Charles Leclerc leads Ferrari 1-2 in final Russian GP practice
Charles Leclerc closed out practice for the Russian Grand Prix at the head of the timesheets as Ferrari swept to a one-two finish to put 🍨itself on top heading into qualifying on Saturday afternoon.
Leclಞerc set the pace in FP1 before finishing a close second behind Red Bull rival Max Verstappen in second practi🐷ce, but returned to top spot in FP3, leading Ferrari teammate Sebastian Vettel.

Charles Leclerc closed out practice for the Russian Grand Prix at the head of the timesheets as Ferrari swept to a one-two finish to put itself on top heading into qualifying on Saturday🍸 afternoon.
Leclerc set the pace in FP1 before finishing a close second behind Red Bull rival Max Verstappen in second practice, but r🍷eturned to top spot in FP3, leading Ferrari teammate Sebastian Vette🌟l.
Leclerc recorded a fastest lap ti🅘me of 1m32.733s at the Sochi Autodrom to clinch P1 by three-tenths of a second, putting himself in the frame for a fourth consecutive pole position in qualifying.
Vettel backed up Leclerc's pace by finishing second, bouncing ♉back from a difficult Friday of running, while Mercedes drivཧers Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas were left to settle for third and fourth respectively.
Ham🦩ilton was left downbeat after hearing Ferr⛦ari's pace midway through the session, but recovered to end just 0.396s back from Leclerc. Bottas was a further two-tenths of a second off the pace.
Max Verstappen took fifth for Red Bull ahead of Haas' Romain🌠 Grosjean, who finished an impressive sixth ahead of Alexand𓂃er Albon in the second Red Bull car.
Nico Hulkenberg finished eighth for Renault ahead of McLaren's Lando Norris, while Kevin Magnussen closed out the top ꦉ10 for Haas.
The session went by without any major incidents, the only brief caution peri🐈od coming when Daniil Kvyat parked hi꧑s car up at the side of the track early on, reporting a power issue in a similar incident to his setback on Friday.
Qualifying for the Rus🅺sian Grand Prix begins at 1500 local time (1300 BST).