Saturday May 20th, 2000 Briton David Coulthard on Saturday claimed his first pole position for nearly two years when he outpaced everyone in a rain-hit opening qualifying session for Sunday's European Grand Prix. Just 18 days after he escaped from an air crash at Lyons in France which killed the pilot and co-pilot, the McLaren driver delivered the ninth prime starting position of his career. The Scot, in his Mercedes-Benz-powered car, wound up one-tenth of a second ahead of championship-leading German Michael Schumacher in a Ferrari after a mid-session rainstorm curtailed the action, leaving everyone to make a vain effort to overturn Coulthard's best time in the final 90 seconds. Coulthard's McLaren teammate Finn Mika Hakkinen, the defending world champion, was third fastest ahead of Brazilian Rubens Barrichello in the second Ferrari with Ralf Schumacher fifth in a Williams and Italian Jarno Trulli sixth for Jordan. Briton Jenson Button, 20, who was fastest on Friday's practice in the second Williams, was unable to repeat the feat on Saturday and wound up in 11th place on the grid, having improved his time in the final flurry. Coulthard, winner of seven Grands Prix in his career, will seek his first victory at the Nurburgring in Sunday's race to bolster his title challenge.
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