Six in a row for Red Bull

Apologies again for the lack of activity – work has been crazy, but a highlight being my namecheck from Crofty on Sky F1…

Anyway, I’m back for another multiple-races-into-one report!

Last time it was three for the price of one. This time it’s six! And they’ve all been Red Bull wins…

The tide begins to turn in Imola

Really testing my memory here but let’s take a crack at a summary of the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.

Having taken his first pole of the year, Max Verstappen got off the line poorly in the first Sprint Race of the year and was jumped by Charles Leclerc. He would make amends, though, reclaiming the lead on the penultimate lap.

Meanwhile, the title rivals’ respective teammates – Sergio Pérez and Carlos Sainz – fought their way through the field to third and fourth respectively, having started seventh and 10th after a chaotic, wet qualifying session which also saw the Mercedes caught out by a red flag and eliminated in Q2.

Image credit: Getty Images

The rain returned on Sunday and this time it was Leclerc with the poor getaway, dropping behind Pérez and Lando Norris.

All of Sainz’s hard work during the Sprint was undone immediately as he was punted out at the first corner by an understeering Daniel Ricciardo.

Leclerc reclaimed third from Norris but was never quite able to pass either Red Bull and then made his first mistake of the season as he desperately tried to catch Pérez.

A bad day for the onlooking Tifosi got worse as Leclerc spun at the Variante Alta chicane.

He recovered to sixth – and the fastest lap – after a pit stop for a broken front wing but saw his title lead shrink as the Red Bulls picked up their first 1-2 since the 2016 Malaysian Grand Prix, with Norris taking McLaren‘s only podium of the year so far.

Further back, George Russell made a great recovery drive to fourth, but teammate Lewis Hamilton was less fortunate on the opening lap and found himself stuck in a DRS train for the next 90 minutes.

Welcome to Miami

Will Smith references perhaps became a little less palatable thanks to a certain slap a month or so earlier, but the above was somewhat inevitable as F1 headed to Florida for the inaugural Miami Grand Prix.

In a race that appeared to want to be America’s version of Monaco, celebrities came from far and wide for a look at some F1 cars and a dip – or perhaps not – in the infamous fake marina.

Image credit: Reuters

On track, Ferrari locked out the front row for the first time in over two years but Verstappen would have them split by the first corner.

And eight laps later, he would have the lead.

The next hour or so was largely dull until a somewhat bizarre clash between Norris and Pierre Gasly brought out the Safety Car.

Leclerc gave it his all in the closing laps but Verstappen had enough to hold onto the lead, with Sainz also holding off Pérez for the final spot on the podium.

After a poor performance in qualifying, Russell got lucky with the timing of the Safety Car – not for the first time this season – allowing him to continue his run of top-five finishes, whilst Mick Schumacher threw away a chance of his first points with a clumsy lunge on hero and mentor Sebastian Vettel.

The Pain in Spain Falls Mainly on Leclerc

Having waited over five years for their last 1-2, Red Bull wouldn’t even have to wait five weeks for their next one.

Image credit: Motorsport Images

This time, though, it was not on merit.

Leclerc picked up another pole and proceeded to sail away at the front as Sainz and Verstappen behind him each took a trip into the gravel at Turn Four thanks to a couple of rogue gusts of wind.

That dropped the Dutchman behind Russell and Pérez. Whilst his teammate was predictably easy to pass, the Mercedes would prove far trickier – Verstappen spending almost half the race staring at the INEOS-branded rear wing as the DRS flap on his own rear wing developed a fault.

Their battle became one for the lead when Leclerc suffered an engine failure, his despairing calls over the radio reminiscent of those at Sakhir in 2019.

Red Bull decided to mix things up with a three-stop strategy for Verstappen and it paid off.

However, that was in some part due to the team asking Pérez to let him through, the displeased Mexican saying “that’s very unfair, but okay”.

Russell would take a second podium of the season, whilst his teammate provided arguably the performance of the day.

Hit by Kevin Magnussen on the opening lap, Hamilton had fallen to the very back of the pack but produced a stellar drive through the field to fourth, before a late engine issue saw him fall back behind Sainz.

Toto Wolff said he believed a 104th win would have been possible for the seven-time world champion without the early incident. Signs of life from the Silver Arrows?

The Leclerc Monaco Curse Strikes Again

Image credit: Getty Images

F1 returned to the setting of its favourite real marina in late May, with Leclerc surely standing the best chance to end his run of horrible luck on home soil.

And things looked even better once he’d secured the all-important pole position around the streets of Principality.

In terms of admin and organisation, it was a pretty shocking weekend for the under-pressure event.

A downpour and a local power cut saw a delay to the start of the race that was equal parts embarrassing and confusing, whilst the TV direction was once again poor at the only race on the calendar that insists upon having its own local director.

By the time the race finally got going, most of the rain had disappeared and Leclerc appeared comfortable out front.

Then came the Ferrari strategy blunder, though.

An erroneous stop for intermediate tyres put Leclerc in trouble; a belated call to stay out sealed his fate.

The end result was a top-four order of Pérez, Sainz, Verstappen and then Leclerc.

A nasty-looking crash that ripped Schumacher’s car in two brought out a red flag – as well as adding further pressure to the young German – and gave the leading cars a choice to make.

The Red Bulls chose the medium tyre for the final 45 laps of the race whilst the Ferraris went with the hard.

Ultimately it proved to be a moot point as passing was shown to be impossible once again on the tight streets, even when Pérez’s tyres were well past their best.

Image credit: Getty Images.

So, a third career win for the popular Mexican and one that almost brought him to tears on the podium.

A Definitive Swing in the Title Battle?

A fortnight later and the F1 circus headed to its often-far-more-chaotic street race in Azerbaijan.

It was yet another pole for Leclerc – his sixth in eight races – after a stunning final Q3 lap, but once again things would unravel on race day.

He was passed into the first corner by Pérez, but had been holding Verstappen at bay when teammate Sainz trundled into an escape road with a hydraulic issue.

The Spaniard’s painful 2022 season continues, but his misfortune did allow his team to take a strategy risk and bring Leclerc in for a cheap pit stop under the ensuing Virtual Safety Car.

Despite Verstappen having been tucked up behind his title rival, it was Pérez whose tyres were struggling and he was soon caught by his teammate.

The team informed the Mexican that there should be “no fighting” and car number one sailed past on the start-finish straight.

The race appeared to be heating up nicely with Leclerc retaking the lead on his alternate strategy as the Red Bulls pitted, but the weekend was about to get yet more painful for the Scuderia.

The cameras cut to a plume of smoke emerging from the back of the remaining prancing horse of Leclerc, who pulled into the pits to retire.

Image credit: Formula 1

From there it was a comfortable run to the chequered flag for Verstappen, with Pérez and Russell equally at ease in second and third.

If there was one thing that the weekend wasn’t for many of the drivers, however, it was comfortable.

The new regulations’ bouncing and porpoising issues hit new heights – both metaphorically and literally – with Hamilton barely able to get out of his car at the end of the race due to severe back pain.

F1 Finally Returns to Canada

After three years away, the sport finally made its return to the popular setting of Montreal, and the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve showed F1 what it had been missing.

Another eventful wet qualifying session saw Verstappen secure pole, with Fernando Alonso on the front row for the first time in over a decade and Leclerc starting at the back with an engine penalty.

It was Pérez suffering an early mechanical failure this time and bringing out a Virtual Safety Car under which Verstappen and Hamilton pitted.

Once things had shaken out it was a clear front three of last year’s title rivals either side of Sainz.

With 20 laps remaining, Yuki Tsunoda embarrassingly slid straight into the barriers at the pit exit, bringing out a first full Safety Car of the race.

On fresher tyres, Sainz hounded Verstappen to the end but the Red Bull’s superior traction meant he was always able to stay just out of reach in the DRS zones.

Image credit: Getty Images.

So close, yet so far once again for the Spaniard, who now has 11 podiums without a victory and is closing in on Nick Heidfeld’s unwanted record.

No such problems for Verstappen, though, who further extended his championship lead despite Leclerc recovering to fifth.

After two painful weekends – in every sense – on street circuits, Hamilton and Mercedes showed signs that they might be able to challenge on upcoming smoother tracks, whilst Mr-Saturday-turned-Mr-Consistency Russell continued his impressive record of finishing in the top five at every race.

F1 fans feared that Red Bull’s early-season mechanical woes would ruin the title battle as Leclerc dominated.

With a sixth consecutive race win for the Austrian team and now a 49-point margin to Leclerc in the championship, it appears that it may, in fact, be the other way round.

2021 Monaco GP report | Verstappen takes first Monaco win

Ecstasy for Verstappen, agony for Leclerc, frustration for Hamilton.
Max Verstappen celebrates winning the Monaco Grand Prix.
Image credit: Getty Images

Max Verstappen took his first win at the Monaco Grand Prix as all his main challengers gradually fell by the wayside.

It appeared that Charles Leclerc had broken his Monaco curse when his gearbox was deemed safe to start the race after he had crashed in qualifying on his way to claiming pole position. But the curse returned with a vengeance on his installation lap and the Monegasque was cruelly consigned to watch his home race from the garage by a terminal driveshaft issue.

That left Verstappen effectively on pole and, once he had survived Valtteri Bottas‘s attack into the first corner, the race was his to lose. Bottas shadowed him for the first few laps as all the drivers managed their pace to conserve tyre life but, as they moved closer to the first stops, the Mercedes started to fall away from the Red Bull and into the clutches of Carlos Sainz in third place.

Further back, Lewis Hamilton was still stuck behind Pierre Gasly in sixth, after a nightmare qualifying session. The World Champion could not get the required temperature into his tyres and was left displeased that his team had not pursued an approach which he had suggested. Mercedes decided to attempt an undercut with Hamilton on lap 30 but found themselves still behind the AlphaTauri driver when he responded with a stop one lap later.

And things were about to get worse.

Valtteri Bottas's neverending pit stop.
Image credit: Getty Images

Having run long and exploited the clean air that provided, first Sebastian Vettel and then Sergio Pérez successfully jumped Hamilton. Meanwhile, teammate Bottas was forced to retire when the wheel gun stripped the nut on his front right during his pit stop. It had turned into one of those Germany 2019-esque races for the Silver Arrows.

Out front, Verstappen was having no such dramas and serenely sailed to the chequered flag, keeping a comfortable gap to the chasing Sainz throughout. The Spaniard provided some consolation for Ferrari after Leclerc’s heartbreak with a strong second place, but was a little disappointed as he felt that he could have challenged for pole and victory without the Q3 red flag caused by his teammate’s crash.

Lando Norris completed another excellent weekend – sporting the beautiful, one-off Gulf livery – and held off a late charge from Pérez to claim his second podium of the season and move up to third in the standings.

Lando Norris in the one-off McLaren Gulf livery.
Image credit: Kym Illman

Vettel, Gasly and Hamilton predictably stayed in that order for the remainder of the race, Hamilton successfully pitting late on to claim the bonus point for fastest lap. Behind him, Lance Stroll made an alternative strategy work, starting on the hard tyres and moving up from 13th on the grid to finish eighth. Esteban Ocon finished a further half a minute down the road in ninth and Alfa Romeo‘s Antonio Giovinazzi claimed the final point – his first of the season.

It was a weekend not lacking in drama but the racing on Sunday was a typically mundane affair. And the Monegasque director – Monaco is the only race to use its own broadcast director – cut away from the one bit of wheel-to-wheel action that we did get… None of that will bother Verstappen and Red Bull, however, who have taken the lead in both championships. The momentum in the title battle switches once again.

Now, how will a very different street circuit – Baku in two weeks’ time – suit the cars?

Where Did That Ferrari Pace Come From?!

The Ferraris often flatter to deceive with their Friday pace, but this time they remained at the top of the timing charts throughout the weekend. So, how did that happen? Did they bring a major upgrade?

Charles Leclerc at the Monaco Grand Prix.
Image credit: DPPI

Well, I’m afraid to say – to any members of the Tifosi currently throwing their red caps in the air and declaring an imminent title charge – that is likely to be a one-off.

Ferrari have often gone well around the streets of the Principality – Vettel came home second in the previous two Monaco Grands Prix and 2017 saw a Ferrari 1-2. Their traditional short wheelbase makes the car nimble through the tight turns and, this year, the Monaco layout masked their still considerable deficiency when it comes to straight-line speed.

Even so, the drivers were surprised by their competitiveness.

“It is quite a big surprise,” Leclerc said. “Surely we were very competitive in Sector 3 in Barcelona, but again it’s a very different track and we were maybe expecting Red Bull and Mercedes to have something more for here, but apparently they didn’t and we were just very competitive from the start. So it was good, but until quali we didn’t believe we could fight for pole, so it’s a surprise.”

Whilst this likely isn’t the appearance of an unlikely championship contender, Ferrari can be very pleased with their progress since last year’s hugely disappointing campaign. Even the confines of Monaco wouldn’t have saved the SF1000. They can expect to compete at or near the front again in Hungary and Singapore – if that race happens – and now appear to be in a private battle with McLaren for third in the title. A feel good story for the two former giants of F1.

Vettel Finds Form, Ricciardo Loses It Again

Sebastian Vettel brushing a barrier at the Monaco Grand Prix.
Image credit: DPA Picture Alliance

It has been well documented that the drivers who switched teams for 2021 have been struggling to adapt due to the lack of testing. But Vettel appears to have finally made a breakthrough in the Aston Martin. He was far closer to Lance Stroll in Portugal and Spain than he had been at the first two grands prix of the year, and in Monaco he showed his experience, comfortably outperforming the Canadian in every session.

An impressive eighth in qualifying was turned into an even better fifth on Sunday, thanks to smart strategy and some guts during that wheel-to-wheel battle with Gasly. Vettel earned a well-deserved ‘Driver of the Day’ and will now look to build on this for the coming races.

Daniel Ricciardo, however, went in the opposite direction. After a much-improved performance in Spain saw him take a solid sixth place and finish ahead of teammate Norris for the first time, the wheels came off at what is his most successful circuit. The Aussie won here in 2018, after being robbed of victory in 2016, so moving aside to be lapped by Norris on Sunday will have been a bitter pill to swallow.

Daniel Ricciardo's retro helmet design.
Image credit: Motorsport Images

Most worrying of all, he is at a loss to explain his lack of speed. “All weekend, even crossing the line a lot of laps I felt good, I was like that’s a good lap. And I think at one point I was 1.2s slower than say what Lando had just done, so no answers at the moment.”

He will need to find some answers quickly, or he risks having his reputation questioned in the manner Vettel’s was when Ricciardo joined Red Bull in 2014 and consistently outperformed him.

The Monaco Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Will Mercedes or Red Bull be on top around the twists of the Circuit de Monaco? Red Bull, if not Ferrari!

Can Max Verstappen make up for the many laps he spent stuck behind Lewis Hamilton in 2019? He can, in some style.

Will any teams surprise with their performance at this unique track? See above…

Who will have the best unique helmet design? The Williams drivers’ designs in honour of the team’s 750th race were nice, as were the McLaren Gulf specials, but I’m going for Bottas’s cartoon design.

2021 Monaco GP preview

The Burning Questions

Will Mercedes or Red Bull be on top around the twists of the Circuit de Monaco?

Can Max Verstappen make up for the many laps he spent stuck behind Lewis Hamilton in 2019?

Will any teams surprise with their performance at this unique track?

Who will have the best unique helmet design?

The Track

The Stats

  • Track Length: 3.337 km
  • Laps: 78
  • Race Distance: 260.286 km
  • Maximum Speed: 291 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 45%
  • First Grand Prix: 1950
  • Race Lap Record: Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 2018 | 1:14.260
  • Outright Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2019 | 1:10.166
  • Most Driver Wins: Ayrton Senna | 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993
  • Most Constructor Wins: McLaren | 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007, 2008

The Weather

The Quotes

Lewis Hamilton | “I think I have done well to avoid all the incidents. But we have 19 more [races] and we could connect. He feels he perhaps has a lot to prove. I’m not in the same boat.”

Max Verstappen | “I have nothing to prove and avoiding contact goes both ways. So we have done well. We race hard, we avoided the contact both sides. Let’s hope we can keep doing that and keep racing hard against each other.”

Zak Brown | “I’m delighted with the extension of our agreement with Lando for 2022 and beyond. He’s been instrumental in our return of form here at McLaren and we’re proud of the growth he’s shown since he first started with us back in 2017.”

Sebastian Vettel | “No advice! Obviously I didn’t succeed, Lewis beat me, so it’s better not to give [Verstappen] any advice! I guess he wants to succeed. It’s a long year, there are a lot of races so, I don’t know, it doesn’t work like this. I’m not giving him any advice.”

The Thursday Form

Practice 2 Top 5

1 | Charles Leclerc | 1:11.684 | 30 Laps
2 | Carlos Sainz | 1:11.796 | 32 Laps
3 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:12.074 | 28 Laps
4 | Max Verstappen | 1:12.081 | 27 Laps
5 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:12.107 | 32 Laps

Practice 1 Top 5

1 | Sergio Pérez | 1:12.487 | 36 Laps
2 | Carlos Sainz | 1:12.606 | 32 Laps
3 | Max Verstappen | 1:12.648 | 39 Laps
4 | Pierre Gasly | 1:12.929 | 37 Laps
5 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:12.995 | 34 Laps

Red Bull and Mercedes continue their battle, but it was Ferrari who provided the headlines on Thursday.

There were mixed fortunes in the Scuderia garage in the morning session. Carlos Sainz consistently produced purple sectors throughout the session and ended up second, but Charles Leclerc’s Monaco curse appeared to be continuing as he suffered a gearbox issue which saw his morning running over after just four laps.

The afternoon was good news for all in red, though, as the drivers finished with a surprising 1-2. Leclerc showed no ill effects from missing the earlier session and topped the times, an impressive four tenths clear of Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen.

Whether they can stay at the front come qualifying – after Monaco’s traditional rest day on Friday – is another matter, but they appear to be a genuine threat to the title rivals.

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

The greatest ever Monaco Grands Prix

“Driving around this track is like riding a bike around a living room”, said Nelson Piquet. COVID-19 meant that the world’s most advanced ‘bikes’ were unable to traverse the world’s most expensive ‘living room’ last year, but this week finally sees the return of the Monaco Grand Prix.

The 2021 season has thus far served up four highly entertaining battles between seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton and the heir to this throne, Max Verstappen. Whilst races at Monaco can often be a somewhat mundane affair – more rush hour than Rush – when they are good, they tend to be very good.

Here are the best of the 77 grands prix to this point. Let’s hope that number 78 will be able to compete with them.

1965

Graham Hill at the 1965 Monaco Grand Prix.
Image credit: Stuart Heydinger

Graham Hill completed a hat-trick of victories in Monte Carlo and cemented his position as ‘Mr. Monaco’ after a stunning comeback drive in 1965.

After having secured pole position and then opened up a comfortable lead, Hill spun whilst trying to overtake backmarker Bob Anderson on lap 25 and found himself down an escape road. At a time when reverse gear wasn’t available in F1 cars, the Briton was forced to climb out and push his car back onto the track.

Over the following 40 laps, Hill steadily but surely clawed back the 30-second deficit to the leaders and then picked them off one by one. He withstood a late charge from reigning champion John Surtees to take the chequered flag and earn the third of his five victories in Monaco.

1970

Jochen Rindt at the 1970 Monaco Grand Prix.
Image credit: Corbis

Jochen Rindt and Colin Chapman had many a disagreement regarding the safety of the Lotus cars and, after a huge accident in Spain, Rindt refused to use the latest Lotus 72 at the 1970 Monaco Grand Prix.

Despite that, the Austrian made steady progress through the field from eighth on the grid – aided by numerous retirements in front of him – and found himself in second place with 19 laps remaining. Jack Brabham’s appeared to have a comfortable 15-second lead but it gradually decreased and, after being held up twice by backmarkers, it was down to four seconds on the penultimate lap.

Rindt blitzed the lap record and was suddenly within touching distance. Under pressure at the final hairpin, Brabham went off-line to lap Piers Courage and slithered off into the barrier, leaving Rindt to inherit his sole Monaco triumph and the last ever victory for the famous Lotus 49.

1982

The field climb the hill to Massenet.
Image credit: LAT

The 1982 Monaco Grand Prix was a race which, it appeared, nobody wanted to win.

Alain Prost appeared favourite after his pole-sitting teammate, René Arnoux, had spun on lap 15. But with three laps remaining and rain starting to fall, Prost himself spun out and handed the lead to Riccardo Patrese, only for the Italian to spin as well during the following lap. That left Didier Pironi in the lead, but his car ran out of fuel on the final lap. Andrea de Cesaris would have inherited the lead but had also run out of fuel and Derek Daly – the next man down the road – had just retired with a gearbox failure.

As James Hunt put it, “we’ve got this ridiculous situation where we’re all sitting by the start-finish line waiting for a winner to come past, and we don’t seem to be getting one”. Patrese had managed to restart his car, though, and eventually came through to take his maiden victory.

1984

The master at work, for the first time.
Image credit: Getty Images

Two years later, another wet race saw Ayrton Senna announce himself as a superstar in the making.

At the request of Niki Lauda, Bernie Ecclestone used his power to have the tunnel flooded, as oil from prior use had “turned it into a fifth gear skid pad” when the cars came racing in carrying the spray from their tyres. Pole-sitter Prost was passed on lap nine by Nigel Mansell, to lead a grand prix for the first time, but the Briton crashed six laps later after sliding on a painted white line.

Prost reassumed the lead and, on lap 29, began waving to the stewards to signal the race should be stopped, with Senna – who had started the race 13th in an uncompetitive Toleman – closing in rapidly. The red flag was duly shown at the end of lap 32. Senna passed Prost’s slowing McLaren before the finish line but, as per the rules, the positions were counted from the last lap completed by every driver and Prost retained the victory. Nonetheless, Senna had emphatically displayed the wet weather skills that would become infamous over the next decade.

1992

Nigel Mansell stalks Ayrton Senna at the 1992 Monaco Grand Prix.
Image credit: LAT Images

1992 saw another Senna Monaco masterclass; this time, though, in defensive driving.

That season’s Williams was one of the most dominant in the history of the sport, Mansell taking the championship at a canter and winning a then-record 9 of 16 races. In Monaco, however, a late puncture in a race he had been dominating saw him emerge from the pits seven seconds behind Senna’s McLaren.

That gap had disappeared in just a lap and a half. Senna was still sporting the same tyres on which he had started the race, but was not about to let his rival through in a hurry. Mansell darted left and right for the remaining five laps but to no avail as the Brazilian positioned his car perfectly and remained utterly resolute. The Master of Monaco was not to be denied that day and took his fourth consecutive victory in the Principality.

1996

A pre-race downpour in 1996 saw a fraught start during which five drivers – including Michael Schumacher – retired from the race on the first lap. Another four had gone before lap 10.

Amid the chaos, a certain Olivier Panis had moved up from 14th on the grid to run eighth at the halfway point. With the rain clouds having moved on, the Frenchman instructed his Ligier team to monitor the first driver pitting for slicks and report on their progress. That would prove to be Damon Hill, whose instant speed convinced Panis to pit on the following lap.

Others weren’t as quick to respond and Panis moved up to fourth. He quickly dispatched Eddie Irvine – into the wall, to be specific – and, when Hill and Jean Alesi suffered mechanical failures up ahead, found himself in the lead. A lack of fuel threatened the Frenchman’s maiden victory, but he clung on from the chasing David Coulthard and was the first of just three drivers to reach the chequered flag. It would prove to be his only win. But, if you’re only going to get one, it’s not a bad one to have.

2008

Lewis Hamilton at the 2008 Monaco Grand Prix.
Image credit: EFE

Small mistakes have huge consequences in the tight confines of the Circuit de Monaco. Those consequences are almost always bad but, in 2008, a small mistake ultimately led to a victory for Lewis Hamilton.

Once again, rain played a major part in an eventful Monaco Grand Prix. Hamilton had passed Kimi Räikkönen for second place on the opening lap, but on lap 6, with the conditions worsening, he fractionally misjudged his exit from Tabac and tapped his right-rear wheel against the barrier, popping the tyre off the rim. That led Hamilton and his team to take a risk, fitting intermediate tyres and fuelling for a long second stint.

It proved to be inspired. The rain ceased, a dry line emerged, and Hamilton took the lead. When the time came for his next stop, conditions had reached the point for a transition to slicks and Hamilton maintained his lead to the chequered flag, despite a late safety car. Behind him, Adrian Sutil had been running in an unlikely, career-best fourth place, only to be taken out of the race by Räikkönen with just eight laps to go.

2016

Contrasting emotions in the 2016 Monaco top three.
Image credit: The Telegraph

2016 saw another wet race and another Hamilton win, but in very different circumstances.

Daniel Ricciardo led away from pole, followed by the Mercedes pair of Nico Rosberg and Hamilton. The two Silver Arrows were on best behaviour – after their infamous crash in Spain two weeks beforehand – and, after struggling with the conditions in the early laps, Rosberg obeyed a team order to allow his teammate through.

Out front, Ricciardo had built a comfortable lead but, when the time came for his change to slicks, the Red Bull pit crew weren’t ready. Mechanics fumbled for the right tyres and Hamilton agonisingly swept by when Ricciardo eventually reached the end of the pit lane. Over the course of the remaining 45 laps, Hamilton produced a defensive display akin to Senna in 1992 as a frustrated Honey Badger bit at his heels.

It felt like redemption for Hamilton who had suffered a similar fate 12 months earlier when an erroneous call to pit lost him a certain victory. And Ricciardo himself would right the wrongs in 2018, claiming an impressive win after an engine issue left him down on power and defending for his life for most of the race.

Quiz | Monaco masters

Who are the masters of Monaco?

I’ve gone through the history books and figured out who has been the most successful by awarding points to the top five in every grand prix (10, 6, 4, 2, 1) plus bonus points for pole positions and grands chelem.

Once you’re done, be sure to check out my other quizzes here.

2019 Monaco GP report | Hamilton takes emotional victory

Niki would be proud.
Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel at the 2019 Monaco Grand Prix.
Image credit: Getty Images

The run of Mercedes 1-2s finally came to an end at the 2019 Monaco Grand Prix, to be replaced by a Niki Lauda 1-2.

Lewis Hamilton took the victory in a McLaren-era Lauda helmet, followed (once Max Verstappen’s penalty had been applied) by the Ferrari-era Lauda helmet donned by Sebastian Vettel. It was a very fitting result for what was always going to be a poignant, somewhat muted Monaco Grand Prix weekend – a dampener put on all the glitz, glamour and indulgent festivities that the Monte Carlo race usually brings.

Whilst Monaco is often accused of being a procession, this was certainly no walk in the park for Hamilton. After an early safety car – brought out by Charles Leclerc’s gingerbread trail of bits of tyre and Ferrari floor – Mercedes placed their drivers on the medium tyre whilst Verstappen and Vettel went for the harder option. Verstappen and Valtteri Bottas then collided in the pit lane, leaving the former with a five second penalty and the latter needing to come in due to the damage. At this point, Mercedes changed Bottas to the harder tyre and Hamilton came to the realisation that he was facing the prospect of nursing his tyres for 67 laps with cars attacking him on better-suited rubber.

Toto Wolff later admitted that this was a rare strategic mistake from Mercedes, although their decision was justifiable at the time. They were wary of being jumped after the safety car if their competitors were on softer tyres, the hard tyre had proved tricky during practice and there was also the prospect of rain – sadly, for the spectacle, it never materialised beyond some light drizzle – with the medium the better tyre for damp conditions. It is always tricky to be the lead team in these situations as those following can react to your decisions.

Either way, Hamilton succeeded in fending off the increasingly aggressive Verstappen, who knew that second place would turn into fourth after the penalty if he could not pass, for a victory of perseverance and fighting against the odds. Everything that encapsulated Niki Lauda.

More Ferrari Woes

It was yet another tale of blunders from both team and drivers for Ferrari. They had looked well off the pace during the Thursday practice sessions but found some speed on Saturday morning with Leclerc topping the timesheets. Only for the sister car of Vettel to end up in the wall at Sainte Devote. The engineers did a good job to get it repaired in time for qualifying but that’s where things really started to unravel.

Vettel’s first attempt in Q1 left him in the drop zone. Leclerc also had a scrappy lap which was only 0.2 seconds quicker than his teammate’s but the team decided to try and save tyres by not sending him out, despite their driver’s repeated questioning of that decision. So the young Monegasque had to sit and watch from the garage as ‘LEC’ fell further and further down the timings screen, before being finally knocked into 16th, and out of qualifying, by Vettel of all people.

In the face of some trying times – particularly having victory cruelly snatched away in Bahrain – Leclerc has remained calm and said all the right things. But here, he was visibly furious. Monaco is his home race after all and he knows as well as anyone that passing around the Principality is almost impossible. He decided to go with an all or nothing approach on Sunday. Sadly it was to be the latter as, after an excellent pass on Romain Grosjean at La Rascasse the lap previously, Nico Hülkenberg proved to be less accommodating and Leclerc clipped the barrier. This left him with with a puncture which resulted in terminal damage to the car as he returned to the pits far too fast, clearly having reached the end of his tether.

Meanwhile Vettel, after a scruffy remainder of the qualifying session where he touched the barriers twice, did at least bring home second place come race day. Bizarrely Ferrari’s best result of the year despite the weekend as a whole feeling very much a failure. There is still a long way to go before the systematic issues in Ferrari’s operations are ironed out.

Sainz Continues to Excel Under the Radar

I have, for a long time, felt that Carlos Sainz is criminally underrated.

This is a driver who generally matched Verstappen in their time together at Toro Rosso. The Dutchman scored more points and was more spectacular but Sainz beat him in their qualifying head-to-head before suffering poor luck on race days for the most part.

Whilst Verstappen was hurried up the Red Bull ladder, Sainz’s career stalled somewhat as he spent season after season with Toro Rosso. He finally got his move to Renault towards the end of 2017 but there was to be more bad luck on race days and a very in-form teammate in Nico Hülkenberg. The German scored more points and many seemingly wrote off the still very young Sainz, despite the fact that the Hulk is no slouch, was fully settled in the team and, apparently, Sainz never particularly got on with the Renault’s handling.

Image credit: AFP

But this year, he has a clean slate. He has taken the seat of his boyhood hero, Fernando Alonso, at McLaren and is now finding his feet. After some misfortune and a poor decision to try and squeeze Verstappen that cost him an excellent result in Bahrain, Sainz has really started to perform, culminating in an excellent drive to sixth in Monaco. It also included what Sainz described as “the best move of my career” as he opportunistically carved round the outside of both Toro Rossos at Massenet on Lap 1.

Up against a highly-rated rookie in Lando Norris, Sainz seems to be relishing the role of team leader and it will be interesting to see whether both he and McLaren can continue their progress towards the front of the grid. Maybe we’ll see him back fighting regularly with Verstappen soon enough.

One Very Important Moment Swept Under the Rug

Not broadcast by FOM, a marshal was centimetres from being injured, or even killed, on Sunday.

The marshals at Monaco are generally accepted as being some of the best in the world. In the most constricted surroundings on the calendar, they have always dealt with incidents impressively quickly and efficiently. But it must be remembered that they are volunteers following orders. And when those orders result in a situation like this, Sergio Pérez doing well to keep his head and narrowly avoid two marshals crossing his path, the situation must be examined.

The Monaco Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Surely Mercedes can’t claim another 1-2?! It looked like it was heading that way after qualifying but they’ll have to settle for a lowly 1-3 this time.

Can Max Verstappen keep it out of the wall this year? He can.

Something of a Monaco expert, and on a track with less engine-dependence, can Daniel Ricciardo spring a surprise? An excellent performance in qualifying but poor strategy stifled his race somewhat.

Will Charles Leclerc’s home knowledge see him outclass his teammate? He had seemed the faster driver through practice but Ferrari’s error left him in a different race. A race that, as it transpired, did not last long.

It’s currently due to rain at some point over the weekend…could we have a classic Monaco race rather than a procession? It wasn’t a classic but it was at least a tense procession. Maybe rain next year?..

2019 Monaco GP preview

The Burning Questions

Surely Mercedes can’t claim another 1-2?!

Can Max Verstappen keep it out of the wall this year?

Something of a Monaco expert, and on a track with less engine-dependence, can Daniel Ricciardo spring a surprise?

Will Charles Leclerc’s home knowledge see him outclass his teammate?

It’s currently due to rain at some point over the weekend…could we have a classic Monaco race rather than a procession?

The Track

The Stats

Track Length: 3.337 km

Laps: 78

Race Distance: 260.286 km

First Grand Prix: 1950

Race Lap Record: Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 2018 | 1:14.260

Outright Lap Record: Daniel Ricciardo | Red Bull | 2018 | 1:10.810

Most Driver Wins: Ayrton Senna | 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993

Most Constructor Wins: McLaren | 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007, 2008

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day