Grand Prix 2013 Monaco Grand Prix Practice, Qualifying & Race Discussion

After the excitement of Spain the GP circus moves on to the glamour of Monaco, the longest serving race on the F1 calendar. Monaco, I'm sure, is probably the most testing circuit of the season for the drivers. Hurtling millimetres from unforgiving armco barriers at speeds of up to 180 mph, trying to wrestle 700 plus horsepower engines through tight and twisty corners with no hint of a run off area and having to cope with going from broad daylight into a tunnel with your foot planted hard to the floor before bursting back into the sunlight metres from probably the tightest chicane on any track, anywhere.

It is, almost certainly, the most marmite race on the season. Many love the glamour, the history and the challenge for the drivers. Others feel it is an anachronism in 21st century sport, that it is dangerous and doesn't show F1 at it's best with virtually no opportunity to overtake anywhere on the circuit. Whatever your feelings toward Monaco it isn't going anywhere soon and, I believe, is the only race which can thumb it's nose at FOM when they come along asking for money to allow the race to run. As important to Formula One as Ferrari apparently.

The battle at the top of the WDC leader board has closed up post Spain. Fernando Alonso & Ferrari were outstanding in the Catalan race and the team chose exactly the right tactics to help him win on home ground. Red Bull looked out of sorts, third best behind the Ferrari's and the Lotus Renaults (in Kimi Raikkonen's hands at least).

The tyres should probably not have quite so much of an influence on the racing in Monaco as they have in other races so far this season and Pirelli are planning changes to the rubber to give a maximum of 3 pit stops. Maybe this will help Mercedes, who appear to suffer most of the top teams with decaying rubber. Either that or Ross Brawn should remove the cheese graters Adrian Newey screwed on next to the tyres on the Merc when no one was looking.

If Mercedes manage to show the one lap pace they have elsewhere this season this could be their best chance for a win as they can lead a train around the track. However, it's hard to see past Alonso and, without some mistakes and mechanical failures, you can imagine he would have a VERY healthy lead in the drivers race by now. Perhaps the better driveability of the Renault engines will allow Lotus and Red Bull to mount a more serious challenge to Ferrari. Could someone like Force India spring a surprise, or McLaren? Sorry Macca fans, a little joke there. I shouldn't get your hopes up.

Meanwhile, down at the back. Aww, who cares as long as they get out of the way when being lapped, or get in the way depending on which driver arrives behind them. No safety cars so far this year, some how I'll be shocked if Monaco doesn't give Bert Mylander his first outing.

So Monaco, remember FP1 and 2 are on the Thursday as Friday is a religious holiday for Monegasques. Who'd have thought all those millionaires were so religious. Hope you all enjoy the race, or doing the ironing or gardening if it get's too dull/exciting (delete as appropriate).
 
He's always been over-aggressive, just it's more noticeable now due to him being in a McLaren.
His chicane cutting was a little much too..I counted something around 4 times, 2 were caused by himself pushing too hard. I don't understand how Alonso has to give up the position, but Perez had nothing after doing it multiple times and ruining races...no consistency in the stewards this weekend. Maybe they had their hands full with Grosjean?
 
At Monaco the cars do not get up to racing speeds so the wear on the tyre is not as bad

how come no one is moaning about Red Bull managing one year to do 48 laps on 1 set of tyres around here then ?

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You know I think they need to get rid of that chicane out of the tunnel or at least redesign it because either the cars have to or there is going to be crashes down there .

Also it would make it a better overtaking spot
 
I'm still trying to work out how many trains there were. I think that there was a Hamilton one, there certainly was a Vettel one, I'm not sure about an Alonso one, he certainly suddenly reduced the gap when it got close to tyre change time. How many more were there?

Vettel and Webber were in the perfect position. Vettel was gifted the second place whilst Webber was gifted a podium. Their main rivals both lost a driver in a crash and also finished in lowly positions. All the Red Bull drivers had to do was just keep circulating without ever needing to break out a sweat or even think about an overtake.
 
Most of the time there was only one train. Here's twelve of 'em in shot now ...

Train sharp.jpg


... or is it 13? :D
 
It looked as if everyone bar Perez was circulating and waiting for their pitstop/Safety Car to appear/chequered flag. Watching the leader lift and coast through the Swimming Pool entry was underwhelming to say the least. Paul di Resta was forced to get a bit racy by his early stop and pulled off a couple of good moves.

A word of praise for Max Chilton - probably the only one he'll get from me this season - his pass on van der Garde on the penultimate lap can't have been easy and could be important later in the year when it gets to crunch time. A shame the cameras missed it (I think?).

Still the super-soft lasted 30-odd laps with a full tank of fuel - Pirelli definitely need to increase the degradation on those...;)
 
It looks like the summer-up were right, the overtaken drivers saw who it was and thought that they were being lapped. There did seem to be an element of moving over.
 
Indeed.

I was spurred by comments elsewhere about him showing everyone else up this weekend, to put things in perspective.
On any other circuit, I expect both Mercedes would have been passed by the Red Bulls in short order, or at least by Vettel anyway.
 
I expected Vettel to apply some more pressure in the final stint. I assumed the radio messages from his engineer about tyres were red herrings, but maybe they really were worried.

It's striking how much more consistent Rosberg's lap time progression is in the first stint compared to Vettel.
 
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