Grand Prix 2015 Monaco Grand Prix Practice, Qualifying & Race Discussion

There is something - indeed, almost everything - different about the Monaco Grand Prix. Free practice will take place on Thursday, and F1 will take Friday off. The race will be 40km shorter despite having more laps than any other Grand Prix, and its winners will jump out of the car straight to the 'podium', which will be made up, simply, of a red carpet. Most strikingly, Bernie Ecclestone does not ask for a fee from the organisers in order to include the Grand Prix in his Championship.

The track is old: it has scarcely changed since 1929. The building of the Ranier III Swimming Stadium in 1972 still represents the biggest change that has ever been made to the course. It is very slow by Formula One standards - pole laps frequently average less than 100mph, and the shortening of the distance does not prevent the winning time pushing over one and three-quarter hours even when the red flag has not been thrown. Some of that is also because the Safety Car is so much more likely to appear.

The Safety Car doesn't prevent overtaking in Monaco too much more than the layout itself does - with the pole sitter having won every dry Grand Prix there since 2004, with 2008 standing as the only wet event in that period, won by Lewis Hamilton from third having planted the wall at exactly the right moment! Track position is vital; an undercut is difficult to pull off, and passing someone on dodgy tyres is staggeringly hard. Jenson Button and Fernando Alonso found in 2011 that the only overtaking that occurs in Monaco is when they were overtaken by events.

Winning at Monaco is an interesting achievement. It can certainly underline your reputation as a great (Senna's 6, Schumacher's 5 and Prost's 4), although there are some conspicuous absentees (Clark, Piquet, Mansell). Some find a groove there that they don't maintain elsewhere (Webber, Coulthard, Trintignant), and some have their solitary moment in the sun there (Trulli, Panis, Beltoise). Either way, those that win at Monaco will tell you it is the best circuit on the calendar to win on. Graham Hill's legend will always be founded upon his achievements here.

Who will be the 2015 winner? Following on from Catalan victory, Nico Rosberg will be heartened by his own form in the principality, having won dominantly in each of the last two years. He'll also enjoy that Monaco has never served as a favoured circuit to his team-mate Hamilton (whose only win came courtesy of said lucky walling, and has not finished ahead of a team-mate who actually completed the distance otherwise), and has certainly not favoured Ferrari (who have only won there 8 times from their 61 attempts, and have not taken a victory there since 2001). Although the differences at Monaco are often exaggerated, sometimes constructors do find the circuit to their liking if they focus more on aerodynamics than power, which suggests that this may be Red Bull's best chance to challenge Williams this season.

However, predicting what might happen on a Monaco race day is often a fools' game. It could well be a tedious procession, but it could well be full of drama - a good position can often be thrown into the ubiquitous Armco, the lack of new engines for this circuit could lead to one going pop or a frustrated move down at the Grand Hotel could lead to a front-wing buckling. Last year, lest we forget, Jules Bianchi achieved his one-and-only points finish in Formula One - the only points for the new-for-2010 teams in 5 years of trying. There have been many tedious processions here, but there has been 1970, 1982, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, 1997, 2004, 2008 and 2011 too. Lets hope to add 2015 to that illustrious list.
 
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Ideal Lap (sum best sectors) in theQual:

Qual – No – Driver – Qual Result –Ideal Lap – Flaw

1 - 44 - L.HAMILTON - 01:15,098 - 01:15,027 - 00,071
2 - 6 - N.ROSBERG - 01:15,440 - 01:15,416 - 00,024
3 - 5 - S.VETTEL - 01:15,849 - 01:15,845 - 00,004
4 - 3 - D.RICCIARDO - 01:16,041 - 01:15,925 - 00,116
5 - 26 - D.KVYAT - 01:16,182 - 01:16,143 - 00,039
6 - 7 - K.RAIKKONEN - 01:16,427 - 01:16,187 - 00,240
10 - 33 - M.VERSTAPPEN - 01:16,957 - 01:16,520 - 00,437
9 - 13 - P.MALDONADO - 01:16,946 - 01:16,693 - 00,253
8 - 55 - C.SAINZ - 01:16,931 - 01:16,761 - 00,170
7 - 11 - S.PEREZ - 01:16,808 - 01:16,808 - 00,000
 
Carlos Sainz has been demoted to the back of the grid for ignoring the call to go to scrutineering on his way into the pits -- oh dear


Mephistopheles

I am saying the only real chance to make a pass is down the chicane after the tunnel where DRS could be applied but it is dangerous considering they are going downhill with very little run off and worried about cars being catapulted

I don't know why the area around the swimming pool still needs to remaining to the old configuration whe
 
Even the highlights were boring last time around and now it's Monaco.....
Think i just watch the first and the last lap tomorrow or bring my pillow when am going to my friends house to watch the GP.
 
If you ignore the Mercs the gird is a bit more mixed up than usual. The various Red Bull cars look quite speedy, let's hope the TV director lets us see some of the battles further down the grid.
 
I have just watched qualifying as I simple could not be arsed to watch it live, I pressed fast forward through most of it so managed to waste only about 30 minutes of my life I shall be doing the same thing with the race tomorrow..
 
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It was clear during the second run that Rosberg had locked up into the first corner due to all the smoke which could be seen from the camera looking down.

I was surprised the commentators didn't pick up on it..


Good observation.....I was wondering where in the hell that smoke was coming from.
 
I have gone from not being able to bare not seeing every moment of an F1 weekend live to not caring if I only watch a recording and fast forwarding through most of it.

My next step is not watching it at all...
 
They actually bothered to put in a couple of new camera angles which showed the cars running on a street circuit rather than looking like they were in a rut between houses on the French Riviera.
 
Whether you can overtake or not is irrelevant at Monaco, this race is about so much more. How can it be boring watching the worlds best, driving F1 cars around the narrow streets of a small city in anger. Is it also boring watching a driver try to pressure an error from another driver or putting in a blinding lap to achieve an overlap at the next pitstop, while having to stay mistake free and off the barriers for the entire race. Are you true F1 fans????? Sir Jackie Stewart is 100% right when he calls Monaco the 'Jewel in the F1 Crown'.
 
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rufus_mcdufus and Chad Stewarthill

So happy to receive your likes on my last posting, a big thanks. For one terrible moment I thought I was the last living human that liked and appreciated Monaco for what it is, a huge challenge for all the drivers and a slice of history I hope we never loose. Cheers guys. :cheers:
 
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rufus_mcdufus - I think Sauber's troubles stem from a lack of budget. I think Australia will be their best result this season as they simply can't keep up with the development race. McLaren can throw money at their car all year but Sauber simply can't. Hopefully Nasr and Erricson can pull out some amazing performances and drive the wheels off that thing. I'd like to be proved wrong on my prediction for the team's season.
 
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