Grand Prix 2025 Monaco Grand Prix

Next up on our packed racing calendar is the Monaco Grand Prix. Often referred to as the jewel in F1's crown.

It's said that there are generally two different fan opinions regarding the Monaco Grand Prix. The first is that the track is too small, the racing dull and it should have been dropped a long time ago, the second is that it should have been dropped a long time ago because the racing is dull and the track is too small.

Motorsport has been coming to Monaco since 1929 but It wasn't really until 1929 that it became evident that the track was unsuitable for racing cars. By then it was too late to drop it from the calendar. It's remained a fixture ever since.

Given that it's only in the most unlikely circumstances that one car could pass another around this track, the more memorable races are normally down to the fact that there have been a number of crashes or incidents. Two people have ended up going over the harbor wall and swimming with the fishes. Fans with long memories will recall the famous incident where the American, Pete Aron crashed his Jordan BRM into his British team mate Scott Stoddard resulting in injuries that put Stoddard out of several races in 1966. There have been other memorable incidents including the 1982 race where almost the entire top 6 crashed at one point in the last few laps. The 1984 race where our Nige was well on his way to his maiden F1 victory before a white line and a wall intervened. This was the same race in which Senna finished second for Toleman. Later in the 80's, Senna had his famous out of body experience when qualifying his McLaren almost 2 seconds ahead of his team mate, then went on to have his famous out of car experience when he crashed his McLaren driving inexplicably fast in a race he'd won several times over already. In 1996 we had heartbreak for Damon Hill as he was leading at his Dad's most successful track only to have an engine failure and the rest of the field seemingly joined in out of sympathy. That year only the top three cars saw the finishing line and Olivier Panis became a quiz question. We've had Schumi parking his car on track during qualifying and Rosberg doing something similar or not depending on which side of the fence you sat. So, there has been some entertainment over the years just none of it due to outstanding racing.

Last year was probably one of the all time F1 lows. The top 10 finished in the same order they'd started. An early red flag meant that every car changed their tyres and that was the chance of any pip stop action getting in the way and allowing at least one car to pass another somehow. Verstappen complained that he needed a pillow and Piastri claimed that at times the cars were running slower than the F2 guys.

To try and spice things up this year, the FA has mandated that cars will need to pit twice. Yippee, I hear you all cry. Unfortunately the FIA hasn't mandated that cars should be able to pass each other on the track but still, those pit stops will be awesome I bet. Having said that, given the high likelihood of safety cars, red flags etc, then I can foresee that next year the FIA will mandate a minimum 70 pit stops.

If anyone has actually been to Monaco, then you'll know how tight it really is. I was surprised when I walked the track just how steep the elevation is from the first corner up the hill into Casino square. It doesn't look that steep on TV but when you're walking up it and especially when you look at how high you are when you get to the top and look back down towards the sea, it wouldn't shock me if I was told that it's one of the steepest gradients on an F1 track.

While I've given the race a bit of a kicking and, yes it deserves it, it must be bloody terrifying to drive as an F1 driver especially if there's even a tiny bit of moisture on the road. If they could somehow, find an extra bit of Monaco to stick some more track on and at least provide one measly overtaking opportunity then it wouldn't be the worst place to come in world.

Its interesting to speculate on the future of Monaco. It was once the jewel in the crown but, with so many backers willing to throw money at a few miles of desert and the real hard cash being in locations such as Saudi and the Emirates, Monaco's attraction as a high rollers night out will surely slip away. We are no longer in an era of movie stars strolling out of casino's, looking out upon the riviera to where their yachts are parked. They're more likely to be doing that in Dubai.

Last year, this was a successful day out for Ferrari but given their difficulties so far and especially last weekend, it would be impossible to see anyone other than a McLaren topping both the Saturday time sheets and the Sunday podium with only the flag and anthem to be decided.

Race timings:

First Practice23 May12:30
Second Practice23 May16:00
3rd Practice24 May11:30
Qualification24 May15:00
Race25 May14:00

Looks like there may be a drop of rain on Saturday but Sunday should be fine:

1747696075903.webp

Enjoy it if you can.
 
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Monaco is such a throwback to a past era - but there really isn't a justification for going to the Monaco track with current F1 machinery. Formula E has demonstrated that it's possible to have a race around Monaco, but, even then, the cars struggled to overtake.

Given that this is supposed to be a "different" event, why don't the drivers use different cars for the event - I'm sure that it wouldn't be too expensive to buy a fleet of FFord cars, and hold the entire race with narrower cars. I realise that the cars might not have large enough fuel tanks, but that could be dealt with through pit-stops, where drivers have to swap cars!

Then, the best driver would win - and would mean less chance of cars being catastrophically damaged in a single, pointless, race
 
i love monaco. the whole thing location, the danger, the mental challenge. for me its the greatest qualifying session we see all year. nothing comes close

im half on board with The Artist..... because 1 hand. its imperative we keep qualifying. but can you keep qualifying & give points for that & then have Non Championship race with much smaller cars. like formula E size

i still have my fingers crossed for this new monaco rule. even if i would assume top 10 statergy will be Soft - Hard - Medium & then the backmarkers going Hard - Medium - Soft
 
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And tyre choice will.make very little difference. Back when the cars were smaller and narrower you'll remember when Mansell had to pit due to a puncture and lost the lead to Senna. Mansell came out behind Senna and was all over his rear wing like a rash. All you have to do is put the car on the apex and nothing gets by.
 
The BBC's pre race program on Radio 5 tonight highlights the very issues we're talking about above.

They spent the first 5 minutes telling us how awesome Monaco is and how despite the moaners, it's the one all drivers want to win. We even had a sarky voice put on when the presenter moaned that every year we have to hear "have the cars outgrown the track?"

We then get a 5 minute discussion on how boring it was last year and how it's almost impossible to overtake here.

We then get 5 minutes on how the two stop rule is a knee jerk based on last year and some cars at the back may well just pit on lap 1 and 2 to get it out of the way. Then in the last 30 seconds of that chat they decide that two pit stops is a genius move and will really spice up the race.

:facepalm:
 
I tend to watch it every year, in the hopes that something happens, most years I am disappointed, but sometimes drama rears it's head, not usually because of overtaking, but sometimes rain, sometimes a pitstop issue.

This years rule about 2 pitstops is another contrived mechanic to try and spice it up, in my mind, if you need to make up special rules, there's something else wrong.

In all that though, I do think that there are no better shots of a formula one car doing what it does best than the low level cameras on the entry to the swimming pool. It showcases just how incredible these cars are. For that alone I would watch at least a few laps!

Other than thst though, I think if it was proposed as a circuit today, it would get laughed out!
 
Leclerc may have had a magical & faultless run to winning the Monaco gp last year but he more than made up for it now. as we are only 10 mins in & already Leclerc outbreaked himself in to Mirabeau, ending up in the run off where rosberg accidentally deliberately outbreaked himself to secure pole in 2016 & now he ran into the back of stroll at the loews hairpin, breaking his front wing
 
for a ferrari that leclerc said on thursday in official conference & many media interviews is "dreadful in slow speed corners & monaco has alot of them" leclerc is looking pretty quick
 
Last year, this was a successful day out for Ferrari but given their difficulties so far and especially last weekend, it would be impossible to see anyone other than a McLaren topping both the Saturday time sheets
This prediction seems to be aging well.

:facepalm:
 
Trust Ferrari to cock things up over the radio for Hamilton at probably the worst place to do so

Anyone thinks Mercedes might do a wild strategy whereby they pit early and use the clear track to undercut whilst the guys at the front are holding each other in the guy because the cars are just too wide

I looked at the F2 sprint highlights and they were losing wings and there is not enough room to squeeze by anywhere

Please no red flag tomorrow because the current rule means tyres can be changed
 
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It's ridiculous that a fuck up by the team penalises the driver.

“The team first informed the driver of Car 44 that Car 1 was on a fast lap. Then they sent another message saying that Car 1 was ‘slowing down’ when in fact Car 1 was always on a push lap and was not ‘slowing down’ as suggested by the team. This resulted in Car 44 speeding up and moving into the racing line of Car 1 entering Turn 3.

“As with previous incidents of this nature where a driver has received inaccurate or incomplete information resulting in a car impeding another, the fact that the radio message was the cause of the impeding does not amount to a mitigating factor.

“We therefore impose the standard penalty of a drop of three grid positions.”

 
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