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F1 Monaco GP live commentary and updates – race

Live Commentary

By:
Jake Boxall-Legge

02:25:38 pm

Want to know more? Check out our top F1 stories

Read Also:

  • Formula 1Stella: F1 Monaco GP pole a key step for Norris’ confidence in qualifying
  • Formula 1“Genius” required to strategize Monaco’s two-stop rule, says Pirelli
  • Formula 1Newey claims Lance Stroll is “much better than people give him credit for”
  • Formula 1How F1’s mandatory pitstop rule works at the Monaco GP

02:22:28 pm

How will Monaco’s new ‘two-stop’ rule play out?

In a new twist for 2025, all drivers must use three sets of tyres in the Monaco GP (for clarification, this does not mean all three compounds). Without safety cars, this would mean that all teams would be required to perform two conventional stops.

In the event of a red flag, changing tyres here would fulfil the brief. And then there’s the effect of safety cars, VSCs…there’s opportunities to get relatively cheap tyre stops here.

So is it worth the early gamble for a backmarker? Probably; if there’s no first-corner pile-up (like we saw in F2 earlier) then they could go for it. But the leaders will remain in lock-step, and it will depend on what Norris does at the start.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images via Getty Images

02:12:51 pm

Post-qualifying penalties and starting grid

As we said earlier, Lewis Hamilton was given a three-place penalty for impeding Max Verstappen in qualifying, and starts from seventh.

Lance Stroll collected two separate penalties – a one-place drop for causing contact with Charles Leclerc in FP1, and a three-place drop for impeding Gasly in Q1. This moves him from 19th to…well, 19th.

Bearman received a 10-place grid drop for overtaking Sainz under a red flag in FP2, and thus starts last.

Starting grid for the Monaco GP

1

 – 

3
1

 – 

2
Cla Driver # Chassis Engine Time Tyres km/h
1 United KingdomL. NorrisMcLaren 4 McLaren Mercedes

1’09.954

  171.729
2 MonacoC. LeclercFerrari 16 Ferrari Ferrari

+0.109

1’10.063

  171.462
3 AustraliaO. PiastriMcLaren 81 McLaren Mercedes

+0.175

1’10.129

  171.301
4 NetherlandsM. VerstappenRed Bull Racing 1 Red Bull Red Bull

+0.715

1’10.669

  169.992
5 FranceI. HadjarRB 6 RB Honda

+0.969

1’10.923

  169.383
6 SpainF. AlonsoAston Martin Racing 14 Aston Martin Mercedes

+0.970

1’10.924

  169.381
7 United KingdomL. HamiltonFerrari 44 Ferrari Ferrari

+0.428

1’10.382

  170.685
8 FranceE. OconHaas F1 Team 31 Haas Ferrari

+0.988

1’10.942

  169.338
9 New ZealandL. LawsonRB 30 RB Honda

+1.175

1’11.129

  168.893
10 ThailandA. AlbonWilliams 23 Williams Mercedes

+1.259

1’11.213

  168.693
11 SpainC. SainzWilliams 55 Williams Mercedes

+1.408

1’11.362

  168.341
12 JapanY. TsunodaRed Bull Racing 22 Red Bull Red Bull

+1.461

1’11.415

  168.216
13 GermanyN. HulkenbergSauber 27 Sauber Ferrari

+1.642

1’11.596

  167.791
14 United KingdomG. RussellMercedes 63 Mercedes Mercedes

 

   
15 ItalyA. AntonelliMercedes 12 Mercedes Mercedes

 

   
16 BrazilG. BortoletoSauber 5 Sauber Ferrari

+1.948

1’11.902

  167.077
17 FranceP. GaslyAlpine 10 Alpine Renault

+2.040

1’11.994

  166.863
18 ArgentinaF. ColapintoAlpine 43 Alpine Renault

+2.643

1’12.597

  165.477
19 CanadaL. StrollAston Martin Racing 18 Aston Martin Mercedes

+2.609

1’12.563

  165.555
20 United KingdomO. BearmanHaas F1 Team 87 Haas Ferrari

+2.025

1’11.979

  166.898

02:05:38 pm

GPS analysis: Norris’ pole lap

How did Norris overturn Leclerc’s margin at the final moment? We’ve taken a look at the data across his lap.

Formula 1

Analysis: How Norris beat Leclerc to pole for F1’s Monaco GP

Formula 1’s most anticipated qualifying of the season delivered with a thrilling battle for pole position between Lando Norris and Charles Leclerc. Here’s how the tussle swung between the pair and why the McLaren driver came out on top

02:04:44 pm

Monaco GP qualifying recap

Q1: Charles Leclerc was quickest in the opening session, which ended earlier than expected when Andrea Kimi Antonelli put his Mercedes into the wall at the Nouvelle Chicane.

Bortoleto was denied a Q2 appearance at the last minute by Hadjar, as Bearman (encumbered with a 10-place penalty), Gasly, Stroll, and Colapinto went out.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

Q2: Both Mercedes drivers took an early bath as George Russell’s electrics packed up and the Briton came to a stop in the tunnel.

This left three relegation spots, which was occupied by Sainz (who was unable to improve late on softs), Tsunoda (in the old-spec Red Bull) and Hulkenberg. Norris headed the session over Leclerc by 0.011s.

Q3: Lando Norris struck at the death of the session to snatch pole from Leclerc by 0.109s. The two McLarens chose to double-stint their second set of soft tyres at the end of the session, and thus went out early.

Norris set a 1m10.125s benchmark, but Leclerc followed this up with a 1m10.063s to take provisional pole. After a cooldown lap, Norris went again – breaking the track record to do a 1m09.954s.

Piastri placed third on the grid, while Verstappen moved up to fourth when Hamilton was penalised post-session for impeding the Dutchman.

Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

01:54:36 pm

F1 Monaco Grand Prix at 2pm BST/3pm local

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images via Getty Images

Hello everyone, and thanks for joining us – in just over an hour’s time, Monaco will roar into life as 20 F1 cars get the lights-out and pounce out of their grid boxes.

And there should be a lot to unpick as we go along – sans safety cars, everyone will have to do two stops, so expect some wild strategies from those towards the back. We’re excited, and we hope you are too!

Want to know more? Check out our top F1 stories

Read Also:

  • Formula 1Stella: F1 Monaco GP pole a key step for Norris’ confidence in qualifying
  • Formula 1“Genius” required to strategize Monaco’s two-stop rule, says Pirelli
  • Formula 1Newey claims Lance Stroll is “much better than people give him credit for”
  • Formula 1How F1’s mandatory pitstop rule works at the Monaco GP

How will Monaco’s new ‘two-stop’ rule play out?

In a new twist for 2025, all drivers must use three sets of tyres in the Monaco GP (for clarification, this does not mean all three compounds). Without safety cars, this would mean that all teams would be required to perform two conventional stops.

In the event of a red flag, changing tyres here would fulfil the brief. And then there’s the effect of safety cars, VSCs…there’s opportunities to get relatively cheap tyre stops here.

So is it worth the early gamble for a backmarker? Probably; if there’s no first-corner pile-up (like we saw in F2 earlier) then they could go for it. But the leaders will remain in lock-step, and it will depend on what Norris does at the start.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images via Getty Images

Post-qualifying penalties and starting grid

As we said earlier, Lewis Hamilton was given a three-place penalty for impeding Max Verstappen in qualifying, and starts from seventh.

Lance Stroll collected two separate penalties – a one-place drop for causing contact with Charles Leclerc in FP1, and a three-place drop for impeding Gasly in Q1. This moves him from 19th to…well, 19th.

Bearman received a 10-place grid drop for overtaking Sainz under a red flag in FP2, and thus starts last.

Starting grid for the Monaco GP

1

 – 

3
1

 – 

2
Cla Driver # Chassis Engine Time Tyres km/h
1 United KingdomL. NorrisMcLaren 4 McLaren Mercedes

1’09.954

  171.729
2 MonacoC. LeclercFerrari 16 Ferrari Ferrari

+0.109

1’10.063

  171.462
3 AustraliaO. PiastriMcLaren 81 McLaren Mercedes

+0.175

1’10.129

  171.301
4 NetherlandsM. VerstappenRed Bull Racing 1 Red Bull Red Bull

+0.715

1’10.669

  169.992
5 FranceI. HadjarRB 6 RB Honda

+0.969

1’10.923

  169.383
6 SpainF. AlonsoAston Martin Racing 14 Aston Martin Mercedes

+0.970

1’10.924

  169.381
7 United KingdomL. HamiltonFerrari 44 Ferrari Ferrari

+0.428

1’10.382

  170.685
8 FranceE. OconHaas F1 Team 31 Haas Ferrari

+0.988

1’10.942

  169.338
9 New ZealandL. LawsonRB 30 RB Honda

+1.175

1’11.129

  168.893
10 ThailandA. AlbonWilliams 23 Williams Mercedes

+1.259

1’11.213

  168.693
11 SpainC. SainzWilliams 55 Williams Mercedes

+1.408

1’11.362

  168.341
12 JapanY. TsunodaRed Bull Racing 22 Red Bull Red Bull

+1.461

1’11.415

  168.216
13 GermanyN. HulkenbergSauber 27 Sauber Ferrari

+1.642

1’11.596

  167.791
14 United KingdomG. RussellMercedes 63 Mercedes Mercedes

 

   
15 ItalyA. AntonelliMercedes 12 Mercedes Mercedes

 

   
16 BrazilG. BortoletoSauber 5 Sauber Ferrari

+1.948

1’11.902

  167.077
17 FranceP. GaslyAlpine 10 Alpine Renault

+2.040

1’11.994

  166.863
18 ArgentinaF. ColapintoAlpine 43 Alpine Renault

+2.643

1’12.597

  165.477
19 CanadaL. StrollAston Martin Racing 18 Aston Martin Mercedes

+2.609

1’12.563

  165.555
20 United KingdomO. BearmanHaas F1 Team 87 Haas Ferrari

+2.025

1’11.979

  166.898

GPS analysis: Norris’ pole lap

How did Norris overturn Leclerc’s margin at the final moment? We’ve taken a look at the data across his lap.

Formula 1

Analysis: How Norris beat Leclerc to pole for F1’s Monaco GP

Formula 1’s most anticipated qualifying of the season delivered with a thrilling battle for pole position between Lando Norris and Charles Leclerc. Here’s how the tussle swung between the pair and why the McLaren driver came out on top

Monaco GP qualifying recap

Q1: Charles Leclerc was quickest in the opening session, which ended earlier than expected when Andrea Kimi Antonelli put his Mercedes into the wall at the Nouvelle Chicane.

Bortoleto was denied a Q2 appearance at the last minute by Hadjar, as Bearman (encumbered with a 10-place penalty), Gasly, Stroll, and Colapinto went out.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

Q2: Both Mercedes drivers took an early bath as George Russell’s electrics packed up and the Briton came to a stop in the tunnel.

This left three relegation spots, which was occupied by Sainz (who was unable to improve late on softs), Tsunoda (in the old-spec Red Bull) and Hulkenberg. Norris headed the session over Leclerc by 0.011s.

Q3: Lando Norris struck at the death of the session to snatch pole from Leclerc by 0.109s. The two McLarens chose to double-stint their second set of soft tyres at the end of the session, and thus went out early.

Norris set a 1m10.125s benchmark, but Leclerc followed this up with a 1m10.063s to take provisional pole. After a cooldown lap, Norris went again – breaking the track record to do a 1m09.954s.

Piastri placed third on the grid, while Verstappen moved up to fourth when Hamilton was penalised post-session for impeding the Dutchman.

Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

F1 Monaco Grand Prix at 2pm BST/3pm local

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images via Getty Images

Hello everyone, and thanks for joining us – in just over an hour’s time, Monaco will roar into life as 20 F1 cars get the lights-out and pounce out of their grid boxes.

And there should be a lot to unpick as we go along – sans safety cars, everyone will have to do two stops, so expect some wild strategies from those towards the back. We’re excited, and we hope you are too!

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