
Kimi Antonelli scored his fifth consecutive victory in Formula 1 in a dramatic race in Monaco in which many drivers received a penalty for speeding in the pits and cars crashing out due to the track surface breaking up.
The Mercedes driver was in full control from the start, making a clean getaway while Max Verstappen – who qualified second on the grid – was forced to retire with a technical issue.
At lights out in Monaco, the championship leader calmly maintained first place as Verstappen faced a depressing issue at the start that saw him slide down the order before he became the first to retire.
While others struggled with various mechanical problems that forced them out of the action, including Valtteri Bottas and McLaren driver Lando Norris, Antonelli consistently opened up his advantage over the Ferrari duo of Hamilton and Charles Leclerc.
However, his win was threatened with around 20 laps remaining when Lance Stroll crashed at the final corner of the Circuit de Monaco, bringing out a safety car that allowed many to take a second pit stop without losing too much time.
It may have threaten Antonelli’s race, but it offered a brilliant opportunity for those who had been handed time penalties for speeding in the pit lane to serve them during the race.
The restart was short-lived as home favourite Leclerc experienced an identical crash to Stroll’s and the race was halted to inspect track break-up at Turn 19. His retirement helped promote Hadjar to his first Red Bull podium – Pierre Gasly finished ahead on the track but dropped down the order thanks to two five-second penalties – with Oscar Piastri and Liam Lawson taking fourth and fifth place.
Arvid Lindblad finished in P6 scoring some great result for Racing Bulls. Gasly is classified in seventh, Alex Albon in eighth and Esteban Ocon in ninth. Cadillac achieved their first points with Sergio Perez, although Checo is still under investigation for a false start.
Initially, the race was a processional affair until the final part of the Monaco Grand Prix when Stroll hit the wall and prompted the emergence of the safety car on lap 60.
This led to a series of action in the pitlane ahead of the lap 66 restart, but Leclerc’s crash at the same corner prompted the safety car’s return followed by the red flag.
The issue was a recently resurfaced layer of track on the entry to the final corner, which had broken up and left a sprinkling of asphalt on the racing line.
Neither driver agreed that this was the cause of their crashes, however with Stroll saying that an engine braking issue was behind his crash, with Leclerc blaming the brakes.
After the track was cleaned up and inspected by race officials, the Monaco Grand Prix was resumed after a 40-minute pause, with the cars instructed to perform a standing start where Antonelli led Lewis Hamilton on the front row.
Despite Ferrari’s getaway off the line, Antonelli kept calm in the face of chaos and covered off Hamilton into the first corner.
The championship leader had led every lap up until that point. There were hints of an early battle between him and fellow front-row driver Max Verstappen but was dashed immediately, when the Red Bull struggling off the grid and prompted the field behind to take evasive action.
This put the Ferraris, Hamilton from Leclerc, behind Antonelli, but the polesitter fled the scene immediately and gathered more than the required one-second advantage to escape from a potential challenge from the seven-time world champion.
Antonelli’s lead was up to five seconds by the end of lap 10. The gap between he and Hamilton closed up over the next ten laps, briefly reducing to below three seconds as Antonelli had to tackle with the early stoppers queuing up to be lapped.
Yet, once the traffic had been cleared and when Antonelli had managed his brake temperatures, the gap over Hamilton quickly began to swell by over a second per lap.
The Mercedes driver looked in control running P1 in the race, continuing to run at a pace that was not viable for Ferrari to match.
After pitting at half distance, a few laps after both Ferraris had conducted their stops, Antonelli returned to the circuit with 17.3 seconds in hand over Hamilton.
From there, it looked increasingly easy for Antonelli. Despite a minor scare emerged when his Mercedes powertrain suffered a small derate on the run to Massenet, but the team was able to identify the issue.
Yet, Stroll’s crash was late race drama, producing the safety car which wiped out Antonelli’s now nearly-30-second lead over Hamilton.
After five laps in formation while the Aston Martin was being cleared, Antonelli appeared to have kept the Ferrari behind him covered off through the opening laps, although the race was halted when Leclerc also crashed at the final corner.
Antonelli maintained his cool to keep Hamilton in check on the eventual final restart.
Hamilton had been one of many drivers to pick up a penalty for speeding in the pitlane, although he was able to serve this correctly when switching to the softs during the safety car period.
Isack Hadjar crossed the finishing line behind Pierre Gasly, but was promoted to third when the Alpine driver was hit with two five-second penalties – although for speeding in the pitlane.
Hadjar has an investigation dangling over his head for a safety car infringement, where the Red Bull driver appeared to slow down ahead of George Russell and conceded more than ten car lengths to the car ahead.
Oscar Piastri was classified in fourth even though it was a difficult weekend for McLaren, which was celebrating their 1000th Grand Prix, which had to retire Lando Norris as the reigning champion battled a problematic battery.
The Racing Bulls duo of Liam Lawson and Arvid Lindblad captured a big set of points. Lindblad had earlier interrupted the hold-up play by Williams to get both cars into the points, and did not make a single pitstop. Instead, he benefitted from a red flag, where he was able to switch to the softs for the final stage of the race.
Gasly was demoted to seventh ahead of Alex Albon and Esteban Ocon, while a late 10-second penalty awarded to Nico Hulkenberg promoted Sergio Perez into the top ten to provisionally score Cadillac’s first Formula 1 point – although he is also awaiting the stewards to make a call on whether he false-started on the restart.
Chec0 had earlier served a penalty for mistakenly starting in Gabriel Bortoleto’s empty grid box, as the Audi driver started the race from the pitlane.
Hulkenberg had hit Carlos Sainz on the first lap of the lap 71 restart at the hairpin, tagging the Williams driver into the wall. Sainz’s race was ruined further when he was hit by Franco Colapinto moments later at Portier.
Russell endured a miserable race after failing to serve a five-second speeding penalty during his second stop under the safety car. The Mercedes mechanics immediately got to work on the car, rather than wait for five seconds.
After dropping to a net fourth after his stop under the safety car, Russell’s chances of points was a non issue when he was awarded a drive-through penalty after the team unable to clear the five-second arrears – and he crossed the line in P13, behind Fernando Alonso and Bortoleto.
So an eventful Monaco Grand Prix. Andrea Kimi Antonelli has achieved his first win around the streets of Monte Carlo with a controlled drive and with his teammate finishing outside in the points, the championship leader has built up more important points.

Monaco Grand Prix, race results:
1 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 2:23:31.243
2 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +6.271s
3 Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Ford +23.394s
4 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes +24.261s
5 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls-Ford +26.553s
6 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Ford +29.010s
7 Pierre Gasla Alpine-Mercedes +30.369s
8 Alexander Albon Williams-Mercedes +33.413s
9 Esteban Ocon Haas-Ferrari +37.140s
10 Sergio Perez Cadillac-Ferrari +39.153s
11 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin-Honda +41.899s
12 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi +42.748s
13 George Russell Mercedes +43.353s
14 Nico Hulkenberg Audi +44.102s
15 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes +48.964s
Carlos Sainz Williams-Mercedes DNF
Charles Leclerc Ferrari DNF
Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Honda DNF
Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes DNF
Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari DNF
Valtteri Bottas Cadillac-Ferrari DNF
Max Verstappen Red Bull-Ford DNF

















