Event: Monaco F1 Grand Prix
Track: Monaco Circuit

Weather: dry  22°C
Tarmac: dry  43°C
Humidity: 54%
Wind: 2.8 km/h

Lando Norris scored his 6th F1 race win today. The British driver won the Monaco Grand Prix for the very first time. It was his second race win of the 2025 season. The McLaren driver started from pole and drove to victory under pressure from Charles Leclerc almost the whole race. It was the 195th race win for the McLaren F1 team.

A Papaya Dream Comes True in Monaco

In the jewel of the F1 calendar, the glitz, glamour, and unforgiving barriers of Monaco witnessed a race for the ages. Lando Norris, in what might become the defining win of his career, delivered a clinical performance to conquer the streets of Monte Carlo for McLaren. From pole to victory, Norris was flawless, resisting relentless pressure from local hero Charles Leclerc and teammate Oscar Piastri to secure his second win of the season.

Monaco demanded precision. Norris delivered poetry.

A Start With Sparks and Scrapes

The drama began as early as Turn 1. While Norris held onto his lead despite a heart-stopping lock-up, chaos erupted further back. Gabriel Bortoleto slammed into the barriers exiting the corner before the tunnel after an aggressive move on Antonelli went south. The Virtual Safety Car was quickly deployed, creating early strategic dilemmas in this rare two-stop mandatory race.

Moments later, Tsunoda and Gasly added to the casualty list. A misjudged move into the Nouvelle Chicane saw Gasly rear-end the Red Bull, ending his race on Lap 8. Tsunoda, surprisingly, carried on—battle scars and all.

McLaren Holds Firm as Chaos Reigns

With Norris and Leclerc in control up front, the race’s true intrigue brewed beneath the surface—strategy. The new two-stop rule forced teams into unpredictable moves. McLaren timed it to perfection, executing slick double stops for both drivers. Ferrari matched McLaren’s execution, but not their pace.

Leclerc hounded Norris with Monegasque fire, but overtaking on these narrow streets remained nearly impossible. Verstappen tried to spice things up with an ultra-long stint on worn mediums, leading briefly before a last-lap pit stop dropped him to P4.

Norris in Control, Leclerc Out of Time

Lap after lap, Leclerc filled Norris' mirrors. But the Brit was ice cold. The Monaco walls loomed, the pressure was immense, yet Lando never cracked. Behind them, Piastri—recovering from a scrappy weekend—held onto third, preserving his slender championship lead by just three points.

Hamilton finished a quiet but clean P5, while rookie Isack Hadjar dazzled with a P6 finish after brilliant strategy execution by Racing Bulls. Ocon, Lawson, Albon, and Sainz completed the top 10, with George Russell just missing out after a messy outing that included two drive-through penalties.

Verstappen’s Gamble, Mercedes’ Misfire

Red Bull’s call to delay Verstappen’s second stop nearly paid off. The reigning champ backed Norris into Leclerc, causing late-race tension—but it wasn’t enough. Max’s strategy gamble ended with him just off the podium, and questions looming over Red Bull’s form.

Mercedes, meanwhile, suffered a race to forget. With neither car scoring and Russell’s aggressive chicane cut costing him dearly, the Silver Arrows were outplayed tactically and outpaced on track.

Team Game in the Midfield

The biggest midfield winners? Williams and Racing Bulls. Both teams executed team orders and split strategies to perfection. Sainz played the team role to help Albon score; Lawson benefitted from Hadjar’s early pit stop. Even in Monaco’s processional reputation, team tactics brought big rewards.

The Podium: Champagne, Cheers, and Championship Pressure

As Norris crossed the line to rapturous cheers, it was clear this wasn't just another race—it was a statement. McLaren are title contenders. Norris is back in form. And the battle with Piastri, now three points ahead, is heating up.

Leclerc, ever gracious, admitted defeat was sealed on Saturday. “Lando did a better job. I wish I’d won at home again, but this weekend was still better than we expected,” said the Ferrari driver.

Piastri, meanwhile, called his Monaco podium “not bad for a messy weekend,” hinting he’s ready to bounce back in Spain.

Alonso’s Agony & Monaco’s Attrition

While McLaren celebrated, Alonso’s nightmare continued. A smoky retirement on Lap 38 means eight races without points—unthinkable for the Spaniard. The double DNF for Gasly and Alonso leaves Aston Martin reeling, now behind Racing Bulls in the Constructors’ Championship.

Championship Shake-Up

With Piastri’s lead now cut to just three points over Norris, and Verstappen lurking just behind, the title fight is alive and electrifying. Three title contenders. Eight rounds done. Sixteen to go.

The F1 caravan rolls on to Spain next weekend—where the twists in this 2025 season show no sign of slowing down.

Classification 2025 Monaco GP

PNoDriverTeamTimeLapsGridPts
14United Kingdom Lando Norris
United Kingdom McLaren01:40:33.84378
1
25
216Monaco Charles Leclerc
Italy Ferrari01:40:36.97478
2
18
381Australia Oscar Piastri
United Kingdom McLaren01:40:37.50178
3
15
41Netherlands Max Verstappen
Austria Red Bull01:40:54.41578
4
12
544United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Italy Ferrari01:41:25.23078
7
10
66France Isack Hadjar
Italy Racing Bulls01:41:38.92577
5
8
731France Esteban Ocon
United States Haas01:41:39.87277
8
6
830New Zealand Liam Lawson
Italy Racing Bulls01:41:40.58977
9
4
923Thailand Alex Albon
United Kingdom Williams01:40:45.71276
10
2
1055Spain Carlos Sainz
United Kingdom Williams01:40:49.07576
11
1
1163United Kingdom George Russell
Germany Mercedes01:41:07.68776
14
0
1287United Kingdom Oliver Bearman
United States Haas01:41:28.53676
20
0
1343Argentina Franco Colapinto
France Alpine01:41:30.95776
18
0
145Brazil Gabriel Bortoleto
Switzerland Sauber01:41:42.26776
16
0
1518Canada Lance Stroll
United Kingdom Aston Martin01:41:44.23876
19
0
1627Germany Nico Hülkenberg
Switzerland Sauber01:41:45.38776
13
0
1722Japan Yuki Tsunoda
Italy Racing Bulls01:41:45.69276
12
0
1812Italy Kimi Antonelli
Germany Mercedes01:40:42.25275
15
0
DNF14Spain Fernando Alonso
United Kingdom Aston MartinPower unit36
6
0
DNF10France Pierre Gasly
France AlpineBrakes7
17
0

Fastest lap: 1:13.221 min by Lando Norris, McLaren MCL39 #4 on lap 78 @164.067 km/h

2025 Monaco F1 GP Results
FP1 2025 Monaco F1 GP
FP2 2025 Monaco F1 GP
FP3 2025 Monaco F1 GP
Quali 2025 Monaco F1 GP
Start grid 2025 Monaco  F1 GP

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One F1 fan comment on “2025 Monaco Formula 1 Grand Prix Results & Report

  1. Jere Jyrälä

    As was clear beforehand, overtaking wasn't going to become easier via the two-stop minimum requirement.
    At least strategic variability was big, which caused excitement & tensity, even if artificially, & ultimately better than nothing, especially the dismal showing of last year's edition, so I hope the two-stop minimum requirement remains in place for the Monaco GP.
    I hope this special requirement remains in place for the Monaco GP because it's more or less the only way for any sort of excitement in dry conditions.
    I thought Tsunoda, Stroll, & or Bearman would pull off Haas-style tactics, but VCARB, Williams, & Mercedes in the end.
    The drive-through penalty for Russell was surprising (even if it were a direct consequence of his blunt radio remark), given this penalty option hadn't been used for a long time, I don't even recall when it was previously used.
    What a race for Mercedes & Gasly was unlucky that Tsunoda was right ahead of him when his brakes failed, & Alonso just can't catch a break this season, but he still has many opportunities for opening his points scoring.
    The amount of lapping the front-runners had to do was very hectic & that was solely thanks to VCARB & Williams.


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