Leclerc to regain the championship on his rock
The Scuderia driver, dominant in the general classification since the start of the season, was surprised last weekend in Spain by a mechanical problem when he was largely leading the race. Forced to retire, he lost the championship lead to defending champion Max Verstappen.
Far from being dismantled, Leclerc quickly evacuated his disappointment by recalling that “the season is still long”: “We know that we have the potential”. A potential that the 24-year-old driver will once again try to show during the 7th round of the season this weekend. But for that, he will still have to complete the 78 laps through the streets he knows so well. “I hope I can finally finish this Grand Prix at home,” he whispered in Spain.
“Finally”, because the Monegasque has always had to give up since 2017 after technical problems or clashes. Whether in 2017 in Formula 2, the antechamber of the elite, or in F1 in 2018 (with the Sauber team) then in 2019, for his first season with Ferrari. Last year (the 2020 edition was canceled due to the pandemic), Leclerc, qualified in pole position, finally had to bring his Ferrari back to the pits due to a technical problem.
Mercedes back in the fight?
So far, the season has offered clashes at the forefront, as evidenced by the world championship rankings: among the drivers, Verstappen is ahead of Leclerc by six points and among the manufacturers, Red Bull has taken a small advantage (26 pts) on Ferrari thanks to its double podium in Spain.
Behind the leading teams, Mercedes, third and in difficulty at the start of the season with the arrival of the brand new technical regulations, seems to have regained its colors in Spain after having made a lot of improvements to its single-seaters. “It’s only a matter of time before they join this battle,” acknowledged Red Bull boss Christian Horner.
The Monaco GP, a historic F1 event, however, almost saw Mercedes deprived of its seven-time F1 world champion Lewis Hamilton because of… his jewellery. If the ban on wearing jewelry on board single-seaters was activated in 2005 as a security measure, it was never really applied by the drivers – until the tightening of screws decided this season by the new race director of the International Automobile Federation (FIA), Niels Wittich.
At the beginning of May, on the occasion of the Miami GP, the British driver received an exemption until the Monaco GP to comply with the regulations, an exemption now extended until the end of June by the FIA, in order to continue the talks. Hamilton, who claims not to be able to remove some of his jewelry such as his nose piercing, will again face the settlement on the occasion of “his” GP in early July at Silverstone, Great Britain.
New format
New this year in the Principality, the race will take place over three consecutive days, like all the others on the calendar, and no longer over four days as was the case according to tradition.
Historically, the Monaco GP, present during the first year of the F1 World Championship in 1950, was organized during the Ascension weekend. Thursday being a public holiday, this day was chosen to run the single-seaters, before a break on Friday then qualifying on Saturday and the race on Sunday.
This singularity was maintained until now even if the GP was not organized each time at Ascension. This weekend, Monaco also hopes to regain its former fervor after two years disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic which saw the GP canceled in 2020 and clear stands the following year.