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    Featured

    Your guide to the 2016 Monaco Grand Prix

    Inside RacingMay 25, 2015
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    The Monaco Grand Prix is a Formula One motor race held each year on the Circuit de Monaco. Run since 1929  and joined the FIA Formula One world Championship 1950, it is widely considered to be one of the most important and prestigious automobile races in the world and, with the Indianapolis 500 and the 24 Hours of Le Mans, forms the Triple Crown of Motorsport. The circuit has been called “an exceptional location of glamour and prestige”.

    The race is held on a narrow course laid out in the streets of Monaco, with many elevation changes and tight corners as well as a tunnel, making it one of the most demanding tracks in Formula One. It is the only Grand Prix that does not adhere to the FIA’s mandated 305-kilometre (190-mile) minimum race distance.

     

    Monaco Grand Prix, round six of the 2016 Formula 1 season

     

    Circuit Name: Circuit de Monaco

    Race Laps: 78

    Circuit Length: 3.337 km (2.074 mi)

    Race Length: 260.286 km (161.734 mi)

    Number of corners: 19 (11 Right, 8 Left)

    DRS Zone: One Zones (Start/Finish Line Between Turns 19 and 1)

    Circuit Direction: Clockwise

    Pole Position 2015: Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:15.098

     

     

    Pirelli used compounds

     

    Pirelli will bring the following three compounds to the Monaco, to be held (May 26 – 29) on The Circuit de Monaco

    Yellow soft: unusually, it’s the hardest compound of the weekend. Not so many chosen.
    Red super-soft: a favoured race tyre, capable of quite long stints in Monaco.

    Purple ultra-soft: chosen by many teams; the default choice for qualifying and expected also in the race.

     

    The tires that Pirelli has said must be used at some point in the race:
    One set of Yellow soft

    One set of Red super soft

    Each driver must have both these sets available for the race, and must use at least one of them.

    The tires assigned for Q3 in qualifying:

    Purple ultra-soft

     

    THE CIRCUIT FROM A TYRE POINT OF VIEW:

    The street circuit offers very little grip and a high degree of track evolution over the weekend.

    Teams use a high-downforce set-up to ‘push’ the car onto the track as much as possible.

    Wear and degradation is the lowest seen all year, making one-stop strategies possible even on soft compound tyres.

    Tactics need to consider a high probability of the safety car and the difficulty of overtaking.

    With little representative running of the ultrasoft up to now, free practice (on Thursday) is vital.

    Lowest average speed of the year so tyre warm-up is a key skill for maximum performance.

     

    HOW IT WAS A YEAR AGO:

    Winner: Rosberg (one stop: started on supersoft, changed to soft on lap 37 of 66)

    Best-placed alternative strategy: Hamilton, second with two stops. Pitted from the lead to take on new supersofts during a late safety car, but admitted later that it was probably a mistake.

    The vast majority of drivers made just one pit stop: including Sainz who finished 10thfrom last.

     PAUL HEMBERY, PIRELLI MOTORSPORT DIRECTOR:

    “Monte Carlo will mark the first race for our new purple ultra-soft tyre, which offers the maximum performance and technology that we can put into a compound. However, the large numbers of this compound nominated by the teams for the Monaco GP shows that it is a serious race tyre rather than just a ‘qualifying special’. With the unique conditions of Monaco, and its own specific timetable, the teams will be looking to get a thorough read on the characteristics of the new ultra-soft during free practice. Only then will we have an accurate idea of race strategy, although with the difficulty of overtaking, drivers will be looking to minimise their pit stops.”

     Drivers / Teams compound choices

    Team

    Car #

    Driver

    Soft

    Super Soft

    Ultra Soft

     Mercedes AMG

    44

     Lewis Hamilton

    1

    2

    10

    6

     Nico Rosberg

    1

    2

    10

     Scuderia Ferrari

    5

     Sebastian Vettel

    2

    2

    9

    7

     Kimi Raikkonen

    2

    2

    9

     Williams-Mercedes

    19

    Felipe Massa

    2

    4

    7

    77

     Valtteri Bottas

    2

    4

    7

     Red Bull Racing

    3

    Daniel Ricciardo

    1

    2

    10

    26

     Daniil Kvyat

    1

    2

    10

    Force India-Mercedes

    11

     Sergio Perez

    3

    3

    7

    27

     Nico Hulkenberg

    3

    3

    7

    Renault

    20

     Kevin Magnussen

    1

    2

    10

    30

     Jolyon Palmer

    1

    3

    9

    Toro Rosso-Ferrari

    33

     Max Verstappen

    3

    3

    7

    55

     Carlos Sainz Jr.

    3

    3

    7

     Sauber-Ferrari

    9

    Marcus Ericsson

    1

    4

    8

    12

     Felipe Nasr

    1

    4

    8

     McLaren-Honda

    14

    Fernando Alonso

    1

    5

    7

    22

     Jenson Button

    1

    5

    7

     Manor-Mercedes

    88

    Rio Haryanto

    2

    5

    6

    94

     Pascal Wehrlein

    2

    5

    6

     Haas-Ferrari

    8

     Romain Grosjean

    1

    3

    9

    21

     Esteban Gutierrez 

    1

    3

    9

     

    Monaco Grand Prix Winners (By year)

    (Held under the FIA Formula One world Championship)

    # Wins

    Driver

    Years Won

    2015

     Nico Rosberg

    Mercedes

    2014

     Nico Rosberg

    Mercedes

    2013

     Nico Rosberg

    Mercedes

    2012

     Mark Webber

    Red Bull-Renault

    2011

     Sebastian Vettel

    Red Bull-Renault

    2010

     Mark Webber

    Red Bull-Renault

    2009

     Jenson Button

    Brawn-Mercedes

    2008

     Lewis Hamilton

    McLaren-Mercedes

    2007

     Fernando Alonso

    McLaren-Mercedes

    2006

     Fernando Alonso

    Renault

    2005

     Kimi Räikkönen

    McLaren-Mercedes

    2004

     Jarno Trulli

    Renault

    2003

     Juan Pablo Montoya

    Williams-BMW

    2002

     David Coulthard

    McLaren-Mercedes

    2001

     Michael Schumacher

    Ferrari

    2000

     David Coulthard

    McLaren-Mercedes

    1999

     Michael Schumacher

    Ferrari

    1998

     Mika Häkkinen

    McLaren-Mercedes

    1997

     Michael Schumacher

    Ferrari

    1996

     Olivier Panis

    Ligier-Mugen-Honda

    1995

     Michael Schumacher

    Benetton-Renault

    1994

     Michael Schumacher

    Benetton-Ford

    1993

     Ayrton Senna

    McLaren-Ford

    1992

     Ayrton Senna

    McLaren-Honda

    1991

     Ayrton Senna

    McLaren-Honda

    1990

     Ayrton Senna

    McLaren-Honda

    1989

     Ayrton Senna

    McLaren-Honda

    1988

     Alain Prost

    McLaren-Honda

    1987

     Ayrton Senna

    Lotus-Honda

    1986

     Alain Prost

    McLaren-TAG

    1985

     Alain Prost

    McLaren-TAG

    1984

     Alain Prost

    McLaren-TAG

    1983

     Keke Rosberg

    Williams-Ford

    1982

     Riccardo Patrese

    Brabham-Ford

    1981

     Gilles Villeneuve

    Ferrari

    1980

     Carlos Reutemann

    Williams-Ford

    1979

     Jody Scheckter

    Ferrari

    1978

     Patrick Depailler

    Tyrrell-Ford

    1977

     Jody Scheckter

    Wolf-Ford

    1976

     Niki Lauda

    Ferrari

    1975

     Niki Lauda

    Ferrari

    1974

     Ronnie Peterson

    Lotus-Ford

    1973

     Jackie Stewart

    Tyrrell-Ford

    1972

     Jean-Pierre Beltoise

    BRM

    1971

     Jackie Stewart

    Tyrrell-Ford

    1970

     Jochen Rindt

    Lotus-Ford

    1969

     Graham Hill

    Lotus-Ford

    1968

     Graham Hill

    Lotus-Ford

    1967

     Denny Hulme

    Brabham-Repco

    1966

     Jackie Stewart

    BRM

    1965

     Graham Hill

    BRM

    1964

     Graham Hill

    BRM

    1963

     Graham Hill

    BRM

    1962

     Bruce McLaren

    Cooper-Climax

    1961

     Stirling Moss

    Lotus-Climax

    1960

     Stirling Moss

    Lotus-Climax

    1959

     Jack Brabham

    Cooper-Climax

    1958

     Maurice Trintignant

    Cooper-Climax

    1957

     Juan Manuel Fangio

    Maserati

    1956

     Stirling Moss

    Maserati

    1955

     Maurice Trintignant

    Ferrari

    1954

    Not held

    –

    1951

    1950

     Juan Manuel Fangio

    Alfa Romeo

     

    Multiple Winners (Drivers)

     

    # Wins

    Driver

    Years Won

    6

     Ayrton Senna

    1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993

    5

     Graham Hill

    1963, 1964, 1965, 1968, 1969

     Michael Schumacher

    1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001

    4

     Alain Prost

    1984, 1985, 1986, 1988

    3

     Stirling Moss

    1956, 1960, 1961

     Jackie Stewart

    1966, 1971, 1973

     Nico Rosberg

    2013, 2014, 2015

    2

     Juan Manuel Fangio

    1950, 1957

     Maurice Trintignant

    1955, 1958

     Niki Lauda

    1975, 1976

     Jody Scheckter

    1977, 1979

     David Coulthard

    2000, 2002

     Fernando Alonso

    2006, 2007

     Mark Webber

    2010, 2012

     

     

    Multiple Winners (Constructors)

     

    #Wins

    Constructor

    Years

    15

     McLaren

    1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998,2000, 2002, 2005, 2007, 2008

    8

     Ferrari

    1955, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1981, 1997, 1999, 2001

    7

     Lotus

    1960, 1961, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1974, 1987

    5

     BRM

    1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1972

    3

     Cooper

    1958, 1959, 1962

     Tyrrell

    1971, 1973, 1978

     Williams

    1980, 1983, 2003

     Mercedes

    2013, 2014, 2015

     Red Bull

    2010, 2011, 2012

     

     Maserati

    1956, 1957

    2

     Brabham

    1967, 1982

     

     Benetton

    1994, 1995

     

     Renault

    2004, 2006

     

     

    Numbers and Facts

    Most wins (driver) 6 – Ayrton Senna 1987 – 1989 – 1990 – 1991 – 1992 – 1993

    Most wins (constructor) 15 – McLaren 1984 – 85 – 86 – 88 – 89 – 90 – 91 – 92 – 93 – 98 – 2000 – 02 – 05 – 07 – 08

    Wins from pole position 27 – Most recent 2014 (Nico Rosberg)

    Lowest grid for past winner 14 – 1996 (Olivier Panis – only winner to start outside the top 10)

    Most recent 1-2 finish 2014 – Mercedes (Nico Rosberg-Lewis Hamilton)

    Most emphatic win (here) 1 lap – 1950 – 1964 – 1967 – 1982

    Closest winning margin 0.215s – 1992 Ayrton Senna-Nigel Mansell

    Rain-affected races 9 – 1960 – 1972 – 1975 – 1982 – 1987 – 1996 – 1997 – 2008 – 2012

    Safety Car-affected races 11 – 2003 – 2004 – 2005 – 2006 – 2008 – 2010 – 2011 – 2012 – 2013 – 2014 – 2015

    Red Flag (and result declared) races 1 – 1984

    Fastest race 2007 – 78 laps @ 1hr 40m 29.329s (1984 red flag race finished at 31 laps in 1hr 01m 07.740s)

    Slowest race 1950 – 100 laps @3hrs 13m 18.7s

    Most pole positions (driver) 5 – Ayrton Senna 1985 – 1988 – 1989 – 1990 – 1991

    Most pole positions (constructor) 11 McLaren 1984 – 86 – 88 – 89 – 90 – 91 – 98 – 99 – 2001 – 05 – 07

    Monte Carlo, Monaco. Sunday 24 May 2015. Nico Rosberg, Mercedes AMG, 1st Position, Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari, 2nd Position, and Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG, 3rd Position, on the podium.

    What Happened last race here?

    Lewis Hamilton secured his first ever Monaco pole position during Saturday’s qualifying. In the race, Nico Rosberg took his third consecutive win at Monaco, second win of the season, and the tenth of his career, while Sebastian Vettel finished second. Hamilton, who had led for most of the race, moved from first into third place following a “pit stop misjudgement” during a late safety car period, for which his team, Mercedes, later apologised. McLaren-Honda partnership scored its first points since Honda’s return to the sport.

     

    2015 Race Classification

    Pos.

    Driver

    Constructor

    Time/Retired

    Grid

    1

     Nico Rosberg

    Mercedes

    1:49:18.420

    2

    2

     Sebastian Vettel

    Ferrari

    +4.486

    3

    3

     Lewis Hamilton

    Mercedes

    +6.053

    1

    4

     Daniil Kvyat

    Red Bull Racing-Renault

    +11.965

    5

    5

     Daniel Ricciardo

    Red Bull Racing-Renault

    +13.608

    4

    6

     Kimi Räikkönen

    Ferrari

    +14.345

    6

    7

     Sergio Pérez

    Force India-Mercedes

    +15.013

    7

    8

     Jenson Button

    McLaren-Honda

    +16.063

    10

    9

     Felipe Nasr

    Sauber-Ferrari

    +23.626

    14

    10

     Carlos Sainz, Jr.

    Toro Rosso-Renault

    +25.056

    PL

    11

     Nico Hülkenberg

    Force India-Mercedes

    +26.232

    11

    12

     Romain Grosjean

    Lotus-Mercedes

    +28.415

    15

    13

     Marcus Ericsson

    Sauber-Ferrari

    +31.159

    17

    14

     Valtteri Bottas

    Williams-Mercedes

    +45.789

    16

    15

     Felipe Massa

    Williams-Mercedes

    +1 Lap

    12

    16

     Roberto Merhi

    Marussia-Ferrari

    +2 Laps

    19

    17

     Will Stevens

    Marussia-Ferrari

    +2 Laps

    18

    Ret

     Max Verstappen

    Toro Rosso-Renault

    Collision

    9

    Ret

     Fernando Alonso

    McLaren-Honda

    Gearbox

    13

    Ret

     Pastor Maldonado

    Lotus-Mercedes

    Brakes

    8

     

     

    Did you know?

    ✪ Lewis Hamilton will be looking for his 44th F1 career win aboard of course car ♯44.

    ✪ Hamilton has set 34 of his 52 pole positions to date on Pirelli tyres. It is 3 more than any other driver in the history of F1 (Vettel next-best 31)

    ✪ Hamilton is now just 16 pole positions from equalling Michael Schumacher’s all-time record of 68 F1 GP pole positions. Since he has

    been at Mercedes he has taken pole 26 times already. That is over 40% of all races he’s started for the team (26/ 62 = 41.9%)

    ✪ Hamilton has won (43) 25.0% of all GP he’s started (172) and is in the top 10 drivers races to win ratio of all-time. This is how he compares:-

    1. Fangio 47.0%, 2. Ascari 40.6%, 3. Clark 34.7%, 4. M.Schumacher 29.7%, 5. Ja.Stewart 27.2% 6. Vettel 26.1% (42/ 161), 7.Prost 25.6%
    2. Senna 25.5%, 9. Hamilton 25.0%, 10. Moss 24.2%

    ✪ Hamilton has led just 1 race lap so far in 2016 (0.4%). Last year he led 587 of 1,149 race laps (51%). After 5 GP in ‘15 he’d led 173 laps (59%)

    ✪ If Hamilton leads in Monaco he will then have led 87 F1 GP, 1 more than his idol Ayrton Senna. Only Michael Schumacher has led more (116)

    ✪ Nico Rosberg is aiming to become only the second driver ever to win the Monaco Grand Prix 4 times in a row (Senna 1989-92 [and 93])

    ✪ Rosberg run of 7 GP wins ended in Spain. It was best run ever in his whole motor racing career to date and is the fourth-best run ever in F1

    beaten only by Michael Schumacher (8), Sebastian Vettel and Alberto Ascari (9)

    ✪ Rosberg’s has won 18 GP. Nobody has won more GP and not won the driver’s title at some point in their F1 career

    ✪ Rosberg (45 F1 podiums) has exactly half the number of F1 podiums of Hamilton (90)

    ✪ Rosberg in Monaco can beat Niki Lauda’s 24 pole positions

    ✪ Vettel in Spain beat Senna’s 161 GP starts

    ✪ Felipe Massa and Valtteri Bottas are the only drivers to have finished in the points in all 2016 Grand Prix to date

    ✪ Nico Hulkenberg is scheduled to make his 100th Grand Prix start on Sunday

    CONSTRUCTORS’

    ✪ Mercedes aiming for an 12th pole in a row. Mercedes’ best-ever run of poles is 23 (Great Britain 2014 to Italy 2015 inclusive), and is beaten

    only by Williams’s run of 24 poles in 1992 – 93

    ✪ Mercedes beat Red Bull Racing’s 57 F1 pole positions with pole in Spain

    ✪ Mercedes won its 49th F1 World Championship race victory in Russia. To date Mercedes has won just over one-third of all the F1 GP it has

    has competed in (49 wins/ 132 races = 37.1%). Mercedes is now 2 wins behind Red Bull’s F1 career total of 51

    ✪ Ferrari has been represented on all 5 race podiums so far this season, a record no other team can boast

    ✪ Williams is the only team to have finished both cars in the points at all races so far in 2016

    ✪ McLaren in Monaco will celebrate their 50th anniversary of becoming a F1 constructor. The marque entered a Grand Prix for the first time

    here in 1966 with Bruce McLaren driving the single-car entry. Originally it had been planned to enter two McLaren-Fords, one for McLaren

    and the other for fellow Kiwi Chris Amon. McLaren retired on only the 9th lap with an oil leak. He had started P10 on the 16-car grid

     MONACO GRAND PRIX

    ✪ Mercedes will be aiming for a 4th successive Monaco Grand Prix victory. Only 2 other constructors have won 4 or more in a row in Monaco.

    BRM won 4 in a row (1963 to 1966 inclusive) while McLaren won a record 6 in a row (1988 to 1993 inclusive)

    ✪ 20 years ago Olivier Panis became the only driver to win a Monaco Grand Prix from a starting grid outside of the top 10. Panis started P14

    ✪ The 1996 race is notable for other things too. Firstly, that just 3 cars were actually moving under power at the end, the lowest-ever number in

    any Grand Prix. Secondly, it remains the most recent F1 Grand Prix won by a French driver. Thirdly, it marked the final win for Ligier in F1

    ✪ 50 years ago F1 celebrated ‘the return to power’ with the 1966 Monaco Grand Prix being the first race of the then new 3-litre non turbo / 1.5

    litre turbo engine regulations. However, just 4 cars were classified as finishing, the lowest number ever in any Grand Prix before or since.

    1998 Monaco Grand Prix. Monte Carlo, monaco. 21-24 May 1998. Mika Hakkinen (McLaren MP4/13 Mercedes-Benz) leads the field into Ste. Devote at the start.

    World Drivers’ Championship standings

    Pos.

    Driver

    Points

    Diff

    1

     Nico Rosberg

    100

     

    2

     Kimi Räikkönen

    61

    39

    3

     Lewis Hamilton

    57

    43

    4

     Sebastian Vettel

    48

    52

    5

     Daniel Ricciardo

    48

    52

    6

     Max Verstappen

    38

    62

    7

     Felipe Massa

    36

    64

    8

     Valtteri Bottas

    28

    72

    9

     Daniil Kvyat

    22

    78

    10

     Romain Grosjean

    22

    78

    11

     Carlos Sainz, Jr.

    12

    88

    12

     Fernando Alonso

    8

    92

    13

     Sergio Pérez

    8

    92

    14

    Kevin Magnussen

    6

    94

    15

     Nico Hülkenberg

    6

    94

    16

     Jenson Button

    3

    97

    17

    stoffel Vandoorn

    1

    99

    18

     Jolyon Palmer

    0

     

    19

     Esteban Gutiérrez

    0

     

    20

     Marcus Ericsson

    0

     

    21

     Pascal Wehrlein

    0

     

    22

     Felipe Nasr

    0

     

    23

     Rio Haryanto

    0

     

     World Constructors’ Championship standings

    Pos.

    Constructor

    Points

    Diff

    1

     Mercedes

    157

     

    2

     Ferrari

    109

    48

    3

     Red Bull-TAG Heuer

    94

    63

    4

     Williams-Mercedes

    65

    92

    5

     Toro Rosso-Ferrari

    26

    131

    6

     Haas-Ferrari

    22

    135

    7

     Force India-Mercedes

    14

    143

    8

     McLaren-Honda

    12

    145

    9

     Renault

    6

    151

    10

       Sauber-Ferrari

    0

     

    11

     MRT-Mercedes

    0

     

     Drivers penalty points:

    Driver

    Penalty points

    Max Verstappen

    6

    Daniil Kvyat

    5

    Marcus Erricson

    4

    Romain Grosjean

    4

    Valtteri Bottas

    4

    Nico Hulkenberg

    4

    Sebastian Vettel

    3

    Kimi Raikkonen

    3

    Lewis Hamilton

    2

    Fernando Alonso

    2

    Rio Haryanto

    2

    Carlos Sainz

    2

    Esteban Gutierrez

    2

    Kevin Magnussen

    2

    Jenson Button

     

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