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    Featured

    Your guide to the 2017 Monaco Grand Prix

    Inside RacingMay 23, 2017
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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 6 of the 2017 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 2016: Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer 1:13.622

    Track Record (During the race): 1:14.439 Michael Schumacher – Ferrari 2004

    Circuit de Monaco

     

    Pirelli used compounds

    Tyres that must be available (one of them to be used) at some point in the race:

    One set of P Zero Yellow soft

    One set of P Zero Red Super-Soft

    Tyres assigned for Q3 in qualifying:                     

    One set of P Zero Purple Ultra-Soft

    Teams/Drivers compounds choice

    Driver

    Soft

    Super-Soft

    Ultra-Soft

    Lewis Hamilton

    1

    3

    9

    Valtteri Bottas

    1

    3

    9

    Daniel Ricciardo

    1

    1

    11

    Max Verstappen

    1

    1

    11

    Sebastian Vettel

    1

    2

    10

    Kimi Raikkonen

    1

    2

    10

    Sergio Perez

    1

    2

    10

    Esteban Ocon

    1

    2

    10

    Lance Stroll

    1

    1

    11

    Felipe Massa

    1

    1

    11

    Stoffel Vandoorne

    1

    2

    10

    Jenson Button

    2

    1

    10

    Daniil Kvyat

    1

    3

    9

    Carlos Sainz

    1

    3

    9

    Romain Grosjean

    1

    2

    10

    Kevin Magnussen

    1

    2

    10

    Nico Hulkenberg

    1

    1

    11

    Jolyon Palmer

    1

    1

    11

    Marcus Ericsson

    1

    2

    10

    Pascal Wehrlein

    1

    2

    10

     

    THE CIRCUIT FROM A TYRE POINT OF VIEW:

     

    MARIO ISOLA – HEAD OF CAR RACING

    “The three softest compounds are the obvious choice for Monaco, but there is still plenty of scope for strategic variation, because wear and degradation is so low that the teams can more or less choose whenever they would like to make their single pit stop from ultrasoft to supersoft, which should be the standard choice for the race. This is the first grand prix that the drivers have been able to select their own tyre allocations, and as expected the nominations have overwhelmingly favoured the ultrasoft. This is the tyre that will be used the most in both qualifying and the race.”

    MONACO MINIMUM STARTING PRESSURES (SLICKS)

     

    Monaco EOS – CAMBER LIMIT

     

     Monaco Grand Prix Winners 1950 – 2016

    # Wins

    Driver

    Years Won

    2016

    Lewis Hamilton

    Mercedes

    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 Raikkonen

    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 Hakkinen

    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

    Lewis Hamilton

    2008, 2016

    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

    4

     Mercedes

    2013, 2014, 2015, 2016

    3

     Cooper

    1958, 1959, 1962

     Tyrrell

    1971, 1973, 1978

     Williams

    1980, 1983, 2003

     Red Bull

    2010, 2011, 2012

    2

     Maserati

    1956, 1957

     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 1 lap 1950 – 1964 – 1967 – 1982

    Closest winning margin 0.215s 1992 Ayrton Senna-Nigel Mansell

    Rain-affected races 10, 1960 – 1972 – 1975 – 1982 – 1987 – 1996 – 1997 – 2008 – 2012 – 2016

    Safety Car-affected races 12, 2003 – 2004 – 2005 – 2006 – 2008 – 2010 – 2011 – 2012 – 2013 – 2014 – 2015 – 2016

    Red Flag (and result declared) races 1, 1984

    2-hour rule shortened races 4 1975 – 1996 – 1997 – 2008

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

    Slowest race (here) 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

     

    What Happened last race here?

    Lewis Hamilton won the eventful Monaco Grand Prix from Daniel Ricciardo, while Serigo Perez took third in hangeable conditions saw plenty of action.

    Sebastian Vettel was fourth for Ferrari, followed by Fernando Alonso’s McLaren, while Nico Hulkenberg snatched sixth from Nico Rosberg on the run to the line.

    With heavy rain hit track prior to the start, the FIA announced that the race would begin under Safety Car conditions.

    The race begun properly at the start of lap eight. Ricciardo made a strong getaway, pulling out a second over Nico Rosberg.

    Later on, Jolyon Palmer lost control of his Renault over the start/finish straight, slamming into the outside barriers and spearing into the wall. And the Virtual Safety Car was called.

    When the race resumed, Kimi Raikkonen understeered into the barriers at the Hotel Hairpin, breaking his front wing before colliding with Romain Grosjean at Portier, putting the Ferrari out of the race.

    After a mix of strategies, Ricciardo attempted to use his speed to jump Hamilton in the pits, but when he arrived in his pit box there were no tyres to be found with the Red Bull mechanics in a costly error saw Hamilton resume into the lead.

    Hamilton had to resist heavy pressure from the chasing Red Bull, but despite Ricciardo’s best efforts, the Red Bull driver was unable to find a way past the Mercedes and Hamilton duly held on to claim his first victory of the season. 

    2016 Race Classification

    Pos.

    Driver

    Constructor

    Time/Retired

    Grid

    1

    Lewis Hamilton

    Mercedes

    1:59:29.133

    3

    2

    Daniel Ricciardo

    Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer

    +7.252

    1

    3

    Sergio Perez

    Force India-Mercedes

    +13.825

    7

    4

    Sebastian Vettel

    Ferrari

    15.846

    4

    5

    Fernando Alonso

    McLaren-Honda

    +1:25.076

    9

    6

    Nico Hulkenberg

    Force India-Mercedes

    +1:32.999

    5

    7

    Nico Rosberg

    Mercedes

    +1:33.290

    2

    8

    Carlos Sainz

    Toro Rosso-Ferrari

    +1 Lap

    6

    9

    Jenson Button

    McLaren-Honda

    +1 Lap

    13

    10

    Felipe Massa

    Williams-Mercedes

    +1 Lap

    14

    11

    Esteban Gutierrez

    Haas-Ferrari

    +1 Lap

    12

    12

    Valtteri Bottas

    Williams-Mercedes

    +1 Lap

    10

    13

    Romain Grosjean

    Haas-Ferrari

    +2 Laps

    15

    14

    Pascal Wehrlein

    MRT-Mercedes

    +2 Laps

    20

    15

    Rio Haryanto

    MRT-Mercedes

    +4 Laps

    19

    Ret

    Marcus Ericsson

    Sauber-Ferrari

    Collision damage

    17

    Ret

    Felipe Nasr

    Sauber-Ferrari

    Collision damage

    PL

    Ret

    Max Verstappen

    Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer

    Accident

    PL

    Ret

    Kevin Magnussen

    Renault

    Collision damage

    16

    Ret

    Daniil Kvyat

    Toro Rosso-Ferrari

    Collision/Electrical

    8

    Ret

    Kimi Räikkönen

    Ferrari

    Accident damage

    11

    Ret

    Jolyon Palmer

    Renault

    Accident

    18

     

    Did you know?

    DRIVERS

    ✪ Sebastian Vettel Vettel has not won back-to-back Grand Prix since he won the 2013 Brazilian Grand Prix. That race ended a 9-race run of victories that started in

    Belgium, (BEL, ITA, SIN, KOR, JAP, IND, ABU, USA, BRA)

    ✪ Vettel will be looking for a 75th F1 front row this weekend

    ✪ Lewis Hamilton is just 4 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 38 times already. That is over 40% of all races he’s started for the team (38/ 81 = 46.9%). He is also just 1 behind Ayrton Senna’s (second-best) career total of 65 pole

    positions. Clearly he could equal Senna’s total on Saturday

    ✪ Hamilton in Spain beat Jim Clark’s career total of 11 F1 hat-tricks (pole, win and fastest lap). Only Michael Schumacher with 22 F1 hat-tricks has now scored more than

    Hamilton (12)

    ✪ Hamilton has won (55) 28.5% of all GP he’s started (193) 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. Hamilton 28.5%, 6. Ja. Stewart 27.2%, 7. Prost 25.6%, 8. A. Senna 25.5%,
    2. S. Moss 24.2% 10. Vettel 24.0% (44/ 183),

    ✪ Hamilton has now led 103 different F1 Grand Prix races. Only Michael Schumacher has led more (142)

    ✪ Valtteri Bottas has led 378 km of F1 race laps. It is the same distance led by Jean-Pierre Beltoise who scored his one and only F1 victory here 45 years ago driving a

    BRM. The very wet race proved to be BRM’s final F1 race win

    ✪ Bottas has yet to record a top 10 finish in Monaco in 4 starts to date. His best result here is 12th in 2013 and again last year

    ✪ The Spanish Grand Prix marked the first anniversary of Max Verstappen’s first Grand Prix win. He has until the Singapore Grand Prix in September to win a second

    while still a teenager. (20th birthday on September 30th 2017). He is of course, so far the only teenager in F1 history to win a F1 World Championship Grand Prix and could

    still become the only teenager to take pole position too for a F1 World Championship Grand Prix. Max and Ricardo Rodriguez who started the 1961 Italian Grand Prix

    from P2 in his Ferrari when aged 19 years and 208 days are the only teenage drivers to date to have started a Grand Prix from the front row (Max the youngest, at the

    2016 Belgian Grand Prix where he started P2 he was aged18 years and 333 days

    ✪ Sergio Perez needs just 1 more podium to become the Mexican driver with the most F1 podiums (currently =1 with Pedro Rodriguez on 7)

    ✪ Fernando Alonso in Spain finally ensured that every 2017 driver who entered a race to that point had been around for the waving of the chequered flag for at least 1

    Grand Prix. Jenson Button now needs to be circulating when the Monaco Grand Prix finishes to keep that record going

    ✪ On his return to F1 Button is scheduled to equal Michael Schumacher’s 306 F1 Grand Prix starts. Only Rubens Barrichello has started more (326)

     

    CONSTRUCTORS

    ✪ Mercedes in Monaco will be aiming to lockout the front row for the 49th time. The all-time record is 62 and is jointly held by McLaren and Williams

    ✪ Mercedes’s fastest lap of the race in Spain courtesy of Lewis Hamilton was the marque’s 50th as a F1 World Championship constructor

    ✪ Ferrari last season was the only team to score championship points at all 21 events

    ✪ Ferrari has still not scored consecutive pole positions since Fernando Alonso took pole for the Scuderia at the 2012 British and German Grand Prix and has still not scored a consecutive front row lock-out since Michael Schumacher and Felipe Massa lock-out the front row for the 2006 US and French Grand Prix

    ✪ Red Bull has achieved a podium result for at least one of their drivers podium in 101 different F1 Grand Prix

    ✪ The current Williams team traces its origins back to the setting up of Williams Grand Prix Engineering by Frank Williams and Patrick Head in 1977. This year the team will

    be celebrating its 40th anniversary. The team began by running a March for Belgian Patrick Neve who sadly died earlier is year and later in 1978, became a constructor

    running a single FW06 car for Alan Jones. In 1979 the team expanded to 2 cars with Clay Regazzoni joining Jones. Regazzoni won Williams’s first Grand Prix, at Silversone

    in 1979 while Jones claimed Williams’s first driver’s and first constructor’s titles in 1980. Frank Williams had made his first forays into F1 in 1969, running a Brabham for

    Piers Courage. Campaigns with De Tomaso, private March’s, with his own cars and ex-works Heskeths latterly in conjunction with Canadian-Austrian entrepreneur Walter

    Wolf followed but it wasn’t until Williams teamed up with Head and started a new team all over again that Williams’s F1 fortunes really took off

    ✪ Force India is the only constructors to have finished both cars in each of the 5 Grand Prix so far this season

     

    MONACO GRAND PRIX

    ✪ This year is the 75th Monaco Grand Prix (the figure includes pre-WWII races and sportscar-only Grand Prix)

    ✪ At least 1 Safety Car intervention has interrupted the Monaco Grand Prix in each of the last 7 races. All told, since 2003 12 Monaco Grand Prix have featured a Safety Car

    intervention at some point during the race ie 12 of last 14 races (86%)

    ✪ Olivier Panis who won here in 1996 is still the only driver to win the Monaco Grand Prix and to have started the race he won from a grid start outside of the top 10. Panis’s

    win remains also the most recent F1 race win by a French driver

    ✪ Both of Lewis Hamilton’s Monaco Grand Prix wins have come off a P3 grid start

    ✪ Mercedes is chasing a 5th Monaco grand Prix win in a row. The record is 6 in a row by McLaren between 1988 and 1993 and they are the only constructor in the World

    Championship history of the event to have won more than 4 in succession. Mercedes and BRM (1963 to 1966) have both won 4 in a row

     

    Driver’s Championship standing

    POS

    DRIVER

    POINTS

    1

    Sebastian Vettel

    104

    2

    Lewis Hamilton

    98

    3

    Valtteri Bottas

    63

    4

    Kimi Raikkonen

    49

    5

    Daniel Ricciardo

    37

    6

    Max Verstappen

    35

    7

    Sergio Perez

    34

    8

    Esteban Ocon

    19

    9

    Felipe Massa

    18

    10

    Carlos Sainz

    17

    11

    Nico Hulkenberg

    14

    12

    Romain Grosjean

    5

    13

    Pascal Wehrlein

    4

    14

    Kevin Magnussen

    4

    15

    Daniil Kvyat

    4

    16

    Marcus Ericsson

    0

    17

    Lance Stroll

    0

    18

    Fernando Alonso

    0

    19

    Antonio Giovinazzi

    0

    20

    Jolyon Palmer

    0

    21

    Marcus Ericsson

    0

     

    Constructor’s Championship standing

    POS

    CONSTRUCTOR

    POINTS

    1

    Mercedes

    161

    2

    Ferrari

    153

    3

    Red Bull/Renault

    72

    4

    Force India/Mercedes

    53

    5

    Toro Rosso/Renault

    21

    6

    Williams/Mercedes

    18

    7

    Renault

    14

    8

    Haas/Ferrari

    9

    9

    Sauber/Ferrari

    4

    10

    McLaren/Honda

    0

     

    Driver’s penalty points:

    Driver

    Penalty points

    Jolyon Palmer

    7

    Sebastian Vettel

    6

    Pascal Wehrlein

    6

    Daniil Kvyat

    5

    Carlos Sainz

    5

    Kevin Magnussen

    5

    Nico Hulkenberg

    4

    Esteban Ocon

    4

    Sergio Perez

    3

    Romain Grosjean

     3

    Stoffel Vandoorne

    3

    Valtteri Bottas

    2

    Kimi Raikkonen

    2

    Marcus Erricson

    2

    Felipe Massa

    2

    Lewis Hamilton

    2

    Max Verstappen

    1

     

     

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