Perez wins chaotic Monaco GP, Ferrari blows it for Leclerc | Nikhilodien
Perez wins chaotic Monaco GP, Ferrari blows it for Leclerc | Nikhilodien

Sergio Perez rebounded from
Red Bull team orders that denied him a chance to race for the win one week ago
to pick up his first Formula One win of the season in the rain-marred Monaco
Grand Prix.
Perez earned
his third career F1 victory on the slick city streets of Monaco after a
questionable strategy call by Ferrari cost pole-sitter Charles Leclerc a win on
his home circuit.
Although Leclerc finished
the race for the first time in four tries, he finished fourth and allowed
reigning world champion Max Verstappen to extend his lead in the points
standings. Carlos Sainz Jr. finished second for Ferrari and Verstappen was
third for Red Bull.
Verstappen now
leads Leclerc by nine points in the standings; Leclerc has two wins this
season, Verstappen and Perez have combined for five victories as Red Bull and
Ferrari have claimed all seven races.
But the win
went to Verstappen's teammate just one week after Perez was ordered to cede the
lead to Verstappen during the Spanish Grand Prix. Leclerc had dropped out of
the race with an engine failure and Red Bull chose to capitalise by
manipulating the finish to get Verstappen the win in Spain.
The team
promised Perez he'd be allowed to race for wins and held its word Sunday.
"You dream
of winning this, and after your home race, there is no place more special to
win," Perez said after waving the Mexican flag.
Leclerc led
from the pole and screamed in rage when told to pit for a second tire change on
Lap 22—at the same time as Sainz. His engineer realised the mistake and yelled
"stay out!" but it was too late and Leclerc came back out on track in
fourth place.
"What are
you doing?" Leclerc shouted.
After the race,
he lectured Ferrari again. "No words, no words. We cannot do that,"
he radioed.
Leclerc also
won the pole a year ago but never got to start because he crashed at the end of
qualifying, and the car's gearbox failed moments before the start. In 2018 and
2019, Leclerc had retired from the race with crash damage.
The race was
delayed by 70 minutes for heavy rain and began from a rolling start behind a
safety car. It was then red-flagged on Lap 30 after Mick Schumacher's heavy
crash three laps earlier sliced his Haas car in two. He escaped unharmed.
"I'm fine,
very, very upset not to finish the race," Schumacher said. "I don't
know why the car split in two." George Russell finished fifth for Mercedes
ahead of McLaren's Lando Norris and the Alpine of Fernando Alonso. Seven-time
F1 champion Lewis Hamilton was eighth for Mercedes - extending his winless run
with the Silver Arrows to eight races - while Valtteri Bottas was ninth for
Alfa Romeo and Sebastian Vettel 10th for Aston Martin.
The restart
after Schumacher's crash was again a rolling start behind the safety car. But
the long delay and red flag shortened the race from 77 laps to a timed race so
that it would end by local curfew.
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