Monaco offers Hamilton his best chance yet
Words and hats may have to be eaten along with the usual canapes and caviar if Lewis Hamilton wins the glamour race of the Formula One season in Monaco this weekend. Preview: ALAN BALDWIN The sceptics who doubted McLaren’s 2008 world champion would...
Words and hats may have to be eaten along with the usual canapes and caviar if Lewis Hamilton wins the glamour race of the Formula One season in Monaco this weekend. Preview: ALAN BALDWIN
The sceptics who doubted McLaren’s 2008 world champion would stand on top of the podium this season after his move to Mercedes face a moment of truth with Lewis Hamilton’s team arriving in the Mediterranean principality on the back of three pole positions in a row.
Mercedes have faded in races so far, unable to control their car’s insatiable appetite for tyres on a Sunday afternoon, but Monaco’s tight and treacherous streets are kinder on the compounds.
Hamilton, a winner in what is now his home in 2008, loves the historic circuit that winds up through Casino square and blasts down through the echoing tunnel and out along the harbourside and the ranks of swaying super-yachts.
Champions Red Bull have won the jackpot for the past three years, with Australian Mark Webber triumphant in 2012 after also winning in 2010, but Mercedes’ qualifying form threatens their run of success.
“They (Mercedes) will arrive as favourites for Monaco,” said Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso after he won his home race in Spain this month.
“They’ve been on pole position for the last three races, they were on pole last year with Michael’s (Schumacher) lap, so it would be a surprise if they weren’t on pole position in Monaco,” the Spaniard added.
“And it’s more difficult to overtake in Monaco, so maybe they can keep good positions for longer.”
Hamilton’s team-mate Nico Rosberg will be just as much of a threat, with the German - who grew up in Monaco with the circuit part of his daily journey to school - chasing a hat-trick of poles.
Red Bull’s triple champion Sebastian Vettel leads the standings after five races, four points ahead of Lotus’s Kimi Raikkonen and 17 clear of Alonso in third place.
The tyres should be less of a problem than in Spain, where four pitstops were the norm and a shocked Hamilton sank from second on the grid to 12th at the chequered flag, although debris damage will still be a concern.
Suppliers Pirelli, who have brought their softest tyres to the race, expect drivers to have to make no more than two visits to the pits.
Hamilton left Spain too stunned to focus on Monaco but a sponsor trip to the US and a visit to Le Mans to watch the French MotoGP race last weekend are sure to have revived his spirits.
Monaco is the date on the calendar he has been looking forward to more than most. He has watched the preparations for the race, with the barriers and grandstands going up, with barely concealed excitement.
“I was running around and I was thinking - because obviously Michael put it on pole - that it (last year’s car) must have been pretty good (in Monaco),” he said. “So I hope that’s the same this year.”
Although Schumacher, a five times winner in Monaco, was fastest in qualifying last year, the German did not start on pole because he had a five-place penalty carried over from Spain where he had caused a collision.
Webber did, and made the advantage stick with Rosberg a close second after starting alongside the Australian.
Just like last year, the Red Bull driver arrives in Monaco hungry for his first win of the year – a situation he would have already resolved had Vettel not defied team orders in Malaysia.
“It’s always been a good track for me,” said Webber.
“It’s still a daunting place, a very challenging venue. I’m not saying you are on holiday there but when I’m out there, I don’t know what makes me feel as comfortable as I do.”
Alonso and Vettel are the only drivers to have won twice this year, with Raikkonen the other winner, and the Spaniard can become the first to win at Monaco for three different teams having triumphed previously for Renault and McLaren.
Rosberg fastest
Nico Rosberg gave Mercedes a dream start to their Monaco Grand Prix weekend with the fastest time in both practice sessions.
To further fuel widespread expectations of a fourth successive pole position for the Silver Arrows, team-mate and 2008 world champion Lewis Hamilton lapped second fastest in the afternoon.
Rosberg clocked a best time of one minute 16.195 seconds before lunch and then 1:14.759 in the second session.
Hamilton was 0.318 off Rosberg’s pace, with drivers using Pirelli’s softest tyre compounds.
While Rosberg will be chasing his third successive pole position in tomorrow’s qualifying, hat-trick chasing Spaniard Fernando Alonso was second and third fastest respectively for Ferrari.
Team-mate Felipe Massa was fourth on a sunny afternoon.
Standings
Drivers
1. Vettel 89; 2. Raikkonen 85; 3. Alonso 72; 4. Hamilton 50; 5. Massa 45; 6. Webber 42; 7. Grosjean 26; 8. Di Resta 26; 9. Rosberg 22; 10. Button 17; 11. Perez 12; 12. Ricciardo 7; 13. Sutil 6; 14. Huelkenberg 5; 15. Vergne 1.
Constructors
1. RedBull 131; 2. Ferrari 117; 3. Lotus 111; 4. Mercedes 72; 5. Force India 32; 6. McLaren 29; 7. Toro Rosso 8; 8. Sauber 5.