Mercedes emerged as the clear front runner when this F1 season began, having nailed the new regulations and building a car capable of setting it on the path of dominance this campaign, and maybe more.
Ferrari showed early promise but was soon clear that it had the second-best car on the grid, though it remained capable of causing headaches to the Silver Arrows. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff acknowledged that after the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, saying, “The prevailing feeling is that we now have a fight on our hands with Ferrari.”
The two teams have been the strongest ones so far, but the gap between the two isn’t as miniscule as the neutral would’ve wanted. At last weekend’s Monaco GP, however, both went through similar emotions with their drivers, at contrasting levels.
Anatomy of dominance
Unlike many – perhaps most – other circuits on the F1 calendar, the Monaco GP is rarely decided by wheel-to-wheel combat. Around those unforgiving, narrow streets, track position is king. Precision outweighs aggression, and the smallest mistake can carry the biggest consequences.
The formula for success is almost deceptively simple: produce the lap of your life in qualifying, start near the front, keep the car out of trouble, and make sure no one jumps you during the pit-stop cycle. It is why Formula 1’s oldest joke remains one of its truest: “Monaco is won on Saturday.”
Yet, Monaco has always been more than a procession. To purists, it is the ultimate examination of a driver’s craft. A qualifying lap around the Principality is often described as the purest expression of speed, commitment, and precision that motorsport can offer.
That much remained true this year. But there was another layer to the story.
Was the Mercedes W17 exceptional? Absolutely. Did pole position pave the way for victory? Without question. But Kimi Antonelli’s commanding triumph in Monaco – his fifth consecutive win of the season – was anything but a textbook Monaco success.
He did not merely protect track position. He annihilated the contest.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images
When the lights went out, Antonelli launched into clear air and never looked back. The task became significantly easier when Max Verstappen’s Red Bull, which had qualified within four-hundredths of a second of the Mercedes, retired on the opening lap. Antonelli seized the opportunity with ruthless efficiency.
By lap four, he had already carved out a healthy margin to the chasing pack. His only real companion during the long afternoon at the front was race engineer Pete Bonnington, whose occasional radio messages punctuated an otherwise lonely drive. There were reminders about tyre temperatures still running a touch high, cautions to manage brake temperatures while negotiating traffic, and little else.
The race quickly shifted from attack to control. By lap nine, Antonelli’s advantage was already substantial enough to allow a greater focus on management. The gap stretched relentlessly, reaching 15 seconds by the time Lewis Hamilton made his pit stop. When Charles Leclerc took fresh tyres, Antonelli responded, rejoining comfortably in the lead and maintaining complete control of proceedings.
He was serenely cruising toward victory when Monaco finally delivered a hint of drama.
A late safety car erased what had grown into a lead of nearly half a minute. Then came a red flag, introducing an element of uncertainty that had been absent all afternoon. A standing restart loomed. Ferrari, whose cars had shown impressive launch performance, suddenly had a narrow window of opportunity through Hamilton.
For a brief moment, there was at least the possibility of a fight. It lasted only a few corners. When racing resumed for what effectively became an eight-lap sprint to the chequered flag, Antonelli immediately reasserted his authority. He surged clear once more, rebuilt a comfortable advantage, and extinguished any lingering hopes of a Ferrari challenge.
The final laps felt less like a battle for victory and more like a coronation.
And as he swept through the streets of the Principality for the final time, Antonelli did more than win the Monaco GP. He etched his name into the history of one of motorsport’s most iconic stages.
The safety car came. The red flag came. The possibility of a late fight briefly flickered into life. But Monaco’s script had already been written. Antonelli did not spend Sunday defending a lead; he spent it demonstrating why nobody else deserved it.
On a circuit where victory is supposed to reward perfection over pace, patience over daring, Antonelli delivered something a little rarer: domination. By the time he reached the chequered flag, the result was no longer the story. The manner of it was.
Disintegration on the other side
If the Principality became the stage for a defining statement for Antonelli, it marked the latest chapter in an increasingly troubling slide on the other side of his garage for George Russell.
While Antonelli disappeared into the distance, Russell spent much of his afternoon trapped in fifth place behind a struggling Isack Hadjar. Despite the Red Bull driver’s issues, he still managed to put 20 seconds between himself and the Mercedes, leaving Russell vulnerable to the ultimate indignity around Monaco: being lapped by his teammate. Sure enough, after 53 laps, Antonelli swept past him.
Things only unravelled from there.
Mercedes failed to react quickly enough to the safety car triggered by Lance Stroll, opting not to pit Antonelli immediately. The resulting sequence left Russell stacked behind the championship leader when he eventually stopped, costing him the position he had only just wrestled away from Hadjar.
And then came the final blow.
Russell was then hit with a drive-through penalty that had to be served after the late restart when the field was tightly packed together. Any hope of salvaging something from the weekend evaporated there and then. He eventually crossed the line in 14th place, and now finds himself trailing Antonelli by 68 points. Suzuka qualifying was a gut punch. Retiring from the lead in Montreal was arguably worse. Yet somehow, Monaco may prove the most damaging weekend of all.
Not simply because of the result, but because of what Russell is now saying about it. “There’s something in my driving style that’s not helping the car at the moment but is playing into his hands perfectly well. The difference in how we’re driving has such an impact upon the tyres,” he admitted after qualifying.
Heading into this season, Russell was the driver bookmakers expected to dominate the title fight. Now, he is not only no longer leading it, he is not even Antonelli’s closest challenger. That distinction belongs to Hamilton, who leapfrogged his fellow Brit into second place after Monaco.
A few months ago, Russell looked like Mercedes’ title favourite. Today, he looks like a driver searching for answers while the championship rapidly slips out of reach.
A tale of two, for Ferrari too
Divided emotions were not confined to Mercedes.
Ferrari arrived in Monaco looking capable of mounting a genuine challenge, and for a brief moment it seemed as though the Scuderia might have the pace to do exactly that. Hamilton and Charles Leclerc, fresh off signing a contract extension, were untouchable in Friday’s opening session and, while the field closed in during the afternoon, Ferrari still ended the day on top.
From there, however, the trajectory was almost entirely downward.
Hamilton outqualified Leclerc after the Monegasque brushed the barriers at Tabac on his final Q3 attempt. What followed was not merely a divergence in results, but in mood, confidence and outlook. As Ferrari’s weekend slipped away, an increasingly technical debate over brake performance began to dominate the conversation.
By then, the contrast in the drivers’ own words was clear.
“The happiest day of my Ferrari days so far. I finally have the engineering team that I’ve been working towards. I think our car is great. I can understand it and am a lot more comfortable with it. While we’re not exactly where we want to be, getting this result has capitalised on our great reliability. I feel very light right now, mentally in a good place,” Hamilton said after the Canadian GP.
Leclerc, meanwhile, could hardly have sounded more different.
“It’s been one of, if not the, worst weekend of my career. I have work to do to get to Lewis’s level on a day like this. I will look into the data. I’ve gone through difficult races [before] where you analyse after and you learn a lot,” he then admitted. The gap between the two has not simply been one of results. It has increasingly become a story of differing solutions to similar, if not the same, problem.
Hamilton switched to customised brake packages supplied by Carbon Industrie at Suzuka, favouring a stronger initial bite and more precise modulation that complements his trademark late-braking style.
Leclerc, meanwhile, has continued with Brembo hardware. Given his preference for an aggressive front end, a higher tolerance for oversteer, and a tendency to brake earlier than Hamilton, the setup has become an increasingly frustrating limitation.
By Monaco, that frustration had boiled over. “I don’t know how much I can go into the details, but I don’t think… it’s just not acceptable. The issues I have faced with my brakes have been…it’s not that it’s difficult, it’s that in this particular moment, it’s just impossible,” the Monegasque said after his home race.
His description of the problem was even more revealing.
“I cannot do anything. The only thing I can do is not brake for the last corner, but in an F1 corner not braking in the last corner ends up in the wall anyway. I put the least amount of brakes I could possibly do, and it’s not even braking, it’s leaning my foot on the brake.”
When asked to elaborate on the root cause, Leclerc stopped just short of publicly pointing the finger at Ferrari’s long-time brake supplier. “I think it’s very clear for everyone, I don’t think there’s any doubt.”
That was enough to prompt a swift response from Brembo.
“At present, the company does not know the causes of the issues experienced by Charles Leclerc and therefore considers it premature to draw definitive technical conclusions before the available data has been analysed,” the company said.
“In cases such as this, it is necessary to examine the telemetry data together with the team’s engineers in order to accurately determine the origin of the incident.”
Whether Brembo ultimately bears responsibility may be irrelevant, for Leclerc has already identified the direction he wants Ferrari to take.
“The only thing I can say is that we have the solution in-house, and I’ll go to Lewis’s configuration from the next race onwards, which hopefully will be a step,” he revealed, before adding, “But it’s been a nightmare.”
Leclerc’s miserable home weekend cannot be pinned solely on one component, and he has acknowledged as much. Yet the brake saga has become impossible to ignore, not least because a potential remedy already appears to exist within Ferrari’s own garage.
If Hamilton’s configuration transforms his fortunes, Ferrari may look back on Monaco as the weekend that stopped the bleeding.
Subplots thicken
Monaco is often described as F1’s ultimate test. Not because it produces the best racing, but because it exposes every strength, every weakness and every crack beneath the surface.
This year, it exposed plenty.
It revealed a young driver turning dominance into routine. It revealed a title contender struggling to halt a slide. It revealed a seven-time world champion growing ever more comfortable in red, and a hometown hero searching desperately for answers.
The championship order may not have changed dramatically, as Mercedes remains the benchmark and Ferrari remains its closest pursuer. But perceptions did. And in F1, perception has a habit of becoming reality.

