Lewis Hamilton and Isack Hadjar escaped punishment at the Monaco Grand Prix after being investigated for allegedly leaving more than 10 car lengths to the safety car, as set out in Article B5.13.2. The FIA stewards took no further action, pointing to guidance issued at Canada 2025 that allowed some tolerance on safety grounds while drivers prepare tyres and power units. In their decision, the stewards wrote: “in the interests of safety it would allow a certain degree of tolerance… Accordingly no further action is taken.”


George Russell says Kimi Antonelli’s 68-point lead is not too big and he still believes he can win the 2026 Formula 1 title, despite his Mercedes team-mate winning the past five grands prix. Russell said: "No, it's not [too big a point deficit to overcome]. You look at Verstappen last year - but I need to get myself out. I don't know how we keep ending up in the same position. Things I need to improve for sure. But I know on clean weekends what I can do and it's just unfortunate. I still very much believe in myself and know what I can do. I think we're not even 30% of the way through, but there's a lot of points down the drain."

Ferrari team principal Fred Vasseur says the team must stay focused and positive after a mixed Monaco Grand Prix in which Lewis Hamilton finished second and Charles Leclerc crashed out amid brake problems. Vasseur said: "We need to keep our focus on ourselves, continue working hard and maximise every opportunity. The mood within the team is positive, the direction is the right one and we have another opportunity in just a few days' time to keep moving forward."

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff says the team “clearly” made a mistake in failing to serve George Russell’s Monaco Grand Prix pit-lane speeding penalty correctly, a sequence that led to an extra drive-through and left Russell out of the points. Toto Wolff said: "There will have been a dozen pit lane speeding incidents, that's number one. So I can't really give you an answer. As for not serving the stop, clearly our mistake, we need to look at our communication, whether we actually expected him to come in. What I remember is about staying out and not coming in, but nevertheless, you've got to be on it, then to hold him, and we didn't."


Lewis Hamilton said Ferrari “need more downforce” and “a lot of work” to reach Mercedes’ level after finishing second in Monaco. Hamilton said: "I think for me it's really the car. The car is good, but we need more downforce ultimately. With the tyres, with the different scenarios we had out there, I ran out of tyres quite early in the first stint... I think just with all different things that have been thrown at us, it was massively challenging but really grateful for the day... and I've just got to keep working harder to see if I can finally take that next step for them."

Charles Leclerc says he will switch to the same brake specification used by Lewis Hamilton from next week’s Spanish Grand Prix after a brake issue he says caused his crash at the final corner in Monaco. Charles Leclerc said: "Out of the four brakes, I had three brakes not working. In an F1 car, it's never a good thing. The front left was working well, the front right was half working, and the two rear brakes were not working at all. The only thing I can say is that we have a solution in-house and I'll go to Lewis' configuration from the next race onward which hopefully will be a step."

Lance Stroll said engine braking issues “pushed” him into the wall in his race-ending crash at the Monaco Grand Prix, after he went straight on at Antony Noghes and hit the barrier. Stroll said: "We were just getting to the end of the race, and then we had some engine braking issues throughout the whole race. All season we've been having engine braking issues, some corners it's pushing, some corners it's pulling, and it's doing different things all the time. So on that particular corner and lap it just pushed me into the wall, like the throttle pedal was 50% open."

Max Verstappen said he was left “praying” other cars would avoid him after an engine failure caused his Red Bull to bog down at the start of the Monaco Grand Prix from second on the grid, before he retired at the end of the first lap. Verstappen said: "I had no power, so I was steering left with the friction of the wheels, and I was just praying that everyone would go to the right. But everyone luckily reacted."


Aston Martin team principal Adrian Newey was seen inspecting both McLaren MCL40 cars on the grid ahead of the Monaco Grand Prix, PlanetF1.com reports. PlanetF1.com’s Thomas Maher spotted Newey first looking over Lando Norris’s car before walking across to examine Oscar Piastri’s McLaren as well. It marked Newey’s return to the paddock after he had not attended a race since the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, following reports last month that he had suffered a bout of illness.




Kimi Antonelli said Mercedes’ rear-wing upgrade for the Monaco Grand Prix was a “surprise” in how much it transformed the car, after he took pole position and went on to win the race. Antonelli said: "It was a really strong weekend and the team did an incredible job, first of all with the rear wing that we brought, but as well with the turnaround that we had between Friday and Saturday. The car just changed massively and obviously gave me a lot more confidence to push around this track. And yeah, I've just really been able to enjoy."

George Russell said he is in a "very weird state of mind" after the Monaco Grand Prix, where a pit-lane speeding penalty escalated into a drive-through and left the Mercedes driver 12th. Russell said: "I am in a very, very weird state of mind because I've had very low moments in my career where maybe I've had a run of two or three bad races on my own personal performance, but I've never had a run of bad luck such as this. It didn't happen when the car was P7 two years ago, or a P3 or P4 car last year, and now I've got the car, it feels very painful, but there is still a long way to go."

George Russell said he is “beyond frustration” with how his season is unfolding after an unserved five-second penalty for speeding in the pit lane turned into a drive-through penalty and dropped him out of podium contention in Monaco. Russell said: "I'm beyond frustration now, just struggling to comprehend how on earth the season is panning out this way. The team said there was nothing I did wrong with the speeding in the pit lane, a software issue, we don't know where from, five-second penalty – not ideal, but not the end of the world. And then obviously a drive-through for not serving it properly when I was in P3. So, two weekends in a row, 40 points [lost]."
Lando Norris says McLaren and Mercedes "have to do a better job" on reliability after a power unit failure ended his Monaco Grand Prix and left him expecting engine-related grid penalties later in the season. Norris said: "Problem is I'm on my third power unit already, third battery, and I'm taking penalties from this one onward. So hopefully that's not the case, but I don't know what to expect nowadays. It seems like every weekend we have something, but it's not just McLaren, it's Mercedes as well – and between HPP [Mercedes High Performance Powertrains] and McLaren, we have to do a better job, because it's just not good enough."
Lando Norris says a power unit problem that struck with little warning caused his Monaco Grand Prix retirement. Norris said: "Not a lot. At the end, it pretty much went immediately. There were some issues at the beginning, and then more in the middle, and I don't know if they're related or not. We had to retire the car, so there's not a lot I can do nowadays."





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