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Leclerc Admits He 'Looks Like an Idiot' After Crash in 'Borderline Dangerous' Ferrari
7 June 2026Sky SportsInterviewRace report

Leclerc Admits He 'Looks Like an Idiot' After Crash in 'Borderline Dangerous' Ferrari

Charles Leclerc admitted he "looks like an idiot" and branded his Ferrari "borderline dangerous" after crashing into the barriers in Monaco. The incident underscored the intense pressure and ongoing struggles the Monegasque faces at his home grand prix.

Charles Leclerc slammed his Ferrari into the wall during the 2026 Monaco Grand Prix, branding his car "borderline dangerous" and admitting the mistake made him "look like an idiot." The Monegasque's latest crash on the streets where he grew up added another painful layer to a home race weekend already weighed down by championship pressure.

Why it matters:

Monaco is the one victory Leclerc covets above all others, yet his history here is defined by heartbreak and high-profile errors. Another crash heaps pressure onto a driver carrying Ferrari’s title hopes while raising serious questions about whether the car’s handling is truly fit for purpose at low-grip, high-consequence venues.

The details:

  • Leclerc clipped the barriers during practice, bringing out the red flags and forcing the Ferrari crew into hurried repairs ahead of qualifying.
  • Over team radio, he delivered a scathing verdict on the car’s balance, calling it unpredictable and nearly impossible to place with confidence through Monaco’s tight corners.
  • The 28-year-old was just as harsh on himself, telling reporters the error made him "look like an idiot" in front of the home crowd that turns out to support him every year.
  • The incident adds to a painful Monaco legacy that includes his infamous 2021 qualifying crash from pole position and multiple retirements on a circuit he knows by heart.

What's next:

Ferrari must urgently diagnose whether the instability stems from setup issues or a deeper chassis flaw before the championship fight intensifies this summer. With Red Bull and McLaren applying relentless pressure, Leclerc cannot afford to waste points at venues where driver confidence means everything. The Scuderia needs to give him a car he can trust, or risk watching its 2026 title challenge unravel through self-inflicted wounds.

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