
Leclerc leads Ferrari one-two in Monaco FP1 as Hadjar and Alonso bring out red flags
Charles Leclerc topped Monaco Grand Prix FP1 with a Ferrari one-two ahead of Lewis Hamilton, while red flags from Isack Hadjar's crash and Fernando Alonso's debris disrupted the session.
Charles Leclerc set the pace in Monaco Grand Prix FP1, leading a Ferrari one-two with teammate Lewis Hamilton just two-tenths behind. The session was punctuated by red flags — first from Isack Hadjar losing the rear at the Swimming Pool chicane and then Fernando Alonso leaving his front wing on the track.
Why it matters:
Ferrari's strong start on the streets of Monte Carlo is critical for Leclerc, a local hero who has yet to win his home race. With Monaco's unique layout where qualifying position often dictates the race result, early pace is a promising sign for the Scuderia.
The details:
- Leclerc clocked 1:13.978, 0.226s ahead of Hamilton and 0.513s clear of third-placed Max Verstappen.
- Kimi Antonelli briefly led after switching to mediums, finishing fourth for Mercedes, ahead of George Russell.
- Hadjar crashed hard at the exit of the Swimming Pool, apologizing over team radio: "I don't understand why it snapped." The Red Bull driver ended the session 13th.
- Alonso hit the wall late in the session, scattering debris. He finished 20th; teammate Lance Stroll managed only one lap due to an ERS issue, ending last.
- Verstappen complained of tyre degradation ("my tyres are completely dead") and a malfunctioning release system, instructing Red Bull to "fix this release."
- A heated radio exchange between Esteban Ocon and Oliver Bearman added intra-team tension at Haas.
What's next:
Teams will analyze data ahead of FP2, where setup adjustments and tyre compound choices will be refined. Ferrari's early dominance sets a benchmark, but Red Bull and McLaren are expected to respond as the weekend progresses.
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