The Herald (South Africa)

F1 drivers slate ‘boring’ Monaco race

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THE Monaco Grand Prix faced a growing barrage of criticism yesterday after Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton called it probably the most boring race ever.

Daniel Ricciardo’s winning performanc­e on Sunday in his power-reduced Red Bull may have boosted his value in the drivers’ market and given him an outside tilt at the title, but the dull procession behind him was widely condemned as a spectacle.

Two-time world champion Alonso, twice a winner on the narrow street circuit in the Mediterran­ean principali­ty, was not the first or only driver to complain after a contest lacking incident and excitement.

It was the first Monaco race without the deployment of a safety car since 2009.

That Ricciardo could win from pole position in a car that had had its power reduced by 25% confirmed both his maturing talent and the enforced tedious mediocrity of the racing.

Alonso, of McLaren, was only echoing what championsh­ip leader and defending champion Hamilton had said after finishing third behind Ricciardo and fellow fourtime champion, Germany’s Sebastian Vettel of Ferrari.

“Extremely boring. I mean, this is probably the most boring race ever,” Alonso said.

“Without a safety car, without yellow flags, I think the sport needs to think a little bit about the show because this is very disappoint­ing.

“I think we probably need to give something to the fans at the end of the race just to pay the ticket back a little.

“I think it is Monaco – the way it is. I think it is quite boring.

“We just start in our qualifying position and we run to the flag in that position.”

Finn Kimi Raikkonen, in the second Ferrari, started and finished fourth.

“Qualifying decides everything here,” he said. “Not a lot happens.

“Everyone drives around behind each other and whoever is in front dictates the speed.”

Hamilton had set the tone among the senior drivers when he said: “The tyres were not great, but we were all driving so slow. It was not an attacking race – we were just cruising. It was not racing.

“I will be shocked if anyone was awake at home while it was on, because I would have been asleep on the couch.”

The predictabi­lity of the Monaco race is normally forgiven if there is some incident to enliven the glamorised choreograp­hy of what is a largely corporate festival, but this year’s contest plumbed new depths of mediocrity.

It has presented F1’s new American owners Liberty Media with a major problem as they grapple with the task of brightenin­g up the show without losing its traditiona­l values.

The main problem, this time, appeared to be the new “hyper-soft” Pirelli tyres.

They produced stunning one-lap speed, but lacked durability and, as a result, in a one-stop race on a tight street track where overtaking is virtually impossible, drivers were instructed to be conservati­ve and make their alternativ­e “ultra-soft” tyres last the distance. – AFP

 ?? Picture: CHRISTIAN ALMINANA/GETTY IMAGES ?? JUST CRUISING: Germany’s Sebastian Vettel on the Monaco track
Picture: CHRISTIAN ALMINANA/GETTY IMAGES JUST CRUISING: Germany’s Sebastian Vettel on the Monaco track

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