Verstappen wins in Monaco to make it six out of six

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MONACO: Red Bull Racing’s Dutch driver Max Verstappen competes during the Formula One Monaco Grand Prix at the Monaco street circuit on Sunday.—AFP
MONACO: Red Bull Racing’s Dutch driver Max Verstappen competes during the Formula One Monaco Grand Prix at the Monaco street circuit on Sunday.—AFP

MONACO: Double world champion Max Verstappen led a soggy and slippery Monaco Grand Prix from start to finish on Sunday to stretch his Formula One lead to 39 points and earn Red Bull a sixth win in as many races this season.

In a race livened up by a downpour after a processional 51 laps in dry conditions, Spaniard Fernando Alonso finished second for Aston Martin but a massive 27.9 seconds behind at the chequered flag.

Frenchman Esteban Ocon completed the podium in third place for Renault-owned Alpine, their first of the season, with Mercedes’ seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton fourth and taking a bonus point for fastest lap.The win was Verstappen’s fourth of the season, second in Monaco and 39th of his career. Mexican team-mate Sergio Perez, his closest title rival, started in last position after a qualifying crash and finished two laps down in 16th.

Mercedes’ George Russell was fifth and home hero Charles Leclerc finished sixth for Ferrari.

Alpine’s Pierre Gasly, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, McLaren’s Lando Norris and team-mate Oscar Piastri completed the points positions.

Verstappen led away cleanly from the start on the medium tyres, with Alonso opting for the harder compound and slotting in close behind with no change to the rest of the points positions.

If the podium ended up being the same top three as on the starting grid, the rain brought added excitement as drivers slid around the track, some getting too close to the barriers, before pitting for intermediate tyres and then full wets.

While Alonso celebrated his fifth podium of the season, and best result yet for Aston Martin, Canadian team-mate Lance Stroll retired after repeated tangles with rivals.

The only other driver not running at the finish was Haas’s Kevin Magnussen, whose team-mate Nico Hulkenberg was 17th in the team’s 150th race and collected a five-second penalty for causing a collision with Williams’ Logan Sargeant.

Published in Dawn, May 29th, 2023

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