Monaco, criminal tax haven and glittering Cubic Zirconia of the Mediterranean. Fleshpot and gambling den of Europe. Gangster Paradise.
Since the Great Depression they’ve also held an annoying Formula One race known mostly for it’s lack of racing because there are no places to pass on its twisty streets except when there are flaming hunks of twisted metal (well, shattered shards of carbon fiber but you get the picture).
It is the Talladega of Formula One and one of the most popular races because of that.
The tires on offer today are the new Ultra Softs (surprisingly durable), Super Softs, and Softs.
Don’t worry about that because mostly they’ll be using the Intermediates and Wets.
Yup. Supposed to rain in buckets which may mix things up but probably will simply ensure that most of the race will run under Yellow except for the times they entirely stop under Red to clean up the debris.
Nominally to run 78 laps this will likely peter out as most of them do at the 2 hour time limit.
Some more sanguine takes on Monaco-
Everybody’s Favorite Formula One Throwback
By BRAD SPURGEON, The New York Times
MAY 27, 2016
The Monaco Grand Prix is probably the only race on the Formula One calendar where the poor race performances of great drivers and the superb performances of lesser drivers share the spotlight with the achievements of the finest drivers.
It’s a race that is remembered as much for Ayrton Senna’s crash 12 laps from the end while dominating it in 1988 — the Brazilian lost concentration, hit a wall and lost the victory — as it is for his record of winning there six times.
Alain Prost’s desire that the rain-drenched 1984 race be ended before the young Senna, who had climbed up from 13th on the grid to second, could catch him is as memorable as Prost’s four victories there.
Then there are the triumphs of the outsiders, like Jean-Pierre Beltoise, a Frenchman whose only race victory came there in 1972, in the rain in an underpowered BRM car.
And the Monaco Grand Prix is also remembered for its accidents, such as when Alberto Ascari flew off the track in his Lancia and into the harbor in 1955 or when Lorenzo Bandini crashed his Ferrari in the 1967 race and died three days later.
A Legendary Short and Winding Road in Monaco
By BRAD SPURGEON, The New York Times
MAY 27, 2016
Run on a temporary circuit in the streets of a principality overlooking the Mediterranean, the Monaco Grand Prix is unique among Formula One races. Given its anachronistic character, it’s also an event that, were it not for its illustrious history and its continuing ability to attract heads of state, movie stars, entrepreneurs and executives of the world’s biggest companies, would certainly no longer exist.
Putting on the Brakes to Get Ahead in Formula One
By BRAD SPURGEON, The New York Times
MAY 27, 2016
Without a perfect braking system, a driver cannot set up the rest of the car to go fast, because nothing — the aerodynamics, the engine power, the steering — will work to its best capacity.
Brake technology is one of the most complex aspects of Formula One cars, part of a technological system that is constantly developed, tweaked and changed.
…
When the hybrid engine rules took effect in 2014, the teams began using “brake-by-wire,” an electric system for the rear brakes that has greatly increased the importance and complexity of the braking system.The brake-by-wire builds up the pressure on the rear caliper instead of the driver doing so directly. Until 2014, the rules outlawed such electronic driver’s aids. But with the introduction of the hybrid energy recovery systems, it was necessary to allow such a system of braking on the rear of the car.
While there is considerable braking power at high speed, when the cars drive through a corner at low speed the braking power is done almost entirely by the energy recover system, or E.R.S. And this requires changing the behavior of the brake pedal according to the involvement of the recovery system.
- Can Lewis Hamilton Get His Formula One Season Back on Track?, By BRAD SPURGEON, New York Times, MAY 27, 2016
- A Survivor’s Lone Grand Prix Victory, By BRAD SPURGEON, The New York Times, MAY 27, 2016
- When the First Time Is the Charm in Formula One, By BRAD SPURGEON, The New York Times, MAY 27, 2016
- Formula One Weighs Its Cockpit Safety Options, By BRAD SPURGEON, The New York Times, MAY 27, 2016
- Monaco F1 qualifying: Daniel Ricciardo beats Rosberg and Hamilton to pole, by Paul Weaver, The Guardian, Saturday 28 May 2016 09.36 EDT
- Lewis Hamilton: Mercedes do not owe me despite 2015 Monaco miscalculation, by Paul Weaver, The Guardian, Friday 27 May 2016 16.59 EDT
- Jules Bianchi’s family launch legal action against FIA and Marussia, by Paul Weaver, The Guardian, Thursday 26 May 2016 13.27 EDT
- Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg admits he made an error in Spanish Grand Prix, by Paul Weaver, The Guardian, Wednesday 25 May 2016 14.03 EDT
- F1 set to announce huge new sponsorship deal with Heineken, by Paul Weaver, The Guardian, Tuesday 17 May 2016 13.00 EDT
The bottom line- Verstappen crashed out of Qualifying, Ricciardo sits on pole. He has the new version of the Renault engine. Rosberg, Hamilton after Hamilton had a melt down in Q3 and barely got back on track.
None of it matters because of the rain which is going to keep the high rollers in the bar, watching on TV just like you are. Pre-race NBC Sports at 7 am, race 7:30 am on NBC.
Hey, at least it keeps Chuck Todd off the air.
57 comments
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Author
Safety from the start. Why am I watching this again?
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Formation lap
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Everyone on Wets
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Lap 2
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Lap 5 of 78
Ricciardo
Rosberg
Hamilton
Vettel
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Perez
Alonso
Bottas
Raikkonen
Author
Kvyat is having extreme electrical problems.
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Still raining
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Safety car in on Lap 7
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Magnussen in for Intermediates
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Palmer parks it
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Yellow again
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Button, Nasr, and Kvyat on to Inters
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Lap 10 of 78
Ricciardo
Rosberg
Hamilton
Vettel
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Perez
Alonso
Bottas
Gutierrez
1st Lap 1st Crash, FI.
Author
Grosjean and Raikkonen mix it up
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Raikkonen done
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Verstappen pits for Inters
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Vettel in for Inters
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Alonso in for Inters
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Hulkenberg and Bottas in for Inters
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Lap 15
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Grosberg in for Inters
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Hamilton passes Rosberg
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Rosberg possible problems, much slower.
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Rosberg pits for Inters (maybe)
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Massa pits (been holding up people from 6th)
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Sainz and Perez pit
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Kvyat pits
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Lap 22 of 78
Ricciardo
Hamilton
Rosberg
Perez
Vettel
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Alonso
Gutierrez
Button
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Ricciardo pits. Hamilton Leads. Hamilton still on wets. Lap 23
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Lap 25 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Rosberg
Perez
Vettel
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Alonso
Gutierrez
Verstappen
Author
Mercedes setting up Hamiton for a move to Ultra Softs
Author
In theory it could work if he doesn’t get more than 22 seconds behind Ricciardo. That’s the pit time and Ricciardo will have to make that transition at some point.
Author
Lap 30 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Rosberg
Vettel
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Alonso
Gutierrez
Verstappen
Massa
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Everyone pits for tires
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Ricciardo pits. It’s a bad one
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Nasr pits
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Verstappen parks
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Lap 35 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Perez
Vettel
Alonso
Rosberg
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Button
Gutierrez
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Hamilton on Ultras, Ricciardo on Super
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Lap 40 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Perez
Vettel
Alonso
Rosberg
Hulkenberg
Sanz
Button
Gutierrez
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Lap 45 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Perez
Vettel
Alonso
Rosberg
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Button
Massa
Author
Ericsson collects Nasr. Full course Yellow
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Lap 51 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Perez
Vettel
Alonso
Rosberg
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Button
Massa
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Lap 55 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Perez
Vettel
Alonso
Rosberg
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Button
Massa
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Lap 60 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Perez
Vettel
Alonso
Rosberg
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Button
Massa
Author
The question is, there are showers about to hit when there are 8 laps to go. Ricciardo is on Super Softs and has about 10 more laps on them than Hamilton’s Ultras so they are both quite old. There is about 2.5 seconds between Hamilton and Ricciardo, but Hamilton has been gaining time. A pit takes 22 seconds.
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Lap 65 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Perez
Vettel
Alonso
Rosberg
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Button
Massa
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Lap 70 of 78
Hamilton
Ricciardo
Perez
Vettel
Alonso
Rosberg
Hulkenberg
Sainz
Button
Massa
Author
Massa is a lap down
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