Welcome to the fifth edition of my F1 driver POWER rankings list. I hope you enjoyed my previous edition after the Spanish Grand Prix but if you didn’t get around to reading it and don’t want any spoilers, you can find it here.
This years running of the Monaco Grand Prix helped prove my point in my Why is Monaco So Special? post. 95% of the excitement happened before the five lights went out on Sunday. It was looking like a fairytale was on the cards with Charles Leclerc, rather fortuitously, sticking it on pole after crashing during the final runs of qualifying while on provisional pole. This stopped Verstappen and Bottas from completing very fast laps which the Ferrari’s would have done well to beat. This Ferrari pace was surprise of the weekend and it added extra spice to the competition, with Hamilton losing out because of it. It was the first time in a long time that three teams were genuinely in the fight for pole. Leclerc was unable to take the start due to a left driveshaft failure on his reconnaissance lap which left Verstappen to lead the field into Turn 1 once he had fended off Bottas. He would go quite unopposed to the chequered flag in quite a dull affair with no real on track action post Lap 1. Doesn’t mean that weren’t opportunities to shine with an old champion showing his speed once again. Lets get into it.
After Monaco Grand Prix (5 of 23)
1. Max Verstappen (+1)
The first change in ranking for the ‘Big Two’ this season sees Max jump Hamilton but I can’t deny the significance of the weekend in the early running of this championship. Hamilton was looking like getting away in the drivers championship coming into the weekend with a 3-1 lead in the win stakes. We exit the weekend, however, with Max taking the lead in the championship for the first time in his career and Red Bull leading the Constructors. He was on a super quick lap in Q3 before it was halted early by Leclerc’s crash and I think he would have taken pole. With Leclerc cleared out of the way before the start a Max win felt inevitable, especially once Bottas retired. This was his first victory around the streets of Monte Carlo and this coupled with a tricky weekend for Hamilton puts Verstappen in a great position going to Baku.
2. Lewis Hamilton (-1)
Hamilton was never on the leading pace all weekend, seemingly about 0.2/0.3 seconds back consistently. It came down to not being able to warm the tyres enough, which is vital to give the driver confidence around the ultimate confidence track. We don’t know where he could have got without Leclerc’s crash but he qualified a disappointing seventh on a track where it is almost impossible to overtake. He was staring at the back of Pierre Gasly’s Alpha Tauri for pretty much 79 Laps and lost out to Perez and Vettel who both performed very effective overcuts. Lewis sounded very frustrated on the radio but he has learnt to control his emotions and move on from weekend’s like this so I am expecting the fight to commence in Baku which has been a happy hunting ground for Mercedes in recent years.
3. Lando Norris (+1)
A return to the podium in Monaco means a return to the podium of this list for Norris. He got himself at the sharp end on Saturday, qualifying fifth, and was rewarded for his efforts when Leclerc and Bottas retired ahead of him to take McLaren’s first podium at Monaco since they last had Mercedes engines. He had a quiet race but his confidence and pace on Saturday got him this result. A good way to make sure everyone forgets all about Spain.
4. Charles Leclerc (-1)
Charles drops because you have to complete the weekend. He was driving beautifully at his home Grand Prix, the first Monegasque driver to take pole at his home race since 1931, even though it was slightly fortuitous and by his own doing when he crashed in Q3 to secure it. I don’t accept the ‘Monaco curse’ excuse for Leclerc this time, it was his mistake that cost him victory on Sunday. A broken left driveshaft meant that he couldn’t take the start as Ferrari only identified the issue on the way to the grid which didn’t give enough time to fix it. Lots of potential but no end result this time around at home for Charles.
5. Carlos Sainz (+4)
Carlos was the more impressive Ferrari driver around Monaco and I think he would have beaten Leclerc in qualifying had it not been for his teammate’s crash. He was disappointed with fourth on the grid when pole was a genuine possibility and he kept pace with Bottas easily during the race, backing up his claim. Sainz, like Norris, benefitted from retirements ahead to take his first Monaco and Ferrari podium with second. A fantastic weekend for the Spaniard and what a way to endear yourself to the Tifosi. A massive weekend for Sainz and the biggest move yet on this list.
6. Pierre Gasly (+2)
Another result which means you have to stand up and take notice of Pierre Gasly. He qualified and finished ahead of a works Mercedes in Monaco as he started and finished in sixth. On a track which rewards driver ability and confidence, Gasly shone brightly. He did well in the race to guard against the Hamilton undercut and then used his car width to keep him behind. He did lose two places through strategy but he can’t be blamed for that. Surely another chance at a big team must be in his future.
7. Sergio Perez (-+)
Sergio’s race pace once again saved his blushes at Monaco but he still hasn’t been able to put a complete weekend together. He can be excused for being slower than Max in qualifying around Monaco if he isn’t fully in tune with the car and Perez was hampered by Leclerc’s crash to start ninth. His pace in clear air once people in front had pitted was equal to Verstappen out front and this meant he jumped up to fourth after the pit stops. A wonderfully performed over cut. Perez said that it would take him five races to get up to speed in this Red Bull and those five have now passed. It is time he joined the big two in the fight.
8. Lance Stroll (-3)
This was the first weekend all season where Stroll was beaten by his teammate in both Quali and the race. He missed out on Q3 to line up thirteenth but progressed further than anyone in the race to finish eighth. Unfortunately for Lance, others around him on this list had superb weekends. Some good points and good strategy are the positives from Monaco for the Canadian.
9. Esteban Ocon (+1)
Ocon is becoming the main guy at Alpine. He capitalised on an out-of-sorts Alonso to make himself look good around the streets of Monte Carlo. While he missed out on Q3 by six one hundredths of a second to line up eleventh, he moved up to ninth at the flag after a great start and some good strategic calls from the pit lane. It has been reported that Alpine have been so impressed they are already negotiating a contract extension for the Frenchman, deciding against trying to sign another young French driver.
10. Daniel Ricciardo (-4)
Spain feels a long time ago all of a sudden for Daniel Ricciardo. He was slow all weekend around Monaco and he wasn’t really sure why, which isn’t encouraging. His qualifying position of twelfth was his highest finish of any session during the weekend, equaled by his finishing position on Sunday. Once locked into grid spot, he was stuck in the midfield and his destiny sealed. I think his lack of pace around Monaco really highlights the lack of chemistry between car and driver in this package at the moment. Next stop is another tricky street circuit that he has previously won but one that should be able to hide his blushes better because of that big ol’ straight.
11. Sebastian Vettel (+3)
He’s back baby, well at least for this weekend he was. Sebastian showed some of that Vettel fighting spirit when it counted on Sunday to jump Gasly and Hamilton in the pit stops using the overcut. He made up four seconds in two laps to make it possible and then held off Gasly up the hill to Casino Square to show a side that’s been missing the last 12 months. Vettel was the leading Aston Martin in every session and made it into Q3 for the first time in 10 months with eighth on the grid. That aforementioned fighting spirit rewarded him with a fifth place finish and it was nice to hear the joy in his post race radio celebration once again.
12. George Russell (-+)
A quiet weekend for George Russell in Monaco but another one where he leads his team to Q2 at the expense of a big name. He would be annoyed not to move forward more in the race with some retirements but the Williams is still a step away in direct combat with other cars not with Haas branding.
13. Kimi Raikkonen (-+)
Kimi was beaten fair and square by Giovinazzi in Monaco. Not much to say for Kimi this weekend as I feel the result was comfortably within Alfa Romeo’s window. He qualified fourteenth, used the stronger overcut to get up to eleventh but was a long way off his teammate and only caught him because of a slow Ocon in front.
14. Fernando Alonso (-3)
Fernando was another previous Monaco winner to be mysteriously slow. He was knocked out in Q1 to start seventeenth and was nowhere near the points on Sunday. He complained of not being able to get the tyres into the right temperature window which would explain it but is it another example of the two year hiatus holding him back at the start to this season?
15. Valtteri Bottas (-+)
Is Bottas this generation’s Rubens Barrichello? It feels like he has inherited his bad luck. Valtteri looked the quicker of the two Mercedes drivers during qualifying and the race in Monaco and was on course to take some good points out of his teammate. He was in the fight for pole but also had to halt a much faster lap in Q3 due to Leclerc’s incident and had to settle for third. This turned into second with Leclerc’s DNS. He had one chance at the start to get into the lead but Max shut that door quickly. A podium was in the bag, however, a faulty wheel nut getting stuck in place at his pit stop meant it was impossible to change tyres and forced him to retire from second. It feels like the universe doesn’t want Bottas to interfere in the title fight, just like it did for Barrichello all those years ago.
16. Antonio Giovinazzi (+2)
Giovinazzi is starting to change my mind about him, he is stringing some nice weekends together in this Alfa Romeo and now looks like the leading driver in that team. He got himself into Q3 as one of seven different teams represented in the final part of qualifying and started the race tenth. He showed off his race craft on the first lap with an opportunistic move around the outside at Mirabeau on Ocon. He was rewarded with a championship point for his efforts.
17. Mick Schumacher (-1)
Mick found out how dangerous the Monaco barriers can be in FP3 on Saturday morning with a heavy crash at Casino Square, losing the back end and destroying much of the left hand side of the car. He would miss qualifying and line up last for the race. He got past his teammate at the Lowes hairpin on Lap 1 but lost the place later on to be beaten to the flag by Mazipin for the first time in 2021.
18. Yuki Tsunoda (-1)
Tsunoda had never driven around Monaco before this weekend as COVID interrupted his only season in F2 with the race being cancelled. This really puts into context how raw of a talent Yuki is. It showed as it took him a while to warm up and he was never relevant on track during the weekend. This is just another notch in his F1 education with more data logged.
19. Nicolas Latifi (-+)
Don’t know what else to say for Latifi apart from he started eighteenth and finished fifteenth. He was able to match his teammate’s race pace which is nice for him.
20. Nikita Mazipin (-+)
Signs of life from Mazipin as he looked as quick as his teammate all weekend and finished ahead of him on merit on Sunday to take his first teammate clean sweep of the season. You would have got good odds for Mazipin not to be the Haas driver in the barriers this weekend. Onwards and upwards.