F1, Monaco, ‘Talking About’ Monaco GP Problem

F1 Grand Prix Of Monaco
MONTE-CARLO, MONACO - MAY 25: Liam Lawson of New Zealand driving the (30) Visa Cash App Racing Bulls VCARB 02 leads Alexander Albon of Thailand driving the (23) Williams FW47 Mercede, Carlos Sainz of Spain driving the (55) Williams FW47 Mercedes, Nico Hulkenberg of Germany driving the (27) Kick Sauber C45 Ferrari, Yuki Tsunoda of Japan driving the (22) Oracle Red Bull Racing RB21, George Russell of Great Britain driving the (63) Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team W16 Gabriel Bortoleto of Brazil driving the (5) Kick Sauber C45 Ferrari and Andrea Kimi Antonelli of Italy driving the (12) Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team W16 on track during the F1 Grand Prix of Monaco at Circuit de Monaco on May 25, 2025 in Monte-Carlo, Monaco. (Photo by Sam Bagnall/Sutton Images)
F1 Grand Prix Of Monaco
MONTE-CARLO, MONACO - MAY 25: Liam Lawson of New Zealand driving the (30) Visa Cash App Racing Bulls VCARB 02 leads Alexander Albon of Thailand driving the (23) Williams FW47 Mercede, Carlos Sainz of Spain driving the (55) Williams FW47 Mercedes, Nico Hulkenberg of Germany driving the (27) Kick Sauber C45 Ferrari, Yuki Tsunoda of Japan driving the (22) Oracle Red Bull Racing RB21, George Russell of Great Britain driving the (63) Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team W16 Gabriel Bortoleto of Brazil driving the (5) Kick Sauber C45 Ferrari and Andrea Kimi Antonelli of Italy driving the (12) Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team W16 on track during the F1 Grand Prix of Monaco at Circuit de Monaco on May 25, 2025 in Monte-Carlo, Monaco. (Photo by Sam Bagnall/Sutton Images)

Stefano Domenicali has confirmed Formula 1 is “talking about” the problem of the Monaco GP.

Notwithstanding the disastrously processional 2024 race on the tight, twisty streets, the sport’s reaction – mandatory two-stop strategies – resulted in arguably an even worse outcome.

Still, F1 CEO Domenicali sees the bright side.

“The Monaco event has been amazing,” he told Sky. “The event itself is what Formula 1 wants, and that is really great.”

The problem, of course, is that with the speed, size and weight of the current cars, multiplied by the slow and narrow nature of the barrier-lined street circuit, overtaking was essentially impossible.

It led to some drivers deliberately holding up big trains of cars so that their teammates ahead could race away.

Alex Wurz, a former F1 driver who now heads his own circuit design company, WurzDesign, has proposed three key circuit changes – including widening and re-profiling the Rascasse corner and the famous hairpin.

He says that his idea for the harbour chicane, however, would require a “larger civil engineering” project.

Domenicali suggests that Wurz’s ideas are not new.

“I think that (over) 75 years, they wanted to try to do something different,” said the Italian. “I mean, we are talking with the city, but as you can imagine, it’s not easy at all.

“We know with the width of the street and the cars are quite big, so the attempt is to create attention to that.”

He even sees positive aspects to the mandatory two-stop approach.

“It was great to see the day before everyone thinking that everyone has to stop on the first lap,” said Domenicali, “and a lot of discussion, so no one understood exactly anything.

“I think it was the right attempt and the attention was definitely there.”

As for what happens next, he said the “good thing is that we are talking about it”.

“Let’s enjoy the event that has ultimately been fantastic,” Domenicali concluded.

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