Monaco Grand Prix: Max Verstappen wins in the wet in Monaco

Max Verstappen at the Monaco Grand Prix

Mid-race rain added a sprinkle of chaos to a Monaco Grand Prix that was heading towards a processionary finish, but the top three remained unchanged with Max Verstappen taking the chequered flag.

Fernando Alonso’s second place went unchallenged, but nor did he ever challenge the eventual race winner, who finished over 27 seconds ahead of the Aston Martin driver. Esteban Ocon came under attack as the rain struck, but unlike Carlos Sainz, kept it clean to seal his first podium of the season.

At Monaco, the risks are taken on Saturday so that they don’t have to be taken on Sunday. Alonso said that he at times took “a little too much risk” on his qualifying lap, which earned him second place on the grid.

Ferrari the big losers in mid-race shower

He didn’t make a move down the inside of Verstappen heading into Sainte-Dévote, whilst up and down the grid there was a lack of overtaking. Lewis Hamilton was the closest to making an important overtake but pulled out of his move on Sainz on the run out of turn one.

As is often the case at Monaco, all the action happened towards the back of the field. Last year’s winner Sergio Perez was desperate to make up for his crash in Saturday’s qualifying but found overtaking difficult. His impatience and frustration were the source of collisions with Kevin Magnussen and Lance Stroll.

The race looked set to be heading towards a processional conclusion, and whilst the top three ultimately remained unchanged, there was plenty of excitement and movement before the chequered flag.

The rain began around Mirabeau on lap 52, and by lap 55 the drivers needed to react with Esteban Ocon the first of the front-runners to come in under considerable pressure from Sainz, who was less than a second behind.

Sainz stayed out, but he aquaplaned heading downs towards Mirabeau Haute, losing time and crucially ceding a place to teammate Charles Leclerc. That meant that the Monégasque got the priority in a double-stacked Ferrari pitstop.

That allowed the home favourite to maintain his sixth position, but Sainz was consequently jumped by Pierre Gasly. Leclerc ultimately finished sixth, Sainz in a disappointing eighth, having at one point challenged for the podium.

Red Bull imperious once again

There were other accidents of varying degrees throughout the field. Logan Sargeant, Stroll, Magnussen, Perez and even race winner Verstappen all touched the walls, the latter ironically clipping the wall at a soaking-wet Piscine corner.

However, no damage was sustained and he went on to take the chequered flag, ahead of Alonso and Ocon. The Mercedes, which evidenced improvements in performance scored a good finish with Hamilton finishing fourth and George Russell fifth, despite a five-second penalty for reversing onto the track and into Perez.

Charles Leclerc by ACM_Follete

A sixth place will represent a disappointing weekend for Leclerc on home tarmac. A three-place grid penalty, received for being adjudged to have blocked Lando Norris during Saturday’s qualifying, put pay to his chances of a podium, and he couldn’t profit from the mid-race carnage to make his way through the field.

Charles Leclerc: “I couldn’t do much more.”

Last year, the Ferrari could rival the Red Bull, but this year, the latter are in a league of their own; they have won every race this season, with reigning champion Verstappen taking the chequered flag on Sunday, he has four wins and a championship lead of 39 points over his teammate Perez, who has won the other two.

“We have a very difficult car in traffic. I think our place was better than what we showed today, but this is how it is. I couldn’t do much more. The car is very difficult to drive in the wet,” said a despondent Leclerc, who is still yet to win at his home Grand Prix.

Red Bull will be looking to extend their streak at next weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix, whilst Ferrari will be looking to return to form and earn their first podium since the Azerbaijan Grand Prix back in April.

 

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Photo by ACM / Magoni / Caenen

Football: Monaco fail to arrest the slide and drop out of European places

AS Monaco's Youssouf Fofana v Stade Rennais

AS Monaco suffered another loss on Saturday, this time against Rennes (2-0) on Saturday, and this one, their fourth in six matches, could prove highly consequential. 

Monaco’s destiny is no longer in their own hands. The slide began in April, and it hasn’t been arrested. Once in the chase for Champions League football, going into the final game of the season, they may now miss out on all forms of European football next season.

Back-to-back defeats against Lyon and now Rennes, both direct rivals for the European places, have dropped Les Monégasues to sixth. Whilst level on points with the latter, Monaco will have to count on Rennes or Lille slipping up on the final day to secure either Europa League or Europa Conference League football next season.

“A confidence problem.”

Monaco’s porous defence was once again an issue as it has been all season for only the 13th-best defence in the league. However, the goals have dried up in recent weeks as well.

Lovro Majer could have opened the scoring early on but was denied by an in-form Alexander Nübel. However, he did get his goal early in the second half, the Croatian international completely unmarked within the Monaco box to finish a cutback.

Former OGC Nice forward Amine Gouiri then doubled the lead to definitively kill off a weak Monaco resistance. As a result of Rennes’ victory (2-0), they leapfrog Monaco, whilst Lille’s win against Nantes sees them jump into fourth. Monaco’s capitulation couldn’t come at a worse time.

“It’s a confidence problem,” said underfire manager Philippe Clement post-match. He added that it would be a failure should they fail to qualify for European competition next season. They must better Lille’s and Rennes’ results when they face Toulouse at the Stade Louis II next Saturday to avoid this season being qualified as such.

 

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Photo by AS Monaco

 

Formula 1: Max Verstappen pips Fernando Alonso to Monaco pole

Max Verstappen denied Fernando Alonso his first pole position in 11 years, and will fancy his chances of a fourth victory this season in Sunday’s Monaco Grand Prix. Charles Leclerc starts sixth after receiving a three-place grid penalty.

This was the first ‘normal’ Monaco Grand Prix since 2019. Whilst the grandstands of Monte-Carlo were packed last year, the additional elements that make the event so special returned, notably the fan zone in Place d’Armes.

Saturday is oftentimes more special than Sunday in Monaco. Nowhere else is qualifying so crucial. Sergio Perez won’t want to be reminded of that fact. Last year’s winner took too much speed in Sainte-Dévote and suffered a hefty collision that saw him retire from the session.

“Over the limit” Alonso cruelly denied sentimental pole

The Mexican driver will start from the back of the grid, and with overtaking so difficult around the tight streets of the Principality, scoring points will be a tough ask, even for a car as superior as the Red Bull.

On a track such as Monaco, the speed of the Red Bull is mitigated. The Ferrari and Aston Martin looked primed to profit. Leclerc didn’t show formidable pace in the free practice sessions, but he knows the streets better than anyone.

He understands the risks that need to be taken to take pole; he pushes the car to the limit, and sometimes beyond it. The Monégasque is no stranger to the barriers here.

A massive cheer reverberated around the streets of Monte-Carlo as Leclerc took provisional pole deep in Q3, but his time was so narrowly bettered by Alonso, who was dreaming of his first pole since the German Grand Prix in 2012. Post-session, he said he took an “uncomfortable” amount of risk, admitting that at times across the two laps, he went “a little bit over the limit.”

However, there was to be no dream pole for the Spaniard, as Verstappen then pipped his time at the death by just 0.084 seconds. He therefore starts second. With overtaking so difficult, Red Bull will fancy their chances of continuing their unbeaten start to the season on Sunday.

Meanwhile, Leclerc’s miserable season continues after he was handed a three-place grid penalty for impeding McLaren’s Lando Norris. Esteban Ocon is bumped up to third, and Leclerc now faces a tall order to claw his way back onto the podium at this home Grand Prix.

 

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Photo by ACM / Magoni / Caenen

Exhibition: The story behind Prince Rainier’s “Noah’s Ark”

Monaco’s Jardin Animalier is soon to launch a behind-the-scenes photography exhibition depicting Prince Rainier III with the creatures great and small that he adopted and cared for. 

Prince Rainier was a life-long lover of animals. As a young boy, he spent many happy days at the Villa Ibéria, in Saint Jean Cap Ferrat, surrounded by birds of all feathers as well as two beloved chimpanzees, Clovis and Tanagra.  

During a trip to West Africa in 1954, when Prince Rainier was in his early 30s, he welcomed onto his yacht some 30 orphaned and injured animals from the continent. Chimpanzees, crocodiles, monkeys, ostriches and more… the Deo Juvante II was transformed into a veritable “Noah’s Ark”, as described by the Prince himself.  

A few weeks later, they had all found a new, safe home at the Centre d’Acclimatation Zoologique de Monaco. A young Asian elephant called Buom-Nam, a gift from then-Emperor of Vietnam Bao Dai, and two lions called Pacha and Caïd also joined the exotic crew of animals that the Principality and its young Prince hosted within the safety and security of what would become today’s Jardin Animalier, which can be found in the Fontvieille neighbourhood.  

prince rainier jardin animalier
Monaco’s Jardin Animalier. Photo by Monaco Life

Many had been abandoned, some had been trafficked, others came from circuses, but all received the care and attention of Prince Rainier, who is said to have visited the park each morning to check in on its residents.  

Prince Rainier also personally oversaw a succession of redevelopments and extensions of the park, which will soon celebrate its 70th anniversary. Of course, public opinion and understanding of animals in captivity has changed greatly in these years, but Monaco and its current sovereign and the heir of Prince Rainier, Prince Albert II, continue to aim for the highest welfare standards for the park’s inhabitants. Today it is a verdant one-hectare space in which many creatures live harmoniously and – most importantly – happily.  

On 31st May, as part of the vast commemorative events that honour the centenary of Prince Rainier’s birth, the Jardin Animalier will launch an exhibition depicting the Prince in one of the places he enjoyed the most with a collection of intimate photographs. It will run until the end of this year. 

To learn more about the ‘Le Prince et ses animaux’ exhibition as well as the many other events set to take place in Prince Rainier’s memory, click here.  

 

Read more:

May 31st: Prince Rainier III’s 100th birthday celebrations

 

Do you have an event in Monaco or the French Riviera that you would like us to include in our What’s On section and events calendar? Please email editor@monacolife.net.

 

Photo source: Centenairerainier3.mc

Intermarché to take over a hundred stores from the Casino group

The Casino group, which has a large presence in the Alpes Maritimes, announced on Friday that it will sell a significant number of its stores to Intermarché, France’s third largest supermarket chain.

Two days after suspending trade on the stock market, the Casino group, which owns the brands Monoprix, Leaderprice, and Spar among others, announced that it had entered into conciliation proceedings to negotiate with its creditors. At the same time, Casino will sell 100 of its stores to the Mousquetaires group (Intermarché), with which it joined forces in 2021.

The deal is set to bring in €1.15 billion in turnover.

The sale will affect more than a hundred hypermarchés, supermarkets and convenience stores “in areas considered non-priority”, the group’s financial director David Lubek told a press briefing, according to Ouest-France.

The core of Casino’s activity is located in the Ile-de-France, the Rhône-Alpes and the Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur.

The deal is expected to strengthen Intermarchés’ presence in the west at a lower cost by revitalising stores that were losing momentum.

Intermarché has reportedly “undertaken to acquire an additional volume of stores representing 500 million euros in turnover”, if Casino so requests.

A long-running French favourite

The Casino Group was founded in 1898 by Geoffroy Guichard and has spearheaded many innovations, including the first distributor’s brand in 1901, the first supermarket to display a sell-by date on consumer products in 1959, and even the first self-service store in Nice in 1957.

 

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Monte-Carlo Television Festival: more than a red carpet event

The 62nd edition of the Monte-Carlo Television Festival has confirmed details of its extended Business Content programme.

The specially curated event, which will offer a series of panels spanning many current issues facing the international programming industry, will be attended by a group of leading experts, executives and creative talent from around the world.

Delegates and attendees of the Monte-Carlo Television Festival will be able to join the Business Content strand as well as those who separately register for the Festival’s exclusive Pass Pro which gives participants access to an exceptional line-up of high-level professionals who are shaping the future of television.

Also included in Pass Pro registration is Festival Connect – a unique networking tool which is now open to facilitate exclusive meetings with leading industry figures via the platform.

 “Our Festival continues to be the leading European hub for creativity and talent,” said Laurent Puons, CEO Monte-Carlo Television Festival. “We are extremely pleased to have curated a welcoming and intimate setting for influential experts from across the international content business to meet and share conversations about the topics and trends that matter most.”
The Business Content schedule will take place in Monaco’s state-of-the-art Grimaldi Forum from 17th to 19th June. To see the full schedule, click here.

 

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