F1: Charles Leclerc finishes Spanish Grand Prix in P5, Verstappen wins

spanish grand prix

For Scuderia Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz, the Spanish Grand Prix wasn’t “particularly rewarding”, but it could have been worse following a Lap 3 incident that saw the teammates collide.  

Monegasque pilot Charles Leclerc began the race on the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya on Sunday 23rd June from P5, having missed out on a second row start by mere thousandths of a second. It was a similar story for his teammate, Carlos Sainz, who started in P6. 

Despite opting for different strategies throughout the race, the result for each driver was the same. Neither managed to make much progress during the 66 laps, and both ended in the same position from which they had taken off.  

Both were keen to advance in the early stages of the race, leading to a tense moment on Lap 3 when Sainz got ahead of his teammate by squeezing him on the inside. Sainz momentarily left the track, but did gain the advance. 

Leclerc was clearly disgruntled by the move, complaining over the radio, “He [Sainz] closed on me.” 

He later told reporters that he felt the overtake and contact between the cars had cost them both some time.  

“It’s a shame,” he said. “The team had told us before the race to save the tyres… I was doing exactly that… Carlos used that one lap to push, he was very close to me. I understand that it’s his home race, a very important moment of his career, so I guess he wanted to do something spectacular, but I probably wasn’t the right person to do that with.” 

The 26-year-old Monegasque ultimately reclaimed his position from his teammate in Lap 55, which allowed him to go after Mercedes’ George Russell. Leclerc caught up with the British driver on the final lap, but didn’t have enough time left to make it count.  

In the end, the two Ferrari drivers picked up a combined 18 points at the Spanish Grand Prix. Red Bull’s Max Verstappen took the win, finishing just two seconds ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris. Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton claimed P3 in front of his teammate, Russell, in P4.

The points have helped maintain Ferrari’s status as the second team in the Constructors’ Standings, with Leclerc third in the Drivers’ Rankings.

“It was tight today and we were just a lap short of fighting for P4, but our competitors were still ahead in terms of pace,” he said post-race. “Regarding our strategy, I think we did well to offset ourselves from the cars around us. Going forward, we will focus on our race pace extracting the maximum from our package at the next race.” 

The next round in the early summer triple-header will be the Austrian Grand Prix on the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg on 30th June. From there, the grid will head to the UK for the British Grand Prix on Sunday 7th July at Silverstone.  

 

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Photo credit: Scuderia Ferrari Media Centre 

Monaco government “takes note” of 2024 budget rejection, vows to push on

The housing of Monegasque citizens and the new Fontvielle shopping centre are behind the National Council’s first rejection of the 2024 Amending Budget, but the government says it will not stop them from “continuing their action”. 

During a public session on Friday 21st June, the National Council rejected the first draft of the 2024 Amending Budget, with elected officials, led by Thomas Brezzo, carrying out the familiar threat of not voting on a budget at all this year. 

“This budget comes at a time when we have been in a renewed dialogue with the government for a few months. We were rather confident but the private meetings of 11th and 13th June were catastrophic,” said Thomas Brezzo in a press conference the following day, according to Monaco Matin. 

Elected officials say they were waiting for concrete proposals regarding the National Housing Plan for Monegasque citizens and the development of the new Fontvieille shopping centre. 

Bezzo said that the government’s budget announcements did not live up to the “promises that had been made”, and that “elected officials found themselves in a situation where they had no choice but to vote against this budget.”

“We need a new National Housing Plan”

Thomas Bezzo has reportedly called for a “complete overhaul” of the National Housing Plan, an issue that is a “perpetual subject of conflict between the government and the National Council.”

In response, the government said in a statement Saturday that the government’s National Housing Plan has delivered 633 apartments for Monegasque nationals within six years. In addition, 25 apartments at Villa La Luciole will be delivered in 2027-28, in what it described as a “concrete gesture”. 

“Despite the conviction and mobilisation of the government and the administration services concerned, we must not ignore the complex land, urban planning and legal issues of Monaco, a small country by size, with very little land space available,” said Minister of State Pierre Dartout. “To plan a real estate operation, you need land: the government is not sparing its efforts, but there may be periods of negotiations and transactions.”

The Fontvielle “fiasco”

In describing the proposed Fontvielle shopping centre development as a “fiasco”, elected official Franck Julien claimed that €36 million had been spent in study fees alone.

Dartout responded that it was “appropriate” for the government to better assess with “precaution and precision” the parameters of this major project, particularly cost, deadlines and the impact on the neighbourhood. 

“No one will be left out: not the residents of the Terraces de Fontvieille who will be accompanied individually in their rehousing, nor the traders who participate in the running of the commercial centre and who were involved at each stage of the project.”

The next discussions on the second draft of the 2024 Amending Budget will take place in October, after Didier Guillaume will have assumed the role of Minister of State on 9th September. 

See also:

 

Fontvieille shopping centre project to be “revised”, National Council “stunned”

Monaco Life is produced by real multi-media journalists writing original content. See more in our free newsletter, follow our Podcasts on Spotify, and check us out on Threads,  Facebook,  Instagram,  LinkedIn and Tik Tok

Photo: Minister of State Pierre Dartout and National Council President Thomas Bezzo, source: National Council of Monaco