F1 NEWS🏎️ New Verdict On Severe Penalty & Hamilton’s Revelation After Penalty Blunder!

George Russell’s Monaco Penalty Sparks Controversy as Lewis Hamilton Reveals Tech Glitch Behind Qualifying Blunder

 

The 2025 Monaco Grand Prix, held on May 25, delivered another lackluster race on the iconic but overtaking-starved Monte Carlo streets, with the FIA’s mandatory two-stop rule failing to ignite the anticipated excitement. Instead, the spotlight fell on a contentious penalty for Mercedes’ George Russell and a revealing admission from teammate Lewis Hamilton about a technological mishap in qualifying. Russell’s deliberate chicane-cutting move to pass Williams’ Alex Albon, followed by a rare drive-through penalty, and Hamilton’s disrupted qualifying lap due to a computer glitch, have fueled intense debate about stewarding consistency and team communication, overshadowing Lando Norris’s dominant McLaren victory.

The two-stop strategy, designed to break Monaco’s processional nature, backfired as teams like Williams exploited it to manipulate gaps. Alex Albon slowed deliberately to create a pit window for Carlos Sainz, frustrating Russell in their scrap for the final points positions. On lap 59, Russell cut the Nouvelle Chicane to overtake Albon at Turn 11, radioing he’d “rather take the penalty than give the position back,” citing Albon’s “erratic” driving to avoid a collision. Expecting a standard 10-second penalty, Russell aimed to build a gap, but the FIA stewards, armed with pre-race warnings about deliberate off-track overtakes, imposed a harsher drive-through penalty. The verdict, detailed in an FIA statement, noted Russell’s radio message as evidence of intent, stating, “The deliberate infringement warranted a drive-through penalty.” The punishment dropped Russell from a potential eighth to ninth, costing him crucial points and drawing scrutiny over the FIA’s stringent approach.

Fans on X were divided, with some praising the stewards’ firmness, as one post read, “Russell knew the rules. Drive-through was fair for cheating the track.” Others argued the penalty was excessive, with a user commenting, “10 seconds would’ve been enough. FIA’s making an example of George.” The incident highlighted Monaco’s unique challenges, where overtaking is nearly impossible, pushing drivers to exploit track limits. Sky Sports F1’s Martin Brundle criticized the race’s tactical games, lamenting, “This is about excellence, not drivers slowing to play a game.” The stewards’ pre-race directive, emphasizing stricter penalties for deliberate track-cutting, was a response to anticipated loopholes in the two-stop rule, but it left Mercedes reeling.

Meanwhile, Hamilton’s qualifying penalty added another layer of frustration for Mercedes. Starting P4, Hamilton was demoted to P7 after impeding Max Verstappen’s push lap at Massenet during Q3. The stewards found Hamilton, who moved to the racing line entering Turn 3, had disrupted Verstappen’s lap, forcing the Red Bull driver to abort. Hamilton revealed to Planet F1 that a computer glitch caused the confusion, with his Ferrari engineer mistakenly informing him Verstappen was on a slow lap. “The screen said Max was on a lap, then it disappeared and said he wasn’t,” Hamilton explained. “I stayed fully to the left, but it distracted Max.” The three-place grid drop compounded Hamilton’s struggles in the race, where he finished a lonely fifth, unable to challenge the leaders due to Monaco’s overtaking constraints.

The Monaco fiasco has intensified scrutiny on the FIA’s rule enforcement and track suitability. The two-stop rule, meant to spark action, instead enabled teams to game the system, with Racing Bulls’ Liam Lawson also holding up rivals to aid Isack Hadjar’s sixth-place finish. Posts on X called for reforms, with one suggesting, “Monaco needs smaller cars or a new layout. This isn’t racing.” Others proposed a minimum lap time to curb deliberate slowing, a fix gaining traction after similar tactics marred the midfield. Hamilton’s tech glitch revelation raises questions about team communication under pressure, while Russell’s penalty underscores the fine line between strategy and rule-breaking in F1’s tightest circuit.

Norris’s win, narrowing the championship gap to McLaren teammate Piastri to three points, was a footnote in a race defined by controversy. As the F1 circus moves to Montreal, the FIA faces pressure to address Monaco’s shortcomings and ensure consistent stewarding. Russell’s bold move and Hamilton’s candid admission have exposed the sport’s growing pains, leaving fans eager for solutions to restore Monaco’s racing glory.

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