The Monaco Grand Prix is rarely short of tension, but for Carlos Sainz, the Principality delivered a particularly bitter kind of chaos – one that ended with frustration, contact, and a points-paying opportunity ripped away in an instant.
What had been a controlled and promising afternoon for the Spaniard unravelled in the flash of a red-flag restart, with a collision involving Nico Hülkenberg at the exit of the Grand Hotel Hairpin ultimately sealing the fate of the Williams driver’s race.
Sainz, who had carried a flawless scoring streak on the streets of Monaco into the weekend, saw it all collapse in a chain reaction that also involved further contact moments later from Franco Colapinto’s Alpine.
By the time he limped to a halt, the damage was done – and so too was his patience.
The turning point came during the restart, when midfield congestion and cold tyres turned Monaco’s tight confines into a pressure cooker.
Sainz, running inside the top ten and on course for another strong finish, suddenly found himself in the middle of a scrap that spiralled out of control.
What followed, he argued, was a reckless escalation of risk-taking that cost him dearly.
“Very well managed race up until that restart,” he told reporters after the race.
“I think we did a very good, solid pace, very good race in general. Was en route to score another couple of points this weekend.
“But unfortunately, people at the restart just decided to take stupid risks and my race was over.”
Even after attempting to continue, Sainz’s battered Williams was struck again on the run out of Portier, forcing him into retirement and extinguishing what had looked like a straightforward points finish.
The Spaniard’s anger only grew as he reflected on a move he felt never had the margin to succeed in the first place.
“In a corner like Turn 6, that we’ve raced around here hundreds of times, and we know it always bunches up and people going for a dream move get it wrong sometimes,” Sainz added.
“I was the victim of it. Very frustrating because to throw all the effort of the team and two points in the bin is very frustrating.”
While Sainz pointed the finger at over-ambition in the pack, Hülkenberg found himself summoned for his part in the incident and later handed a 10-second time penalty.
But while the Audi driver was caught in the same restart melee, he offered a very different version of events, insisting he had been forced into avoidance rather than aggression.
©Audi
“Esteban was swerving around a bit. I had to avoid a crash with him, therefore ended up on the very inside, all the way up on Loewe’s corner on the kerb, full steering lock,” Hulkenberg said.
“It’s then somehow inevitable. I came around and obviously made contact.
“It was pretty heated and it was pretty difficult there to not hit something or someone. I need to re-watch TV, but of course I’m not happy, I don’t agree with it.”
For Hülkenberg, the contact was less a planned attack than an unavoidable consequence of Monaco’s tight margins and the concertina effect triggered by cars ahead.
As Monaco closed its gates on another chaotic Sunday, Sainz was left with zero reward for a weekend that had promised so much.
And while attention now shifts to Barcelona, the Spaniard’s parting message from the Principality was unmistakable: in Monaco, one ambitious lunge can undo an entire race in a heartbeat.
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