Antonelli made a great start but it might have been an optical illusion as Verstappen, who was alongside him, lost power. It was well done by everyone that he was not hit as he was stationary in his grid spot. The only driver to overtake off the start was Gasly, who got past Norris, helped that he was avoiding the Red Bull As we got over that excitement, we saw that Russell was being investigated for a false start. Norris had grassed on reported him being outside his box but it was dismissed. Perez was given a drive through penalty for a false start; he did make a flying one.
After the stewards had finished their duties, there was nothing to report until we were a third of the way through the race. Hadjar's car was slowly breaking, losing different elements each lap. Russell had caught right up behind him and his car was jumping about wildly; I'm not sure if that is how the Mercedes are running or if that is the effect of turbulent air. Finally, it was the undercut at his pit stop nearly halfway through the race that got Russell past. As the drivers started making their one and only pit stop, Hamilton sped in the pit lane and received a five second penalty. He must have wanted the race over quickly so he could whisk Kim back to his Monaco pad.
Norris was the next driver to start to lose function in his car. David Croft speculated that the bumps on the track were knocking the cars apart: Norris, Hadjar, Verstappen had all lost power. Bearman and Bottas had also quietly retired. Russell also then got a five second penalty too for speeding in the pit lane. As the phrase goes, if he didn't have bad luck, he'd have no luck at all. The gremlins were serious and Norris had to retire. Piastri joined the speeding in the pit lane club. If it wasn't one thing it was another.
Both Williams were in the points then they were asked to swap places. Albon wasn't happy but did it and then we waited to see what would happen. After Sainz' stop they swapped back and Sainz was left to defend against Hulkenberg for a while. The strategy didn't work out because Linblad in front of them got a cheap pit stop...
Just as I was wondering whether we would get all the way through Qualifying and the Race without a Safety Car and only one Red Flag and whether Stroll would bring this about, Stroll went nose first into the wall at the chicane. Not all drivers came in for fresh tyres.
At the start, Hamilton got fairly close to race leader Antonelli but not enough for the pass. Leclerc behind his team mate had cold brakes and couldn't get them working at the restart and went into the tyre wall and out came the Safety Car again.
Gasly then sped in the pit lane. But Russell forgot to take his penalty so there would be more coming to him.
The crane and operators were well-practised and moved quick and Leclerc was almost immediately back in the garage and his car lifted off the track. The cars were going around the track behind the Safety Car and then the race was Red Flagged and suspended. Finally, we were shown what had happened: the tarmac on one corner was coming up in chunks.
Hamilton was investigated for some infringement but it was dismissed. Russell had a drive through penalty for not taking his penalty at his pit stop. Then the long wait was over and I have no idea what they actually did to the track to fix the problem. Antonelli's engineer thought they just swept it up and the problem would continue for the final eight laps of the race.
The Safety Car led the cars around to the grid for a standing start sprint shoot-out to end the Monaco GP. Antontelli kept his lead, with Hamilton right behind. Hulkenberg, who had been giving Williams grief all afternoon, tagged Sainz and put him out of the race as he was then tapped by Colapinto to seal the deal. The Audi then overtook Albon very naughtily. The German should not get any points for that race and those final laps. He gave the place back. He did get a ten second penalty in the end which did indeed put him out of the points.
As they raced close together, yet more infringements were reviewed by the stewards. Hadjar would be investigated after the race. Russell took his drive through and Gasly still had a second penalty to take. Hadjar was battling to get onto the podium but kept losing power in his Red Bull. Perez was also out of position at the restart and to be looked into.
The commentators effusive words during Antonelli's last lap made it seem fateful that he would crash during it. Hamilton took a great second place, which may feel like a win. Hadjar would stand on third place on the podium but might lose it later, which would be unfair on Piastri who needed a stand on the podium for his confidence. Hulkenberg's drop down the order meant that Cadillac scored their first ever point with Perez (even though he was still under investigation). It would be Alonso and Aston Martin who would get it if he were demoted.
Hamilton was the first to congratulate Antonelli before he was even out of the car. It was a good haul for Racing Bull in (potentially) sixth and seventh. Only fifteen cars finished the race. The top ten were Antonelli, Hamilton, Hadjar (who was cleared by the stewards in the end), Piastri, Lawson, Linblad, Gasly, Albon, Ocon and Perez.
With five races won in a row, Antonelli is firmly in the lead in the championship. There is only one week's gap before racing in Barcelona so he has the momentum and Russell is now behind Hamilton as well in the championship. When does George become a desperate man?