Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

FIA confirms changes to 2026 F1 rules ahead of Miami GP

Formula 1
Miami GP
FIA confirms changes to 2026 F1 rules ahead of Miami GP

Wolff warns against ADUO “gamesmanship”: Only one F1 manufacturer has a problem

Formula 1
Wolff warns against ADUO “gamesmanship”: Only one F1 manufacturer has a problem

Why 2026 F1 rule changes involve "a scalpel, not a baseball bat"

Formula 1
Miami GP
Why 2026 F1 rule changes involve "a scalpel, not a baseball bat"

Cars and stars from the 2026 Goodwood Members’ Meeting

General
Cars and stars from the 2026 Goodwood Members’ Meeting

Sutton takes early BTCC lead after Donington Park opener

Feature
BTCC
Donington Park (National Circuit)
Sutton takes early BTCC lead after Donington Park opener

Close encounters bookend glorious Goodwood’s 83rd Members’ Meeting

General
Close encounters bookend glorious Goodwood’s 83rd Members’ Meeting

Why 'inevitably' struck again in IndyCar as Palou won at Long Beach

Feature
IndyCar
Long Beach
Why 'inevitably' struck again in IndyCar as Palou won at Long Beach

Tech3 forced into fielding just one bike for MotoGP Spanish GP

MotoGP
Spanish GP
Tech3 forced into fielding just one bike for MotoGP Spanish GP

Alonso expects no upsets at Monaco

Fernando Alonso has warned not to expect too many surprises at the Monaco Grand Prix, where the Spaniard reckons things will not change much in front

The Monte Carlo circuit is renowned as a performance equaliser, and the races there are usually filled with trouble due to the nature of the track.

Ferrari team boss Stefano Domenicali suggested after Sunday's Turkish Grand Prix that BMW and even Renault could join his squad and McLaren in the fight on top.

"I think that not only McLaren will be strong, I am expecting Renault, BMW of course to be strong again," said Domenicali. "Everything will be different, so I think Monte Carlo will be a very important race for everyone."

Alonso, however, reckons the situation on top is likely to stay unchanged.

"We'll see," said Alonso when asked if he expected surprises at Monaco.

"That's what we always think when going to Monaco or at least we all think Monaco is so different that things will change, but in the end it's always a McLaren or a Ferrari winning or Renault like in 2006.

"The cars that have been winning all season arrive at Monaco and win too so in the end we see less surprises than we initially expect," added the Renault driver, who has won on the streets of the principality for the past two years.

The Renault team confirmed the step forward they have taken, with Alonso finishing in sixth place in Turkey's race on Sunday.

The two-time champion, however, said that was the best possible result.

"Yeah, impossible to do better," he said. "It sounds a bit repetitive, but the three teams in front are too far from the rest and we are fighting for seventh place, which is what we have been saying for a while.

"Here we achieved that, there were no surprises. Thanks to Kovalainen's problem we finished sixth, otherwise we would have been seventh."

Previous article Kovalainen vows to move on from Turkey
Next article Q & A with Fernando Alonso

Top Comments

Latest news