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Top 10 Le Mans Ferraris ranked: Testa Rossa, P4, 499P and more

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What we learned from Friday practice at the 2026 Monaco Grand Prix

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Formula 1
Monaco GP
What we learned from Friday practice at the 2026 Monaco Grand Prix

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Monaco GP
Alonso slams 2026 F1 cars as “worst ever” in Monaco

F1 Monaco GP: Hamilton heads Ferrari 1-2 from Verstappen in FP2

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Monaco GP
F1 Monaco GP: Hamilton heads Ferrari 1-2 from Verstappen in FP2

F1 Monaco GP: Leclerc leads Ferrari 1-2 in first practice, Hadjar and Alonso suffer crashes

Formula 1
Monaco GP
F1 Monaco GP: Leclerc leads Ferrari 1-2 in first practice, Hadjar and Alonso suffer crashes

Audi responds to F1's future engine plans: "We don't have problems with V8s"

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Monaco GP
Audi responds to F1's future engine plans: "We don't have problems with V8s"

LIVE: F1 Monaco GP live commentary and updates - Leclerc tops FP1, Hadjar and Alonso suffer crashes

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Monaco GP
LIVE: F1 Monaco GP live commentary and updates - Leclerc tops FP1, Hadjar and Alonso suffer crashes

LIVE: F1 Monaco GP commentary and updates - Hamilton leads Leclerc in red-flagged FP2

Formula 1
Monaco GP
LIVE: F1 Monaco GP commentary and updates - Hamilton leads Leclerc in red-flagged FP2

Red Bull F1 car so undriveable it was “dangerous” at Suzuka - Hadjar

Hadjar did not enjoy his Japanese GP, that’s the least one can say

Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing

Isack Hadjar has claimed his Red Bull Formula 1 car was undriveable to the point that it was dangerous in the Japanese Grand Prix.

Having qualified eighth at Suzuka, Hadjar lost three places in the first two laps, which “really sucked”, on his way to a 12th-place finish.

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Asked about the poor result, the Frenchman said: “It's not even 1% of how bad this race was. So it's no big deal. It's just I need to understand why that battery situation, and so early. Because I was comfortable in eighth. The plan was to fight Pierre [Gasly], which we were doing, and it all faded away with an empty battery. And then you're just powerless.”

Hadjar still had a decent chance of points from 11th, but was offered feisty resistance by Racing Bulls rookie Arvid Lindblad, who was given a black-and-white last-warning flag for moving under braking before the chicane – which the Red Bull driver branded as “not very useful for both of us, but it's OK, he's young”.

Arvid Lindblad, Racing Bulls, Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing

Arvid Lindblad, Racing Bulls, Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Simon Galloway / LAT Images via Getty Images

Then Hadjar was among the drivers who pitted before the safety car intervention, which dropped him to 13th. He did overtake Nico Hulkenberg and Gabriel Bortoleto to fight back to 11th, enjoying his battles with the Audis, but eventually was repassed by the German and therefore finished 12th.

“We didn’t have good pace anyway,” the Hadjar lamented on Canal+. “That was expected, but it was worse than earlier in the weekend. It was really, really undriveable – it even was dangerous. So that was tricky.”

And as F1 goes into a five-week break following the cancellation of the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian grands prix, Hadjar has little cause for optimism.

“The only positive right now is that I can drive the car fast. But we have no lead on how we can make the car fast,” he tersely said, having scored just four points over the first three rounds of the season.

Additional reporting by Jake Boxall-Legge

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