Charles Leclerc finally broke his Monaco Grand Prix curse on Sunday as Red Bull had an off weekend, with Max Verstappen sixth and Sergio Perez crashing out on the first lap.

Leclerc ended years of frustration at his home race by winning the jewel in the Formula One calendar from pole at his third attempt.

Leclerc, tearful, said, “No words can explain this. It means a lot, it’s the race that made me dream of becoming a F1 driver.”

“Tonight is going to be a big night!”

McLaren’s Oscar Piastri followed Leclerc across the line with Carlos Sainz in the other Ferrari in third.

In 2021 and 2022, Leclerc started at the front of the grid at the circuit he used to travel along on the bus to school as a kid, only for misfortune to stop him from winning on both occasions.

With Ferrari now a much smoother-run ship under Fred Vasseur, the team is much better than it was and Leclerc dictated the pace perfectly from the front, until the end of the first lap.

The red flag then came out to stop the race after a three car pile-up with Perez’s Red Bull ripped apart.

Perez spun after being hit hard from behind by Kevin Magnussen’s Haas.

Nico Hulkenberg in the other Haas was a third innocent casualty.

The race on the narrow streets of the Principality was interrupted for around 30 minutes to allow debris to be cleared off the circuit.

All three crash victims were missing at the restart, along with Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, who joined this unhappy group of onlookers after he was forced to retire following a tangle with his team-mate Pierre Gasly.

Leclerc escaped all the drama and led the rest of the race to claim his victory.

With three-time world champion Verstappen only sixth, Leclerc moved to within 31 points of the Dutchman, ahead of the Canadian Grand Prix taking place in a fortnight.

With AFP

Subscribe to our newsletter

Newsletter signup

Please wait...

Thank you for sign up!