Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc completed on Saturday a flawless run through free practice ahead of his home Grand Prix in Monaco, laying down in FP3 a clear marker with a late-session flyer that left the field chasing shadows.
With a blistering lap of 1m10.953s, Leclerc outpaced Red Bull’s Max Verstappen by nearly three tenths, solidifying his status as the slight favorite for pole in his home race.
The session, however, revealed a tyre conundrum that promises to make the upcoming qualifying a tactical chess match, while a late crash by Lewis Hamilton brought a dramatic close to proceedings.
Monaco Grand Prix Free Practice 3 - Results
Leclerc’s Heroics Cement Ferrari Momentum
Under the golden sun of the Côte d’Azur, the final dress reheasal began in rather subdued fashion. Only six drivers took to the circuit in the first 15 minutes as teams played it safe on a street track still waking up from its public overnight access.
The early surface slickness added an element of unpredictability that would carry through the session.
Lando Norris and Leclerc traded early top spots before Max Verstappen threw down the gauntlet midway through, clocking a 1m11.233s on the medium C5 compound — a time that, oddly enough, stood firm against the supposedly faster soft tyres.
Leclerc answered back, trimming Verstappen’s benchmark to a 1m11.179s — just 0.054s quicker — before a stunning late surge saw him clock a 1m10.953s, stretching nearly three tenths clear of the Red Bull.
Leclerc’s clean sweep of the practice sessions — the first by a Ferrari driver here since Sebastian Vettel in 2017 — now puts him firmly in the crosshairs of pole position at his home race, something he achieved last year before retiring from the lead on Sunday.
But with tyre strategy now throwing a wrench into typical qualifying predictions, nothing is certain.
Tyre Troubles: The C6 Conundrum
The biggest talking point heading into qualifying isn’t just Ferrari’s form, but Pirelli’s C6 soft compound — a tyre that’s turning out to be more of a curse than a blessing.
Verstappen was among the most vocal about its lack of grip, declaring the red-walled softs had "no grip at all" going into Turn 1.
Mercedes’ George Russell echoed the confusion, saying he was "out of ideas" as his team scrambled for solutions in a session riddled with traffic and inconsistency.
Hamilton Tags the Wall as McLaren Impresses
While Leclerc grabbed the headlines, the session wasn’t without drama. Hamilton was on a late hot lap late in the session when he lost control at the tricky Massenet corner. The seven-time world champion clipped the wall with his right-rear, then his right-front, bringing out a red flag that effectively ended proceedings two minutes early.
Though he still ended fifth overall, the incident cast some doubt over the extent of the damage on the Briton’s SF-25, especially it gearbox element.
McLaren continued their strong weekend form, with Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri finishing third and fourth respectively, only a few tenths behind Leclerc. They’ve quietly built momentum over the weekend and are definitely contenders for the front row.
Further back, Williams' Alex Albon impressed with a sixth-place finish, while Racing Bulls’ Liam Lawson delivered another eye-catching performance to place seventh — a strong follow-up to his Friday pace.
Carlos Sainz, driving the second Williams this weekend in a temporary switch, slotted into eighth just ahead of Red Bull’s Yuki Tsunoda.
Mercedes’ rookie Andrea Kimi Antonelli rounded out the top 10, narrowly edging his more experienced team-mate Russell in another promising session for the young Italian.
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