Ferrari claimed its first home-nation victory since 2019 at the Italian Grand Prix on Sunday, with driver Charles Leclerc holding off the McLaren cars.
The difference for LeClerc was the team decision to have him make only one pit stop, compared to two for the McLaren team of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris.
The latter started in the pole position and eventually was surpassed by his teammate, with Piastri controlling the race much of the way.
But the second pit stop for each with about 20 laps to go gave LeClerc and his teammate Carlos Sainz — also employing the one-stop strategy — a chance to move into the lead in the latter laps of the race in Monza, Italy.
Sainz, who turned 30 on Sunday, wasn’t able to hold his place, however, given his worn-down tires, and was passed by the McLaren cars. Leclerc finished 2.6 seconds ahead of Piastri to claim his second win of the season, adding the title to his victory at the Monaco Grand Prix.
“I mean Monaco and Monza are the two races I want to win every year,” said Leclerc, who is from Monaco, per F1.com. “Obviously I want to win as many races as possible, and the World Championship as soon as possible, but these are the two most important races of the season and I managed to win them this year. It’s so, so special.”
It was the second Italian Grand Prix win for Leclerc, with Piastri, Norris, Sainz and Lewis Hamilton rounding out the top five.
“It’s an incredible feeling,” Leclerc said. “Actually I thought that the first time would just feel like this, and then the second time — if there was a second time — wouldn’t feel as special, but my god, the emotions in the last few laps, exactly the same like in 2019.”
Had there been another lap or two, Leclerc and his degrading tires might not have been able to hold on. With seven laps to go, his lead was 11 seconds, and with five laps left, it was 8.3.
McLaren lost an opportunity to overtake Red Bull in the constructor championship standings but closed to within eight points, down from 30.
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was sixth.
Also Sunday, Haas driver Kevin Magnussen was given a one-race ban after being assessed penalty points for a clash with Alpine’s Pierre Gasly. Added to his previous penalty points, Magnussen’s point total triggered the ban. He will miss the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, scheduled for Sept. 15.
–Field Level Media
NASCAR did not approve veteran driver Mike Wallace, who hasn’t competed in a Cup Series race since 2015, to get behind the wheel for MBM Motorsports at the 2025 Daytona…
Jacob Abel will race full-time in IndyCar this season after being hired for Dale Coyne Racing’s No. 51 car, while former DCR driver David Malukas has been named as the…
Sergio Perez’s downfall at Red Bull was swift, but it has not taken the Mexican star long to find peace as he considers his next career move. Perez signed a…
Jacob Abel, David Malukas land 2025 IndyCar rides
Sergio Perez ‘very happy,’ uncertain about F1 future
Daytona 500 announces sellout, ’26 race date
Aston Martin names Andy Cowell F1 team principal