Historic day as Webber wins in Monaco

By Tristan Rayner / Editor

Mark Webber won the Monaco Grand Prix in a flawless performance around one of the most special places to drive a car anywhere in the world – the streets of Monte Carlo.

The only other races that attract so much attention are the Indianapolis 500 and the Le Mans 24 hour race.

Webber set up his victory in the stunning street circuit of Monaco with a storming pole position on Saturday, becoming the first Australian to be on pole at Monaco since 1967.

Webber calmly executed the win despite a number of safety car incidents making life difficult, caused by car failures and a spectacular crash between Jarno Trulli and Karun Chandhok in the last few laps right in front of the Australian.

Once upon a time, Webber’s legendary bad luck would have had him unable to avoid the crash – but he managed to sneak past, keep out of trouble, and carry on for the win.

Webber was ecstatic after the race: “Absolutely incredible, for sure this is the greatest day of my life today,” Webber said immediately after crossing the finish line.

Webber’s Red Bull Racing teammate Sebastian Vettel finished in second after taking Robert Kubica at the first corner and holding off the charging Polish driver. Kubica rounded out the podium for the revived Renault team.

Yet Webber’s win wasn’t the only victory at Monaco today for the Aussies. Young Red Bull reserve driver and Australian Daniel Ricciardo qualified on pole in the World Series of Renault (WSR) Formula 3.5 and won from pole position in similarly emphatic fashion. Ricciardo never looked in doubt from the start of his race, running in a class of one.

Some of the best entertainment all weekend came from WSR with overtaking by New Zealander and teammate of Ricciardo, Brendon Hartley. The young driver was on the limit between brave and foolhardy around Monaco, damaging the nose of his car as he finished 4th from 8th on the grid.

Both Webber and Ricciardo now lead their respective championships in a huge day for Australians in open wheelers, as the Australian anthem became familiar to Principality locals. Interestingly, Webber leads only on race wins, as his teammate Vettel now has the same number of points – an intriguing development between the ultra competitive teammates.

Still, regardless of the final outcome of the season, a win at a track that demands so much from the drivers is the one that everyone wants, despite it being a real one off track. Monaco does not ruin a drivers reputation – it makes them. Jarno Trulli has only ever won one race, yet he isn’t regarded as a failure as he won at Monaco.

Webber’s win was the first for an Aussie in 51 years after Sir Jack Brabham won in 1959. That win was the highlight of Sir Jack’s career and Webber was humbled and honoured about following such a legend of the sport, and other legends such as Ayrton Senna, Jackie Stewart, Sir Stirling Moss and many more.

Webber’s maximum result from the last two races puts him on a strong charge heading to the next race in Turkey. Dan Ricciardo, on the other hand, will be seeking to continue to impress, and will be pushing very hard to take a Formula 1 drivers seat next year.

This is absolutely historic for Australian motorsports. When you consider Casey Stoner is consistently challenging in MotoGP and in IndyCar Will Power is leading the championship with Ryan Briscoe also performing well in the series, it is truly a golden age for Aussie drivers.

The Crowd Says:

2010-05-18T15:12:45+00:00

Akazie

Guest


Lets hope he can make it 3 in a row, well done champ.

2010-05-17T21:52:22+00:00

Bob

Guest


and 'beast-a-tron' you lose with that rubbish name

2010-05-17T09:52:19+00:00

Chris

Guest


Great to see he hasn't left his roots behind. Can't imagine he did it for the money either (if there even was any).

2010-05-17T09:38:51+00:00

Andy

Guest


Congrats to Mark Weber, long time coming!

2010-05-17T07:58:54+00:00

James

Guest


Webber is a Canberra milk kid: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be3-J9XtJCw

2010-05-17T06:53:35+00:00

Michael C

Roar Guru


Bit tired now,.....sat up and watch too much of it last night........not my regular thing, but, it just felt pretty right for him from the start, (helps having poll at Monaco no doubt).

2010-05-17T06:39:37+00:00


Another solid win from Webber and another nail in the metaphorical coffins of his moronic haters and critics. Way to to show em Mark!

2010-05-17T06:35:31+00:00


Way to go on completely ignoring the valid point he made. You lose.

2010-05-17T05:20:10+00:00

Bob

Guest


dont kid yourself Chris, we all know you arent paying taxes.

2010-05-17T05:05:35+00:00

Chris

Guest


and if it wasn't for the Federal taxpayer Canberra would never have existed. That and something about your water supply...

AUTHOR

2010-05-17T03:27:10+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


There is a bit of talk that Ferrari are interested in Webber as they consider replacing Massa who has not performed well so far this season (although Monaco results were better). Kubica is surely on the radar as he again wringed performance out of his Renault. Can't really see it happening myself, Red Bull are giving Mark everything he needs at the moment for the first time in his career.

2010-05-17T03:22:47+00:00

Bob

Guest


Ahh if it wasnt for Canberra, QBN would have collapsed a long time ago. So for keeping QBN alive, us Canberrans will claim this one thanks! Go Webber - The man from the berra!

2010-05-17T03:15:01+00:00

Brett McKay

Guest


quite true Chris, especially the current configurations. Ironic really that the old GMC400 walls are in use!! I'm certainly glad I've got a little bit of power under my right foot as I negotitate it each day...

2010-05-17T03:01:03+00:00

Hansie

Guest


The coverage last night seemed to be suggesting a possible driver swap of Massa and Webber, but Webber to Ferrari seemed to be at longer odds than Kubica to Ferrari. Of course, all that speculation was before the race.

2010-05-17T02:41:28+00:00

ilikedahoodoogurusingha

Guest


ABC Sydney this morning were saying that he may be going to Ferrari next year. Any news/info anyone?

2010-05-17T02:21:12+00:00

Chris

Guest


Apologies for the double posting above. Though it was lost in the mail. Brett - must have learnt those silky skills on our fine (yet much maligned) roundabouts. If you can get through Parkes Way/Kings Avenue at 4:10 in the afternoon (ie: when the public servants leave for the night) then Monaco would be easy.

AUTHOR

2010-05-17T01:40:47+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


Agreed Hansie! Webber has always threatened to take it up with the big boys but reliability and perhaps confidence in the car hampered his charge. I've never given up on him over the last years, but I also never dreamed that he wouldn't just win a few races, but absolutely dominate them. Don't forget just a few weeks ago Vettel was the heir apparent to Schumacher's crown, this that and the other, but Webber has torn him to shreds now. Good call on the Monaco/Indy 500 double... I'm wondering if we might have a WSR champ, F1 champ and Indy champ by the end of the season :) Webber does have a chance looking forwards, he did well in Turkey last year and Silverstone, unfortunately the Germany track isn't the Nurburgring where he won for the first time last year but Hockenheim so not sure there. Spa, Monza and Montreal will be tracks not ideally suited to both the RBR and the Renault engine I believe.

2010-05-17T00:21:23+00:00

Brett McKay

Guest


Chris, Webber does still have his moments merging in traffic!! That's as Canberra as they come :-D

2010-05-17T00:19:10+00:00

Chris

Guest


Canberra? More like Queanbeyan mate. Ironic that the Canberra region produces one of the world's best drivers given how shocking the average Canberran is on the road.

2010-05-17T00:06:34+00:00

Hansie

Guest


Agreed that RBR should sign him up pronto. I've previously posted that I was worried about Red Bull parachuting Kimi Raikkonen into Webber's seat, but I think I can relax on that front.

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