Is Singapore better than Monaco?

By Michael Lamonato / Expert

To anyone the headline hasn’t already driven away: welcome. Welcome, and hear this column out before you leave.

Claiming any race on the Formula One calendar parallels the significance of Monte Carlo without your next words being ‘but Monza’ is motorsport sacrilege, but in the streets of Marina Bay we might yet have our Beelzebub.

First the defence.

The Monaco Grand Prix is a race of supreme heritage bettered only by the Italian Grand Prix. The streets of Monte Carlo, in a configuration remarkably similar to the one used today, hosted a championship round in Formula One’s inaugural season and hasn’t missed a year since 1955.

For this reason the circuit is inextricably linked with Formula One history. It has borne witness to some of the sport’s most astonishing feats and has become synonymous with some its premier drivers, not least of whom are Ayrton Senna.

‘Formula One’ and ‘Monte Carlo’ fit together as naturally as ‘Monaco’ and ‘Grand Prix’. On display is not only sublime driving talent but also a projection of the sport’s image of choice – glitz and glamour, wealth and fame, challenge and reward.

“This isn’t just motor racing,” Monaco shouts to the world. “This is *Formula One*.”

Indeed one need go only so far as four months back to read this very column’s consideration of why Monaco, despite the inevitability of the twisty circuit delivering boring racing, showcases Formula One like no other venue.

Or does it?

Enter Singapore.

Marina Bay mounts a comprehensive argument for the crown of motorsport’s best street circuit.

A racing lap around the historic Monte Carlo is like threading a needle 19 times at 170 kilometres per hour; a lap around Marina bay is much the same, but you’re forced to do it 23 times at night while covered in sweat.

The suffocating tropical climes of Singapore make this grand prix the sternest test on the calendar. It’s a combination of the inescapable heat of Bahrain, the claustrophobic humidity of Malaysia and the daring layout of Monaco rolled into one impossible race.

The unrelenting bumps intrude into the cockpit, daring you to lose concentration. The brake pedal gets longer, demanding more and more energy when your legs have only less and less to give. There’s little time between corners to mentally relax. The only consolation is that you’re an astounding three kilograms lighter when the time comes to extricate yourself from your car.

Last year’s fastest lap was an excruciating one minute 50.041 seconds – the second-longest circulation of the season – and after 68 laps that take the race perilously close to the maximum two-hour mark there are few words to adequately describe the experience.

Even the machinery is punished at Marina Bay. Brakes are consumed more quickly, fuel is tricky to manage, and the power units are in a state of thermal duress – and that’s before considering the power lines running beneath the bridge between turns 12 and 13 that can wreak havoc with a car’s electrics.

Given the Herculean racing task it’s little wonder only Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton, and Sebastian Vettel have been able to secure victory in the Lion City.

A racing challenge? Check – and the race is equally impressive off-track.

Formula One is big business – between now and next year the sport’s commercial rights are changing hands to the tune of $8 billion – meaning there’s no shortage of the high-flyers that descend upon the Monaco harbour each May.

And while that harbour sets the Monaco Grand Prix along the stunning Côte d’Azur, the glittering neon towers of the Singapore skyline still pack a punch.

History? It’s perhaps Singapore’s one weakness, but it isn’t for a lack of trying.

Before even mentioning the momentous ‘crashgate’ scandal of 2008–09 Singapore can lay claim to hosting the first race after the European leg, earning itself the chance to set up the title fight to the finish. In 2016 Marina Bay will set the tone for the final seven races with Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg separated by just two points.

The Singapore Grand Prix has fast established itself as a mainstay of the Formula One calendar. Its uniquely challenging layout triggers good racing for a street circuit, and its world class setting makes it an undeniably attractive grand prix.

Does that make it better than Monaco?

You decide. But the case is compelling.

Follow @MichaelLamonato on Twitter.

The Crowd Says:

2016-09-17T02:30:35+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


The Monaco race is very boring, it's the only race in the season where I only watch the highlights. If I was going compare it against other races, it would be against other procession races in the calendar. I do agree the history and glitz keeps it on the calendar and don't intend to suggest it should be taken off. Perhaps change the point system, so classification awards more points than the race? Make classification longer to go with it? Or perhaps make it into a mid-season exhibition race, no points to the championship, but where teams can try out components and do other tweaks. Almost a test, but run like a race with a trophy to the winners, etc. Know neither of these will ever be adopted, but it's what I'd do if I had the controls.

2016-09-17T00:23:42+00:00

marfu

Guest


Thanks Michael. Street tracks in F1 are probably a necessary evil to provide some variety but the cars have outgrown them. I wish I knew the answer to change the formula to allow more interesting street races as changing the tracks to be wider and have longer straights like Baku doesn't seem to work as even that was a bit of a dud this year.

2016-09-16T12:35:08+00:00

Tony

Guest


There's a few corners that you can get some good photos - one in particular in the cheap tickets section (zone 4) just after the Singapore Cricket Club.

2016-09-16T08:44:10+00:00

Simoc

Guest


I think you missed the single most noticeble feature of the Singapore GP, and that is that it is under lights, the only GP that is.

2016-09-16T08:08:16+00:00

Carl

Roar Rookie


Short answer to your title question: yes. I've said for a while now Monaco is actually my least favourite of the current Grands Prix on the calendar. I get the history and the glitz and glamour but the cars have long since outgrown the track and the races have become so dull there that I didn't even watch this year. I'd still like to go one day for the event that is Monaco but its definitely at the bottom of the list of races I haven't been to yet. Singapore isn't usually the most thrilling race, but it definitely rates better than Monaco for me. And really I guess not every race track can be as entertaining as Spa-Francorchamps or the old Hockenheim or Adelaide circuits (that's right Adeladie still >>> Melbourne, even non-Croweaters I know that have been to both say the same thing).

2016-09-16T06:27:44+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


What a great place for the race!

AUTHOR

2016-09-16T06:15:29+00:00

Michael Lamonato

Expert


Definitely true in terms of the quality of the racing. Singapore benefits from having a bit more space for the drivers to play with, which makes a significant difference without taking away from the challenge. It does have a touch of the exotic about it, doesn't it? Monaco's exciting, but it's still Europe like half the other races. Singapore is close to unique amongst even the Asian races.

AUTHOR

2016-09-16T06:13:32+00:00

Michael Lamonato

Expert


Much closer! And you can even stay in the same city for the race, which isn't always particularly economical in Monte Carlo. Yeah, the Monaco corners are more famous, and the circuit is that much tighter, which it gives it an additional air of spectacle — the Singapore circuit doesn't feel Ike it's been squeezed into an impossible space like Monaco does.

2016-09-16T02:43:27+00:00

Tom Bridge

Roar Pro


I have long said to friends that I would go to the Singapore Grand Prix first, before Monaco. I love the history of Monaco and the setting, including the circuit - that hairpin is incredible. The race itself, however, tends to be a procession. I know a number of the races on the calendar have that feel and reality, but Monaco tops the list in that regard. You just have to look at how much pole position actually matters at Monaco for the end result. I think it is almost purely the fact that the Singapore GP takes place at night that it is the drawcard for me - but the food would be a lovely bonus for me also. Plus it is a lot cheaper to stay overlooking the track than it is in Monaco. And you are right in terms of what is required physically to conquer the Singaporean F1 race.

2016-09-16T01:43:42+00:00

bill

Guest


I think history and the length of the track are the two knocks - the part around the Marina is awesome - but then the pit straight is so far away from that so I don't know how it could be made smaller. have been to both - both are excellent/amazing weekends - but their were corners where I had to go in Monaco to have a look and take photos etc - whereas there is barely one in Singapore I can think off. of course - its a much smaller flight so I know which one I will be going back too.

Read more at The Roar