Liam Lawson has achieved his best Formula One qualifying position of 2025, and will start ninth at the Monaco Grand Prix.
The Racing Bulls driver is the best chance for a points finish as he’s been this year so far, given the narrow nature of the Circuit de Monaco making overtaking on track nigh on impossible.
Lawson had only advanced to Q3 twice in his career previously, coming at Singapore in 2023 and Brazil last year. On both of those occasions, Lawson finished in the points, finishing ninth in each.
And having shown pace all weekend, Lawson can hope to finish in the points for the first time since that Brazil race, provided there are no major incidents over the course of the Grand Prix.
“Coming into the weekend, I think I would have been happy with [reaching] Q3,” said Lawson after qualifying.
“But the car’s been pretty quick, especially in P2 and P3. We were very strong. To be honest, I think we missed a little bit in quali. That’s a bit of a shame.
“We got traffic as well, but this place is always full of that. It feels like we missed out a little bit, but a strong quali for the team.
“With the new rules, it’s going to be interesting anyway, so we’ll be trying to plan the best we can.
“The most important part, I would say, of the weekend is done. We’re in a decent position, and the car is fast.
“We just need to optimise it tomorrow.”
- Lawson ‘disappointed, for everybody’ after Imola Grand Prix
- 'Tough one to swallow': Lawson robbed by red flag, qualifies 16th in Imola
- Lawson forced to retire after damage in Miami Grand Prix
- Lawson stripped of first F1 points of 2025, loses seventh-place sprint finish
- ‘That was so bad’: Lawson beaten by teammate, to start 14th in Miami sprint
- Lawson’s hopes of points finish dashed by time penalty in Saudi Arabia
McLaren’s Lando Norris claimed his second pole position of the season, and set a new track record with a lap of 1m 9.954s, which condemned Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc to start second in his home race, looking to make it two victories in as many years.
World championship leader Oscar Piastri will start third, and was 0.175s back from his teammate, while Leclerc’s Ferrari teammate Lewis Hamilton completes the second row in fourth.
Current world champion Max Verstappen starts fifth, while Lawson’s Racing Bulls teammate Isack Hadjar is sixth, 0.969s back from Norris.
Make no mistakes, the Monaco Grand Prix is a race where qualifying holds more significance than any other circuit on the Formula One grid.
More often than not, a driver’s best lap in qualifying is more significant than any of the 78 to be raced in the Grand Prix.
Liam Lawson in practice for Formula One's Monaco Grand Prix. Photo / Red Bull
That’s why the FIA - the sport’s governing body - have gone to the lengths of dictating drivers must undertake at least two pit stops and make use of three sets of tyre compounds during the race.
Just what effect that has, though, will be seen in the Grand Prix.
Lawson can take confidence from his displays at Monaco in Formula Two, where he claimed an initial victory in the sprint race, before it was stripped for an illegal throttle map. On that occasion, though, Lawson finished ahead of Piastri, before he lost his result.
Taking to the track off the back of two top 10 finishes from three practices, Lawson temporarily set the fastest time in Q1, clocking a first mark of 1m 12.946s.
And while that mark understandably didn’t stand as the fastest time for long, Lawson was able to progress with the 12th fastest time in Q1, 1m 11.818s, after Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli hit the barrier at turn 11 to trigger a red flag.
Being on the right end of a red flag will be a welcome relief for Lawson, who was eliminated in Q1 at Imola last week for the same reason.
The Kiwi continued to improve into Q2, and posted a first time of 1m 11.646s to temporarily move second behind Leclerc, before Mercedes suffered another blow when George Russell lost power, and caused another red flag as he too was forced to retire.
Once the session resumed, Lawson improved even further with a best lap of 1m 11.250s, however that placed him ninth, and at risk of elimination. But Mercedes’ retirements and three other drivers failing to better his time had Lawson advance to Q3 without any real issue.
One of those drivers was Red Bull’s Yuki Tsunoda, who missed out on Q3 by 0.153s, after replacing Lawson in the senior team after just two races earlier this year.
At no risk of elimination, Lawson was able to set a 1m 11.129s in Q3, but ultimately finished 1.175s off Norris, and 0.206s back from Hadjar.
And while Racing Bulls can take pride from having both cars finish in the top 10, Lawson will still have one eye on bettering Hadjar once the lights go out.
Earlier, Lawson continued his impressive displays from Friday practice by clocking the seventh-fastest time in the final session before qualifying.
Fresh from being the quickest of the four Red Bull-affiliated cars in FP2, Lawson was second only to Verstappen in FP3, and managed a best lap of 1m 11.814s, 0.861s off the pace set by Leclerc.
That time saw Lawson improve on his FP2 mark by nine milliseconds, and showed the Kiwi was continuously improving throughout the race weekend. Lawson logged another 33 laps in the third and final practice, the most by any of the 20 drivers on the grid.
In comparison, Hadjar finished FP3 in 17th, 0.457s back from his teammate. However, Hadjar was also prevented from setting a final push lap after Hamilton hit the wall to trigger a red flag, and prematurely end the session.
The Monaco Grand Prix begins at 1am on Monday (NZ time).
Monaco Grand Prix starting grid
- Lando Norris - McLaren
- Charles Leclerc - Ferrari
- Oscar Piastri - McLaren
- Lewis Hamilton - Ferrari
- Max Verstappen - Red Bull
- Isack Hadjar - Racing Bulls
- Fernando Alonso - Aston Martin
- Esteban Ocon - Haas
- Liam Lawson - Racing Bulls
- Alex Albon - Williams
- Carlos Sainz - Williams
- Yuki Tsunoda - Red Bull
- Nico Hulkenberg - Sauber
- George Russell - Mercedes
- Kimi Antonelli - Mercedes
- Gabriel Bortoleto - Sauber
- Oliver Bearman - Haas *penalty
- Pierre Gasly - Alpine
- Lance Stroll - Aston Martin *penalty
- Franco Colapinto - Alpine
Alex Powell is a sports journalist for the NZ Herald. He has been a sports journalist since 2016.
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