Lando Norris reveals Monaco Grand Prix success is a dream realised
The 25-year-old was victorious on Sunday.
Lando Norris says he has realised a childhood dream and looks forward to his own kids telling everyone that their dad won the Monaco Grand Prix.
The 25-year-old converted his scintillating lap-record pole position on Saturday into victory on Sunday as he held off local hero Charles Leclerc and overcame the strategy puzzle of a mandatory two-stop race.
Norris became McLarenās 16th Monaco winner but their first since Lewis Hamilton in 2008 and cut team-mate Oscar Piastriās championship lead to three points after the Australian finished third.
Monaco is the jewel in the Formula One crown and undoubtably the famous prestigious on the calendar and Norris was overjoyed to etch his name into the history books.
āSeeing the chequered flag and winning in Monaco is something I dreamed of when I was a kid,ā Norris said.
āThe view of the team and seeing everyone, my mum and dad down below⦠itās the feelings inside, which are really the special ones.
āThere are many things that I think everyone dreams of ā itās getting to Formula 1, winning a race in Formula 1 and winning a race in Monaco. And we achieved it today.
āI think the best bit is that my kids one day will be able to tell everyone that I won in Monaco. Thatās probably the thing Iām most proud about.
āItās the meaning, the history, the people that have won here in the past.
āThey donāt always go on to be champions, but most of them have. And just to know in 30 yearsā time, I can say āI mastered Monaco that one yearā ā or hopefully a few more ā but that one year is something I look forward to saying.ā
Norris survived a scare when he locked up at turn one but stayed ahead of Leclerc and he remained in control of the race despite the mix of pit-stop strategy.
The FIA introduced a mandatory two-stops for this year in a bid to spice up the race on a track where overtaking is nigh-on impossible.
Max Verstappen left his second stop until the penultimate lap, backing Norris up into Leclerc and taking his chance on a red flag playing into his hands.
That did not materialise as he finished fourth and Norris was able to savour his Monaco moment.
The British driver has been open about his frustration over qualifying struggles which left him trailing in the championship race and he has been criticised for making mistakes under pressure.
Norris insists he always had belief and feels he now has positive momentum to take into the Spanish Grand Prix next weekend.
āI was more proud of yesterday than I almost was of today,ā Norris added.
āNot just because a pole in Monaco sets up a win but the accomplishment of doing it, no matter what the track would have been, was something Iām more proud about.
āTo kind of give myself that momentum, that boost, definitely makes me feel better going into Barcelona next week.
āPeople have their own opinions, they can do all of those things. Thing is, none of them are true, 99 per cent of the time. So, itās all crap.
āI donāt mind what people write as long as I know the truth and my team know the truth.ā
Lewis Hamilton gained two places to finish fifth for Ferrari.