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F1 Champion Plunges Into Monaco Harbour Before Strange Coincidences Unfold

Highlights

  • 72nd Monaco Grand Prix held since inaugural 1950 race.
  • Only Alberto Ascari and Paul Hawkins crashed into Monaco harbour.
  • Ascari crashed in 1955; later died testing at Monza circuit.
  • Hawkins crashed in 1965; died in 1969 racing accident.
  • Both drivers escaped harbour crashes but died years later racing.
  • Lewis Hamilton favored contender amid competitive Monaco Grand Prix weekend.

Monaco stages its 72nd Grand Prix, a precision test on Formula 1’s tightest circuit. The harbour provides glamour, but history shows only two race-day plunges into the water.

Those rare incidents define Monaco’s risk profile and safety evolution. Alberto Ascari in 1955 and Paul Hawkins in 1965 both ended up in the harbour and survived.

Only Alberto Ascari and Paul Hawkins have ended up in Monaco’s harbour during a Grand Prix.

Ascari is a two-time champion from 1952 and 1953 with Ferrari, seasons run to Formula 2 regulations. After switching to Lancia in 1954, reliability blunts his campaign.

Historic Monaco harbour incidents in Formula 1
Image Credit: F1i

In 1955 he leads after Stirling Moss retires with engine failure. On lap 80 of 100, he misjudges braking for the post‑tunnel chicane-to-be and spears into the harbour.

Ascari escapes the sinking Lancia and swims to a boat. Days later at Monza, he dies testing a Ferrari sports car; the cause remains unclear.

Ascari escaped the 1955 plunge, then died days later testing at Monza.

Family tragedy adds symmetry. His father, Antonio, dies after leading the 1925 French Grand Prix. Both are 36 and die on the 26th, soon after surviving major crashes.

The second arrives in 1965. Lotus driver Paul Hawkins misjudges the chicane and escapes before the car sinks. He dies in 1969 at Oulton Park after a fiery Lola crash.

Hawkins survived Monaco in 1965, but died at Oulton Park in 1969.

These cases remain unique on race day, despite Monaco’s punishing geometry. Modern barriers and marshals improve protection, yet mistakes still carry immediate consequences seen in recent high-profile crashes.

Track position and tyre warm-up will decide the weekend. Lewis Hamilton looks strong if Mercedes maximises ride and traction. Red Bull’s kerb and bump compliance could limit its advantage.

The weather outlook, safety cars, and qualifying execution can flip the order. Teams will prioritise clear air and pit windows that avoid traffic.

Recent rule changes around start procedures and Safety Car deployments also shape strategy. Monaco rewards precise execution under these rules more than outright pace.

Visual Summary


Monaco’s Harbour Crashes Ascari 1955 Hawkins 1965


?

Only TWO drivers have landed in Monaco’s harbour:

Alberto Ascari
1955, while leading the race

Paul Hawkins
1965, at the chicane

A
Alberto Ascari
Launched into the harbour in 1955. Fatal crash days later, aged 36—his father Antonio died aged 36, both on the 26th, after surviving prior crashes.

H
Paul Hawkins
Harbour crash in 1965; died in a fire at Oulton Park on May 26, 14 years after Ascari’s identical date.


Two crashes into the blue—the Monaco Harbour keeps its secrets, its duels, and its legends.
As F1 returns, drama awaits: will anyone else join this list of rare and unforgettable moments?

2024:


Hamilton vs Red Bull—Monaco awaits new stories.

Who dares the edge?
Who risks the splash?

Daniel miller author image

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.

Daniel miller author image
Daniel Miller

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.

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