IT'S RACE WEEK: 5 storylines we're excited about ahead of the 2025 Italian Grand Prix
Ferrari in focus and Lando Norris looking to bounce back from his Dutch Grand Prix doldrums – here are the big stories ahead of the Italian Grand Prix at Monza.


And just like that, the final race of the European season is upon us. Fresh from a thriller in the Netherlands, the paddock makes the relatively short trip south to Monza, and one of the sport’s most iconic and unique challenges.
Norris’ response to Zandvoort
The 2025 season has been extremely close between the McLaren drivers so far, and it appeared to be getting even closer after a run of four straight weekends where the pair finished first and second in every race.
Those results had seen the title fight ebb and flow and the gap remain small, but then came a reliability issue for Lando Norris in the closing stages of the Dutch Grand Prix. Out of nowhere, Oscar Piastri’s championship lead opened up to 34 points, after another impressive weekend from the Australian.
How Norris responds to that disappointment will be a significant aspect of this coming weekend, with the Briton having said the margin could actually allow him to drive more freely.
“It’s only made it harder for me and put me under more pressure,” Norris said. “But it's almost a big enough gap now that I can just chill out about it and just go for it.”
The mindset is one thing, but delivering the results is another, and Norris will be keen to start his fightback immediately by ensuring the gap is reduced to some degree by the end of the weekend in Monza.
Hadjar putting himself in the Red Bull frame
The second Red Bull seat alongside Max Verstappen is an intriguing part of the driver market this year, with Yuki Tsunoda currently in place but facing the same challenges that Liam Lawson and Sergio Perez had before him, and struggling to score points.
Tsunoda was promoted from Racing Bulls early this year and guaranteed his seat until the end of the season, with Red Bull saying his experience would give him the best chance of helping develop a troublesome car and get closer to Verstappen. But a return of just nine points since the move – including two in Zandvoort – leaves his future uncertain.
Hadjar made an impressive start to the season, but as a rookie is still learning his trade, and coming out of the summer break he had scored just a solitary point since the Spanish Grand Prix. But that run was emphatically ended with a stunning podium from fourth on the grid in Zandvoort, propelling Hadjar into the heart of the conversation for a Red Bull seat.
If he can follow up with another impressive performance in Monza this weekend, momentum will really build for the Frenchman.

A big weekend for Ferrari
The Italian Grand Prix is always a significant race for Ferrari, but this year it could be argued that it is even more so, as they come into the weekend off the back of a double DNF in Zandvoort.
Ferrari were increasingly competitive in the second half of last season – to such an extent that Charles Leclerc scored the most points of any driver after the summer break – but this year they have yet to register a victory, and are just 12 points ahead of Mercedes in the Teams’ Championship.
Leclerc took a hugely impressive win in Monza a year ago, making a one-stop strategy work to hold off the two McLaren drivers, but this time around the team arrive at their home race already on the back foot.
Having shown encouraging progress and strong pace compared to Leclerc in Zandvoort, Lewis Hamilton’s day on Sunday ended in disappointment as he crashed out of the race and then later received a five-place grid penalty for Monza, for not slowing sufficiently during reconnaissance laps to the grid.
Added to the lack of points, it was hardly the ideal way to head into such an important week in the team’s year, but Ferrari often find a way to challenge at home – and the crowd will be right behind them as ever.
The Tifosi and a historic venue
It is a huge crowd that descends on the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, and much like last weekend’s Dutch Grand Prix, it’s predominantly backing one entity. From Max Verstappen’s fans in Zandvoort, it’s Ferrari who receive significant support at their home race.
The scenes are special all weekend, but none more so than the iconic podium that sees the Tifosi spilling out onto the pit straight and unfurling a giant Ferrari flag, with the top three standing high above the track.
If the home crowd can’t manifest a Ferrari victory on Sunday, then they will be trying to do so for an Italian driver instead, with Kimi Antonelli returning to the scene of his first FP1 outing from 12 months ago. On that occasion, Antonelli crashed early in the session but was soon looking forward more positively after being announced as a future Mercedes driver the following day.
Antonelli arrives in Monza off the back of an encouraging race performance that was marred by a collision with Charles Leclerc at Zandvoort, and he will try and take the lessons from a challenging Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix – the event closest to his Bologna home – where he felt he ran out of energy before the race itself.

The ever-changing P5 fight
Both Ferraris failing to finish and Lando Norris also retiring opened up the potential for some big results in Zandvoort, and multiple teams took advantage.
On top of Hadjar’s well-earned podium, there was a strong points return for Williams as Alex Albon secured fifth, ahead of Ollie Bearman’s career-best sixth from a pit lane start. That was part of a double-points score for Haas – with Esteban Ocon 10th – while the two Aston Martins also scored in the top eight.
In some ways, the results cancelled each other out a little, with Racing Bulls only gaining three points on Williams, and Aston Martin matching Albon’s return of 10. But it just goes to show how well some teams are performing, and keeps the fight for Teams’ Championship positions close.
Williams managed to retain their 18-point lead over Aston Martin, but a further 18 points then cover Aston in sixth with Racing Bulls, Sauber and Haas in ninth.
Williams Team Principal James Vowles says the first three races out of the break – Zandvoort, Monza and Baku – are his team’s best chance to score points and build up a bit of a buffer, and they’ll need to with four teams in the chasing pack all recently proving they are capable of scoring heavily.

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