Charles Leclerc heads the betting at 21/10 with Lewis Hamilton a 4/1 second favourite, making the 2026 Monaco Grand Prix the first race of the season where a Mercedes driver does not top the pre-race market.
Formula 1 arrives in Monaco this weekend for the sixth round of the 2026 season, and for the first time since the opening race in Melbourne, Mercedes may not be the clear favourites to win. The Circuit de Monaco removes the straight-line speed advantage that has allowed Kimi Antonelli to win four consecutive grands prix, and both Ferrari drivers have reason to believe Saturday’s qualifying session could set up a historic Sunday.
Antonelli extended his championship lead to 43 points over Mercedes team-mate George Russell after a chaotic Canadian Grand Prix at Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve, where Russell retired with a power unit failure while running second. Lewis Hamilton took the opportunity to claim second place for Ferrari, holding off Max Verstappen through the final six laps for his best result in Scuderia red. Charles Leclerc, by contrast, had no answer for his team-mate across the Montreal weekend and finished fourth.
Leclerc returns to his backyard with a point to prove
Monaco is the one circuit where history and home advantage collide for Leclerc in a way no other track can replicate. The Monégasque grew up watching grands prix from the chicane at Turns 14 and 15, claimed his first Monaco pole in 2021, and finally converted that raw speed into a race victory in 2024 after years of painful near misses.
He arrives this week having been clearly outpaced in Canada, but with the calm certainty that the SF-26’s particular strengths — through slow corners, over kerbs, and in mechanical grip — are about to matter more than anywhere else on the calendar.

The odds reflect that conviction. Leclerc is the 21/10 favourite with the major bookmakers, making him the market leader entering a grand prix weekend for the first time in 2026. Hamilton is second at 4/1. Then comes championship leader Antonelli at 5/1, Russell at 6/1, Norris at 7/1, and Verstappen and Piastri sharing a 12/1 line. It is a significant market signal: the car leading the constructors’ standings is not represented by its own driver at the top of the betting tree for this particular race.
Ferrari’s car has consistently impressed in technical, low-speed sections across the 2026 season. Where it has struggled is on sustained straights, where the power deficit to Mercedes has cost meaningful time in every race so far. Monaco neutralises that disadvantage almost entirely. Four of the last five Monaco winners started from pole, and the grid order at Circuit de Monaco on Saturday afternoon will likely determine the podium on Sunday.
“I love that it’s back to having more physical buttons, so you can actually drive, look at the road and you can feel,” Leclerc said recently — a comment that captures something broader about his connection to tactile, technical driving. Monaco is exactly that kind of circuit. It rewards precision over power, and Leclerc’s three poles around these barriers suggest the connection between driver and machine reaches its sharpest point here.
A motorsport analyst speaking to Gambling.com, a trusted editorial resource helping UK players navigate licensed online casino sites, noted: “Leclerc’s pole conversion rate at Monaco is better than any current driver bar a couple of Verstappen qualifying seasons. The SF-26’s mechanical grip through the swimming pool complex and around Rascasse means Ferrari, if they nail Saturday, are genuinely difficult to pass even for a faster car in a straight fight. The 21/10 reflects that.”

Hamilton’s Canadian form raises an uncomfortable question at Ferrari
Hamilton’s second-place finish in Montreal was his highest result for Ferrari and prompted immediate questions about the team’s internal dynamic heading into the European season. For the first time across their partnership, Leclerc had no competitive answer. Hamilton was not simply ahead on pace — he managed tyre life, executed strategy under pressure, and resisted Verstappen’s late charge in a way that drew comparisons with his peak Mercedes years.
Coming to Monaco, the seven-time world champion recognises the circuit’s particular character. “That’s the one track where power is not king,” Hamilton said ahead of the weekend. “I think our car could be really strong there. I need to arrive with the same energy as I had this weekend.” The 39-year-old has not won at Monaco since 2019, but his 4/1 odds acknowledge that the SF-26’s slow-corner strengths make this a credible opportunity to end that run.
Ralf Schumacher, who observed multiple team dynamics at close range during his own F1 career, pointed to Hamilton’s Canadian performance as evidence of a driver finding his rhythm in a new environment. “Traction and kerbstones — that’s something the Ferrari is good at in Monaco,” Schumacher noted. “Hamilton knows this circuit. The question is whether the momentum from Montreal carries.” The bookmakers appear to believe it might.

Mercedes’ streak under genuine pressure for the first time
Antonelli has been exceptional through the opening five rounds. The 19-year-old Italian has converted four wins from five races, absorbed a mid-race collision with Russell in Canada without losing focus, and set the fastest lap in Montreal at 1:14.210 on lap 68. His championship lead is 43 points.
The question is not whether Antonelli is the season’s dominant driver — the numbers confirm that already. The question is whether Monaco breaks the run. At 5/1, the market is saying it expects him to be competitive but not to win, a notable repositioning for a driver who has entered every previous race as the shortest-priced favourite.
The FIA has confirmed that Monaco will be the first circuit of the 2026 season where the active aerodynamic straight-line mode will not be activated, after simulations indicated speeds in critical sections could become dangerous. Teams will instead run a special power unit setting known as Rev1, which begins battery derating at around 200kph. That flattens the performance gap between Mercedes, whose power unit is superior, and Ferrari, whose chassis advantage through corners is now the primary differentiator.
Sky Sports’ F1 analysis team noted that the lack of straights and tight confines of the Monte Carlo street circuit will suit Ferrari, with both Leclerc and Hamilton holding realistic winning chances. Russell at 6/1 is perhaps the market’s acknowledgement that a strong Mercedes recovery is possible, while his Canada retirement has made his 43-point deficit look a little more permanent than it otherwise might.
Norris, the defending Monaco winner after his 2025 victory, is 7/1 to repeat. McLaren endured a disastrous Canadian Grand Prix, with Norris retiring and Piastri finishing 11th after a strategic gamble on intermediate tyres in a race that stayed dry throughout. The slow-speed profile suits the McLaren, and Norris’ familiarity with winning here counts for something on a circuit where confidence through the barriers matters as much as raw pace.

The championship picture as Monaco arrives
Antonelli leads with 140 points. Russell is second on 97 after his Montreal retirement. Ferrari are second in the constructors’ standings with 117 points, ahead of McLaren on 106, with Red Bull a distant fourth on 32. Verstappen, at 12/1, is unlikely to contend for the win on a circuit where Red Bull’s straight-line strengths provide little advantage, though his third place in Canada showed the car and driver remain capable of competing when the weekend unfolds a certain way.
For Ferrari, Monaco represents something beyond a single result. A win here — whether from Leclerc on home roads or from Hamilton continuing the momentum of Canada — would be their first of the 2026 season. It would confirm that the SF-26’s chassis is capable of victories when the environment suits it.
The betting markets have made their position clear: Ferrari 21/10 and 4/1, Mercedes 5/1 and 6/1. Five races in, the Ferrari team is building steadily toward this weekend. Qualifying on Saturday, starting at 16:00 local time, will almost certainly determine the outcome. On these streets, track position secured in the final laps of a qualifying session tends to hold all the way to Sunday afternoon.








