Alpine struggles at Monza: Gasly finishes P16, urges patience for 2026
Alpine faced another challenging weekend at the 2025 Italian Grand Prix, finishing well outside the points in Monza. Pierre Gasly, winner of the 2020 Italian GP, was unable to replicate past success, ending the race in 16th place, ahead only of teammate Colapinto and Lance Stroll. For the French team, it was yet another difficult outing as they continue to struggle in the midfield.
Following a disappointing qualifying session on Saturday, Alpine made several adjustments to Pierre Gasly’s #10 car. As a result, the French driver had to start the race from the pit lane, alongside teammate Isack Hadjar. The team opted for a long-race strategy, hoping for a safety car or a red flag to reshuffle the field, but the opportunity never came. Pierre Gasly ultimately finished 16th, lapped by the leaders, underlining Alpine’s ongoing difficulties.
Gasly looks to the future despite Monza disappointment
Despite the frustration of the weekend, Pierre Gasly emphasized the need to remain patient and focus on long-term development. In Monza, he confirmed his contract extension with Alpine until 2028, signaling confidence in the team’s project and their prospects for the 2026 regulation changes.
Pierre Gasly explained that even with an optimal strategy, Alpine would still finish in the same relative positions due to their lack of pace. He admitted the team is struggling both on Saturdays and Sundays and that trying different approaches is necessary. The long-race strategy with Franco Colapinto aimed to exploit potential safety cars or red flags, but it ultimately did not yield any advantage, leaving the drivers to finish where they were expected.
He added that Alpine’s issues are comprehensive, affecting both chassis and engine, and no single component can be blamed. The positive takeaway is that the team fully understands where the shortcomings lie. Moving forward, Gasly stressed the importance of giving maximum effort every weekend, even when the car is not competitive, and taking advantage of every possible opportunity.
“Right now, even on our best day, we would finish 16th or 17th,” Pierre Gasly noted. “That’s not the target. Our goal is to prepare the entire team to fight for much higher results next year.”
Gasly’s outlook highlights Alpine’s commitment to the long-term project and the steps they are taking to be competitive under the new 2026 regulations, despite a difficult season in 2025. Patience, persistence, and continuous learning remain central to the team’s strategy as they aim to close the gap to the front-runners.



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