2025 Italian Grand Prix start time: how to watch, live stream, F1 schedule and weather
The 2025 Italian Grand Prix is up next – find out how to follow all the F1 action from Monza as it happens
The F1 car that Daniel Ricciardo and Nico Hülkenberg hope will catch the ‘big three’ is unveiled at Renault’s factory
Renault has unveiled its RS19 for the 2019 Formula 1 season at the team’s factory in Enstone.
From a mere eight points in 2016, Renault earned 57 in 2017 and sixth place in the standings. Last season, Renault improved again to 122 points and fourth in the constructors’ standings.
The team is widely identified as most likely to bridge the gap to F1’s ‘big three’ squads of Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull, yet the deficit is sizeable as even with Renault’s improvement it scored some 297 points fewer than third-placed Red Bull last season.
Furthermore, Renault, as our grand prix editor Mark Hughes has explained, is not spending on the level of the trio ahead and hopes instead that F1’s governing body and Liberty will bring in budget limitations.
More: How Renault is engaging in F1’s arms race
Yet for this season Renault has F1’s most sensational driver signing for many a year, tempting multiple grand prix winner Daniel Ricciardo from Red Bull to partner the highly-rated Nico Hülkenberg. Hülkenberg’s partner from last year, Carlos Sainz, has moved to McLaren.
The 2025 Italian Grand Prix is up next – find out how to follow all the F1 action from Monza as it happens
In a new interview with Matt Bishop, former McLaren F1 boss Eric Boullier has revealed what Ron Dennis said when it became clear the Honda partnership was a grave error
The charismatic Giuseppe Farina won the battle of the 'Three Fs' to become F1's first ever world champion – but he's now a forgotten racing hero, writes Matt Bishop
From Piastri's long-overdue luck to Ferrari's nightmare and Sainz's heartbreak, the 2025 Dutch GP left few drivers unscathed and plenty of questions for the season ahead