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Pierre Gasly reflects on his 'crazy' F1 ride after Italian GP triumph

F1's shock underdog triumph for Gasly and AlphaTauri ends the big three's monopoly on race days after seven years; "After everything that happened to me in the last 18 months, I could not have hoped for a better way to get my first win"

AlphaTauri's Pierre Gasly ended Formula 1's long run of three-team victory domination, missed a congratulatory call from France's president, and then reflected on the "crazy ride" of the past 18 months of his career after delivering a true racing upset by winning the Italian Grand Prix.

A 250-1 shot for a first career victory from 10th on the grid ahead of the race, Gasly became the first driver outside of F1's recognised big three - Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari - to stand on the podium's top step for seven years and an astonishing 147 races.

F1's biggest teams had shared all of the race wins between them - including all the first 128 of the current V6 engine era - amid an unprecedented period of Sunday supremacy ever since the former Lotus team won at the 2013 Australian GP.

AlphaTauri, then known as Toro Rosso, had only won once before, also at Monza, with a young Sebastian Vettel in 2008. A dozen years on, and Red Bull's junior team's second triumph with Gasly was arguably even more unexpected.

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AlphaTauri team principal Franz Tost praised Pierre Gasly after the Frenchman claimed a maiden race win at the Italian Grand Prix

"I'm still struggling to realise what's happened for us," said the young Frenchman, who was only three months old the last time a driver from his country, Olivier Panis in Monaco 1996, won a Grand Prix.

"My first win in Formula 1… a couple of months ago I got my first podium in Brazil and then today it's my first win, in Monza with AlphaTauri, which is an Italian team.

"It could not have been better and we worked so hard, day by day, race after race, after everything that happened to me in the last 18 months, I could not have hoped for a better way to get my first win."

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Gasly's tumultuous path to being an F1 race winner

As test of characters go, Gasly has had to contend with a great deal in those 18 months he mentions.

After a breakout maiden year in F1 with Toro Rosso in 2018, he earned an immediate promotion to the main Red Bull team next to Max Verstappen for the following season when Daniel Ricciardo left for Renault.

But the step up to the big time was far from a smooth transition.

Two crashes in pre-season testing set the tone for a difficult baptism and Gasly's early-season form was inevitably compared to Verstappen's, who won two races and finished in the top five in every event up to the summer break.

By constrast, Gasly collected just two top-five results and never troubled the podium, with his single-lap deficit to his team-mate in qualifying - a tried-and-tested F1 barometer of performance and potential - especially glaring.

Pierre Gasly

Despite public assurances from Red Bull's bosses that he would be given more time, he was still demoted back down to the junior team during the August summer break with Alex Albon, by now himself catching the eye in Gasly's previous seat at Toro Rosso in his own rookie year, promoted in his place.

After just 38 starts, the early promise of the likeable Frenchman's F1 career was in danger of being lost.

Gasly finished in the points on his first race back with Toro Rosso at Spa but the weekend was tragically overshadowed by the death of his compatriot and long-time friend Anthoine Hubert in that weekend's F2 race.

Still coming to terms with the loss, he finished the season strongly and a maiden podium was the reward at the penultimate round in Brazil, coming home second to Verstappen after a typically incident-filled Interlagos race.

Top three finishers Max Verstappen of Netherlands and Red Bull Racing, Pierre Gasly of France and Scuderia Toro Rosso and Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP celebrate on the podium during the F1 Grand Prix of Brazil at Autodromo Jose Carlos Pace on November 17, 2019 in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Image: Top three finishers Max Verstappen of Netherlands and Red Bull Racing, Pierre Gasly of France and Scuderia Toro Rosso and Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP celebrate on the podium during the F1 Grand Prix of Brazil at Autodromo Jose Car

Gasly has been one of this season's most impressive and consistent performers and had already produced several eye-catching performances in qualifying sessions and races.

On an emotional his first return to Spa-Francorchamps last weekend since Hubert's passing, Gasly was voted the fans' driver of the day with a stirring run to eighth place, a performance which included a sensational move on Sergio Perez into Eau Rouge.

Gasly certainly therefore had plenty to reflect upon when he took a moment on his own after the trophy presentations and champagne to sit on the edge of the podium and gather his thoughts.

"I had so many things in my mind. I know these kind of moments are going so fast," he told Sky Sports F1 during The Notebook.

"From Brazil last year afterwards I was thinking I wished I had more time on the podium just to enjoy those kind of emotions even more.

"It was amazing. I just wanted to take the time to figure out what was just happening to me because it was amazing. I had a lot of thoughts crossing my mind and wanted to take my mind to enjoy that."

Not that it couldn't quite be the ultimate Monza podium experience.

"I wish there could have been thousands of people down there and all the Tifosi," said Gasly.

"Everyone says Monza is probably the craziest place to win because the Tifosi are so passionate here. I wished I could have felt that energy, but there were already so many emotions it was a fantastic moment."

A moment warmly recognised by colleagues inside F1, as well as significant followers outside.

Revealing he needed to return a missed call to his country's president, Emmanuel Macron, Gasly also reserved a special thanks for his Italian team.

"Franz [Tost, AlphaTauri's team boss] told me 'we have won it in the wet with Seb and now in the dry with you'. It's crazy. I'm so happy to have given these two podiums and to have my first race win with these guys because they have been giving me so much."

After a day like Sunday at Monza, the feeling is surely mutual.

Tributes to Gasly, Formula 1's 109th race winner

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