2005 French Grand Prix

France  2005 French Grand Prix
Race details
Race 10 of 19 in the 2005 Formula One season
Date 3 July 2005
Official name Mobil 1 Grand Prix de France
Location Magny-Cours, France
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 4.411 km (2.74 mi)
Distance 70 laps, 308.77 km (191.8 mi)
Weather Sunny, Air: 32 °C (90 °F), Track 53 °C (127 °F)
Pole position
Driver Renault
Time 1:14.412
Fastest lap
Driver Finland Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes
Time 1:16.423 on lap 25
Podium
First Renault
Second McLaren-Mercedes
Third Ferrari

The 2005 French Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race, held on 3 July 2005 at Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, near Magny-Cours, in France. The 70-lap race was the tenth round of the 2005 Formula One season, and was won by Renault driver Fernando Alonso. McLaren driver Kimi Räikkönen, Alonso's main title rival, finished the race in second position whlist Michael Schumacher completed the podium for the Ferrari team.

Report

Background

The 2005 French Grand Prix was the tenth race of the 2005 season and after the controversial 2005 United States Grand Prix, Formula One returned to Europe for the busiest month in its 56-year history, with Magny-Cours being the first of four races to be held in the five weekends of July.

Practice and qualifying

At the start of the weekend, McLaren and Renault appeared to be the fastest, topping the time sheets for both practice sessions on Friday. However, Kimi Räikkönen suffered an engine failure, using a new-spec Mercedes V10, and was forced to drop 10 grid positions as a result. Renault set the two fastest times in Saturday practice 1 by over 1 second, but only 9 cars ran in the session. Giancarlo Fisichella was quickest in the final practice session before qualifying, with Räikkönen was close behind.

The qualifying session ran in markedly cool conditions than expected but still the Michelin tyres had the advantage over the Bridgestones.[1] Fernando Alonso scored his second consecutive pole position, ahead of Toyota's Jarno Trulli, while Räikkönen scored 3rd, which would become 13th after his penalty thus promoting Michael Schumacher up to P3. Sauber qualified for their best positions of the year in 10th and 11th. Williams, who had struggled all weekend despite several new aerodynamic updates to the car, were 13th and 14th while the Minardis and Jordans remained unable to improve on the last 4 positions. The session was incredibly close as the top 9 drivers were covered by less than a second.[1]

Race

The start of the race saw Alonso speed away quickly leaving Trulli to fend off Michael Schumacher through the first few corners while Rubens Barrichello leap-frogged Takuma Sato into 4th place. Räikkönen was able to pass both Mark Webber and Ralf Schumacher to move into 11th position by the end of the first lap. By the second lap, Alonso had extended his lead to nearly 3 seconds while Räikkönen moved up another position to 10th by passing Jacques Villeneuve. Red Bull's Christian Klien became the first retirement of the race pulling off on lap 2 because of a lack of fuel pressure. Alonso continued pulling away from the pack setting consecutive fastest laps.

Rubens Barrichello was the first of the front-runners to stop; from 4th position. The following lap both Trulli and Michael Schumacher pitted allowing Schumacher to emerge ahead having been stuck behind Trulli's Toyota since the beginning. Alonso finally pitted on lap 20 while leading by nearly 30 seconds allowing him to rejoin without losing a position. The pitstop sequence allowed the two long-running McLarens into 2nd and 3rd positions with Juan Pablo Montoya ahead of Räikkönen. Both McLaren drivers continued their first stints before Montoya pitted on lap 25 rejoining ahead of Michael Schumacher to take 3rd. Räikkönen stayed out for three more laps and finally pitted on lap 28. Those laps did make the difference and he came out ahead of Montoya.

Patrick Friesacher became the second retirement when he stopped on lap 34. On lap 37, Christijan Albers crashed his Minardi heavily after spinning in turn 2. Alonso stopped for the second time on lap 41 rejoining with a 14-second margin to the second-placed Räikkönen. Meanwhile, Montoya began to struggle and ultimately retired from 3rd position on lap 46 with a hydraulics failure. This allowed Michael Schumacher to move into the final podium position, which he held after his final pitstop on lap 51. Williams' dismal day continued as Nick Heidfeld pitted complaining that his car was impossible to drive. With all but the top 4 cars lapped, Takuma Sato ran wide briefly into the gravel at Estoril corner, which cost him 10th position to David Coulthard. Fisichella stalled as he attempted to leave his pit box on lap 58. Renault mechanics had to restart his engine costing him two valuable positions.

With 8 laps remaining, Alonso lapped fourth-placed Jenson Button leaving only the top three drivers on the lead lap. Alonso crossed the finish line to take his fifth and Renault's sixth win of the season. Räikkönen ensured that the gap in the championship standings only increased by 2 points after finishing 2nd while Michael Schumacher picked up a timely podium for Ferrari allowing him to stay in the championship hunt too. Button came in 4th to score BAR's first points of the year, followed by Trulli, Fisichella, Ralf Schumacher and Villeneuve in the point scoring positions.[2]

Friday drivers

The bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.

This was the last appearance for Olivier Panis.

Constructor Nat Driver
McLaren-Mercedes Spain Pedro de la Rosa
Sauber-Petronas none
Red Bull-Cosworth Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi
Toyota France Olivier Panis
Jordan-Toyota Netherlands Robert Doornbos
Minardi-Cosworth none

Classification

Qualifying

Pos No Driver Constructor Lap Gap
1 5 Spain Fernando Alonso Renault 1:14.412
2 16 Italy Jarno Trulli Toyota 1:14.521 +0.109
3 9 Finland Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes 1:14.559 +0.147
4 1 Germany Michael Schumacher Ferrari 1:14.572 +0.160
5 4 Japan Takuma Sato BAR-Honda 1:14.655 +0.243
6 2 Brazil Rubens Barrichello Ferrari 1:14.832 +0.420
7 6 Italy Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 1:14.887 +0.475
8 3 United Kingdom Jenson Button BAR-Honda 1:15.051 +0.639
9 10 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya McLaren-Mercedes 1:15.406 +0.994
10 12 Brazil Felipe Massa Sauber-Petronas 1:15.566 +1.154
11 11 Canada Jacques Villeneuve Sauber-Petronas 1:15.699 +1.287
12 17 Germany Ralf Schumacher Toyota 1:15.771 +1.359
13 7 Australia Mark Webber Williams-BMW 1:15.885 +1.473
14 8 Germany Nick Heidfeld Williams-BMW 1:16.207 +1.795
15 14 United Kingdom David Coulthard Red Bull-Cosworth 1:16.434 +2.022
16 15 Austria Christian Klien Red Bull-Cosworth 1:16.547 +2.135
17 19 India Narain Karthikeyan Jordan-Toyota 1:17.857 +3.445
18 20 Austria Patrick Friesacher Minardi-Cosworth 1:17.960 +3.548
19 18 Portugal Tiago Monteiro Jordan-Toyota 1:18.047 +3.635
20 21 Netherlands Christijan Albers Minardi-Cosworth 1:18.335 +3.923
Source:[3]

Race

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 5 Spain Fernando Alonso Renault 70 1:31:22.232 1 10
2 9 Finland Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes 70 +11.805 13 † 8
3 1 Germany Michael Schumacher Ferrari 70 +1:21.914 3 6
4 3 United Kingdom Jenson Button BAR-Honda 69 +1 lap 7 5
5 16 Italy Jarno Trulli Toyota 69 +1 lap 2 4
6 6 Italy Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 69 +1 lap 6 3
7 17 Germany Ralf Schumacher Toyota 69 +1 lap 11 2
8 11 Canada Jacques Villeneuve Sauber-Petronas 69 +1 lap 10 1
9 2 Brazil Rubens Barrichello Ferrari 69 +1 lap 5
10 14 United Kingdom David Coulthard Red Bull-Cosworth 69 +1 lap 15
11 4 Japan Takuma Sato BAR-Honda 69 +1 lap 4
12 7 Australia Mark Webber Williams-BMW 68 +2 laps 12
13 18 Portugal Tiago Monteiro Jordan-Toyota 67 +3 laps 19
14 8 Germany Nick Heidfeld Williams-BMW 66 +4 laps 14
15 19 India Narain Karthikeyan Jordan-Toyota 66 +4 laps 17
Ret 10 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya McLaren-Mercedes 46 Engine 8
Ret 21 Netherlands Christijan Albers Minardi-Cosworth 37 Puncture 20
Ret 20 Austria Patrick Friesacher Minardi-Cosworth 33 Puncture 18
Ret 12 Brazil Felipe Massa Sauber-Petronas 30 Hydraulics 9
Ret 15 Austria Christian Klien Red Bull-Cosworth 1 Fuel Pressure 16
Source:[4]

Kimi Räikkönen received a 10 position grid penalty for an engine change on Friday.

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 Spain Fernando Alonso 69
2 Finland Kimi Räikkönen 45
3 Germany Michael Schumacher 40
4 Italy Jarno Trulli 31
5 Brazil Rubens Barrichello 29

Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 France Renault 89
2 United Kingdom McLaren-Mercedes 71
3 Italy Ferrari 69
4 Japan Toyota 53
5 United Kingdom Williams-BMW 47

References

  1. 1 2 "Alonso on pole in France". Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. 2 July 2005. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014.
  2. "Alonso makes it five in France". Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. 3 July 2005. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014.
  3. "FORMULA 1™ Grand Prix de France 2005 - Qualifying". Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. Archived from the original on 24 August 2013. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  4. "FORMULA 1™ Grand Prix de France 2005 - Race". Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. Archived from the original on 25 December 2014. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
Previous race:
2005 United States Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
2005 season
Next race:
2005 British Grand Prix
Previous race:
2004 French Grand Prix
French Grand Prix Next race:
2006 French Grand Prix

Coordinates: 46°51′51″N 3°09′49″E / 46.86417°N 3.16361°E / 46.86417; 3.16361

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