1976 Japanese Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Country:Japan
Grand Prix:Japanese
Date:24 October
Year:1976
Race No:16
Season No:16
Previous Round:1976 United States Grand Prix
Official Name:XI Japanese Grand Prix[1]
Location:Fuji Speedway
Oyama, Shizuoka, Japan
Course:Permanent racing facility
Course Mi:2.709
Course Km:4.359
Distance Laps:73
Distance Mi:197.725
Distance Km:318.207
Weather:Very wet and misty, eventually drying
Pole Driver:Mario Andretti
Pole Team:Lotus-Ford
Pole Time:1:12.77
Pole Country:USA
Fast Driver:Jacques Laffite
Fast Team:Ligier-Matra
Fast Time:1:19.97
Fast Country:France
Fast Lap:70
First Driver:Mario Andretti
First Team:Lotus-Ford
First Country:United States
Second Driver:Patrick Depailler
Second Team:Tyrrell-Ford
Second Country:France
Third Driver:James Hunt
Third Team:McLaren-Ford
Third Country:UK

The 1976 Japanese Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Fuji Speedway on 24 October 1976. It was the 16th and final race of the 1976 Formula One World Championship

The 1976 World Championship was to be decided at the Mount Fuji circuit, with Niki Lauda just three points ahead of James Hunt after a season full of incidents including Lauda's near-fatal crash at the Nürburgring and subsequent missed races.

Background

Entries

The field was almost unchanged from the previous race, but Noritake Takahara rented the second Surtees replacing Brett Lunger and Masami Kuwashima replaced Warwick Brown in the second Wolf-Williams. However, Kuwashima was himself replaced by Hans Binder during the meeting, after his money failed to materialize. Maki resurrected its Formula One car for Tony Trimmer while Heros Racing entered an old Tyrrell for Kazuyoshi Hoshino on Bridgestone tyres, which was the first Formula One start for the Japanese manufacturer. Kojima Engineering entered a locally built chassis for Masahiro Hasemi (on Dunlop tyres).

Championship standings before the race

Heading into the final race of the season it was Niki Lauda who led the World Drivers' Championship by three points ahead of James Hunt. In the Constructors' Championship it was Ferrari who had an eleven point lead over McLaren.[2] As this was the final race of the season with 9 points available for the win it meant that the Japanese Grand Prix would decide the Drivers' Championship although Ferrari had confirmed their Constructors' title win in the previous round.[3]

Championship permutations

For Lauda to win the Championship he needed:

For Hunt to win the Championship he needed to finish:

Qualifying

Mario Andretti took pole position in the Lotus 77, with Hunt alongside him on the front row and Lauda third. Then came John Watson in the Penske, Jody Scheckter, Carlos Pace, Clay Regazzoni and Vittorio Brambilla. The top 10 was completed by Ronnie Peterson and Hasemi. Trimmer failed to qualify the Maki.

Qualifying classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Time Gap
15 Mario AndrettiLotus-Ford1:12.77 —
211 James HuntMcLaren-Ford1:12.80+0.03
31 Niki LaudaFerrari1:13.08+0.31
428 John WatsonPenske-Ford1:13.29+0.52
53 Jody ScheckterTyrrell-Ford1:13.31+0.54
68 Carlos PaceBrabham-Alfa Romeo1:13.43+0.66
72 Clay RegazzoniFerrari1:13.64+0.87
89 Vittorio BrambillaMarch-Ford1:13.72+0.95
910 Ronnie PetersonMarch-Ford1:13.85+1.08
1051 Masahiro HasemiKojima-Ford1:13.88+1.11
1126 Jacques LaffiteLigier-Matra1:13.88+1.11
1212 Jochen MassMcLaren-Ford1:14.05+1.28
134 Patrick DepaillerTyrrell-Ford1:14.15+1.38
1416 Tom PryceShadow-Ford1:14.23+1.46
1517 Jean-Pierre JarierShadow-Ford1:14.32+1.55
166 Gunnar NilssonLotus-Ford1:14.35+1.58
177 Larry PerkinsBrabham-Alfa Romeo1:14.38+1.61
1834 Hans-Joachim StuckMarch-Ford1:14.38+1.61
1920 Arturo MerzarioWolf-Williams-Ford1:14.41+1.64
2019 Alan JonesSurtees-Ford1:14.60+1.83
2152 Kazuyoshi HoshinoTyrrell-Ford1:14.65+1.88
2224 Harald ErtlHesketh-Ford1:15.26+2.49
2330 Emerson FittipaldiFittipaldi-Ford1:15.30+2.53
2418 Noritake TakaharaSurtees-Ford1:15.77+3.00
2521 Hans BinderWolf-Williams-Ford1:17.36+4.59
2621 Masami KuwashimaWolf-Williams-Ford1:17.90+5.13
DNQ54 Tony TrimmerMaki-Ford1:30.91+18.14
Source:[4]

Race

On race day the weather was very wet with fog and running water at several places on the track. There were intense debates as to whether the race should be started; in the end the organisers decided to go ahead and a majority of drivers did not disagree. Some drivers, including Lauda, were not happy with the decision.

Hunt took the lead from the start with Watson and Andretti behind. On the second lap Watson slid down an escape road and Lauda drove into the pits to withdraw, as he believed the weather conditions made the track too dangerous. He later said "my life is worth more than a title." Larry Perkins made a similar decision after one lap, as did Pace and Emerson Fittipaldi later in the race.

Hunt continued to lead, behind him second place passed between Andretti and Brambilla. On lap 22 Brambilla challenged for the lead but spun out of contention before retiring 15 laps later with electrical problems. Jochen Mass moved into second before crashing on the 36th lap just before turn 7, promoting Patrick Depailler into the position with Andretti third.

It seemed Hunt was on for an easy win, but as the track began to dry he started to lose positions. He only needed a fourth place finish to win the title, because of Lauda's retirement. On lap 62 Hunt fell behind Depailler and Andretti, but two laps later Depailler's left rear tyre started to deflate and he had to pit. Andretti took the lead, but then Hunt had a similar tyre problem. Hunt pitted, dropped to fifth and set off after Depailler, Alan Jones and Regazzoni. Depailler overtook both drivers on lap 70 and on the next lap Hunt did the same and overtook both of them in order to win the World Drivers' Championship. There was brief confusion as the immediate unofficial finish marked him as fifth place, but with quick deliberation the official finish was third. Ferrari won the Constructors' Championship despite Lauda's retirement.

Andretti's victory was his second in Formula One, coming five years, seven months and 18 days after his maiden win at the 1971 South African Grand Prix., this is the longest period between a first and second victory of a driver in the series.[5]

Race classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Tyre Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
15 Mario AndrettiLotus-Ford731:43:58.8619
24 Patrick DepaillerTyrrell-Ford72+ 1 Lap136
311 James HuntMcLaren-Ford72+ 1 Lap24
419 Alan JonesSurtees-Ford72+ 1 Lap203
52 Clay RegazzoniFerrari72+ 1 Lap72
66 Gunnar NilssonLotus-Ford72+ 1 Lap161
726 Jacques LaffiteLigier-Matra72+ 1 Lap11 
824 Harald ErtlHesketh-Ford72+ 1 Lap22 
918 Noritake TakaharaSurtees-Ford70+ 3 Laps24 
1017 Jean-Pierre JarierShadow-Ford69+ 4 Laps15 
1151 Masahiro HasemiKojima-Ford66+ 7 Laps10 
Ret3 Jody ScheckterTyrrell-Ford58Overheating5 
Ret21 Hans BinderWolf-Williams-Ford49Wheel25 
Ret16 Tom PryceShadow-Ford46Energy14 
Ret9 Vittorio BrambillaMarch-Ford38Electrical8 
Ret34 Hans-Joachim StuckMarch-Ford37Electrical18 
Ret12 Jochen MassMcLaren-Ford35Accident12 
Ret28 John WatsonPenske-Ford33Engine4 
Ret52 Kazuyoshi HoshinoTyrrell-Ford27Tyre21 
Ret20 Arturo MerzarioWolf-Williams-Ford23Gearbox19 
Ret30 Emerson FittipaldiFittipaldi-Ford9Withdrew23 
Ret8 Carlos PaceBrabham-Alfa Romeo7Withdrew6 
Ret1 Niki LaudaFerrari2Withdrew3 
Ret7 Larry PerkinsBrabham-Alfa Romeo1Withdrew17 
Ret10 Ronnie PetersonMarch-Ford0Engine9 
DNS21 Masami KuwashimaWolf-Williams-Ford    
DNQ54 Tony TrimmerMaki-Ford    

Notes

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 James Hunt69
2 Niki Lauda68
3 Jody Scheckter49
4 Patrick Depailler39
5 Clay Regazzoni31
Source:[8]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 Ferrari83
2 McLaren-Ford74 (75)
3 Tyrrell-Ford71
4 Lotus-Ford29
5 Penske-Ford20
Source:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1976 Japanese GP. 2020-08-02. www.chicanef1.com.
  2. Web site: USA East 1976 - Championship . StatsF1.com. 2019-05-16.
  3. Web site: Japan 1976 . StatsF1.com. 2019-05-16.
  4. Web site: Japan 1976 - Qualifications . StatsF1.com. 19 December 2018.
  5. Web site: Leslie. Jack. The 5 Drivers with the Biggest Gap between First and Second F1 Wins. wtf1.com. 3 January 2018. 18 August 2017.
  6. Web site: Motorsport competition results: 1976 F1 World Championship in Japan. 17 December 2010. ja . .
  7. Web site: Archive: 1976 F1 World Championship in Japan. 25 October 1976. 17 December 2010. ja . .
  8. Web site: Japan 1976 - Championship . StatsF1.com. 18 March 2019.