1988 French Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Country:France
Grand Prix:French
Official Name:Rhône-Poulenc Grand Prix de France
Date:3 July
Year:1988
Race No:7
Season No:16
Location:Circuit Paul Ricard, Le Castellet, France
Course:Permanent racing facility
Course Mi:2.369
Course Km:3.813
Distance Laps:80
Distance Mi:189.543
Distance Km:305.040
Weather:Sunny and hot
Pole Driver:Alain Prost
Pole Team:McLaren-Honda
Pole Time:1:07.589
Pole Country:France
Fast Driver:Alain Prost
Fast Team:McLaren-Honda
Fast Time:1:11.737
Fast Lap:45
Fast Country:France
First Driver:Alain Prost
First Team:McLaren-Honda
First Country:France
Second Driver:Ayrton Senna
Second Team:McLaren-Honda
Second Country:Brazil
Second Flag Suffix:1968
Third Driver:Michele Alboreto
Third Team:Ferrari
Third Country:Italy

The 1988 French Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 3 July 1988 at the Circuit Paul Ricard, Le Castellet. It was the seventh race of the 1988 Formula One World Championship.

The 80-lap race was won by local driver Alain Prost, driving a McLaren-Honda, after he started from pole position. Prost's Brazilian teammate Ayrton Senna finished second, with Italian Michele Alboreto third in a Ferrari.

Qualifying

The two McLarens lined up in their usual front row places, but, for the first time this season, Alain Prost was ahead of Ayrton Senna, the Frenchman beating the Brazilian by almost half a second to take his first pole since the 1986 Monaco Grand Prix and in doing so stopping his teammate from a record-breaking 7th pole in succession. The two Ferraris filled the second row, Gerhard Berger beating Michele Alboreto by over 1.1 seconds, though neither driver believed they could race with the McLarens simply because of fuel consumption. On the third row were the two normally-aspirated Benettons of Thierry Boutsen and Alessandro Nannini, while the Lotuses of Nelson Piquet and Satoru Nakajima filled the fourth row, Piquet being the last driver to qualify under 1:10. The top ten was completed by the Williams of Nigel Mansell (over 2.7 seconds slower than Prost and almost 4 seconds slower than his 1987 pole time) and the March of Ivan Capelli, who had recovered after fracturing his left foot in a crash during practice in Detroit two weeks before.

Meanwhile, Ligier had a disastrous weekend on their home turf with both René Arnoux and Stefan Johansson failing to qualify, though they did have a celebration of sorts over the weekend as Arnoux turned 40 the day after the race. Julian Bailey also failed to qualify in his Tyrrell, while Piercarlo Ghinzani qualified 22nd in his Zakspeed but was excluded for missing a weight check, thus promoting Oscar Larrauri's EuroBrun to the last grid spot.

Race summary

Prost led away from Senna and the two Ferraris, with Piquet passing the two Benettons for fifth. Despite worries in the McLaren pit about overly high fuel consumption (the fuel readouts in the cars were showing less fuel used than what the Honda telemetry was telling the team), Ron Dennis was reportedly prepared to let his drivers run out of fuel at the expense of a perfect season if it taught them to be more conservative given their obvious advantage over the field, though ultimately the onboard readouts were proved correct. Prost maintained a two-second advantage over Senna until the mid-race pit stops, while an early stop by Berger on lap 22 allowed teammate Alboreto through into third. While both McLarens were racing each other out front, they were still pulling away from the field at sometimes a second per lap.

Senna made his pit stop three laps before Prost, enabling him to take the lead thanks to a slow stop for Prost with a sticking front wheel, but traffic on the Mistral Straight (including a less than helpful Piquet who most likely enjoyed seeing Senna lose the lead to Prost at close quarters) and a gearbox problem allowed Prost to close right up to him and then overtake him on lap 61 as they lapped Alex Caffi and Pierluigi Martini at the Signes corner. Meanwhile, Berger reclaimed third only for Alboreto to pass him again during the pit stops, while Mansell suffered his seventh consecutive retirement, dropping out on lap 49 with suspension problems, though he had been dropping back for a number of laps with power loss from his Judd V8 engine. After returning to the pits and getting himself cleaned up, the Englishman left the circuit profoundly fed up with the performance of the Williams, fuelling ongoing speculation in the press that he would leave the team at the end of the year to join Ferrari after the Italian team had announced they would not be keeping Alboreto for 1989. Despite the rumours turning out to be correct, Mansell continued to deny he was joining Ferrari.

In the closing laps, Prost pulled away as Senna's gearbox troubles continued, losing several gears. The Brazilian eventually finished nearly 32 seconds behind the Frenchman, though he was still nearly 35 seconds ahead of Alboreto, the last man on the lead lap. Berger was fourth ahead of Piquet, who also suffered gearbox problems in the later stages of the race; the final point went to the Benetton of Nannini. France was the first time since the 1987 Monaco Grand Prix that Alboreto had finished in front of his teammate in a race where they both finished. During the race Alboreto had the advantage of an almost perfectly balanced car, while Berger complained of severe understeer, something not needed at the high speed Signes corner at the end of the Mistral.

The fastest lap of the race, a 1:11.737 set by Prost on lap 45, was over two seconds slower than the 1:09.548 set by Piquet in a Honda-powered Williams the previous year – a consequence of the restrictions imposed on turbocharged engines this season with the major difference being the speeds attained on the now 1 km long Mistral Straight. In 1987 the fastest turbo cars (Honda powered) were timed at 3250NaN0 on the straight. In 1988 the top speed was recorded at 3110NaN0.

For Prost it was his third win in his home Grand Prix after winning in both 1981 at Dijon (his first Grand Prix victory) and 1983 at the full length Paul Ricard. On both occasions he had been driving for the factory Renault team.

Classification

Pre-qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGap
133 Stefano ModenaEuroBrun-Ford1:12.805
236 Alex CaffiDallara-Ford1:12.891+0.086
322 Andrea de CesarisRial-Ford1:12.898+0.093
432 Oscar LarrauriEuroBrun-Ford1:13.452+0.647
data-sort-value="5"DNPQ31 Gabriele TarquiniColoni-Ford1:14.214+1.409

Qualifying

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Gap
111 Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda1:08.1711:07.589
212 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda1:08.4561:08.067+0.478
328 Gerhard BergerFerrari1:09.0321:08.282+0.693
427 Michele AlboretoFerrari1:09.6241:09.422+1.833
520 Thierry BoutsenBenetton-Ford1:11.1701:09.587+1.998
619 Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford1:10.7431:09.718+2.129
71 Nelson PiquetLotus-Honda1:09.7341:09.900+2.145
82 Satoru NakajimaLotus-Honda1:11.3941:10.250+2.661
95 Nigel MansellWilliams-Judd1:11.1121:10.337+2.748
1016 Ivan CapelliMarch-Judd1:11.7791:10.496+2.907
1117 Derek WarwickArrows-Megatron1:11.3391:10.634+3.045
1222Rial-Ford1:11.8541:10.861+3.272
1318 Eddie CheeverArrows-Megatron1:11.5671:10.979+3.390
1436 Alex CaffiDallara-Ford1:13.1441:11.211+3.622
156 Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Judd1:11.6711:11.286+3.697
1615 Maurício GugelminMarch-Judd1:11.3151:11.404+3.726
1714 Philippe StreiffAGS-Ford1:12.0041:11.466+3.877
1830Lola-Ford1:12.2861:11.511+3.922
1929 Yannick DalmasLola-Ford1:12.5471:11.747+4.158
2033 Stefano ModenaEuroBrun-Ford1:12.9971:12.007+4.418
2110 Bernd SchneiderZakspeed1:13.5271:12.026+4.437
2223 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford1:13.0391:12.268+4.679
233 Jonathan PalmerTyrrell-Ford1:13.0631:12.316+4.727
2421 Nicola LariniOsella1:13.0371:12.406+4.817
2524 Luis Pérez-SalaMinardi-Ford1:12.9381:12.525+4.936
2632 Oscar LarrauriEuroBrun-Ford1:13.8881:12.538+4.949
data-sort-value="27"DNQ25 René ArnouxLigier-Judd1:12.6541:12.736+5.065
data-sort-value="28"DNQ4 Julian BaileyTyrrell-Ford1:13.8391:12.697+5.108
data-sort-value="29"DNQ26 Stefan JohanssonLigier-Judd1:13.6291:12.801+5.212
EX9 Piercarlo GhinzaniZakspeed1:14.7971:12.121

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
111 Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda801:37:37.32819
212 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda80+ 31.75226
327 Michele AlboretoFerrari80+ 1:06.50544
428 Gerhard BergerFerrari79+ 1 lap33
51 Nelson PiquetLotus-Honda79+ 1 lap72
619 Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford79+ 1 lap61
72 Satoru NakajimaLotus-Honda79+ 1 lap8 
815 Maurício GugelminMarch-Judd79+ 1 lap16 
916 Ivan CapelliMarch-Judd79+ 1 lap10 
1022 Andrea de CesarisRial-Ford78+ 2 laps12 
1118 Eddie CheeverArrows-Megatron78+ 2 laps13 
1236 Alex CaffiDallara-Ford78+ 2 laps14 
1329 Yannick DalmasLola-Ford78+ 2 laps19 
1433 Stefano ModenaEuroBrun-Ford77+ 3 laps20 
1523 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford77+ 3 laps22 
NC24 Luis Pérez-SalaMinardi-Ford70+ 10 laps25 
Ret32 Oscar LarrauriEuroBrun-Ford64Clutch26 
Ret21 Nicola LariniOsella56Halfshaft24 
Ret10 Bernd SchneiderZakspeed55Gearbox21 
Ret5 Nigel MansellWilliams-Judd48Suspension9 
Ret30 Philippe AlliotLola-Ford46Electrical18 
Ret3 Jonathan PalmerTyrrell-Ford40Engine23 
Ret6 Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Judd35Brakes15 
Ret20 Thierry BoutsenBenetton-Ford28Engine5 
Ret14 Philippe StreiffAGS-Ford20Fuel leak17 
Ret17 Derek WarwickArrows-Megatron11Spun off11 
DNQ25 René ArnouxLigier-Judd  
DNQ4 Julian BaileyTyrrell-Ford  
DNQ26 Stefan JohanssonLigier-Judd  
DNPQ31 Gabriele TarquiniColoni-Ford   
EX9 Piercarlo GhinzaniZakspeed Excluded 

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Alain Prost54
2 Ayrton Senna39
3 Gerhard Berger21
4 Michele Alboreto13
5 Nelson Piquet13
Source: [1]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 McLaren-Honda93
2 Ferrari34
3 Lotus-Honda14
4 Benetton-Ford13
5 Arrows-Megatron9
Source:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: France 1988 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 17 March 2019.