1995 Belgian Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Country:Belgium
Grand Prix:Belgian
Official Name:LIII Grand Prix de Belgique
Date:27 August
Year:1995
Race No:11
Season No:17
Location:Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps
Francorchamps, Wallonia, Belgium[1]
Course:Permanent racing facility
Course Mi:4.330[2]
Course Km:6.968
Distance Laps:44
Distance Mi:191.785
Distance Km:306.856
Weather:Cloudy, then heavy rain
Pole Driver:Gerhard Berger
Pole Team:Ferrari
Pole Time:1:54.392
Pole Country:Austria
Fast Driver:David Coulthard
Fast Team:Williams-Renault
Fast Time:1:53.412
Fast Lap:11
Fast Country:United Kingdom
First Driver:Michael Schumacher
First Team:Benetton-Renault
First Country:Germany
Second Driver:Damon Hill
Second Team:Williams-Renault
Second Country:United Kingdom
Third Driver:Martin Brundle
Third Team:Ligier Mugen-Honda
Third Country:United Kingdom
Next Round:1995 Italian Grand Prix
Previous Round:1995 Hungarian Grand Prix

The 1995 Belgian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 27 August 1995 at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, near the village of Francorchamps, Wallonia. It was the eleventh race of the 1995 Formula One World Championship.

The 44-lap race was won by Michael Schumacher, driving a Benetton-Renault. Despite qualifying only 16th, Schumacher took his sixth victory of the season after an intense battle with Damon Hill in the Williams-Renault. Hill settled for second, with Martin Brundle third in a Ligier-Mugen-Honda, which would be his last podium finish.[3]

Race report

The race was attended by in excess of 100,000 people.[4] Schumacher and Hill both qualified further down the grid than usual in a wet-dry qualifying session, but fought back during the race. Both Jean Alesi and Johnny Herbert briefly led the race, but Alesi broke down and Herbert struggled for pace once the track was dry. Polesitter Gerhard Berger struggled before dropping out.

David Coulthard pulled away at the front for Williams before suffering a gearbox problem, leaving Hill to lead the race. When Hill made his first pit stop for fresh slick tyres, Schumacher took over at the head of the field. It then started to rain and while Hill went back to the pits for wet weather tyres, Schumacher stayed out on his dry weather slicks. The Williams driver rapidly caught up with the German, but despite lapping six seconds a lap slower, Schumacher was able to keep Hill behind him until he went off the wet track and Hill passed him. Almost immediately the changing track conditions began to favour slicks once more and Schumacher re-passed Hill who pitted again, this time for slicks.

The rain intensified again and the field levelled out when the safety car appeared. Both drivers pitted for wets and returned to the track with Schumacher narrowly ahead of Hill. This appeared to set the two title rivals up for a battle for the lead going into the last ten laps, but Hill then had to pit again to serve a ten-second stop-go penalty for pit lane speeding, a penalty he served with six laps to go, and which put him down to third. Hill recovered to pass Martin Brundle on the Kemmel straight on the final lap to regain second place.

Schumacher's performance did not impress Hill after his defensive moves forced Hill to either back off or go off the track. Schumacher claimed that he had only blocked Hill at the low-speed corners, but video evidence suggested that Schumacher had blocked Hill on some of the high speed corners, such as the Radillion and Blanchimont. Hill later commented that "We (he and Schumacher) had some pretty hairy moments and I am not satisfied with being driven into; I don't think that was acceptable. That is all well and good but if it was meant on purpose I would be very upset, F1 cars are not go-karts. I think there are some things which are acceptable and some things which are not." Schumacher defended himself by agreeing that touching wheels in high-speed corners is "not acceptable" but added that at the speed he and Hill were doing, he thought it was acceptable. Schumacher was given a one-race suspended ban for driving aggressively in order to stop Hill from passing.[5]

Classification

Qualifying

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Gap
128 Gerhard BergerFerrari2:14.7441:54.392 -
227 Jean AlesiFerrari2:15.0771:54.631+0.239
38 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes2:15.8481:55.435+1.043
42 Johnny HerbertBenetton-Renault - 1:56.085+1.693
56 David CoulthardWilliams-Renault2:15.2321:56.254+1.862
67 Mark BlundellMcLaren-Mercedes2:18.1361:56.622+2.230
715 Eddie IrvineJordan-Peugeot2:16.5401:57.001+2.609
85 Damon HillWilliams-Renault2:15.1431:57.768+3.376
926 Olivier PanisLigier-Mugen-Honda2:17.5791:58.021+3.629
1030 Heinz-Harald FrentzenSauber-Ford2:15.5331:58.148+3.756
114 Mika SaloTyrrell-Yamaha2:18.1041:58.224+3.832
1214 Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Peugeot2:17.1441:58.293+3.901
1325 Martin BrundleLigier-Mugen-Honda2:17.2071:58.314+3.922
1429 Jean-Christophe BoullionSauber-Ford2:17.4061:58.356+3.964
153 Ukyo KatayamaTyrrell-Yamaha2:18.1941:58.551+4.159
161 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Renault2:14.9621:59.079+4.687
1723 Pedro LamyMinardi-Ford2:18.5471:59.256+4.864
1810 Taki InoueFootwork-Hart2:23.3112:00.990+6.598
1924 Luca BadoerMinardi-Ford2:17.3352:01.013+6.621
209 Massimiliano PapisFootwork-Hart2:19.3002:01.685+7.293
2117 Andrea MonterminiPacific-Ford2:25.2912:02.405+8.013
2222 Roberto MorenoForti-Ford2:23.4172:03.817+9.425
2316 Giovanni LavaggiPacific-Ford2:26.3112:06.407+12.015
2421 Pedro DinizForti-Ford2:25.6992:09.537+15.145
Sources:[6] [7] [8]

Race

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
11 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Renault441:36:47.8751610
25 Damon HillWilliams-Renault44+ 19.49386
325 Martin BrundleLigier-Mugen-Honda44+ 24.998134
430 Heinz-Harald FrentzenSauber-Ford44+ 26.972103
57 Mark BlundellMcLaren-Mercedes44+ 33.77262
614 Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Peugeot44+ 39.674121
72 Johnny HerbertBenetton-Renault44+ 54.0434 
84 Mika SaloTyrrell-Yamaha44+ 54.54811 
926 Olivier PanisLigier-Mugen-Honda44+ 1:06.1709 
1023 Pedro LamyMinardi-Ford44+ 1:19.78917 
1129 Jean-Christophe BoullionSauber-Ford43+ 1 lap14 
1210 Taki InoueFootwork-Hart43+ 1 lap18 
1321 Pedro DinizForti-Ford42+ 2 laps24 
1422 Roberto MorenoForti-Ford42+ 2 laps22 
Ret3 Ukyo KatayamaTyrrell-Yamaha28Spun off15 
Ret16 Giovanni LavaggiPacific-Ford27Gearbox23 
Ret24 Luca BadoerMinardi-Ford23Accident19 
Ret28 Gerhard BergerFerrari22Electrical1 
Ret15 Eddie IrvineJordan-Peugeot21Fire7 
Ret9 Massimiliano PapisFootwork-Hart20Spun off20 
Ret17 Andrea MonterminiPacific-Ford18Out of fuel21 
Ret6 David CoulthardWilliams-Renault13Gearbox5 
Ret27 Jean AlesiFerrari4Suspension2 
Ret8 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes1Spun off3 

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Michael Schumacher66
2 Damon Hill51
3 Jean Alesi32
4 David Coulthard29
5 Johnny Herbert28
Source: [9]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 Benetton-Renault84
2 Williams-Renault74
3 Ferrari57
4 Ligier-Mugen-Honda16
5 Jordan-Peugeot14
Source:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1995 Belgian GP. Motor Sport. 30 May 2022.
  2. Web site: 1995 Belgian Grand Prix | Motorsport Database.
  3. Web site: Martin Brundle - Podiums. Stats F1. 29 September 2021.
  4. Murray Walker, Jonathan Palmer. 1995. Grand Prix. Television Production. BBC. London, England. 00:51-01:04.
  5. Web site: Schumacher in trouble again . GrandPrix.com . 28 August 1995 . 15 December 2006.
  6. Web site: Belgian Grand Prix – Qualifying 1. Formula1.com. 29 December 2023.
  7. Web site: Belgian Grand Prix – Qualifying 2. Formula1.com. 29 December 2023.
  8. Web site: 1995 Belgian Grand Prix Classification Qualifying. Motorsport Stats. 29 December 2023.
  9. Web site: Belgium 1995 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 13 March 2019.