1995 Japanese Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Previous Round:1995 Pacific Grand Prix
Next Round:1995 Australian Grand Prix
Details Ref:[1]
Country:Japan
Flag Suffix:1947
Grand Prix:Japanese
Official Name:XXI Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix
Date:29 October
Year:1995
Race No:16
Season No:17
Location:Suzuka Circuit
Suzuka, Mie, Japan
Course:Permanent racing facility
Course Mi:3.641[2]
Course Km:5.859
Distance Laps:53
Distance Mi:192.990
Distance Km:310.588[3]
Weather:Rain, later dried out
Attendance:330,000[4]
Pole Driver:Michael Schumacher
Pole Team:Benetton-Renault
Pole Time:1:38.023
Pole Country:Germany
Fast Driver:Michael Schumacher
Fast Team:Benetton-Renault
Fast Time:1:42.976
Fast Lap:33
Fast Country:Germany
First Driver:Michael Schumacher
First Team:Benetton-Renault
First Country:Germany
Second Driver:Mika Häkkinen
Second Team:McLaren-Mercedes
Second Country:Finland
Third Driver:Johnny Herbert
Third Team:Benetton-Renault
Third Country:United Kingdom

The 1995 Japanese Grand Prix (formally the XXI Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held at the Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka on 29 October 1995. It was the sixteenth and penultimate race of the 1995 Formula One World Championship.[1] The 53-lap race was won from pole position by German Michael Schumacher, driving a Benetton-Renault, with Finn Mika Häkkinen second in a McLaren-Mercedes and Schumacher's British teammate Johnny Herbert third.

Jean Alesi, driving for Ferrari, started second, alongside Schumacher. However, Alesi was forced to serve a 10-second stop-and-go penalty because his car moved forward before the start. Alesi climbed back up to second, before retiring on lap 25. Schumacher's rival in the Drivers' Championship, Damon Hill, started fourth amidst pressure from the British media after poor performances at previous races. Hill moved up to second because of Alesi's retirement, but spun off the track on lap 40.[5]

Schumacher's win was his ninth of the season, matching the record set in by Nigel Mansell.[6] Benetton was confirmed Constructors' Champions as Williams could not pass its points total in the one remaining race.[5]

Background

Heading into the penultimate race of the season, Benetton driver Michael Schumacher had already won the season's Drivers' Championship, having clinched the title at the previous race, the . Schumacher led the championship with 92 points; Damon Hill was second with 59 points. A maximum of 20 points were available for the remaining two races, which meant that Hill could not catch Schumacher. Although the Drivers' Championship was decided, the Constructors' Championship was not. Benetton were leading on 123 points and Williams were second with 102 points heading into the 16th race, with a maximum of 32 points available.[7] In the week leading up to the race, Hill was criticised by the British media after poor performances in previous races; there was continued speculation that Williams were going to replace him with Heinz-Harald Frentzen or Gerhard Berger for the 1996 season.[8] [9] [10] Despite the rumours, Williams team boss Frank Williams gave Hill "an unequivocal vote of confidence" heading into the race.[11]

There were two driver changes heading into the race. Having been in one of the two Sauber cars since the fifth race of the season at Monaco, Jean-Christophe Boullion was released from the team and replaced by Karl Wendlinger. The Austrian was given another chance to prove himself after suffering an accident at the 1994 Monaco Grand Prix, which left him in a coma for weeks.[12] The second driver change was Mika Häkkinen's return to McLaren after missing the Pacific Grand Prix because of an operation for appendicitis.[13]

Practice and qualifying

Two practice sessions were held before the race; the first was held on Friday morning and the second on Saturday morning. Both sessions lasted 1 hour and 45 minutes with weather conditions dry throughout.[14] Schumacher was fastest in the first session, posting a time of 1:40.410, two-tenths of a second quicker than Häkkinen. The Williams and Ferrari cars occupied the remaining top six positions; Williams drivers Hill and David Coulthard third and fifth respectively. The Ferrari cars were fourth and sixth fastest; Jean Alesi ahead of Berger. Häkkinen lapped faster than Schumacher in the second practice session with a time of 1:40.389. Eddie Irvine took second place in the Jordan car, three-tenths of a second behind Häkkinen. Hill was third in the Williams, two-tenths behind Häkkinen, with Schumacher fourth behind Hill. The Ferrari cars were fifth and eighth; Alesi in front of Berger. Frentzen's Sauber and Coulthard's Williams split the Ferrari drivers.[1] Despite both the Williams cars going off into the gravel, Hill and Coulthard made the top 10.[15]

The qualifying session was split into two one-hour sessions; the first was held on Friday afternoon with the second held on Saturday afternoon. The fastest time from either sessions counted towards their final grid position.[14] Schumacher clinched his tenth career pole position, in his Benetton B195, with a time of 1:38.023. He was joined on the front row by Alesi, who was eight-tenths of a second behind.[1] [16] Schumacher was particularly pleased with the performance of his Benetton, saying that "I have rarely had such a good car ... I think I can be confident for the race".[17] Alesi was satisfied about his performance, but worried about a mechanical problem which had caused him to crash on Friday, accusing the Ferrari team of withholding information from him.[17] Alesi was scheduled to leave Ferrari for Benetton in a swap with Schumacher at the end of the season, and the relationship between him and the team was becoming increasingly strained.[18] Häkkinen was third in the McLaren, with Hill fourth, a second slower than Schumacher. Despite Häkkinen's best qualifying effort of the season alongside his Belgium third place,[19] his teammate, Mark Blundell, had a disappointing qualifying session. In the first part of qualifying, Blundell crashed into the wall, meaning he could not set a time as his car was too badly damaged. Blundell had his second crash of the weekend at the 130R corner in Saturday practice, which was more serious than the first. Following medical advice, Blundell did not participate in the second qualifying session. He was unable to set a time, leaving him at the back of the grid.[20] Aguri Suzuki crashed his Ligier during Saturday qualifying; he was unable to start the race since he was in a hospital with a broken rib.[5]

Qualifying classification

DriverConstructorQ1Q2
11 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Renault1:38.4281:38.023
227 Jean AlesiFerrari1:39.1271:38.888+0.865
38 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes1:39.1271:38.954+0.931
45 Damon HillWilliams-Renault1:39.0321:39.158+1.009
528 Gerhard BergerFerrari1:40.3051:39.040+1.017
66 David CoulthardWilliams-Renault1:39.1551:39.368+1.132
715 Eddie IrvineJordan-Peugeot1:40.1531:39.621+1.598
830 Heinz-Harald FrentzenSauber-Ford1:40.0101:40.380+1.987
92 Johnny HerbertBenetton-Renault1:40.3491:40.391+2.326
1014 Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Peugeot1:40.3811:40.413+2.358
1126 Olivier PanisLigier-Mugen-Honda1:40.8381:41.081+2.815
124 Mika SaloTyrrell-Yamaha1:41.3551:41.637+3.332
1325 Aguri SuzukiLigier-Mugen-Honda1:42.5611:41.592+3.569
143 Ukyo KatayamaTyrrell-Yamaha1:41.9771:42.273+3.954
159 Gianni MorbidelliFootwork-Hart1:42.6231:42.059+4.036
1629 Karl WendlingerSauber-Ford1:43.6341:42.912+4.889
1723 Pedro LamyMinardi-Ford1:43.3871:43.102+5.079
1824 Luca BadoerMinardi-Ford1:43.9401:43.542+5.519
1910 Taki InoueFootwork-Hart1:44.3861:44.074+6.051
2017 Andrea MonterminiPacific-Ford1:46.8691:46.097+8.074
2121 Pedro DinizForti-Ford1:46.6541:47.166+8.631
2222 Roberto MorenoForti-Ford1:50.0971:48.267+10.244
2316 Bertrand GachotPacific-Ford1:48.8241:48.289+10.266
247 Mark BlundellMcLaren-Mercedes16:42.640no time+15:04.617

Warm-up

The drivers took to the track at 09:30 JST (GMT +9) for a 30-minute warmup session. Despite underperforming in qualifying, both Williams cars performed better in the wet weather warmup session; Hill had the fastest time of 2:00.025. Coulthard was third in the other Williams car; Schumacher split them in second position. Alesi completed the top four, eight-tenths of a second behind Hill.[1]

Race

The track surface was damp for most of the race, which meant that lap times were slower than the previous days' qualifying sessions.[1] Though 24 cars qualified for the race, only 22 took the start: Suzuki was unable to start because of his crash in qualifying and Roberto Moreno's Forti car suffered a gearbox problem.[11] [21] For the first time since the Japanese Grand Prix was held at Suzuka in 1987, tickets for the race did not sell out, despite the fact that three Japanese drivers entered the race.[22]

The race started at 14:00 JST. All of the drivers opted to start on wet-weather tyres as the track was damp from the morning rain.[5] Schumacher, from pole position on the grid, held onto the lead into the first corner. Alesi, who started alongside Schumacher, was judged to have jumped the start, and served a 10-second stop-and-go penalty on lap three,[5] [16] from which he returned to the race in tenth place.[1] Alesi's teammate Berger also jumped the start and received the same penalty. Gianni Morbidelli, near the back of the field in one of the Footwork cars, spun at the first corner on lap one after being hit from behind by Wendlinger's Sauber. Morbidelli stalled his car in the process, forcing him to retire from the race.[11] On lap seven, Alesi stopped at the pits to change to dry weather slick tyres, as the track was beginning to dry.[16] [23] On returning to the race, he began to make his way through the field constantly recording fastest laps; the first of which was 1:54.416, five seconds faster than the remainder of the field.[23] [24] Schumacher made a pit stop on lap 10 for slicks, handing the lead to Häkkinen for a lap before he too pitted. Alesi's progress was interrupted when he spun attempting to pass Pedro Lamy's Minardi for 15th place,[5] [16] but he made his way up to second by lap 10, overtaking Hill around the outside in the final chicane to take the place. Alerted by Alesi's pace on the slick tyres, the other drivers came into the pits to change to slick tyres.[25]

The two Jordan cars collided on lap 15. Rubens Barrichello spun in the final chicane when he attempted to brake later than his teammate Irvine. Barrichello hit a wall, which damaged his car's rear wing and caused him to retire from the race. Irvine was involved in another collision at the chicane on lap 20 when Frentzen hit him from behind. Irvine continued without damage, but Frentzen had to pit for a new front wing.[25] At the front, Alesi was lapping faster than Schumacher, even though Schumacher was on dry tyres.[23] Alesi was only six seconds behind Schumacher when his Ferrari 412T2 suffered an apparent differential failure on lap 25.[5] [16] It was later discovered that the problem was a driveshaft failure, possibly as a result of his earlier spin.[25] Schumacher made a pit stop for a second time on lap 31, returning to the race in second place behind Hill. Schumacher set the fastest lap of the race on lap 33, and regained his lead on the next lap when Hill made his pit stop.[23] Behind them, Häkkinen and Coulthard were third and fourth respectively before their pit stops, but Coulthard pitted six laps later than Häkkinen and returned to the track in third place, one place ahead of the Finn.[26] Johnny Herbert was fifth in the second Benetton car after the second round of pit stops, with Irvine rounding out the point-scoring places in sixth.[1] [27]

At this stage, the rain began to fall again, but only at the Spoon Curve end of the track. The Williams drivers were second and third until Hill ran off the track at Spoon Curve two laps after his pit stop. He damaged his front wing in the process and returned to the track in fourth.[23] Hill returned to the pits to let his pit crew replace the damaged wing. He rejoined fifth, but was then given a ten-second stop-and-go penalty for speeding in the pitlane.[5] Coulthard made the same mistake as his teammate by running through the gravel trap at the Spoon Curve but looked like he was going to escape with only minor damage. However, as he braked for 130R, the next corner, the gravel which had entered his sidepods flew out, causing him to lose control and get his car stuck in the gravel trap.[23] Hill was told by his team on the radio to speed up as he had not yet taken his stop-and-go penalty, but later that lap he spun off at Spoon Curve and retired from the race without having taken the penalty.[5] Blundell, Irvine and Frentzen also left the track at Spoon Curve but all finished the race.[23] With his closest challenger out, Schumacher won the race after 53 laps to secure his ninth victory of the season in a time of 1:36:52.930.[1] [28] The win, along with Herbert's third place and the retirements of Hill and Coulthard, gave Benetton the 1995 Constructors' Championship.[5] Häkkinen finished second in his McLaren, 20 seconds behind Schumacher. Irvine was fourth in his Jordan with Olivier Panis fifth in his Ligier. Mika Salo took sixth place and the final point in his Tyrrell.[28] Despite starting last, Blundell finished in seventh, just 1.6 seconds behind Salo.[26] The delayed Frentzen, Luca Badoer, Wendlinger, Lamy and Taki Inoue completed the finishers.[1]

Post-race

This was Schumacher's last win for Benetton, as he moved to the Ferrari team for the 1996 season.[29] Herbert reiterated Schumacher's opinion by stating that Benetton did "a fantastic job".[26] Hill was disappointed about the race and the season as a whole; he said afterwards:

As a result of Hill not taking his 10-second stop-and-go penalty because of his retirement, Williams were fined $10,000 by Formula One's governing body, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA).[26] In an interview with Motor Sport magazine in 2008, Hill said that the 1995 season, as a whole, "went down, mentally, and it all just got to me". He also said he believed that it was in 1995 that Frank Williams and Patrick Head decided to replace him for the 1997 season.[30]

1980 Formula One World Champion Alan Jones praised Alesi's performance, saying that it "will go down as one of the great drives in Grand Prix racing".[16] Alesi stated that if his driveshaft had not failed, he would "have fought for it, all the way to the end". Alesi added that he believed he did not jump the start, but admitted that "the car crept forwards by a few centimetres" because of the downhill slope of the grid.[25] In an interview with Autosport magazine in 2009, Alesi said that he went to see the race director before the race to see how he could avoid a penalty at the downhill start and that he was "totally fed up" with the penalty decision given.[24] Berger also questioned his penalty, claiming that his car did not move before the green light went on.[10] Alesi has mentioned several times that this was "the race of my life".[31] [32]

Race classification

DriverConstructorTime/RetiredPoints
11 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Renault531:36:52.930110
28 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes53+ 19.33736
32 Johnny HerbertBenetton-Renault53+ 1:23.80494
415 Eddie IrvineJordan-Peugeot53+ 1:42.13673
526 Olivier PanisLigier-Mugen-Honda52+ 1 lap112
64 Mika SaloTyrrell-Yamaha52+ 1 lap121
77 Mark BlundellMcLaren-Mercedes52+ 1 lap23 
830 Heinz-Harald FrentzenSauber-Ford52+ 1 lap8 
924 Luca BadoerMinardi-Ford51+ 2 laps17 
1029 Karl WendlingerSauber-Ford51+ 2 laps15 
1123 Pedro LamyMinardi-Ford51+ 2 laps16 
1210 Taki InoueFootwork-Hart51+ 2 laps18 
5 Damon HillWilliams-Renault40Spun off4 
6 David CoulthardWilliams-Renault39Spun off6 
21 Pedro DinizForti-Ford32Spun off20 
27 Jean AlesiFerrari24Driveshaft2 
17 Andrea MonterminiPacific-Ford23Spun off19 
28 Gerhard BergerFerrari16Electrical5 
14 Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Peugeot15Spun off10 
3 Ukyo KatayamaTyrrell-Yamaha12Spun off13 
16 Bertrand GachotPacific-Ford6Halfshaft22 
22 Roberto MorenoForti-Ford1Gearbox21 
9 Gianni MorbidelliFootwork-Hart0Spun off14 
25 Aguri SuzukiLigier-Mugen-Honda0Accident  

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
DriverPoints
1 Michael Schumacher102
2 Damon Hill59
3 David Coulthard49
14 Johnny Herbert45
15 Jean Alesi42
Source:[33]
Constructors' Championship standings
ConstructorPoints
1 Benetton-Renault137
2 Williams-Renault102
3 Ferrari73
4 McLaren-Mercedes27
5 Jordan-Peugeot21
Source:

References

34.8431°N 136.5406°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Henry, Alan . 1995 Grands Prix: Japanese Grand Prix . Alan Henry . Autocourse 1995–96 . 1995 . Hazleton Publishing . 1-874557-36-5 . 222–223 . December 1995. registration.
  2. Web site: 1995 Japanese Grand Prix. Motor Sport. 4 August 2024.
  3. Web site: 2013 Japanese Grand Prix: Official Media Kit . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140307111513/http://www.fia.com/sites/default/files/external_archive/node4131/jpn_media_kit_en_2013.pdf . 7 March 2014 . 2022-09-19 . FIA.com . Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile . 31 .
  4. Web site: Formula 1 Honda Japanese Grand Prix 2022 – Media Kit . . 5 October 2022 . 5 October 2022.
  5. Web site: Grand Prix Results: Japanese GP, 1995 . GrandPrix.com . Inside F1 . 2 March 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080203031549/http://www.grandprix.com/gpe/rr580.html. 3 February 2008 . live.
  6. News: Results Plus . 24 April 2008 . 30 October 1995 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20180727123811/https://www.nytimes.com/1995/10/30/sports/results-plus-757795.html?sq=%22japanese+grand+prix%22&scp=20&st=nyt . 27 July 2018 . live .
  7. Web site: Schumacher is World Champion . 23 October 1995 . 3 March 2008 . GrandPrix.com . Inside F1 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121011105232/http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns00331.html . 11 October 2012 . live .
  8. Book: Hill, Damon . Damon Hill . Damon Hill

    My Championship Year

    . 1996 . . 0-316-87976-2 . 163–168 . November 1996.
  9. Book: Tremayne, David . David Tremayne . Damon Hill World Champion: The Triumphant Story of a British Sporting Hero . . 1996 . 0-7525-2013-X . The nadir of Hill's 1995 season was Suzuka, where the atmosphere within the Williams camp was acrid, and where he crashed out of the race. It was here, it is rumoured, that Frank Williams resolved to employ Frentzen at the earliest opportunity. . 65 . 1996.
  10. Book: Domenjoz, Luc . The 17 Grand Prix - Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix . Formula 1 Yearbook 1995 . Chronosports Editeur . 2-940125-06-6 . 203 . 1995 .
  11. Book: Henry, Alan . 1995 Grands Prix: Japanese Grand Prix . Alan Henry . Autocourse 1995–96 . 1995 . Hazleton Publishing . 1-874557-36-5 . 218 . December 1995. registration.
  12. Web site: Wendlinger gets another F1 chance . 30 October 1995 . 3 March 2008 . GrandPrix.com . Inside F1 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130927041221/http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns00343.html . 27 September 2013 . live .
  13. Web site: Magnussen impresses for McLaren . GrandPrix.com . Inside F1 . 23 October 1995 . 2 March 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121011105245/http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns00336.html . 11 October 2012 . live .
  14. Web site: F1 Grand Prix of Japan - 95 . Gale Force F1 . 9 May 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060820064929/http://www.galeforcef1.com/f1/95/japan/. 20 August 2006.
  15. Web site: Japanese Grand Prix: 2nd Qualifying . Gale Force F1 . 2 March 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061020092509/http://www.galeforcef1.com/f1/95/japan/qual2.html . 20 October 2006 . dead .
  16. Web site: Jean Alesi - Unfinished Business . . . Paul . Murray . 17 January 2001 . 2 March 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120210213722/http://atlasf1.autosport.com/2001/jan17/murray.html . 10 February 2012 . live .
  17. Book: Domenjoz, Luc . The 17 Grand Prix - Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix . Formula 1 Yearbook 1995 . Chronosports Editeur . 2-940125-06-6 . 202 . 1995 .
  18. Book: Chiavegato, Christiano . Background - View From Italy: Ferrari in the Waiting . Formula 1 Yearbook 1995 . Chronosports Editeur . 2-940125-06-6 . 54–55 . 1995 .
  19. Web site: 1995 > Hakkinen, Mika . The Official Formula 1 Website . 16 June 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071024121243/http://www.formula1.com/results/driver/1995/40.html . 24 October 2007 .
  20. Book: Henry, Alan . 1995 Grands Prix: Japanese Grand Prix . Alan Henry . Autocourse 1995–96 . 1995 . Hazleton Publishing . 1-874557-36-5 . 217 . December 1995. registration.
  21. Walker, Murray (Commentator) . 29 October 1995 . Grand Prix: Japan . Television production . . London, England . 18:00–19:00 . That is Roberto Moreno, who was to start from the pitlane but does not appear to have done so..
  22. Book: Domenjoz, Luc . The 17 Grand Prix - Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix . Formula 1 Yearbook 1995 . Chronosports Editeur . 2-940125-06-6 . 206 . 1995 .
  23. Web site: Japanese 95: The Result . Gale Force F1 . 2 March 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061020092509/http://www.galeforcef1.com/95/japan/result.html . 20 October 2006 . dead .
  24. Alesi . Jean . Jean Alesi . 26 March 2009 . Jean Alesi: Race of My Life . . 195 . 12 . 102 .
  25. Book: Henry, Alan . 1995 Grands Prix: Japanese Grand Prix . Alan Henry . Autocourse 1995–96 . 1995 . Hazleton Publishing . 1-874557-36-5 . 219 . December 1995. registration.
  26. Book: Henry, Alan . 1995 Grands Prix: Japanese Grand Prix . Alan Henry . Autocourse 1995–96 . 1995 . Hazleton Publishing . 1-874557-36-5 . 221 . December 1995. registration.
  27. Walker, Murray (Commentator) . 29 October 1995 . Grand Prix: Japan . Television production . . London, England . 1:24:00–1:25:00. Information from on-screen rundown of lead positions at the beginning of lap 36.
  28. Web site: Suzuka: The Halloween Grand Prix . . . Ewan . Tytler . 2 March 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120210213736/http://atlasf1.autosport.com/99/jpn/preview/tytler.html . 10 February 2012 . live .
  29. Web site: Schumacher - Damon will be 1996 favorite . 21 August 1995 . 3 March 2008 . GrandPrix.com . Inside F1 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121011105251/http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns00254.html . 11 October 2012 . live .
  30. Benson . Andrew . July 2008 . Damon Hill . . 84 . 7 . 70–77 .
  31. Web site: 2020-06-11 . Race of my life: Jean Alesi on the 1995 Japanese Grand Prix . www.autosport.com.
  32. Web site: Jean Alesi Interview | Beyond the Grid | Official F1 Podcast . . 15 May 2019 .
  33. Web site: Japan 1995 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 18 March 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20180220080138/http://www.statsf1.com/en/1995/japon/championnat.aspx. 20 February 2018. live.