2003 Austrian Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Country:Austria
Grand Prix:Austrian
Date:18 May
Year:2003
Previous Round:2003 Spanish Grand Prix
Next Round:2003 Monaco Grand Prix
Official Name:A1 Grand Prix von Österreich 2003[1]
Race No:6
Season No:16
Location:A1-Ring, Spielberg, Austria
Course:Permanent racing facility
Course Mi:2.684
Course Km:4.326
Distance Laps:69
Distance Mi:185.196
Distance Km:298.494
Scheduled Laps:71
Scheduled Mi:190.564
Scheduled Km:307.146
Weather:Mostly cloudy with isolated showers in the area
Pole Driver:Michael Schumacher
Pole Team:Ferrari
Pole Time:1:09.150
Pole Country:Germany
Fast Driver:Michael Schumacher
Fast Team:Ferrari
Fast Time:1:08.337
Fast Lap:41
Fast Country:Germany
First Driver:Michael Schumacher
First Team:Ferrari
First Country:Germany
Second Driver:Kimi Räikkönen
Second Team:McLaren-Mercedes
Second Country:Finland
Third Driver:Rubens Barrichello
Third Team:Ferrari
Third Country:Brazil

The 2003 Austrian Grand Prix (formally known as A1 Grand Prix von Österreich 2003) was a Formula One motor race held on 18 May 2003 at the A1-Ring. It was the sixth round of the 2003 Formula One season and the 27th Austrian Grand Prix. The 69-lap race was won by Michael Schumacher driving a Ferrari car after starting from pole position. Kimi Räikkönen finished second driving for McLaren with Rubens Barrichello third in the other Ferrari. It was the last Austrian Grand Prix to be held until it returned to the renamed Red Bull Ring in 2014.

Background

The Grand Prix was contested by ten teams with two drivers each. The teams (also known as constructors) were Ferrari, Williams, McLaren, Renault, Sauber, Jordan, Jaguar, BAR, Minardi and Toyota.[2] It was announced in January 2003 that the Austrian Grand Prix would be dropped from the Formula One calendar in 2004, three years before the contract for the race was due to expire. This was because an exit clause was enabled in response to the European Union pushing forward a ban on tobacco advertising to 1 October 2005.[3]

Before the race, McLaren driver Kimi Räikkönen led the Drivers' Championship with 32 points, ahead of Michael Schumacher (28) and Fernando Alonso (25). Rubens Barrichello was fourth with 20 points, while David Coulthard was a close fifth with 19 points.[4] In the Constructors' Championship, McLaren was leading with 51 points, three points ahead of their rival Ferrari. Renault (34 points) and Williams (32 points) contended for fourth place and Jordan was fifth with 11 points.[4]

Qualifying

Qualifying was interesting, as there was no knowledge of what the weather would be for the race, making tyre and fuel strategy critical. Michael Schumacher qualified on pole despite a huge slide on his best qualifying lap. Championship leader Kimi Räikkönen qualified second, and was given special dispensation from the FIA to change his cracked valve, without incurring the usual penalty for changing an engine.

Qualifying classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Time Q2 Time Gap
11 Michael SchumacherFerrari1:07.9081:09.150
26 Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes1:08.9781:09.189+0.039
33 Juan Pablo MontoyaWilliams-BMW1:08.8391:09.391+0.241
49 Nick HeidfeldSauber-Petronas1:09.4791:09.725+0.575
52 Rubens BarrichelloFerrari1:08.1871:09.784+0.634
67 Jarno TrulliRenault1:09.4501:09.890+0.740
717 Jenson ButtonBAR-Honda1:08.8311:09.935+0.785
815 Antônio PizzoniaJaguar-Cosworth1:09.0241:10.045+0.895
911 Giancarlo FisichellaJordan-Ford1:09.2811:10.105+0.955
104 Ralf SchumacherWilliams-BMWNo Time1:10.279+1.129
1120 Olivier PanisToyota1:09.7641:10.402+1.252
1216 Jacques VilleneuveBAR-Honda1:08.6801:10.618+1.468
1321 Cristiano da MattaToyota1:10.3701:10.834+1.684
145 David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:08.9471:10.893+1.743
1510 Heinz-Harald FrentzenSauber-Petronas1:10.0551:11.307+2.157
1612 Ralph FirmanJordan-Ford1:11.1711:11.505+2.355
1714 Mark WebberJaguar-Cosworth1:08.5121:11.662+2.512
1818 Justin WilsonMinardi-Cosworth1:11.0561:14.508+5.358
198 Fernando AlonsoRenault1:09.6801:20.113+10.963
2019 Jos VerstappenMinardi-Cosworth1:10.894No Time
Sources:[5] [6] [7]

Race

Fernando Alonso chose to start from the pitlane in the spare car, and Mark Webber chose to start from the pitlane in his regular car. This meant Webber could not change tyres or add fuel until the race started, whereas Alonso could. His Jaguar broke this rule, and so Webber received a 10-second stop/go penalty.[8]

Cristiano da Matta had a faulty launch control, which caused 2 aborted starts, reducing the race to 69 laps. On the third (and final) formation lap, Heinz-Harald Frentzen's Sauber did not start, and he did not have time to set up the team car.

At the start, Jos Verstappen's launch control broke, and he retired. This caused the safety car to be deployed. Michael eventually led Montoya and Räikkönen when the green flag came out at the end of lap 4. The field remained relatively stable for the next several laps.

After 11 laps, it started to rain lightly, although it was not enough to force cars into the pits. Moments later, Jarno Trulli's Renault spun at turn one and he rejoined without problems. On lap 23, Michael pitted and there was a problem with his fuel filler, possibly caused by the fact that the team had used it to fill up Rubens Barrichello's car, which had a very slow first stop. Some of the fuel that actually did come out of the nozzle hit the bodywork on the sidepods, causing a small fire. The fire was extinguished quickly, and Michael continued in the race, losing about 12 seconds and was now running in third position.

On lap 32, everything turned into Michael's favour. Räikkönen was having engine-related performance problems, and this allowed Schumacher to catch and eventually pass him. On the straight between turns two and three, leader Juan Pablo Montoya's engine blew up. He made it back to the garage, and Michael was back in the lead. Alonso was on a good run despite starting from the pit lane, and was running in the top five when he spun off course at turn one, on what turned out to be his own oil caused by a blown engine in his Renault. Michael eventually set the fastest lap of the day, at an average speed of 227.894 km/h.[9]

After the second round of stops, Barrichello closed up on second-place Räikkönen, but was unable to pass him due to some good defensive moves by Kimi, despite his car being clearly faster. Michael eventually went on to win the race, his third successive of the season.[10] Jenson Button finished fourth for BAR despite being disappointed in qualifying, and David Coulthard's race was uneventful in fifth place. Ralf Schumacher was sixth, Webber finished a brilliant seventh despite his penalties, and Trulli was eighth for the final point. Despite causing the aborted starts earlier in the day, da Matta finished the race, a lap down in tenth position.

Race classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
11 Michael SchumacherFerrari691:24:04.888110
26 Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes69+3.362 28
32 Rubens BarrichelloFerrari69+3.951 56
417 Jenson ButtonBAR-Honda69+42.243 75
55 David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes69+59.740 144
64 Ralf SchumacherWilliams-BMW68+1 Lap103
714 Mark WebberJaguar-Cosworth68+1 Lap2
87 Jarno TrulliRenault68+1 Lap61
915 Antônio PizzoniaJaguar-Cosworth68+1 Lap8 
1021 Cristiano da MattaToyota68+1 Lap13 
1112 Ralph FirmanJordan-Ford68+1 Lap16 
1216 Jacques VilleneuveBAR-Honda68+1 Lap12 
1318 Justin WilsonMinardi-Cosworth67+2 Laps18 
Ret11 Giancarlo FisichellaJordan-Ford60Fuel system9 
Ret9 Nick HeidfeldSauber-Petronas46Engine4 
Ret8 Fernando AlonsoRenault44Engine/Spin 
Ret3 Juan Pablo MontoyaWilliams-BMW32Engine3 
Ret20 Olivier PanisToyota6Suspension11 
Ret19 Jos VerstappenMinardi-Cosworth0Launch control20 
DNS10 Heinz-Harald FrentzenSauber-Petronas0Clutch15 

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
+/–DriverPoints
1 Kimi Räikkönen40
2 Michael Schumacher38
13 Rubens Barrichello26
14 Fernando Alonso25
5 David Coulthard23
Source:[11]
Constructors' Championship standings
+/–ConstructorPoints
11 Ferrari64
12 McLaren-Mercedes63
3 Renault35
4 Williams-BMW35
5 Jordan-Ford11
Source:

External links

47.2197°N 14.7647°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A1 Grand Prix von Österreich 2003 - Race. 2021-01-03.
  2. Web site: 2003 Entry List. FIA.com. Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 12 July 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20020602144615/http://www.fia.com/homepage/selection-a.html. 2 June 2002.
  3. Web site: Early end for Austrian GP. BBC Sport. BBC. 27 January 2003. 13 October 2015.
  4. Web site: Drivers' and Constructors' Final Standings. FIA.com. Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 13 October 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20031202162832/http://www.fia.com/FreePress/F1_Guide_2003/Championship.html. 2 December 2003.
  5. Web site: 2003 Austrian GP – 1st Qualification. ChicaneF1. 30 September 2023.
  6. Web site: 2003 Austrian GP – 2nd Qualification. ChicaneF1. 30 September 2023.
  7. Web site: 2003 Austrian Grand Prix Classification Grid. Motorsport Stats. 30 September 2023.
  8. Web site: AUSTRIAN GP - SUNDAY - RACE REPORT. 19 May 2003. 9 January 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150110014306/http://www.grandprix.com/race/r703racereport.html. 10 January 2015. dead.
  9. Web site: 2003 Austrian Grand Prix fastest laps. Statsf1.com. 16 May 2015.
  10. Web site: 2003 Austrian Grand Prix results. Statsf1.com. 16 May 2015.
  11. Web site: Austria 2003 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 8 March 2019.