2005 Brazilian Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Country:Brazil
Grand Prix:Brazilian
Official Name:Formula 1 Grande Prêmio do Brasil 2005
Year:2005
Race No:17
Season No:19
Location:Autódromo José Carlos Pace, São Paulo, Brazil
Course Mi:2.677
Course Km:4.309
Distance Laps:71
Distance Mi:190.083
Distance Km:305.909
Weather:Partially cloudy and dry, Air: 23C, Track 22C
Pole Driver:Fernando Alonso
Pole Team:Renault
Pole Time:1:11.988
Pole Country:Spain
Fast Driver:Kimi Räikkönen
Fast Country:Finland
Fast Team:McLaren-Mercedes
Fast Time:1:12.268
Fast Lap:29
First Driver:Juan Pablo Montoya
First Country:Colombia
First Team:McLaren-Mercedes
Second Driver:Kimi Räikkönen
Second Country:Finland
Second Team:McLaren-Mercedes
Third Driver:Fernando Alonso
Third Country:Spain
Third Team:Renault

The 2005 Brazilian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Grande Prêmio do Brasil 2005)[1] was a Formula One motor race held on at the Autódromo José Carlos Pace in São Paulo, Brazil on 25 September 2005. It was the seventeenth race of the 2005 FIA Formula One World Championship.

The 71-lap race was won by McLaren driver Juan Pablo Montoya, who took the seventh and final victory of his career, ahead of his teammate, Kimi Räikkönen, who finished second. Renault driver Fernando Alonso became the Drivers' Champion for the first time after he finished the race in third place.

Friday drivers

The bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race. Enrico Toccacelo, Minardi's third driver was not present in Brazil as he competed for the Italian team in the opening round of the A1 Grand Prix series at Brands Hatch.[2]

Constructor Nat Driver
McLaren-MercedesAlexander Wurz
Sauber-Petronas-
Red Bull-CosworthVitantonio Liuzzi
ToyotaRicardo Zonta
Jordan-ToyotaNicolas Kiesa
Minardi-Cosworth-

Report

Background

Fernando Alonso led the drivers' championship with 25 points ahead of Kimi Räikkönen and 56 points ahead of Michael Schumacher. With three races remaining, the drivers' championship was decided between Alonso and Räikkönen. A third place would be enough for Alonso to win his first world championship title, while Räikkönen would no longer have a mathematical chance even if he won and came third. In the constructors' championship, Renault led McLaren-Mercedes by six points and Ferrari by 62 points.

Williams' Nick Heidfeld, having injured his shoulder in a cycling accident in Switzerland, was replaced again by Antônio Pizzonia. The German had also missed the two previous Grands Prix due to the consequences of an accident in a test session in Monza.[3]

Qualifying

Alonso took his eighth career pole with a time of 1:11.998 minutes ahead of Montoya and Fisichella. Button completed the second line. Räikkönen reached 5th place.

Commentators have judged Renault's qualifying performance as evidence that their "conservative phase" was over. Renault's Pat Symonds had said that the team was not aiming to settle for a simple podium finish, rather they were aiming to win. BBC's Maurice Hamilton said that "the thought that Fernando Alonso might cruise to the Championship.....was dispelled in the most convincing fashion". McLaren CEO Ron Dennis remained confident of his team's race strategy given Juan Pablo Montoya's strong second position, despite a major error in the qualifying lap of Kimi Räikkönen.

Race

Jacques Villeneuve was forced to start from pit lane as a penalty for infringement of parc ferme regulations. After getting involved in an accident at the start of the race, Mark Webber was able to rejoin, over 20 laps behind the leaders and do some laps, sufficient to position himself fourth in the official qualifying order for the subsequent Grand Prix at Japanese. Due to a driveshaft failure, this was Tiago Monteiro's only retirement of the 2005 season.

Juan Pablo Montoya won the race ahead of teammate Kimi Räikkönen; McLaren's first 1–2 finish since the 2000 Austrian Grand Prix. Fernando Alonso finished 3rd and thus became World Champion for the first time, at the time the youngest ever champion at 24 years and 58 days surpassing Emerson Fittipaldi's record of 25 years and 273 days set in 1972, and the first Spaniard to do so. The result of the Grand Prix marked the only point during the season when McLaren had more championship points than Renault.

Classification

Qualifying

Pos No Driver Constructor Lap Gap Grid
15 Fernando AlonsoRenault1:11.9881
210 Juan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-Mercedes1:12.145+0.1572
36 Giancarlo FisichellaRenault1:12.558+0.5703
43 Jenson ButtonBAR-Honda1:12.696+0.7084
59 Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes1:12.781+0.7935
615 Christian KlienRed Bull-Cosworth1:12.889+0.9016
71 Michael SchumacherFerrari1:12.976+0.9887
816 Jarno TrulliToyota1:13.041+1.05317
912 Felipe MassaSauber-Petronas1:13.151+1.1638
102 Rubens BarrichelloFerrari1:13.183+1.1959
1117 Ralf SchumacherToyota1:13.285+1.29710
1211 Jacques VilleneuveSauber-Petronas1:13.372+1.38420
1318 Tiago MonteiroJordan-Toyota1:13.387+1.39911
147 Mark WebberWilliams-BMW1:13.538+1.55012
158 Antônio PizzoniaWilliams-BMW1:13.581+1.59313
1614 David CoulthardRed Bull-Cosworth1:13.844+1.85614
1719 Narain KarthikeyanJordan-Toyota1:14.520+2.53215
1821 Christijan AlbersMinardi-Cosworth1:14.763+2.77516
194 Takuma SatoBAR-HondaNo time19,
2020 Robert DoornbosMinardi-CosworthNo time18
Notes

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
110 Juan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-Mercedes711:29:20.574210
29 Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes71+2.52758
35 Fernando AlonsoRenault71+24.84016
41 Michael SchumacherFerrari71+35.66875
56 Giancarlo FisichellaRenault71+40.21834
62 Rubens BarrichelloFerrari71+1:09.17393
73 Jenson ButtonBAR-Honda70+1 Lap42
817 Ralf SchumacherToyota70+1 Lap101
915 Christian KlienRed Bull-Cosworth70+1 Lap6
104 Takuma SatoBAR-Honda70+1 Lap19
1112 Felipe MassaSauber-Petronas70+1 Lap8
1211 Jacques VilleneuveSauber-Petronas70+1 LapPL
1316 Jarno TrulliToyota69Puncture17
1421 Christijan AlbersMinardi-Cosworth69+2 Laps16
1519 Narain KarthikeyanJordan-Toyota68+3 Laps15
Ret18 Tiago MonteiroJordan-Toyota55DriveshaftPL
NC7 Mark WebberWilliams-BMW45+26 Laps12
Ret20 Robert DoornbosMinardi-Cosworth34Engine18
Ret8 Antônio PizzoniaWilliams-BMW0Collision13
Ret14 David CoulthardRed Bull-Cosworth0Collision14
Notes

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Fernando Alonso*117
2 Kimi Räikkönen94
13 Juan Pablo Montoya60
14 Michael Schumacher60
15 Giancarlo Fisichella45
Source: [4]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
11 McLaren-Mercedes*164
12 Renault*162
3 Ferrari98
4 Toyota81
5 Williams-BMW59
Source:

References

-23.7036°N -46.6997°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Formula 1 Grande Prêmio do Brasil 2005 - Race. 21 December 2020.
  2. Web site: Brazilian GP: Minardi Friday practice notes. Motorsport.com. 14 December 2023.
  3. Web site: Heidfeld could miss Brazil too. Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. 9 December 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20071025051004/http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2005/9/3588.html. 25 October 2007.
  4. Web site: Brazil 2005 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 13 March 2019.