2006 Australian Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Country:Australia
Grand Prix:Australian
Date:2 April
Year:2006
Official Name:2006 Formula 1 Foster's Australian Grand Prix
Race No:3
Season No:18
Location:Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit
Albert Park, Melbourne, Australia
Course:Temporary street circuit
Course Mi:3.295
Course Km:5.303
Distance Laps:57
Distance Mi:187.823
Distance Km:302.271
Scheduled Laps:58
Scheduled Mi:191.118
Scheduled Km:307.574
Weather:Cloudy with sunny breaks. Air temperature 20°C
Attendance:103,000[1]
Pole Driver:Jenson Button
Pole Team:Honda
Pole Time:1:25.229
Pole Country:UK
Fast Driver:Kimi Räikkönen
Fast Team:McLaren-Mercedes
Fast Time:1:26.045
Fast Lap:57
Fast Country:Finland
First Driver:Fernando Alonso
First Team:Renault
First Country:Spain
Second Driver:Kimi Räikkönen
Second Team:McLaren-Mercedes
Second Country:Finland
Third Driver:Ralf Schumacher
Third Team:Toyota
Third Country:Germany

The 2006 Australian Grand Prix (officially the 2006 Formula 1 Foster's Australian Grand Prix)[2] was a Formula One motor race held at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit in Albert Park, Melbourne on 2 April 2006. It was the third race of the 2006 Formula One season.

The race was won by Renault's Fernando Alonso (Renault's third win from three races), with the McLaren of Kimi Räikkönen second. Ralf Schumacher finished in third place to take the last podium of his career with the Toyota team. Polesitter Jenson Button retired from the race when his engine blew on the final lap. He eventually stopped roughly ten metres from the finish line, losing a points scoring position (fifth place) in the process.

This was the last race until the 2015 Mexican Grand Prix that neither Ferrari was classified.[3]

Report

Background

The Australian Grand Prix had been the season opener since 1996, but this race was held later due to the 2006 Commonwealth Games being held in Melbourne at the time of the opening round. A pre-season test scheduled at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, in Spain from 24–26 February was also rescheduled and moved to the Bahrain International Circuit, in Bahrain. The season was instead opened in Bahrain, and Australia regained its first round of the season slot for 2007.

Murray Walker made a return to the commentary box for a one-off with Australia's Network Ten.

Friday drivers

The bottom six teams in the 2005 Constructors' Championship and Super Aguri 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.

Constructor Nat Driver
Williams-CosworthAlexander Wurz
HondaAnthony Davidson
Red Bull-FerrariRobert Doornbos
BMW SauberRobert Kubica
MF1-ToyotaMarkus Winkelhock
Toro Rosso-CosworthNeel Jani

Race

Juan Pablo Montoya spun as he completed the formation lap and lined up at the back of the grid. However, Giancarlo Fisichella then stalled his engine on the grid, forcing the start to be red flagged. Fisichella had to start from the pit lane, while Montoya reclaimed his original grid position.

On the first lap, Felipe Massa collided with Nico Rosberg and Christian Klien. The Williams and Red Bull sandwiched Massa's Ferrari as the Brazilian attempted to squeeze between them, pitching him into the wall hard and out of the race. Rosberg lost his rear wing, while Klien continued the race unharmed. The safety car was deployed as a result of the incident. Fisichella spun but continued, again in the Jones corner. Alonso passed Button on the start/finish straight when the safety car was recalled two laps later.

On the third lap, Christian Klien crashed heavily near Clark Chicane after a suspension failure. Due to debris on the track, the safety car was deployed again. When the race resumed, Räikkönen attacked and passed Button.

Pit stops began around ten laps later, with Montoya, Button and Trulli pitting first. Alonso and Räikkönen stopped, giving Mark Webber the lead of his home Grand Prix. When Webber took the lead on lap 21 in his Williams-Cosworth he became the first Australian driver to lead his home Grand Prix since John Bowe led the early laps of the non-championship 1984 race driving a Ralt RT4 Ford.

On lap 32, Montoya touched the grass in the Prost turn, but managed to return to the track. Michael Schumacher ran wide at the same spot but lost control and struck the barriers. He said that his car was not easy to drive, and that the tires were not warm enough. This incident led to a third safety car deployment, during which many drivers made pit stops. Räikkönen entered just before Montoya, making a queue.

On lap 35 the safety car was recalled and the race restarted. Alonso left a large gap to the safety car to slow down the cars behind, before accelerating to create a 3-second gap between the two leading cars.

The 36th lap saw the safety car deployed once again, after Vitantonio Liuzzi crashed heavily near Whiteford. Liuzzi blamed Villeneuve for his crash.[4] The race restarted on lap 40, and Alonso employed the same strategy as he had at the previous restart to gain a small lead over Räikkönen.

On lap 39, Tiago Monteiro retired with a mechanical problem. Lap 46 saw Montoya retired with an electrical problem, caused when he ran wide and bounced over a kerb.

On the final lap, two corners from the chequered flag, Jenson Button's engine blew, causing Fisichella right behind him to be covered in oil and struggling to control the car. Button pulled off the track about 10 metres from the finish line. He did so deliberately, giving up a points-scoring position, to avoid a 10-place position penalty in the next race.[5]

Alonso wrapped up his tenth career victory, while Räikkönen took second place on the podium and Ralf Schumacher scored what proved to be the sole podium for Toyota in the season, and ultimately, his final podium in Formula One. This was despite a drive-through penalty for speeding in the pit lane.

Post-race

After the race, the stewards issued a reprimand to Takuma Sato for failing to pay attention to blue flags, and a 25-second penalty to Scott Speed for failing to heed yellow flags. The American driver was also fined $5000 for using abusive language during a post-race hearing.[6]

Classification

Qualifying

DriverConstructorQ1Q2Q3
112 Jenson ButtonHonda1:28.0811:26.3371:25.2291
22 Giancarlo FisichellaRenault1:27.7651:26.1961:25.6352
31 Fernando AlonsoRenault1:28.5691:25.7291:25.7783
43 Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes1:27.1931:26.1611:25.8224
54 Juan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-Mercedes1:27.0791:25.9021:25.9765
67 Ralf SchumacherToyota1:28.0071:26.5961:26.6126
79 Mark WebberWilliams-Cosworth1:27.6691:26.0751:26.9377
816 Nick HeidfeldBMW Sauber1:27.7961:26.0141:27.5798
917 Jacques VilleneuveBMW Sauber1:28.4601:26.7141:29.23919
108 Jarno TrulliToyota1:27.7481:26.327No time9
115 Michael SchumacherFerrari1:28.2281:26.71810
1214 David CoulthardRed Bull-Ferrari1:28.4081:27.02311
1320 Vitantonio LiuzziToro Rosso-Cosworth1:28.9991:27.21912
1415 Christian KlienRed Bull-Ferrari1:28.7571:27.59113
1510 Nico RosbergWilliams-Cosworth1:28.3511:29.42214
166 Felipe MassaFerrari1:28.868No time15
1711 Rubens BarrichelloHonda1:29.94316
1819 Christijan AlbersMF1-Toyota1:30.22617
1921 Scott SpeedToro Rosso-Cosworth1:30.42618
2018 Tiago MonteiroMF1-Toyota1:30.70920
2122 Takuma SatoSuper Aguri-Honda1:32.27921
2223 Yuji IdeSuper Aguri-Honda1:36.16422
Source:[7] [8]
Notes:

Race

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
11 Fernando AlonsoRenault571:34:27.870310
23 Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes57+1.82948
37 Ralf SchumacherToyota57+24.82466
416 Nick HeidfeldBMW Sauber57+31.03285
52 Giancarlo FisichellaRenault57+38.421PL4
617 Jacques VilleneuveBMW Sauber57+49.554193
711 Rubens BarrichelloHonda57+51.904162
814 David CoulthardRed Bull-Ferrari57+53.983111
921 Scott SpeedToro Rosso-Cosworth57+1:18.81718
1012 Jenson ButtonHonda56Engine1
1119 Christijan AlbersMF1-Toyota56+1 lap17
1222 Takuma SatoSuper Aguri-Honda55+2 laps21
1323 Yuji IdeSuper Aguri-Honda54+3 laps22
Ret4 Juan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-Mercedes46Electrical5
Ret18 Tiago MonteiroMF1-Toyota39Hydraulics20
Ret20 Vitantonio LiuzziToro Rosso-Cosworth37Accident12
Ret5 Michael SchumacherFerrari32Accident10
Ret9 Mark WebberWilliams-Cosworth22Transmission7
Ret15 Christian KlienRed Bull-Ferrari4Accident13
Ret8 Jarno TrulliToyota0Collision9
Ret10 Nico RosbergWilliams-Cosworth0Collision damage14
Ret6 Felipe MassaFerrari0Collision15
Source:[10]
Notes:

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
DriverPoints
1 Fernando Alonso28
22 Giancarlo Fisichella14
33 Kimi Räikkönen14
24 Michael Schumacher11
25 Jenson Button11
Source:[14]
Constructors' Championship standings
ConstructorPoints
1 Renault42
12 McLaren-Mercedes23
13 Ferrari15
4 Honda13
15 BMW Sauber10
Source:

External links

-37.8497°N 144.9683°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Aussie GP to revert to opening race in 2007 . ABC News . Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 2 April 2006.
  2. Web site: 2006 FORMULA 1 Foster's Australian Grand Prix - Race. 21 December 2020.
  3. Web site: F1 Mexican Grand Prix: Ferrari counts costs of first double DNF since 2006. crash.net. 3 November 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20151103214036/http://www.crash.net/f1/news/224827/1/ferrari-counts-costs-of-first-double-dnf-since-2006.html. 3 November 2015. 2 November 2015.
  4. News: 2001-03-15 . Villeneuve: Crash not my fault . 2024-06-01 . en-GB.
  5. Web site: 2020-04-09 . "Get Out, Push the Car": When Jenson Button Was Asked to Push the Car to Finish Line in a Heartbreaking Finish . 2024-06-01 . EssentiallySports . en.
  6. Web site: Noble . Jonathan . 2 April 2006 . Speed loses point after penalty . 1 June 2024 . autosport.com.
  7. News: 2006 FORMULA 1 Foster's Australian Grand Prix . Formula1.com . . 1 April 2006 . 16 December 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110829021621/http://www.formula1.com/results/season/2006/753/6277/ . 29 August 2011 .
  8. Book: Domenjoz, Luc. Formula One Yearbook 2006–2007. February 2007 . Chronosports S.A.. 978-2-84707-110-8. 96. etal.
  9. News: Button stuns with Australian pole . Formula1.com . . 1 April 2006 . 16 December 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111224125312/http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2006/4/4184.html . 24 December 2011 .
  10. Book: Domenjoz, Luc. Formula One Yearbook 2006–2007. February 2007 . Chronosports S.A.. 978-2-84707-110-8. 99. etal.
  11. News: Australian GP . www.grandprix.com . www.grandprix.com . 2 April 2006.
  12. News: 2006 FORMULA 1 Foster's Australian Grand Prix . Formula1.com . . 2 April 2006 . 22 March 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140606084633/http://www.formula1.com/results/season/2006/753/6278/ . 6 June 2014 .
  13. Web site: Speed loses point after penalty. Autosport.com. 2 April 2006 . 16 December 2023.
  14. Web site: Australia 2006 – Championship • STATS F1. statsf1.com. 7 March 2019.