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1951 Italian Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryItaly
Grand PrixItalian
Official nameXXII GRAN PREMIO D'ITALIA
Date16 September
Year1951
Previous_round1951 German Grand Prix
Next_round1951 Spanish Grand Prix
LocationAutodromo Nazionale di Monza, Monza, Italy
ImageMonza 1950.png
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi3.915
Course_km6.300
Distance_laps80
Distance_mi313.171
Distance_km504.000
WeatherWarm and sunny
Pole_DriverJuan Manuel Fangio
Pole_TeamAlfa Romeo
Pole_Time1:53.2
Pole_CountryArgentina
Fast_DriverNino Farina
Fast_TeamAlfa Romeo
Fast_Time1:56.5
Fast_Lap64
Fast_CountryItaly
First_DriverAlberto Ascari
First_TeamFerrari
First_CountryItaly
Second_DriverJosé Froilán González
Second_TeamFerrari
Second_CountryArgentina
Third_DriverFelice Bonetto
Third_TeamAlfa Romeo
Third_CountryItaly
Third_Driver2Giuseppe Farina
Third_Country2Italy
Lapchart

The 1951 Italian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 16 September 1951 at Monza. It was race 7 of 8 in the 1951 World Championship of Drivers.

Report

Toulo de Graffenried returned to Alfa Romeo's four-car line up, in place of Paul Pietsch, having raced for Enrico Platé in France and Germany. He raced alongside the regular Alfa drivers, Fangio, Farina and Bonetto. The works Ferrari team retained the same four drivers from the race at the Nürburgring — Ascari, Villoresi, González and Taruffi — while Brazilian Chico Landi made his World Championship debut in a privately run Ferrari. The field was completed by works teams from BRM, Simca-Gordini and OSCA, as well as the usual Talbot-Lago entries.

The front row positions on the grid were shared equally between Alfa Romeo and Ferrari, with Fangio, Farina, Ascari and González posting the four fastest qualifying times. The second row consisted of the remaining works Ferraris of Villoresi and Taruffi, alongside Felice Bonetto. Reg Parnell, in a BRM, was also supposed to be on the second row, but was unable to start due to lubrication problems.

Fangio was the initial race leader, having started from pole position, but he soon had to cede the position to Ascari. He retook the lead on lap eight before pitting for a tyre change, which dropped him to fifth. Early retirements for Farina and de Graffenried left José Froilán González in second, behind his teammate Ascari. Fangio attempted to bridge the gap to the Ferraris, but engine problems eliminated his chances. The sole remaining Alfa driver, Nino Farina, who had taken over Bonetto's car on lap 30, inherited third place as a result of Fangio's retirement. He was fast, but fuel leakages meant that he needed to make two further pitstops; he therefore had to settle for third. Alberto Ascari took his second, and Ferrari's third, consecutive Championship race victory, ahead of British Grand Prix winner González. The other works Ferraris of Villoresi and Taruffi completed the points positions in what was another successful race for the Scuderia.

Ascari's victory took him to within two points of Championship leader Fangio, while González was a further four points behind in third.

Entries

NoDriverEntrantConstructorChassisEngineTyre24681012141618202224262830323436384044464850Sources:
Italy Alberto AscariScuderia FerrariFerrariFerrari 375Ferrari Type 375 4.5 V12
Italy Luigi VilloresiFerrariFerrari 375Ferrari Type 375 4.5 V12
Argentina José Froilán GonzálezFerrariFerrari 375Ferrari Type 375 4.5 V12
Italy Piero TaruffiFerrariFerrari 375Ferrari Type 375 4.5 V12
Italy Gianni MarzottoFerrariFerrari 375Ferrari 375 F1 4.5 V12
Brazil Chico LandiFrancisco LandiFerrariFerrari 375Ferrari Type 375 4.5 V12
Switzerland Rudi FischerEcurie EspadonFerrariFerrari 212Ferrari 212 2.5 V12
UK Peter WhiteheadPeter WhiteheadFerrariFerrari 125Ferrari 125 F1 1.5 V12s
France Louis RosierEcurie RosierTalbot-LagoTalbot-Lago T26C-DATalbot 23CV 4.5 L6
Monaco Louis ChironTalbot-LagoTalbot-Lago T26CTalbot 23CV 4.5 L6
France Pierre LeveghPierre LeveghTalbot-LagoTalbot-Lago T26CTalbot 23CV 4.5 L6
France Yves Giraud-CabantousYves Giraud-CabantousTalbot-LagoTalbot-Lago T26CTalbot 23CV 4.5 L6
Belgium Johnny ClaesEcurie BelgeTalbot-LagoTalbot-Lago T26C-DATalbot 23CV 4.5 L6
Belgium Jacques SwatersEcurie BelgiqueTalbot-LagoTalbot-Lago T26CTalbot 23CV 4.5 L6
UK Reg ParnellBRM Ltd.BRMBRM P15BRM 15 1.5 V16s
UK Ken RichardsonBRMBRM P15BRM 15 1.5 V16s
Italy Nino FarinaAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa RomeoAlfa Romeo 159MAlfa Romeo 1.5 L8s
Switzerland Toulo de GraffenriedAlfa RomeoAlfa Romeo 159MAlfa Romeo 1.5 L8s
Argentina Juan Manuel FangioAlfa RomeoAlfa Romeo 159MAlfa Romeo 1.5 L8s
Italy Felice BonettoAlfa RomeoAlfa Romeo 159AAlfa Romeo 1.5 L8s
Italy Franco RolOSCA AutomobiliOSCAOSCA 4500GOSCA 4.5 V12
France Robert ManzonEquipe GordiniSimca-GordiniSimca-Gordini T15Simca-Gordini 15C 1.5 L4s
France André SimonSimca-GordiniSimca-Gordini T15Simca-Gordini 15C 1.5 L4s
France Maurice TrintignantSimca-GordiniSimca-Gordini T15Simca-Gordini 15C 1.5 L4s

: — Gianni Marzotto withdrew from the event prior to practice : — Ken Richardson qualified the #32 BRM, although he did not start the race. Hans Stuck was also entered in the same car, but he took no part in either qualifying or the race. : — Toulo de Graffenried qualified and drove the race in the #36 Alfa Romeo. Consalvo Sanesi was also entered in the car, but injury prevented his participation in the Grand Prix. : — Felice Bonetto qualified and drove 29 laps of the race in the #40 Alfa Romeo. Nino Farina, whose own vehicle had already retired, took over the car for a further 50 laps. : — Maurice Trintignant qualified the #50 Simca-Gordini but was secretly replaced for the race by Jean Behra.

Classification

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGap123456789101112131415161718192021222324Source:
38Argentina Juan Manuel FangioAlfa Romeo1:53.2
34Italy Nino FarinaAlfa Romeo1:53.9+ 0.7
2Italy Alberto AscariFerrari1:55.1+ 1.9
6Argentina José Froilán GonzálezFerrari1:55.9+ 2.7
4Italy Luigi VilloresiFerrari1:57.9+ 4.7
8Italy Piero TaruffiFerrari1:58.2+ 5.0
40Italy Felice BonettoAlfa Romeo1:58.3+ 5.1
30UK Reg ParnellBRM2:02.2+ 9.0
36Switzerland Toulo de GraffenriedAlfa Romeo2:05.2+ 12.0
32UK Ken RichardsonBRM2:05.6+ 12.4
48France André SimonSimca-Gordini2:08.0+ 14.8
50France Maurice TrintignantSimca-Gordini2:08.9+ 15.7
46France Robert ManzonSimca-Gordini2:09.0+ 15.8
24France Yves Giraud-CabantousTalbot-Lago-Talbot2:09.3+ 16.1
18France Louis RosierTalbot-Lago-Talbot2:10.8+ 17.6
12Brazil Chico LandiFerrari2:11.2+ 18.0
20Monaco Louis ChironTalbot-Lago-Talbot2:12.1+ 18.9
44Italy Franco RolOSCA2:13.4+ 20.2
16UK Peter WhiteheadFerrari2:16.2+ 23.0
22France Pierre LeveghTalbot-Lago-Talbot2:16.5+ 23.3
26Belgium Johnny ClaesTalbot-Lago-Talbot2:18.6+ 25.4
28Belgium Jacques SwatersTalbot-Lago-Talbot2:18.8+ 25.6
14Switzerland Rudi FischerFerrariNo time
32West Germany Hans StuckBRMNo time

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/retiredGridPoints123456789RetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetDNSDNSDNSDNSDNS
2Italy **Alberto Ascari****Ferrari**802:42:39.33**8**
6Argentina **José Froilán González****Ferrari**80last = Langfirst = Miketitle = Grand Prix! Vol 1publisher = Haynes Publishing Groupyear = 1981isbn = 0-85429-276-4page = 35 }}4**6**
40Italy **Felice Bonetto**
Italy **Nino Farina****Alfa Romeo**79+1 lap7**2**
**3**
4Italy **Luigi Villoresi****Ferrari**79+1 lap5**3**
8Italy **Piero Taruffi****Ferrari**78+2 laps6**2**
48France André SimonSimca-Gordini74+6 laps11
18France Louis RosierTalbot-Lago-Talbot73+7 laps15
24France Yves Giraud-CabantousTalbot-Lago-Talbot72+8 laps14
44Italy Franco RolOSCA67+13 laps18
38Argentina Juan Manuel FangioAlfa Romeo39Engine1
50France Jean BehraSimca-Gordini29Engine12
46France Robert ManzonSimca-Gordini29Engine13
20Monaco Louis ChironTalbot-Lago-Talbot23Ignition17
22France Pierre LeveghTalbot-Lago-Talbot9Engine20
28Belgium Jacques SwatersTalbot-Lago-Talbot7Overheating22
34Italy Nino FarinaAlfa Romeo6Engine2
26Belgium Johnny ClaesTalbot-Lago-Talbot4Oil pump21
36Switzerland Toulo de GraffenriedAlfa Romeo1Compressor9
16UK Peter WhiteheadFerrari1Magneto19
12Brazil Chico LandiFerrari0Transmission16
30UK Reg ParnellBRM0Non Starter8
32UK Ken RichardsonBRM0Non Starter10
14SUI Rudi FischerFerrari0Non Starter
32West Germany Hans StuckBRM0Reserve Driver
50France Maurice TrintignantSimca-Gordini0Driver Unwell

;Notes

  • – Includes 1 point for fastest lap
  • – Behra secretly replaced the unwell Trintignant for the race. Team principal Amédée Gordini did not inform the race organizers about the switch as it would have cut the team's starting fee. Behra even wore his compatriot's helmet to disguise the switch.

Shared drive

  • Farina (50 laps) took over from Bonetto (29) after Farina's car retired. Points for 3rd position were shared between the drivers (Farina received 1 extra point for setting the fastest race lap).

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio27 (28)
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]2Italy Alberto Ascari25
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]3Argentina José Froilán González21
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]4Italy Nino Farina17 (18)
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]5Italy Luigi Villoresi15 (18)
  • Note: Only the top five positions are listed. Only the best 4 results counted towards the Championship. Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.

References

| Previous_year's_race = 1950 Italian Grand Prix | Next_year's_race = 1952 Italian Grand Prix

References

  1. Lang, Mike. (1981). "Grand Prix! Vol 1". Haynes Publishing Group.
  2. "Italian GP, 1951 Race Report". Grandprix.com.
  3. "1951 Italian Grand Prix - Race Entries". manipef1.com.
  4. "1951 Italian GP - Entry List". chicanef1.com.
  5. "Italy 1951 - Result". statsf1.com.
  6. "Italian Grand Prix 1951 - Results". [[ESPN]] F1.
  7. "Jean Behra - Biography". MotorSportMagazine.
  8. "Seasons - Italy 1951". www.statsf1.com.
  9. "Italy 1951 - Qualifications • STATS F1".
  10. Lang, Mike. (1981). "Grand Prix! Vol 1". Haynes Publishing Group.
  11. "1951 Italian Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  12. "Italy 1951 - Championship • STATS F1".
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