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1973 United States Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryUnited States
Grand PrixUnited States
ImageWatkins Glen International Track Map-1970-1980.svg
Official nameXVI United States Grand Prix
DateOctober 7
Year1973
LocationWatkins Glen Grand Prix Race Course
Watkins Glen, New York
CoursePermanent road course
Course_mi3.377
Course_km5.435
Distance_laps59
Distance_mi199.24
Distance_km320.67
WeatherCloudy with temperatures approaching 68 F;
Wind speeds up to 9.21 mph
Pole_DriverSweden Ronnie Peterson
Pole_TeamLotus-Ford
Pole_Time1:39.657
Fast_DriverUK James Hunt
Fast_TeamMarch-Ford
Fast_Time1:41.652
Fast_Lap58
First_DriverSweden Ronnie Peterson
First_TeamLotus-Ford
Second_DriverUK James Hunt
Second_TeamMarch-Ford
Third_DriverArgentina Carlos Reutemann
Third_TeamBrabham-Ford
Lapchart

Watkins Glen, New York Wind speeds up to 9.21 mph

The 1973 United States Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on October 7, 1973 at the Watkins Glen Grand Prix Race Course in Watkins Glen, New York. It was race 15 of 15 in both the 1973 World Championship of Drivers and the 1973 International Cup for Formula One Manufacturers.

The 59-lap race was won from pole position by Ronnie Peterson, driving a Lotus-Ford. Peterson held off James Hunt in the Hesketh-entered March-Ford to take his fourth victory of the season, with Carlos Reutemann third in a Brabham-Ford.

The race was overshadowed by the death of François Cevert during qualifying, the day before, in what was to have been the 100th and final Grand Prix for Tyrrell team-mate and triple World Champion Jackie Stewart. The Tyrrell team withdrew from the event as a consequence, handing the Manufacturers' Cup to Lotus.

Summary

Ronnie Peterson ended his first year with Lotus by taking his fourth win of the season, as a thrilling two-man battle ended with Peterson beating James Hunt to the flag by the smallest winning margin in USGP history at that time. The Englishman finished less than a second behind in his Hesketh Racing entered March, but the normal celebrations were tempered by the death of François Cevert during qualifying and the premature end of the career of three-time World Champion Jackie Stewart.

Death of François Cevert

Stewart had already clinched his third World Driver's Championship when the teams came to Watkins Glen, and he intended the final Grand Prix of 1973 to be his swan song. "I had decided in April that I would retire at the end of the season, win or lose," Stewart recalled. "Watkins Glen was going to be my last race in a Formula One car. François Cevert was going to be number one in the team for 1974, although he never knew it. Ken Tyrrell and I had kept it a secret that I was going to retire after that race. In fact, not even my wife, Helen, who was with me that weekend, knew."

With just a few minutes left in the Saturday morning qualifying session, however, the track suddenly fell quiet. Cevert had crashed violently in the uphill Esses heading onto the back of the circuit, between Turns Three and Four. Fighting the car as he went up the hill, Cevert ran too high on the kerbs and slid into the right-hand guardrail. The car then lashed sideways across the track and struck the Armco on the left side of the track at 150 mph at an almost 90-degree angle. The nose of the car submarined into the ground, causing the car to flip upwards on over the barrier, which ripped off the front of the car, which landed in the middle of the track while the rear of the car came to rest upside down on top of the Armco.

Jody Scheckter's McLaren was close behind, and he stopped and rushed over to help Cevert out of the car, but when the front of the car had been ripped off, Cevert had been exposed to making direct physical contact with the barrier and had died instantly. Ken Tyrrell had lost a great driver and Jackie Stewart an outstanding teammate at the circuit where Cevert had taken his only Grand Prix win. "It was a horrendous accident which took the life of a wonderfully charming, personable, handsome young man, who was a tremendous friend to both Helen and me," Stewart said.

When qualifying resumed, Peterson's time from the morning session stood up for his ninth pole of the year. The Tyrrells of Stewart and Chris Amon had earned the fifth and twelfth spots on the grid, but the team decided to withdraw in tribute to Cevert, and Stewart's driving career was over after 99 races and what was then a record 27 Grand Prix wins.

Race

On Sunday, a huge crowd turned out on a cool, overcast day for the race. On the grid, in seventh spot, home favorite Peter Revson felt his car creeping forward as the flag was raised. Rather than hold it with the brakes, he took it out of gear just as the flag dropped. He waved his arms in the air and waited for the field to roar past, then set off in last place.

The front runners got away well, and at the end of the first lap, Peterson led Carlos Reutemann, Hunt, Emerson Fittipaldi, Mike Hailwood and Scheckter. On lap 4, Hunt passed Reutemann for second, and began his chase of Peterson's Lotus. To the surprise of everyone as the race progressed, Hunt was able to stay around one second behind Peterson. Occasionally the gap would widen slightly, but again and again, the extreme straightline speed of the Hesketh March would close it again.

Reutemann kept pace as well, two to three seconds behind Hunt, until he lost nine seconds attempting to lap Graham Hill. From then on, he ran a lonely race to a third-place finish.

Revson, meanwhile, was rocketing through the field from his last place start, and at the midway point, he had gone from twenty-third to seventh. He took sixth from Emerson on lap 40 when the Brazilian pitted to replace his front tyres that were flat-spotted when he had to avoid a spinning Scheckter.

For the last 15 laps, Hunt continued to follow Peterson, between .7 and 1.4 seconds behind. He pulled alongside at one point, but could not finish the pass. "I looked over at Ronnie, and he looked fiercer than me," he explained after the race.

Hunt had decided to bide his time until the final 10 laps, then make a bid to pass Peterson, but his car developed oversteer with a lightening fuel load. This kept him from taking the final corner before the back straight flat out, and effectively took away his speed advantage. He maintained the challenge to the flag, however, setting the fastest lap of the race on the penultimate lap. Peterson's winning margin of 0.688 seconds was the smallest in United States Grand Prix history until 2002.

Reutemann had to weave to the line, virtually out of fuel, but held on to third; Denny Hulme ran a steady race to fourth; Revson made it up to fifth with his splendid drive from last place; and Emerson Fittipaldi took sixth after having to stop for tyres. Having already secured the Manufacturers' Cup following Tyrrell's withdrawal, Lotus finished ten points ahead, despite Stewart taking the Drivers' Championship for Tyrrell.

Classification

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGapGrid12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728
2Sweden Ronnie PetersonLotus-Ford1:39.6571
10Argentina Carlos ReutemannBrabham-Ford1:40.013+0.3562
1Brazil Emerson FittipaldiLotus-Ford1:40.393+0.7363
6France François CevertTyrrell-Ford1:40.444+0.787DNS
27UK James HuntMarch-Ford1:40.520+0.8634
5UK Jackie StewartTyrrell-Ford1:40.635+0.9785
23UK Mike HailwoodSurtees-Ford1:40.844+1.1876
8USA Peter RevsonMcLaren-Ford1:40.895+1.2387
7New Zealand Denny HulmeMcLaren-Ford1:40.907+1.2508
24Brazil Carlos PaceSurtees-Ford1:41.125+1.4689
0South Africa Jody ScheckterMcLaren-Ford1:41.321+1.66410
4Italy Arturo MerzarioFerrari1:41.455+1.79811
29New Zealand Chris AmonTyrrell-Ford1:41.679+2.02212
31UK Brian RedmanShadow-Ford1:42.247+2.59013
20France Jean-Pierre BeltoiseBRM1:42.417+2.76014
19Switzerland Clay RegazzoniBRM1:42.468+2.81115
30West Germany Jochen MassSurtees-Ford1:42.517+2.86016
18France Jean-Pierre JarierMarch-Ford1:42.752+3.09517
12UK Graham HillShadow-Ford1:42.848+3.19118
25New Zealand Howden GanleyIso-Marlboro-Ford1:43.166+3.50919
16USA George FollmerShadow-Ford1:43.387+3.73020
21Austria Niki LaudaBRM1:43.543+3.88621
17UK Jackie OliverShadow-Ford1:43.650+3.99322
26Belgium Jacky IckxIso-Marlboro-Ford1:43.885+4.22823
9UK John WatsonBrabham-Ford1:43.887+4.23024
11Brazil Wilson FittipaldiBrabham-Ford1:44.478+4.82125
15UK Mike BeuttlerMarch-Ford1:45.032+5.37526
28Liechtenstein Rikky von OpelEnsign-Ford1:45.441+5.78427

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints12345678910111213141516NCRetRetRetRetRetRetDSQRetDNSDNSDNS
2Sweden **Ronnie Peterson****Lotus-Ford**591:41:15.7791**9**
27UK **James Hunt****March-Ford**59+ 0.6684**6**
10Argentina **Carlos Reutemann****Brabham-Ford**59+ 22.9302**4**
7New Zealand **Denny Hulme****McLaren-Ford**59+ 50.2268**3**
8USA **Peter Revson****McLaren-Ford**59+ 1:20.3677**2**
1Brazil **Emerson Fittipaldi****Lotus-Ford**59+ 1:47.9453**1**
26Belgium Jacky IckxIso-Marlboro-Ford58+ 1 Lap23
19Switzerland Clay RegazzoniBRM58+ 1 Lap15
20France Jean-Pierre BeltoiseBRM58+ 1 Lap14
15UK Mike BeuttlerMarch-Ford58+ 1 Lap26
18France Jean-Pierre JarierMarch-Ford57Accident17
25New Zealand Howden GanleyIso-Marlboro-Ford57+ 2 Laps19
12UK Graham HillShadow-Ford57+ 2 Laps18
16USA George FollmerShadow-Ford57+ 2 Laps20
17UK Jackie OliverShadow-Ford55+ 4 Laps22
4Italy Arturo MerzarioFerrari55+ 4 Laps11
11Brazil Wilson FittipaldiBrabham-Ford52+ 7 Laps25
0South Africa Jody ScheckterMcLaren-Ford39Suspension10
30West Germany Jochen MassSurtees-Ford35Engine16
21Austria Niki LaudaBRM35Fuel Pump21
23UK Mike HailwoodSurtees-Ford34Suspension6
24Brazil Carlos PaceSurtees-Ford32Suspension9
9UK John WatsonBrabham-Ford7Engine24
31UK Brian RedmanShadow-Ford5Received Outside Assistance13
28Liechtenstein Rikky von OpelEnsign-Ford0Throttle27
5UK Jackie StewartTyrrell-Ford0Withdrew (Fatal Accident in team)5
29New Zealand Chris AmonTyrrell-Ford0Withdrew (Fatal Accident in team)12
6France François CevertTyrrell-FordFatal Accident in Qualifying
  • François Cevert did not start to race due to a fatal accident in qualifying practice. His place on the grid was left vacant.
  • Jackie Stewart and Chris Amon did not start to race due to withdrawal after Cevert's death. Their places on the grid were left vacant.

Notes

  • This was the 10th pole position and 5th Grand Prix win for a Swedish driver.
  • This race marked the 58th fastest lap set by a Ford-powered car. This broke the record set by Ferrari at the 1972 Italian Grand Prix.

Final Championship standings

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1UK **Jackie Stewart***71
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]2BRA Emerson Fittipaldi55
[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 13SWE Ronnie Peterson52
[[File:1downarrow red.svg10px]] 14FRA François Cevert47
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]5USA Peter Revson38

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1UK **Lotus-Ford***92 (96)
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]2UK Tyrrell-Ford82 (86)
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]3UK McLaren-Ford58
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]4UK Brabham-Ford22
[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 35UK March-Ford14
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings. Only the best 7 results from the first 8 races and the best 6 results from the last 7 races counted towards the Championship. Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.
  • Competitors in bold and marked with an asterisk are the 1973 World Champions.

References

References

  1. "Weather information for the "1973 United States Grand Prix"". The Old Farmers' Almanac.
  2. "1973 United States Grand Prix Entry list".
  3. "1973 United States Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  4. "United States 1973 - Championship • STATS F1".
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