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1974 Argentine Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryArgentina
Grand PrixArgentine
DateJanuary 13,
Year1974
ImageAutódromo Oscar y Juan Gálvez Circuito N° 15.svg
Official nameXI Gran Premio de la Republica Argentina
LocationAutodromo Municipal Ciudad de Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires, Argentina
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi3.708
Course_km5.968
Distance_laps53
Distance_mi196.549
Distance_km316.315
WeatherHot and sunny
Pole_DriverRonnie Peterson
Pole_TeamLotus-Ford
Pole_Time1:50.78
Pole_CountrySWE
Fast_DriverClay Regazzoni
Fast_TeamFerrari
Fast_Time1:52.10
Fast_Lap38
Fast_CountrySUI
First_DriverDenny Hulme
First_TeamMcLaren-Ford
First_CountryNZ
Second_DriverNiki Lauda
Second_TeamFerrari
Second_CountryAUT
Third_DriverClay Regazzoni
Third_TeamFerrari
Third_CountrySUI
Lapchart

Buenos Aires, Argentina

The 1974 Argentine Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held in Buenos Aires on 13 January 1974. It was race 1 of 15 in both the 1974 World Championship of Drivers and the 1974 International Cup for Formula One Manufacturers. The 53-lap race was won by McLaren driver Denny Hulme after he started from tenth position. Niki Lauda finished second for the Ferrari team and his teammate Clay Regazzoni came in third.

For the first time, Formula One's visit to the Buenos Aires circuit saw them use the long and fast No.15 configuration, rather than the previously used No.9 layout. This race was also the 8th and last victory of Hulme's Formula One career and, , the last for a New Zealand driver.

Report

It had been one of the most frantic close seasons ever with only Ronnie Peterson, Denny Hulme, Carlos Reutemann and James Hunt remaining with their teams. Emerson Fittipaldi moved from Lotus to McLaren to be replaced by Jacky Ickx. McLaren now had sponsorship from Marlboro and Texaco. The team also entered a third car in their old colours of Yardley for Mike Hailwood. Hailwood's place at Surtees was taken by Jochen Mass where he partnered Carlos Pace, whilst Peter Revson had moved from McLaren to Shadow, where he was joined by Jean-Pierre Jarier.

Niki Lauda and Clay Regazzoni remained teammates but would be driving for Ferrari instead of BRM, who now with Motul sponsorship had three cars driven by Frenchmen Jean-Pierre Beltoise, Henri Pescarolo and François Migault. With the death of François Cevert and the retirement of Jackie Stewart, Tyrrell had an entirely new line-up in Jody Scheckter and Patrick Depailler.

Wilson Fittipaldi left Formula One temporarily to start his own team (returning with it in 1975), so his place along Reutemann at Brabham was taken by Richard Robarts. A privateer Brabham was run by John Goode Racing for John Watson under the Hexagon of Highgate banner. Howden Ganley and Hans Stuck were picked up by March Engineering.

Marlboro continued to back Frank Williams and his Iso-Marlboro-Ford FW for former Ferrari driver, Arturo Merzario. While Hesketh Racing were building their own car back in England, they entered James Hunt in a year-old March, while Graham Hill had Lola Cars build two cars for himself and Guy Edwards. Rikky von Opel completed the field, once again driving for Team Ensign.

Qualifying

Peterson secured pole position, for John Player Team Lotus, averaging a speed of 120.542 mph. However, Scuderia Ferrari showed how much progress they had made during the winter, under the new management, led by Luca di Montezemolo, with Regazzoni qualifying alongside the Swede on the front row. The second row featured the McLaren of Fittipaldi and the Shadow of Revson, while James Hunt impressed in his Harvey Postlethwaite modified Hesketh March by taking fifth place on the grid.

Race

Peterson took an early lead from the fast starting Hunt, while Regazzoni, Revson and Hailwood all arrived at the first corner together and collided. Regazzoni and Revson spun, then Revson’s team-mate, Jarier ran into him. The cars of Merzario and Watson were also damaged in the melee, as Scheckter took to the grass in avoidance.

After Hunt spun later on the opening lap, Reutemann moved into second, with Fittipaldi, Hailwood, Ickx and Hulme completing the top six. By lap three, Reutemann took the lead, while Fittipaldi visited the pits to have a plug lead reattached. This promoted Hailwood to third. By this stage, Ickx had dropped behind Hulme, but soon both were past the Yardley McLaren. Peterson began to fade due to brake trouble and was overtaken by Hulme and Ickx. By now Ickx was beginning to come under pressure from the Ferrari of Niki Lauda.

On lap 27, the second Lotus was now in trouble, as Ickx pitted with a puncture. This left Lauda in a solid third place. The local hero, Reutemann seem to have the race under control when his Cosworth powered Brabham BT44 began to misfire and Hulme rapidly closed him down. On the penultimate lap, Hulme was past, taking the lead. As for Reutemann, his eventually ground to a halt on the last lap, running out of fuel, and was classified seventh overall. As a result, the Ferraris of Lauda and Regazzoni inherited a two-three at the finish.

Hulme won in a time of 1hr 41:02.010mins., averaging a speed of 117.405 mph, and was 9.27 seconds ahead of Lauda. Regazzoni was a further 11.14 seconds behind. Only other drivers to complete the full race distance were Hailwood, Beltoise and Depailler.

Classification

Qualifying

Pos.DriverConstructorTime/Gap1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526Source:
SWE Ronnie PetersonLotus–Ford1:50.78
SUI Clay RegazzoniFerrari+0.18
BRA Emerson FittipaldiMcLaren–Ford+0.28
USA Peter RevsonShadow–Ford+0.52
GBR James HuntMarch–Ford+0.74
ARG Carlos ReutemannBrabham–Ford+0.77
BEL Jacky IckxLotus–Ford+0.92
AUT Niki LaudaFerrari+1.03
GBR Mike HailwoodMcLaren–Ford+1.08
NZL Denny HulmeMcLaren–Ford+1.28
BRA Carlos PaceSurtees–Ford+1.42
RSA Jody ScheckterTyrrell–Ford+1.69
ITA Arturo MerzarioFWRC–Ford+2.36
FRA Jean-Pierre BeltoiseBRM+2.40
FRA Patrick DepaillerTyrrell–Ford+2.49
FRA Jean-Pierre JarierShadow–Ford+2.88
GBR Graham HillLola–Ford+3.12
FRG Jochen MassSurtees–Ford+3.12
NZL Howden GanleyMarch–Ford+3.43
GBR John WatsonBrabham–Ford+3.61
FRA Henri PescaroloBRM+3.89
GBR Richard RobartsBrabham–Ford+3.95
FRG Hans-Joachim StuckMarch–Ford+4.41
FRA François MigaultBRM+4.65
GBR Guy EdwardsLola–Ford+5.65
LIE Rikky von OpelEnsign–Ford+7.08

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints12345678910111213RetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetDNS
6NZL **Denny Hulme****McLaren-Ford**53last = Langfirst = Miketitle = Grand Prix! Vol 3publisher = Haynes Publishing Groupyear = 1983isbn = 0-85429-380-9page = 19}}10**9**
12AUT **Niki Lauda****Ferrari**53+ 9.278**6**
11SUI **Clay Regazzoni****Ferrari**53+ 20.412**4**
33GBR **Mike Hailwood****McLaren-Ford**53+ 31.799**3**
14FRA **Jean-Pierre Beltoise****BRM**53+ 51.8414**2**
4FRA **Patrick Depailler****Tyrrell-Ford**53+ 1:52.4815**1**
7ARG Carlos ReutemannBrabham-Ford52Out of fuel6
10NZL Howden GanleyMarch-Ford52Out of fuel19
15FRA Henri PescaroloBRM52+ 1 Lap21
5BRA Emerson FittipaldiMcLaren-Ford52+ 1 Lap3
27GBR Guy EdwardsLola-Ford51+ 2 Laps25
28GBR John WatsonBrabham-Ford49+ 4 Laps20
1SWE Ronnie PetersonLotus-Ford48+ 5 Laps1
26GBR Graham HillLola-Ford45Engine17
2Belgium Jacky IckxLotus-Ford36Clutch7
8GBR Richard RobartsBrabham-Ford36Gearbox22
9GER Hans Joachim StuckMarch-Ford31Clutch23
37FRA François MigaultBRM31Water leak24
3South Africa Jody ScheckterTyrrell-Ford25Engine12
18BRA Carlos PaceSurtees-Ford21Suspension11
20ITA Arturo MerzarioIso-Marlboro-Ford19Overheating13
24GBR James HuntMarch-Ford11Overheating5
19GER Jochen MassSurtees-Ford10Engine18
16USA Peter RevsonShadow-Ford1Accident4
17FRA Jean-Pierre JarierShadow-Ford0Accident16
22LIE Rikky von OpelEnsign-FordHandling26

Notes

  • This was the Formula One World Championship debut for British drivers Richard Robarts and Guy Edwards, and German driver Hans-Joachim Stuck.
  • This was the 61st pole position for a Ford-powered car, breaking the previous record set by Ferrari at the 1972 Italian Grand Prix.
  • This was the 3rd win of an Argentine Grand Prix by a Ford-powered car, breaking the previous record set by Maserati at the 1957 Argentine Grand Prix.

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
1NZL Denny Hulme9
2AUT Niki Lauda6
3SUI Clay Regazzoni4
4UK Mike Hailwood3
5FRA Jean-Pierre Beltoise2

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
1UK McLaren-Ford9
2ITA Ferrari6
3UK BRM2
4UK Tyrrell-Ford1
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

Name_of_race = Argentine Grand Prix | Year_of_race = 1974 | Previous_race_in_season = 1973 United States Grand Prix | Next_race_in_season = 1974 Brazilian Grand Prix | Previous_year's_race = 1973 Argentine Grand Prix | Next_year's_race = 1975 Argentine Grand Prix}}

References

  1. "Argentine GP, 1974 Race Report - GP Encyclopedia - F1 History on Grandprix.com". Grandprix.com.
  2. (1974-01-13). "GP Argentina 1974 - Entry List". Racing Sports Cars.
  3. "GP Argentina". Racing Sports Cars.
  4. (1974-01-13). "1974 Grand Prix of Argentina". Racing-Reference.info.
  5. "Formula One 1974 Argentine Grand Prix Classification | Motorsport Stats".
  6. Lang, Mike. (1983). "Grand Prix! Vol 3". Haynes Publishing Group.
  7. "1974 Argentine Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  8. (13 January 1974). "Results 1974 Formula 1 Grand Prix of Argentina". F1 Fansite.
  9. "Argentina 1974 - Championship • STATS F1".
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