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1978 Austrian Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryAustria
Grand PrixAustrian
Official nameXVI Großer Preis von Österreich
Date13 August
Year1978
ImageÖsterreichring 1977-1987.svg
Race_No12
Season_No16
LocationÖsterreichring
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi3.692
Course_km5.942
Distance_laps54
Distance_mi199.368
Distance_km320.814
WeatherWet
Pole_DriverRonnie Peterson
Pole_CountrySweden
Pole_TeamLotus-Ford
Pole_Time1:37.71
Fast_DriverRonnie Peterson
Fast_CountrySweden
Fast_TeamLotus-Ford
Fast_Time1:43.12
First_DriverRonnie Peterson
First_CountrySweden
First_TeamLotus-Ford
Second_DriverPatrick Depailler
Second_CountryFrance
Second_TeamTyrrell-Ford
Third_DriverGilles Villeneuve
Third_CountryCanada
Third_TeamFerrari
Lapchart

The 1978 Austrian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 13 August 1978 at Österreichring. This was the last win for Ronnie Peterson before his death at the 1978 Italian Grand Prix, and was also the last win for a Swedish Formula One driver, as of 2025.

Qualifying

Pre-qualifying classification

Pos.DriverConstructorTime8
Harald ErtlEnsign-Ford
Héctor RebaqueLotus-Ford
Nelson PiquetMcLaren-Ford
Brett LungerMcLaren-Ford
René ArnouxMartini-Ford
Keke RosbergWolf-Ford
Arturo MerzarioMerzario-Ford
Rolf StommelenArrows-Ford1:44.88

*Positions in red indicate entries that failed to pre-qualify.

Qualifying classification

Pos.DriverConstructorTimeNo123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930
Ronnie PetersonLotus-Ford**1:37.71**1
Mario AndrettiLotus-Ford1:37.762
Jean-Pierre JabouilleRenault1:38.323
Carlos ReutemannFerrari1:38.504
Jacques LaffiteLigier-Matra1:38.715
Emerson FittipaldiFittipaldi-Ford1:38.776
Jody ScheckterWolf-Ford1:38.857
James HuntMcLaren-Ford1:39.108
Didier PironiTyrrell-Ford1:39.239
John WatsonBrabham-Alfa Romeo1:39.3510
Gilles VilleneuveFerrari1:39.4011
Niki LaudaBrabham-Alfa Romeo1:39.4912
Patrick DepaillerTyrrell-Ford1:39.5113
Patrick TambayMcLaren-Ford1:39.5914
Alan JonesWilliams-Ford1:39.8115
Riccardo PatreseArrows-Ford1:40.1116
Brett LungerMcLaren-Ford1:40.8017
Héctor RebaqueLotus-Ford1:40.8418
Derek DalyEnsign-Ford1:41.0219
Nelson PiquetMcLaren-Ford1:41.1520
Vittorio BrambillaSurtees-Ford1:41.1621
Clay RegazzoniShadow-Ford1:41.4222
Hans-Joachim StuckShadow-Ford1:41.5823
Harald ErtlEnsign-Ford1:41.6024
Keke RosbergWolf-Ford1:41.7225
René ArnouxMartini-Ford1:41.8426
Arturo MerzarioMerzario-Ford1:41.85DNQ
Jochen MassATS-Ford1:42.47DNQ
Rupert KeeganSurtees-Ford1:43.06DNQ
Hans BinderATS-Ford1:44.46DNQ

*Positions in red indicate entries that failed to qualify.

Race

Race start and rain

The crowds for the Austrian GP were full of Niki Lauda fans; but for them Lauda qualified only 12th as the Lotus cars again took the front row, with Ronnie Peterson on pole. The surprise in qualifying was Jean-Pierre Jabouille who qualified his turbocharged Renault third. The race started at 2:00 pm local, the start saw Peterson lead into the first corner, with Carlos Reutemann snatching second from Mario Andretti. Andretti tried to get the place back later in the lap, but the two collided and Andretti retired after his car spun into the barriers while Reutemann lost a couple of places to Patrick Depailler and Jody Scheckter. On the third lap, Scheckter slid off and crashed into Andretti's abandoned Lotus, damaging both cars. On the fourth lap, a heavy rainshower hit the track and Reutemann spun off and was beached but the marshals push-started his car as it was in a dangerous position, while Nelson Piquet and Héctor Rebaque crashed out. At the end of lap six, Gilles Villeneuve headed for the pits for rain tyres having executed a monumental spin, and next lap Jabouille lost control of the Renault, managed to gather it all up and also stopped for rain tyres, while Emerson Fittipaldi was into the pits and Pironi spun off and knocked the nose cone off his Tyrrell but rejoined. Peterson finished lap seven in full control of the situation and when the last car had gone through the officials decided to stop the race and the red and black flags were held out, meaning "Race to stop and restart at a later time." After the decision had been made Peterson spun off onto the grass and got stuck, so it was Depailler who arrived first at the red and black flags. As the rain poured down, the race was stopped. It was clearly stated that the Grand Prix would now be considered a two-part race, the first part having run for seven laps and the starting grid for the 47-lap second part would be in the order in which the competitors completed lap seven. Only those cars that arrived back at the pits under their own power would be allowed to start in the second part and there would be no changing to spare cars, though repairs and resetting of suspension and brakes for rain conditions would be allowed, and naturally everyone fitted rain tyres. During the red flag, Rebaque's was towed back by the marshals undamaged but could not join the restart, though Peterson and Reutemann drove their cars back, having been extricated from the grass verges. Patrese's Arrows was towed in with the nose cone damage, and should have been wheeled away along with Rebaque's Lotus but in the confusion the Arrows management sneaked the car into the pit lane and started repairing it, even though it was illegal. The restart was timed for 3:00 pm giving everyone adequate time to prepare their cars for a really wet track. At 2:40 pm. the pit road was to be opened to allow cars to set off on a warm-up lap, and it was to shut at 2:50 pm and anyone left behind would be out of the second part of the race. It was all quite clear, but there was some discussion as to whether Peterson and Reutemann had received outside assistance driving the first part of the race, even though they had driven their cars back to the pits. With Peterson on pole position and Reutemann in last position, having spun off on lap 5, it was a delicate situation, but was resolved by allowing them both to restart, though Reutemann would be considered to be two laps behind at the start of the second race. There should have been 21 cars lined up in pairs for the second part with Andretti, Scheckter, Rebaque and Piquet already out but there were 22 cars on new grid due to the Arrows team's shady tactics for Patrese.

Race restart

The race restarted at 3:15 pm after the rain relented, and once again Peterson led followed by Depailler and Lauda. As the track began to dry, Peterson started to pull away, and behind, Reutemann was on a charge and passed Lauda for third but he was black-flagged for receiving outside assistance, and Lauda crashed out soon after, leaving Gilles Villeneuve third. The drivers changed to slicks but the top 3 remained the same and stayed so till the end; Peterson winning ahead of Depailler, with Villeneuve taking his first ever podium.

Classification

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints123456789NCNCDSQRetRetRetDSQRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetDNQDNQDNQDNQDNPQPO
6Sweden **Ronnie Peterson****Lotus-Ford**541:41:21.571**9**
4France **Patrick Depailler****Tyrrell-Ford**54+47.44 secs13**6**
12Canada **Gilles Villeneuve****Ferrari**54+1:39.7611**4**
14Brazil **Emerson Fittipaldi****Fittipaldi-Ford**53+1 Lap6**3**
26France **Jacques Laffite****Ligier-Matra**53+1 Lap5**2**
19Italy **Vittorio Brambilla****Surtees-Ford**53+1 Lap21**1**
2UK John WatsonBrabham-Alfa Romeo53+1 lap10
30US Brett LungerMcLaren-Ford52+2 Laps17
31France René ArnouxMartini-Ford52+2 Laps26
17Switzerland Clay RegazzoniShadow-Ford50+4 Laps22
32Finland Keke RosbergWolf-Ford49+5 Laps25
22Ireland Derek DalyEnsign-Ford41Push start19
8France Patrick TambayMcLaren-Ford40Accident14
16FRG Hans-Joachim StuckShadow-Ford33Accident23
15France Jean-Pierre JabouilleRenault31Gearbox3
11Argentina Carlos ReutemannFerrari28Push start4
1Austria Niki LaudaBrabham-Alfa Romeo27Accident12
3France Didier PironiTyrrell-Ford20Accident9
7UK James HuntMcLaren-Ford7Accident8
27Australia Alan JonesWilliams-Ford7Accident15
35Italy Riccardo PatreseArrows-Ford7Accident16
23Austria Harald ErtlEnsign-Ford7Accident24
25Mexico Héctor RebaqueLotus-Ford4Accident18
29Brazil Nelson PiquetMcLaren-Ford4Accident20
20South Africa Jody ScheckterWolf-Ford3Accident7
5US Mario AndrettiLotus-Ford0Accident2
37Italy Arturo MerzarioMerzario-Ford
9FRG Jochen MassATS-Ford
18UK Rupert KeeganSurtees-Ford
10Austria Hans BinderATS-Ford
36FRG Rolf StommelenArrows-Ford
18UK Brian HentonSurtees-FordKeegan's car

Notes

  • This was the 10th fastest lap and 1st Grand Slam set by a Swedish driver.
  • This was the 1st podium finish for a Canadian driver.
  • This was Ronnie Peterson's 2nd win of the Austrian Grand Prix, becoming the first driver to win the Austrian Grand Prix multiple times. Since the inaugural 1964 Austrian Grand Prix, there were nine different winners.
  • This was the 3rd win of the Austrian Grand Prix for Lotus. It broke the previous record set by Ferrari at the 1970 Austrian Grand Prix.
  • This was the 100th fastest lap set by a Ford-powered car.

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1USA **Mario Andretti***54
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]2SWE **Ronnie Peterson***45
[[File:1uparrow_green.svg10px]] 23FRA **Patrick Depailler***32
[[File:1downarrow_red.svg10px]] 14ARG **Carlos Reutemann***31
[[File:1downarrow_red.svg10px]] 15AUT **Niki Lauda***31

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1UK **Lotus-Ford***76
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]2UK **Brabham-Alfa Romeo***40
[[File:1uparrow_green.svg10px]] 13UK Tyrrell-Ford36
[[File:1downarrow_red.svg10px]] 14ITA Ferrari35
[[File:1uparrow_green.svg10px]] 15FRA Ligier-Matra16
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.
  • Competitors marked in bold and with an asterisk still had a theoretical chance of becoming World Champion.

References

Name_of_race = Austrian Grand Prix | Year_of_race = 1978 | Previous_race_in_season = 1978 German Grand Prix | Next_race_in_season = 1978 Dutch Grand Prix | Previous_year's_race = 1977 Austrian Grand Prix | Next_year's_race = 1979 Austrian Grand Prix}}

References

  1. (October 1978). "1978 Austrian GP Report". Motor Sport.
  2. "1978 Austrian Grand Prix". Formula One.
  3. (13 August 1978). "1978 Austrian Grand Prix – Race Results & History – GP Archive".
  4. "Austria 1978 – Championship • STATS F1".
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