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1981 Spanish Grand Prix

Seventh race of the 1981 Formula One World Championship


Seventh race of the 1981 Formula One World Championship

FieldValue
TypeF1
CountrySpain
Flag_suffix1977
Grand PrixSpanish
Official nameXXVII Gran Premio de España
ImageCircuito Permanente del Jarama 1980.svg
Date21 June
Year1981
Race_No7
Season_No15
LocationCircuito Permanente Del Jarama, Jarama, Spain
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi2.06
Course_km3.312
Distance_laps80
Distance_mi164.70
Distance_km264.96
WeatherSunny, hot
Pole_DriverJacques Laffite
Pole_TeamLigier-Matra
Pole_Time1:13.754
Pole_CountryFrance
Fast_DriverAlan Jones
Fast_TeamWilliams-Ford
Fast_Time1:17.818
Fast_Lap5
Fast_CountryAustralia
First_DriverGilles Villeneuve
First_TeamFerrari
First_CountryCanada
Second_DriverJacques Laffite
Second_TeamLigier-Matra
Second_CountryFrance
Third_DriverJohn Watson
Third_TeamMcLaren-Ford
Third_CountryUnited Kingdom
Lapchart

The 1981 Spanish Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 21 June 1981 at the Circuito Permanente del Jarama, Jarama, Spain. It was the seventh race of the 1981 Formula One World Championship.

Summary

The 1981 Spanish Grand Prix featured the second closest finish ever of a Formula One race: after Gilles Villeneuve's Ferrari, the four following cars finished in just 1.24 seconds. This was Villeneuve's last victory, often regarded as his tactical masterpiece.

There were some changes for this race: Eliseo Salazar had left March to join Ensign, replacing Marc Surer. Also, John Player Special sponsorship and livery returned to Team Lotus after a 2-year hiatus.

The pole went to Jacques Laffite on his Ligier-Matra with the two Williams-Cosworth of Alan Jones and Carlos Reutemann second and third ahead of John Watson's McLaren, Alain Prost's Renault and the Alfa Romeo of Bruno Giacomelli. Gilles Villeneuve was seventh.

Race day was unusually hot. At the beginning of the race Jones and Reutemann went into the lead, as Laffite made a poor start. Villeneuve jumped into third place at the first corner, damaging Prost's front wing as he took the position. At the end of the first lap Villeneuve pulled out of Reutemann's slipstream and took second place. Jones began to build a lead but on lap 14 he went off the track, when he was 10 seconds ahead of the Canadian.

This left Villeneuve with Reutemann on his tail. Behind them Watson, Laffite and Elio de Angelis began to close on the dueling leaders. Reutemann was having some trouble with his gearbox and when Laffite arrived behind him there was little the Argentine could do to stop him from overtaking. Reutemann would later drop behind Watson. The five front-runners became a train of cars, packed together for the remaining laps of the race.

Villeneuve used the power of his Ferrari engine on the straight to gain a little margin and not get overtaken by his rivals, but in the corners they were all over him. Many times Laffite pulled alongside the Canadian as they went out a corner but the Ferrari would stay ahead as the horsepower kicked in. The five remained locked together right to the flag, crossing the line covered by just 1.24 seconds to record the second-closest race in the history of Formula One.

This would be the last Spanish Grand Prix at Jarama, owing to criticism of the track being very short and sinuous for modern Formula One, the unpleasant conditions and the small crowd (the small turn-out was probably due to the backlash of the previous year's race not being counted as a World Championship race, the announcement was made on the weekend itself); and the last Spanish Grand Prix until the season, when it would be held at the newly built Jerez circuit in the south of the country. At this Grand Prix the Equipe Banco Occidental team became the last privateer team to have entered a car for a race alongside a works team when they entered a Williams car alongside the Williams works team, but eventually withdrew before the practice and qualifying.

Classification

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930WDSource:
26France Jacques LaffiteLigier-Matra1:14.822**1:13.754**
1Australia Alan JonesWilliams-Ford1:14.424**1:14.024**+0.270
2Argentina Carlos ReutemannWilliams-Ford1:14.808**1:14.342**+0.588
7UK John WatsonMcLaren-Ford1:15.094**1:14.657**+0.903
15France Alain ProstRenault1:14.980**1:14.669**+0.915
23Italy Bruno GiacomelliAlfa Romeo1:16.807**1:14.897**+1.143
27Canada Gilles VilleneuveFerrari1:16.548**1:14.987**+1.233
22USA Mario AndrettiAlfa Romeo1:15.576**1:15.159**+1.405
5Brazil Nelson PiquetBrabham-Ford1:16.861**1:15.355**+1.601
11Italy Elio de AngelisLotus-Ford**1:15.399**1:15.449+1.645
12UK Nigel MansellLotus-Ford1:16.226**1:15.562**+1.808
29Italy Riccardo PatreseArrows-Ford1:16.038**1:15.627**+1.873
28France Didier PironiFerrari1:16.522**1:15.715**+1.961
8Italy Andrea de CesarisMcLaren-Ford1:16.119**1:15.850**+2.096
20Finland Keke RosbergFittipaldi-Ford1:16.040**1:15.924**+2.170
33France Patrick TambayTheodore-Ford1:17.347**1:16.355**+2.601
16France René ArnouxRenault1:17.132**1:16.406**+2.652
6Mexico Héctor RebaqueBrabham-Ford1:16.722**1:16.527**+2.773
25France Jean-Pierre JabouilleLigier-Matra**1:16.559**1:16.794+2.805
3USA Eddie CheeverTyrrell-Ford1:17.459**1:16.641**+2.887
21Brazil Chico SerraFittipaldi-Ford1:18.705**1:16.782**+3.028
17Ireland Derek DalyMarch-Ford1:17.416**1:16.979**+3.225
30Italy Siegfried StohrArrows-Ford1:18.331**1:17.294**+3.540
14Chile Eliseo SalazarEnsign-Ford1:18.769**1:17.822**+4.068
4Italy Michele AlboretoTyrrell-Ford1:18.859**1:17.943**+4.189
31Italy Beppe GabbianiOsella-Fordno time**1:18.169**+4.415
9Sweden Slim BorguddATS-Ford1:20.028**1:18.263**+4.509
35UK Brian HentonToleman-Hart1:19.815**1:18.340**+4.586
36UK Derek WarwickToleman-Hart1:20.342**1:18.872**+5.118
32Italy Giorgio FranciaOsella-Ford**1:19.586**8:22.382+5.832
37Spain Emilio de VillotaWilliams-Ford

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints12345678910111213141516NCRetRetRetRetRetRetRetDNQDNQDNQDNQDNQDNQSource:
27Canada **Gilles Villeneuve****Ferrari**801:46:35.017**9**
26France **Jacques Laffite****Ligier-Matra**80+ 0.221**6**
7UK **John Watson****McLaren-Ford**80+ 0.584**4**
2Argentina **Carlos Reutemann****Williams-Ford**80+ 1.013**3**
11Italy **Elio de Angelis****Lotus-Ford**80+ 1.2410**2**
12UK **Nigel Mansell****Lotus-Ford**80+ 28.5811**1**
1Australia Alan JonesWilliams-Ford80+ 56.582
22USA Mario AndrettiAlfa Romeo80+ 1:00.808
16France René ArnouxRenault80+ 1:07.0817
23Italy Bruno GiacomelliAlfa Romeo80+ 1:13.656
21Brazil Chico SerraFittipaldi-Ford79+ 1 lap21
20Finland Keke RosbergFittipaldi-Ford78+ 2 laps15
33France Patrick TambayTheodore-Ford78+ 2 laps16
14Chile Eliseo SalazarEnsign-Ford77+ 3 laps24
28France Didier PironiFerrari76+ 4 laps13
17Ireland Derek DalyMarch-Ford75+ 5 laps22
3USA Eddie CheeverTyrrell-Ford62+ 18 laps20
25France Jean-Pierre JabouilleLigier-Matra51Brakes19
6Mexico Héctor RebaqueBrabham-Ford46Gearbox18
30Italy Siegfried StohrArrows-Ford43Ignition23
5Brazil Nelson PiquetBrabham-Ford43Accident9
15France Alain ProstRenault28Spun off5
29Italy Riccardo PatreseArrows-Ford21Brakes12
8Italy Andrea de CesarisMcLaren-Ford9Accident14
4Italy Michele AlboretoTyrrell-Ford
31Italy Beppe GabbianiOsella-Ford
9Sweden Slim BorguddATS-Ford
35UK Brian HentonToleman-Hart
36UK Derek WarwickToleman-Hart
32Italy Giorgio FranciaOsella-Ford

Notes

  • This was the 300th Grand Prix in which a Frenchman participated. In those 300 races, French drivers had won 15 Grands Prix, achieved 106 podium finishes, 24 pole positions, 29 fastest laps and 2 Grand Slams.

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
1ARG Carlos Reutemann37
2AUS Alan Jones24
3BRA Nelson Piquet22
4CAN Gilles Villeneuve21
5FRA Jacques Laffite17

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
1UK Williams-Ford61
2ITA Ferrari26
3UK Brabham-Ford25
4FRA Ligier-Matra17
5UK Lotus-Ford12
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

|Previous_year's_race = 1980 Spanish Grand Prix |Next_year's_race = 1986 Spanish Grand Prix

References

  1. Lang, Mike. (1992). "Grand Prix! Vol 4". Haynes Publishing Group.
  2. Lang, Mike. (1992). "Grand Prix! Vol 4". Haynes Publishing Group.
  3. [[Gerald Donaldson]]. ''Gilles Villeneuve: The Life of the Legendary Racing Driver'' (London: Motor Racing Publications, 1996) {{ISBN. 978-0-947981-44-0
  4. "1981 Spanish Grand Prix Entry list".
  5. (1981). "[[AUTOCOURSE]] 1981–82". Hazleton Publishing Ltd.
  6. "1981 Spanish Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  7. (21 June 1981). "1981 Spanish Grand Prix - Race Results & History - GP Archive".
  8. "Spain 1981 - Championship • STATS F1".
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