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1982 San Marino Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryItaly
Grand PrixSan Marino
Date25 April
Year1982
Race_No4
Season_No16
Official name2º Gran Premio di San Marino
LocationAutodromo Dino Ferrari
Imola, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
ImageImola Circuit 1980-1995 Layout.png
Course_mi3.132
Course_km5.040
Distance_laps60
Distance_km302.400
Distance_mi187.902
Pole_DriverRené Arnoux
Pole_TeamRenault
Pole_Time1:29.765
Pole_CountryFrance
Fast_DriverDidier Pironi
Fast_TeamFerrari
Fast_Time1:35.036
Fast_Lap44
Fast_CountryFrance
First_DriverDidier Pironi
First_TeamFerrari
First_CountryFrance
Second_DriverGilles Villeneuve
Second_TeamFerrari
Second_CountryCanada
Third_DriverMichele Alboreto
Third_TeamTyrrell-Ford
Third_CountryItaly
Lapchart

Imola, Emilia-Romagna, Italy

The 1982 San Marino Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 25 April 1982 at the Autodromo Dino Ferrari, Imola, Italy. It was the fourth race of the 1982 Formula One World Championship. The race was boycotted by many teams as part of a political war, unrelated to the event itself, involving the two dominant forces within Formula One, the Fédération Internationale du Sport Automobile (FISA) and the Formula One Constructors' Association (FOCA). Only seven teams took part, giving a field of 14 cars.

The 60-lap race was won by Frenchman Didier Pironi, driving a Ferrari, with Canadian teammate Gilles Villeneuve second and Italian Michele Alboreto third in a Tyrrell-Ford. After the Renaults of René Arnoux and Alain Prost retired, Villeneuve led from Pironi before the Ferrari team ordered both drivers to slow down, with Alboreto far behind. Villeneuve interpreted this as an order to maintain position on the track; Pironi did not and thus overtook Villeneuve on the final lap, infuriating the Canadian to the point that he vowed never to speak to Pironi again. Villeneuve would lose his life in a crash during qualifying for the Belgian Grand Prix two weeks later.

Summary

In a decision relating to the 1982 Brazilian Grand Prix, Nelson Piquet and Keke Rosberg were excluded for their cars' use of water tanks as ballast to keep them under the weight limit during race conditions. The Formula One Constructors' Association (FOCA) protested, and decided to boycott the 1982 San Marino Grand Prix.

Most of the FOCA-aligned teams, including Brabham, McLaren, Williams and Lotus, boycotted the race. However, the Tyrrell, Osella, ATS and Toleman teams broke the boycott, citing "sponsor obligations". They joined the FISA-aligned Ferrari, Renault and Alfa Romeo teams in the race, sporting a total of 14 cars.

The Renaults of René Arnoux and Alain Prost qualified first and second, but their cars failed in the race, leaving Ferrari occupying the top two positions with Gilles Villeneuve leading Didier Pironi. The third-placed Tyrrell of Michele Alboreto was far behind, so Ferrari ordered their drivers to slow down to minimize the risk of mechanical failure or running out of fuel. Villeneuve believed this order also meant that the cars were to maintain position on the track, with Villeneuve ahead of Pironi. However, Pironi believed that the cars were free to race, and passed Villeneuve. Villeneuve believed that Pironi was simply trying to spice up an otherwise dull race, and duly re-passed his teammate, assuming that he would then hold station for the remainder of the race. Thus, Villeneuve failed to protect the inside line going into the Tosa corner on the final lap, and Pironi passed him to take the win. Villeneuve was irate at what he saw as Pironi's betrayal, although opinion inside the Ferrari team was split over the true meaning of the order to slow down. Villeneuve's expression was sullen on the podium, enraged by Pironi's actions. He was quoted afterwards as saying, "I'll never speak to Pironi again in my life." They proved to be prophetic words, as he was still not on speaking terms with his teammate when he died during qualifying for the Belgian Grand Prix two weeks later. Pironi's pass on Villeneuve is considered to be one of the most controversial moments in Formula One.

Manfred Winkelhock was disqualified for his ATS-Ford car being underweight in post-race scrutineering.

Despite most of the FOCA-aligned teams boycotting the race it still counted towards the World Championship. This was a bone of contention with the FOCA teams as two previous races held during the "war" (the 1980 Spanish Grand Prix and the 1981 South African Grand Prix) which had seen all three manufacturer teams boycotting had been down-graded to non-championship races and had not counted towards the championship or official records.

Classification

Qualifying

PosNo.DriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap1234567891011121314
16France René ArnouxRenault1:32.628**1:29.765**
15France Alain ProstRenault1:31.169**1:30.249**+ 0.484
27Canada Gilles VilleneuveFerrari1:31.541**1:30.717**+ 0.952
28France Didier PironiFerrari**1:32.020**1:32.779+ 2.255
3Italy Michele AlboretoTyrrell-Ford1:34.480**1:33.209**+ 3.444
23Italy Bruno GiacomelliAlfa Romeo1:35.214**1:33.230**+ 3.465
22Italy Andrea de CesarisAlfa Romeo1:33.879**1:33.397**+ 3.632
35UK Derek WarwickToleman-Hart1:34.062**1:33.503**+ 3.738
31France Jean-Pierre JarierOsella-Ford1:34.715**1:34.336**+ 4.571
36Italy Teo FabiToleman-Hart1:42.529**1:34.647**+ 4.882
4UK Brian HentonTyrrell-Ford1:36.100**1:35.262**+ 5.497
9FRG Manfred WinkelhockATS-Ford1:36.155**1:35.790**+ 6.025
32Italy Riccardo PalettiOsella-Ford1:37.999**1:36.228**+ 6.463
10Chile Eliseo SalazarATS-Ford1:41.255**1:36.434**+ 6.669

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints12345DSQNCRetRetRetRetRetRetRet
28France **Didier Pironi****Ferrari**601:36:38.8874**9**
27Canada **Gilles Villeneuve****Ferrari**60+0.3663**6**
3Italy **Michele Alboreto****Tyrrell-Ford**60+1:07.6845**4**
31France **Jean-Pierre Jarier****Osella-Ford**59+1 lap9**3**
10Chile **Eliseo Salazar****ATS-Ford**57+3 laps14**2**
9FRG Manfred WinkelhockATS-Ford54Underweight12
36Italy Teo FabiToleman-Hart52+8 laps10
16France René ArnouxRenault44Turbo1
23Italy Bruno GiacomelliAlfa Romeo24Engine6
32Italy Riccardo PalettiOsella-Ford7Suspension13
15France Alain ProstRenault6Engine2
22Italy Andrea de CesarisAlfa Romeo4Electrical7
4UK Brian HentonTyrrell-Ford0Transmission11
35UK Derek WarwickToleman-Hart0Electrical8

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
1FRA Alain Prost18
2AUT Niki Lauda12
3FRA Didier Pironi10
4ITA Michele Alboreto10
5FIN Keke Rosberg8

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
1FRA Renault22
2UK McLaren-Ford20
3ITA Ferrari16
4UK Williams-Ford14
5UK Tyrrell-Ford10
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

| Previous_year's_race = 1981 San Marino Grand Prix | Next_year's_race = 1983 San Marino Grand Prix

References

  1. "Imola 1982: An F1 controversy that keeps on rolling".
  2. Cooper, Adam. "Treachery and betrayal at Imola: the most controversial San Marino GPs".
  3. "1982 San Marino Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  4. (25 April 1982). "1982 San Marino Grand Prix - Race Results & History - GP Archive".
  5. "San Marino 1982 - Championship • STATS F1".
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