Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1985 Austrian Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryAustria
Grand PrixAustrian
ImageÖsterreichring 1977-1987.svg
CaptionThe Österreichring (last modified in 1977)
Date18 August
Year1985
Official nameXXIII Holiday Großer Preis von Osterreich
Race_No10
Season_No16
LocationÖsterreichring, Spielberg, Styria, Austria
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi3.692
Course_km5.942
Distance_laps52
Distance_mi191.994
Distance_km308.984
WeatherDry
Pole_DriverAlain Prost
Pole_TeamMcLaren-TAG
Pole_Time1:25.490
Pole_CountryFrance
Fast_DriverAlain Prost
Fast_TeamMcLaren-TAG
Fast_Time1:29.241
Fast_Lap39
Fast_CountryFrance
First_DriverAlain Prost
First_TeamMcLaren-TAG
First_CountryFrance
Second_DriverAyrton Senna
Second_TeamLotus-Renault
Second_CountryBrazil
second_flag_suffix1968
Third_DriverMichele Alboreto
Third_TeamFerrari
Third_CountryItaly
Lapchart

The 1985 Austrian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Österreichring on 18 August 1985. It was the tenth race of the 1985 Formula One World Championship. It was the 25th Austrian Grand Prix and the 24th to be held at Österreichring. The race was run over 52 laps of the 5.94 km circuit for a total race distance of 308.9 km.

The race was won by Frenchman Alain Prost, driving a McLaren-TAG, after he started from pole position. Prost took his fourth victory of the season by 30 seconds from Brazilian Ayrton Senna in a Lotus-Renault, with Italian Michele Alboreto third in a Ferrari. With the win, Prost moved level on points with Alboreto at the top of the Drivers' Championship.

This was the last F1 race until the start of in which a car with a naturally aspirated engine was entered, Martin Brundle failing to qualify his Cosworth-powered Tyrrell.

Race summary

Missing from the grid was RAM driver Manfred Winkelhock who had been killed in a sportscar race in Canada just a week before. His place was taken in the team by Kenny Acheson for his first Formula One race since the 1983 South African Grand Prix.

A second Toleman was driven by Piercarlo Ghinzani.

Before Saturday morning practice triple and defending World Champion (and 1984 Austrian Grand Prix winner) Niki Lauda, flanked by a very unhappy McLaren team boss Ron Dennis, announced to the media that he would be retiring for good from Formula One following the season ending to concentrate on running his airline Lauda Air. Dennis was reportedly unhappy as he had paid Lauda a considerable amount of money to make his F1 comeback in and he had unsuccessfully tried to get Lauda to continue racing into the season.

A now relaxed Lauda gave his home fans something to cheer about when he qualified a season-high third. Lauda's team mate Alain Prost captured pole position, averaging 155.478 mph (250.219 km/h), followed by Nigel Mansell (Williams-Honda), Lauda, Keke Rosberg (Williams) and Nelson Piquet (Brabham-BMW). After a troubled qualifying, Ayrton Senna only qualified 14th on the grid in his Lotus-Renault.

The race was restarted after one lap (with Niki Lauda having made a great start from third on the grid to lead Prost as the race was stopped). Mansell had got away very slowly in his Williams, but behind him Teo Fabi in the Toleman-Hart barely moved. Elio de Angelis' Lotus dived left to avoid Fabi and was hit by the Ferrari of Michele Alboreto. Fabi suffered damage as did the Arrows-BMW of the second Austrian driver in the race Gerhard Berger. Luckily for those with damaged cars (especially championship leader Alboreto) the first lap was declared null and void and the race was completely restarted meaning those with damaged cars were permitted to start in the team spares. Lucky too was Prost who was able to change cars after his McLaren had developed a misfire. Piercarlo Ghinzani became a non-starter in his Toleman after team mate Fabi took over the spare TG185 for the race as he had qualified 6th while Ghinzani started 19th. This left Ghinzani without a drive.

On lap 13 Andrea de Cesaris survived one of the biggest and most spectacular crashes ever seen in Formula One when his Ligier-Renault went off-line at the left hand Panorama Curve and slid onto the outside grassy embankment at high speed. The grass, wet from overnight rain caused the Ligier to initially slide sideways before his right rear hit a slight bank launching the car into a series of 4 consecutive mid-air rolls and flips with de Cesaris's head bouncing around freely in the cockpit. Somehow as soon as the Ligier came to a rest, de Cesaris undid his seat belt and walked away with nothing more than a mud-splattered helmet and driving suit. When he returned to the pits, the Ligier team had not yet seen a replay of the accident, and de Cesaris told the team that the car had stalled and wouldn't restart. However, the crash was the end for de Cesaris at Ligier, with team owner Guy Ligier firing the Italian after he saw a replay of the crash stating "I can no longer afford to keep employing this man" referring to the constant repair bills from de Cesaris's crashes since he joined the team in . de Cesaris was fired from Ligier after he raced for the team at the Dutch Grand Prix one week later.

With his 20th career victory, Prost moved into a shared lead in the World Drivers' Championship alongside Alboreto, with each having 50 points. After a string of non-finishes since his win in the second race of the season in Portugal, Senna drove a great race into second from a lowly (for him) 14th on the grid, with Alboreto finishing third in the spare Ferrari to retain his lead in the World Championship (now shared with Prost). Stefan Johansson (Ferrari), Elio de Angelis, and Marc Surer (Brabham), completed the points-scoring finishers.

Classification

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526DNQ
2FRA Alain ProstMcLaren-TAG**1:25.490**no time
5GBR Nigel MansellWilliams-Honda1:26.453**1:26.052**+0.562
1AUT Niki LaudaMcLaren-TAG**1:26.250**1:26.727+0.760
6FIN Keke RosbergWilliams-Honda**1:26.333**1:26.762+0.843
7BRA Nelson PiquetBrabham-BMW1:26.568**1:26.404**+0.914
19ITA Teo FabiToleman-Hart**1:26.664**11:12.639+1.174
11ITA Elio de AngelisLotus-Renault**1:26.799**no time+1.309
15FRA Patrick TambayRenault1:27.722**1:27.502**+2.012
27ITA Michele AlboretoFerrari1:29.774**1:27.516**+2.026
22ITA Riccardo PatreseAlfa Romeo1:29.485**1:27.851**+2.361
8SWI Marc SurerBrabham-BMW**1:27.954**1:50.796+2.464
28SWE Stefan JohanssonFerrari1:28.134**1:27.961**+2.471
16GBR Derek WarwickRenault1:30.602**1:28.006**+2.516
12BRA Ayrton SennaLotus-Renault**1:28.123**3:04.856+2.633
26FRA Jacques LaffiteLigier-Renault1:29.181**1:28.249**+2.759
18BEL Thierry BoutsenArrows-BMW1:28.617**1:28.262**+2.772
17AUT Gerhard BergerArrows-BMW**1:28.566**1:28.762+3.076
25ITA Andrea de CesarisLigier-Renault**1:28.666**no time+3.176
20ITA Piercarlo GhinzaniToleman-Hart**1:28.894**no time+3.404
23USA Eddie CheeverAlfa Romeo**1:29.031**1:29.608+3.541
10FRA Philippe AlliotRAM-Hart1:32.766**1:29.827**+4.337
3FRG Stefan BellofTyrrell-Renault1:31.022**1:30.514**+5.024
9GBR Kenny AchesonRAM-Hartno time**1:35.072**+9.582
24NED Huub RothengatterOsella-Alfa Romeo**1:35.329**1:58.090+9.839
30GBR Jonathan PalmerZakspeed1:36.060**1:35.787**+10.297
29ITA Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Motori Moderni10:36.417**1:36.765**+11.275
4GBR Martin BrundleTyrrell-Ford1:39.247**1:37.317**+11.827

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints12345678910RetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetDNS
2France **Alain Prost****McLaren-TAG**521:20:12.5831**9**
12Brazil **Ayrton Senna****Lotus-Renault**52+ 30.00214**6**
27Italy **Michele Alboreto****Ferrari**52+ 34.3569**4**
28Sweden **Stefan Johansson****Ferrari**52+ 39.07312**3**
11Italy **Elio de Angelis****Lotus-Renault**52+ 1:22.0927**2**
8Switzerland **Marc Surer****Brabham-BMW**51+ 1 lap11**1**
3Germany Stefan BellofTyrrell-Renault49Out of fuel22
18Belgium Thierry BoutsenArrows-BMW49+ 3 laps16
24Netherlands Huub RothengatterOsella-Alfa Romeo48+ 4 laps24
15France Patrick TambayRenault46Engine8
26France Jacques LaffiteLigier-Renault43Accident15
29Italy Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Motori Moderni40Suspension26
1Austria Niki LaudaMcLaren-TAG39Engine3
17Austria Gerhard BergerArrows-BMW33Turbo17
19Italy Teo FabiToleman-Hart31Electrical6
16UK Derek WarwickRenault29Engine13
10UK Kenny AchesonRAM-Hart28Engine23
7Brazil Nelson PiquetBrabham-BMW26Exhaust5
5UK Nigel MansellWilliams-Honda25Engine2
22Italy Riccardo PatreseAlfa Romeo25Engine10
30UK Jonathan PalmerZakspeed17Engine25
9France Philippe AlliotRAM-Hart16Turbo21
25Italy Andrea de CesarisLigier-Renault13Accident18
23USA Eddie CheeverAlfa Romeo6Turbo20
6Finland Keke RosbergWilliams-Honda4Oil pressure4
20Italy Piercarlo GhinzaniToleman-Hart0Car raced by Fabi19

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
1FRA Alain Prost50
2ITA Michele Alboreto50
3ITA Elio de Angelis28
4SWE Stefan Johansson19
5FIN Keke Rosberg18

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
1ITA Ferrari72
2GBR McLaren-TAG55
3GBR Lotus-Renault43
4GBR Williams-Honda24
5GBR Brabham-BMW15
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

| Previous_year's_race = 1984 Austrian Grand Prix | Next_year's_race = 1986 Austrian Grand Prix}}

References

  1. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yuglyUW6-4o Andrea de Cesaris crashes out of the 1985 Austrian Grand Prix on YouTube]
  2. "1985 Austrian Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  3. "Austria 1985 - Championship • STATS F1".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1985 Austrian Grand Prix — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report