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2005 Hungarian Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryHungary
Grand PrixHungarian
Previous_round2005 German Grand Prix
Next_round2005 Turkish Grand Prix
Details ref
Official nameFormula 1 Marlboro Magyar Nagydíj 2005
Date31 July
Year2005
ImageHungaroring.svg
Race_No13
Season_No19
LocationHungaroring, Mogyoród, Pest, Hungary
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi2.722
Course_km4.381
Distance_laps70
Distance_mi190.552
Distance_km306.663
WeatherSunny, Air: 34 C, Track 45 C
Pole_DriverMichael Schumacher
Pole_TeamFerrari
Pole_Time1:19.882
Pole_CountryGermany
Fast_DriverKimi Räikkönen
Fast_TeamMcLaren-Mercedes
Fast_Time1:21.219
Fast_Lap40
Fast_CountryFinland
First_DriverKimi Räikkönen
First_TeamMcLaren-Mercedes
First_CountryFinland
Second_DriverMichael Schumacher
Second_TeamFerrari
Second_CountryGermany
Third_DriverRalf Schumacher
Third_TeamToyota
Third_CountryGermany
Lapchart

The 2005 Hungarian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Marlboro Magyar Nagydíj 2005) was a Formula One race, held on 31 July 2005 in the Hungaroring, Mogyoród, Pest, Hungary at 14:00 CEST (UTC+2). It was the 13th race of the 2005 Formula One season.

Friday drivers

The bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.

ConstructorNatDriver
McLaren-MercedesAUTAlexander Wurz
Sauber-Petronas-
Red Bull-CosworthITAVitantonio Liuzzi
ToyotaBRARicardo Zonta
Jordan-ToyotaDENNicolas Kiesa
Minardi-CosworthISRChanoch Nissany

Report

Background

After the German Grand Prix, Fernando Alonso led the drivers' championship with 36 points ahead of Kimi Räikkönen and 40 points ahead of Michael Schumacher. In the constructors' championship, Renault led McLaren-Mercedes by 22 points and Ferrari by 39 points.

The race saw the beginning of the end of tobacco advertising in F1 due to the Europe-wide ban. McLaren (West) ran with tobacco livery just on Friday and BAR (Lucky Strike) ran with tobacco livery on Friday and Saturday before withdrawing it for the race, while Ferrari (Marlboro), Renault (Mild Seven), and Jordan (Benson & Hedges) ran full tobacco livery for the entire weekend. It was the last Formula One race to be sponsored by a tobacco company.

This is also the only official Formula One race weekend for Chanoch Nissany, who drove for Minardi in Free Practice 1 and was just over six seconds behind the next slowest driver.

Qualifying

Seven time World Champion Michael Schumacher surprised the paddock by taking his first pole position of the season, causing speculation that he was running a light first fuel load in order to build a gap on a circuit on which overtaking is notoriously difficult. Beside him on the front row was Juan Pablo Montoya, nearly 9 tenths behind. Jarno Trulli continued his impressive qualifying form by taking 3rd place, while Kimi Räikkönen took fourth spot despite being the first runner out on the dirty circuit. Championship leader Fernando Alonso started in sixth position.

Race

Race day was hot, with the air temperature at 34 °C, and track temperature 47 °C at the start of the race. Both Michael Schumacher and Montoya got fast starts, while Räikkönen took Trulli off the line, and ended the lap in second place, having passed his teammate as well. Further back, Alonso was squeezed into turn one by Ralf Schumacher, the German's right-rear wheel making contact with Alonso's front wing and causing it to hang unevenly. Rubens Barrichello braked too late into the first turn, breaking his front wing on Trulli's diffuser. Further back, Christian Klien made contact with Jacques Villeneuve, with their wheels touching as they fought for position in the first turn. This sent Klien into a spectacular barrel-roll, before finishing the right way up, and unharmed. Red Bull Racing's race then went from bad to worse, with Alonso's front wing dislodging itself between turns 10 and 11, into the path of several drivers. Most managed to avoid it, but David Coulthard, apparently unsighted by Mark Webber's Williams, hit the debris, causing the Scot's right-front suspension to break and force him into retirement. At the end of lap 1, Schumacher led by 1.9 seconds over Räikkönen, who was a further 2.4 seconds ahead of Montoya. Alonso, Barrichello and Jordan's Tiago Monteiro were all forced to pit at the end of the lap for repairs.

Immediately, Räikkönen began pressuring Schumacher, the pair lapping Monteiro after just 4 laps. Räikkönen and Schumacher then began trading fastest laps, and the gap was cut down to just 0.792 seconds after 9 laps. Meanwhile, Barrichello, forced back due to his early damage, got past Minardi's Robert Doornbos, clear superior car speed meaning the Dutch driver could offer no resistance. Räikkönen entered the pits first, on lap 11, showing that his qualifying effort was significantly helped by the light fuel load, and leaving Schumacher to attempt to open a gap before his own stop. Barrichello also made his move on Christijan Albers, moving up to 14th, while Alonso finally dispatched Doornbos to move up to 16th place. Trulli became the second driver to take his scheduled fuel stop on lap 13, while Alonso made short work of Albers to move into 15th. Barrichello continued his charge, taking Narain Karthikeyan for 13th place on lap 14. The question of how much fuel was in Schumacher's car was answered on lap 15, with the German refuelling to leave Montoya in the lead. Schumacher rejoined reasonably comfortably ahead of Räikkönen, while his brother Ralf Schumacher managed to leapfrog teammate Trulli, who was still suffering with a damaged diffuser.

Montoya stretched his lead to over 16 seconds by lap 17, while Doornbos, Karthikeyan and Monteiro all made their stops from the back of the field. Montoya took his first stop on lap 22, but his lead was not large enough to allow him to stay in the lead, rejoining in 3rd place, behind Michael Schumacher and Räikkönen, and ahead of Jenson Button, who had yet to stop. Button took his pitstop alongside Giancarlo Fisichella on the following lap, while Räikkönen again closed in on Michael Schumacher, reducing the gap to just 0.6 seconds by lap 24. Alonso took his first scheduled stop on lap 26, rejoining the race in 14th, and still well out of the pointscoring positions. Lap 27 saw Nick Heidfeld and Jacques Villeneuve pit, the pair apparently on two-stop strategies, while Mark Webber showed that he was fuelled heavily during qualifying, becoming the last driver to take their first stop, on lap 29, from 7th position. Meanwhile, Robert Doornbos pulled off to retire, the team citing hydraulic failure for his early demise.

On lap 30, Michael Schumacher led by just 0.6 seconds over Räikkönen, the Finn apparently content to stay behind the German until their next stops. Montoya was in third position, ahead of Ralf Schumacher, Trulli, Button, Heidfeld, Takuma Sato, Fisichella, Barrichello and Webber. The Saubers of Villeneuve and Felipe Massa sat in 12th and 13th, both of their Petronas engines sounding rough. Trulli and Barrichello pitted on lap 33, followed by Michael Schumacher on lap 35. The German held just a 0.5 second lead over Räikkönen, who pitted on the following lap. The gap was enough for Räikkönen to take the position from Schumacher. Montoya then slowed considerably, and pitted at the end of lap 41 to retire from the race. This handed Räikkönen a comfortable lead over Schumacher, and pushed Ralf Schumacher into a potential podium position. Massa entered the pits on lap 42, spending several laps as the team attempted to fix the damage caused by a small fire due to a fuel spill. On lap 43, Fisichella ran wide at turn 4, losing 8th position to Webber.

Now released from behind Schumacher, Räikkönen was able to show the full speed of his McLaren. He increased the gap to over 20 seconds by lap 44. Button made his second and final pitstop on lap 47 from 5th place, rejoining the race in 6th. Räikkönen took his final stop on the following lap, with his lead large enough to allow him to comfortably rejoin still ahead of Schumacher. Most of the field took their final stops between laps 50 and 55, with little change in the front of the field, although Webber was able to leapfrog Sato to take 7th place. Michael Schumacher made his final stop on lap 57 from a distant second place, rejoining just 4.4 seconds ahead of his brother, who was showing impressive speed in the Toyota. By lap 62, Räikkönen had increased his lead to over half a minute, while Ralf Schumacher closed the gap to just 2.9 seconds behind Michael. Three laps later, the gap was reduced to 1.2 seconds, with all cars except the top 6 at least one lap behind the leader Räikkönen. Albers took a lengthy stop on lap 51, but rejoined the race a few laps later, while Villeneuve retired from the race on lap 57 due to yet another small engine fire on a Sauber. Fisichella took a quick "splash-and-dash" to the finish on lap 68, but was able to hold his 9th position ahead of 10th-placed Barrichello. Räikkönen took a very important comfortable victory ahead of Michael Schumacher who was able to withstand the late charge from Ralf Schumacher, who scored his first podium finish of the year, and his first for Toyota. Fourth place went to Trulli, ahead of Jenson Button, followed by the Williams' of Heidfeld and Webber, with Sato scoring his first point of the year in 8th. Alonso finished in a disappointing 11th position.

Winner Kimi Räikkönen declined the traditional champagne spraying as a mark tribute to 29-year-old McLaren chef Darren Hawker, who died on 27 July. Hawker fell from the eighth floor of the Marriott Hotel in Budapest. It was not the first time that such an event befell F1, as in 1991 a Lotus mechanic died in similar circumstances at the San Marino Grand Prix.

The result meant that Räikkönen moved to within 26 points of Alonso with 6 races remaining, and a good result next race should give him a chance at the championship, given McLaren's apparent superior speed. Michael Schumacher sits in 3rd place on 55 points, while the following six drivers will all be out of the championship race if they fail to score in the Turkish Grand Prix. McLaren reduced the gap to Renault to just 12 points in the constructor's championship, followed by Ferrari, another 19 points in arrears. BAR took their fourth consecutive points haul of the year, but still lie a disappointing (by 2004's standards) 7th place.

Classification

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorLapGapGrid1234567891011121314151617181920
1Germany Michael SchumacherFerrari1:19.8821
10Colombia Juan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-Mercedes1:20.779+0.8972
16Italy Jarno TrulliToyota1:20.839+0.9573
9Finland Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes1:20.891+1.0094
17Germany Ralf SchumacherToyota1:20.964+1.0825
5Spain Fernando AlonsoRenault1:21.141+1.2596
2Brazil Rubens BarrichelloFerrari1:21.158+1.2767
3United Kingdom Jenson ButtonBAR-Honda1:21.302+1.4208
6Italy Giancarlo FisichellaRenault1:21.333+1.4519
4Japan Takuma SatoBAR-Honda1:21.787+1.90510
15Austria Christian KlienRed Bull-Cosworth1:21.937+2.05511
8Germany Nick HeidfeldWilliams-BMW1:22.086+2.20412
14United Kingdom David CoulthardRed Bull-Cosworth1:22.279+2.39713
12Brazil Felipe MassaSauber-Petronas1:22.565+2.68314
11Canada Jacques VilleneuveSauber-Petronas1:22.866+2.98415
7Australia Mark WebberWilliams-BMW1:23.495+3.61316
21Netherlands Christijan AlbersMinardi-Cosworth1:24.443+4.56117
19India Narain KarthikeyanJordan-Toyota1:25.057+5.17518
20MON Robert DoornbosMinardi-Cosworth1:25.484+5.60219
18Portugal Tiago MonteiroJordan-ToyotaNo time20

;Notes

  • – Tiago Monteiro received a 10-place grid penalty for an engine change.

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints1234567891011121314NCRetRetRetRetRet
9Finland **Kimi Räikkönen****McLaren-Mercedes**701:37:25.5524**10**
1Germany **Michael Schumacher****Ferrari**70+35.5811**8**
17Germany **Ralf Schumacher****Toyota**70+36.1295**6**
16Italy **Jarno Trulli****Toyota**70+54.2213**5**
3United Kingdom **Jenson Button****BAR-Honda**70+58.8328**4**
8Germany **Nick Heidfeld****Williams-BMW**70+1:08.37512**3**
7Australia **Mark Webber****Williams-BMW**69+1 Lap16**2**
4Japan **Takuma Sato****BAR-Honda**69+1 Lap10**1**
6Italy Giancarlo FisichellaRenault69+1 Lap9
2Brazil Rubens BarrichelloFerrari69+1 Lap7
5Spain Fernando AlonsoRenault69+1 Lap6
19India Narain KarthikeyanJordan-Toyota67+3 Laps18
18Portugal Tiago MonteiroJordan-Toyota66+4 Laps20
12Brazil Felipe MassaSauber-Petronas63+7 Laps14
21Netherlands Christijan AlbersMinardi-Cosworth59+11 Laps17
11Canada Jacques VilleneuveSauber-Petronas56Engine15
10Colombia Juan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-Mercedes41Driveshaft2
20MON Robert DoornbosMinardi-Cosworth26Hydraulics19
14United Kingdom David CoulthardRed Bull-Cosworth0Suspension13
15Austria Christian KlienRed Bull-Cosworth0Collision11

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1Spain Fernando Alonso87
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]2Finland Kimi Räikkönen61
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]3Germany Michael Schumacher55
[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 24Italy Jarno Trulli36
[[File:1downarrow red.svg10px]] 15Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya34

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1France Renault117
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]2UK McLaren-Mercedes105
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]3Italy Ferrari86
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]4Japan Toyota68
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]5UK Williams-BMW52
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

|Previous_year's_race = 2004 Hungarian Grand Prix |Next_year's_race = 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix

References

  1. "2005 Hungarian GP". ChicaneF1.
  2. "2005 Marlboro Hungarian Grand Prix". Racing-Reference.
  3. "FORMULA 1 Marlboro Magyar Nagydíj 2005 - Race".
  4. "2005 Hungarian Grand Prix". [[Motor Sport (magazine).
  5. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/4730787.stm bbc.co.uk]
  6. "Grand prix tribute to Darren". somersetcountygazette.co.uk.
  7. (27 July 2005). "McLaren chef dies in Hungary fall". news.bbc.co.uk.
  8. "Sadness at McLaren". grandprix.com.
  9. "FORMULA 1 Magyar Nagydij 2005 - Qualifying". Formula1.com Limited.
  10. "FORMULA 1 Magyar Nagydij 2005 - Race". Formula1.com Limited.
  11. (31 July 2005). "2005 Hungarian Grand Prix - Race Results & History - GP Archive".
  12. "Hungary 2005 - Championship • STATS F1".
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