Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/brazil

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

2012 Brazilian Grand Prix

Formula One motor race held in 2012


Formula One motor race held in 2012

FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryBrazil
Grand PrixBrazilian
Previous_round2012 United States Grand Prix
Next_round2013 Australian Grand Prix
Details ref
ImageAutódromo José Carlos Pace (AKA Interlagos) track map.svg
Date25 November
Year2012
Official nameFormula 1 Grande Prêmio Petrobras do Brasil 2012
Race_No20
Season_No20
LocationAutódromo José Carlos Pace, São Paulo, Brazil
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi2.677
Course_km4.309
Distance_laps71
Distance_mi190.083
Distance_km305.909
WeatherRace start:Light rain shower getting heavier at the end.
Air Temp <ref nameweather/
<br />Track Temp <ref nameweather/
Pole_DriverLewis Hamilton
Pole_TeamMcLaren-Mercedes
Pole_Time1:12.458
Pole_CountryGreat Britain
Fast_DriverLewis Hamilton
Fast_TeamMcLaren-Mercedes
Fast_Time1:18.069
Fast_Lap38
Fast_CountryGBR
First_DriverJenson Button
First_TeamMcLaren-Mercedes
First_CountryGBR
Second_DriverFernando Alonso
Second_TeamFerrari
Second_CountryESP
Third_DriverFelipe Massa
Third_TeamFerrari
Third_CountryBRA
Lapchart

Air Temp 19 C

Track Temp 21 C |}}

The 2012 Brazilian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Grande Prêmio Petrobras do Brasil 2012) was a Formula One motor race that took place at the Autódromo José Carlos Pace in São Paulo, Brazil, on 25 November 2012. The race was the twentieth and final round of the 2012 Formula One World Championship, and marked the forty-first running of the Brazilian Grand Prix. The race was won by Jenson Button driving for McLaren, scoring the 15th and last victory of his Formula One career, as well as McLaren's last Grand Prix victory until Daniel Ricciardo's victory at the 2021 Italian Grand Prix and the last win for a British driver for McLaren until Lando Norris won the 2024 Miami Grand Prix.

It was at this race that Sebastian Vettel won the 2012 World Drivers' Championship, his third title in a row. Fernando Alonso finished second in both the race and the championship and had the provisional championship lead at a late stage of the race, before Vettel moved up the order to have a three-point cushion. The race also marked the 306th and final one for Michael Schumacher, after he announced his retirement for the second time. He also scored his final Formula One points by finishing seventh just behind eventual champion Vettel.

Report

Background

The 2012 Brazilian Grand Prix marked Michael Schumacher's final race before his second retirement and was also the last race for Bruno Senna, Vitaly Petrov, Timo Glock, Pedro de la Rosa, Narain Karthikeyan, and the HRT Formula 1 Team. HRT in their history did not score a point, and withdrew because of financial issues.

Tyre supplier Pirelli provided teams with early prototypes of their compounds for the 2013 Formula One season during Friday practice for testing and review. Pirelli brought its silver-banded hard compound tyre as the harder "prime" tyre and the white-banded medium compound tyre as the softer option tyre, as opposed to 2011 Brazilian Grand Prix when they brought the medium and soft compound dry tyres.

In order to become world champion for the third time, Sebastian Vettel needed to defend a 13-point advantage over Fernando Alonso, meaning the latter needed at least third place even if the former failed to score. Conversely, a fourth place was sufficient for Vettel even if Alonso won, and thus he was the odds-on favourite.

Free practice

During free practice on Friday and Saturday, it was Lewis Hamilton and McLaren who set the pace, closely followed by championship contender Vettel and his Red Bull teammate Mark Webber. While Hamilton topped the time sheets in both Friday sessions, Jenson Button was quickest during the third session on Saturday morning.

Fernando Alonso had a difficult first free practice, trailing Vettel by 0.465 seconds, twice as much as in previous races. He was able to lap faster than the German on the harder compound tyres in the second session. Ferrari looked stronger during the long run trials with Felipe Massa putting in the most consistently fast lap times, 0.1 seconds ahead of Hamilton. With high temperatures, tyre degradation was a concern for the teams in the paddock; Hamilton commented that "it felt almost as though I was sliding around the track with the tyres melting".

Qualifying

After the very warm practice sessions, qualifying on Saturday was run under difficult weather conditions. Qualifying one (Q1) started on a damp track and therefore on intermediate tyres, while by Q2 the track was almost dry and slick tyres were used. In Q1, Romain Grosjean collided with the slower running HRT of Pedro de la Rosa and lost his front wing. While he succeeded in nursing the car back into the pit lane, he was unable to change his tyres and was therefore left in a disappointing 18th position on the grid. Michael Schumacher's last ever qualifying did not go well either. He took 14th position, almost half a second down on his teammate, admitting he had perhaps compromised his setup too much for an expected wet race.

The McLarens were fastest all weekend and easily took the front row, with Lewis Hamilton securing his last pole position with the team. Title contenders Vettel and Alonso both struggled, taking 4th and 8th position on the grid respectively. Pastor Maldonado was handed a 10-place grid penalty for missing the weighbridge in the second part of qualifying. He dropped from sixth to 16th, moving Alonso one place up to seventh.

Race

Pre-race

Start of the race

Title contender Alonso and Ferrari were hoping for damp conditions during the race, stating: "Wet races are a bit more unpredictable so we need some kind of damp race with many things happening, because we know that in normal conditions, fighting for the championship will be very difficult." Felipe Massa discounted rumours he might try to help Alonso win the title by forcing Vettel into retirement, stating: "I've always been an honest person and an honest driver. And that will continue to be the case. My limit is the limit of the regulations, and I will stay true to this limit."

Race report

With only light rain just 10 minutes before the start, all teams opted to start on slick tyres. Vettel got away poorly, dropping to seventh position, while his rival Alonso moved up into fifth. Vettel and Bruno Senna collided at turn 4 in a racing incident, which saw Vettel spin while Senna ended up hitting the rear of Pérez. Vettel suffered damage to his left sidepod but was able to carry on, albeit in 22nd position. The reigning world champion began to move up the order, as there was close racing for position at the front of the field as well. Massa helped his teammate overtake Mark Webber on lap two going into the Senna-S, giving the Spaniard the crucial third position he would need to win the title. Alonso lost the position again to the fast running Force India of Nico Hülkenberg after running wide on lap four. Maldonado crashed out on lap two, when he lost control of his car on the kerb through the inside of turn 3, and crashed into the tyre barrier on the exit of the corner.

Rain began to fall during the next few laps and the first cars made pit stops for intermediate tyres, including the two title contenders, while Button and Hülkenberg stayed out. This proved to be the right decision since the rain decreased shortly afterwards and cars on intermediates were forced to pit for slick tyres once again. Hülkenberg continued his strong performance by overtaking Button for the lead at the end of lap 18 (their official time differential at the finish line at the end of that lap was 0.000).

With the two cars in front leading the field by almost a minute, debris on the track brought out the safety car on lap 23. At this point, Alonso and Vettel were running in fourth and fifth place. At the restart on lap 29, Kamui Kobayashi took fifth position from Vettel. The damage on the Red Bull car slowed Vettel down considerably more in dry conditions, and Massa helped his teammate by overtaking the German shortly after. Meanwhile, at the front, Hamilton took second from his teammate and was able to pass Hülkenberg when the German half-spun. Hülkenberg pursued the McLaren but slid into him on lap 54, leaving Hamilton out of the race with damage to the left front suspension and himself with a drive-through penalty, handing Button the lead.

When the rain started again, Vettel was one of the first to pit for intermediates. Since his radio had failed, the team was not ready for him, causing a long delay. Ferrari timed Massa's pit stop well, letting Alonso take second position from him. Vettel took sixth position from Michael Schumacher, which proved sufficient to retain the title even with Alonso finishing second.

The race ended after Paul di Resta crashed on the start/finish straight shortly before the end, bringing out the safety car once again until the conclusion of the race. Vitaly Petrov of Caterham took 11th position, which meant his team overtook Marussia in the Constructors' Championship. Former world champion Kimi Räikkönen had an eventful race as well, almost crashing into Vettel after the start and later trying to use an escape road only to find it to be a dead end. He later stated the way had been open 11 years prior, having made the same manoeuver at the 2001 Brazilian Grand Prix. He also had a close contest with the retiring Schumacher, who finished seventh after recovering from an early puncture but gave up sixth to Vettel in order to help him extend his small point advantage over Alonso in the championship. This was Button's 15th Formula One victory and Vettel became the 2012 world champion.{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2012/nov/25/formula-one-brazilian-grand-prix-live?intcmp=239

Post-race

The race received widespread acclaim, with The Guardian calling it a "rollercoaster". Three-time world champions Niki Lauda and Nelson Piquet stated that they had never seen a race like it. German magazine Der Spiegel deemed the race "spectacular" and "historic" due to the record-breaking 147 successful overtaking manoeuvres carried out during the race. Reuters said that "the Brazilian weather produced a thriller to stand the test of time against some of the sport's great races". Sebastian Vettel himself called it his "toughest race ever". This race has been retrospectively noted for its dramatic nature.

At age 25, Vettel became the youngest triple world champion of the sport, six years younger than Ayrton Senna had been in the 1991 Formula One season. On drawing level with Senna, Vettel commented: "To win that third title here, where one of my greatest idols, Ayrton Senna, was from, it is very difficult to imagine I join him and other great names by winning three successive titles". Red Bull's team principal Christian Horner praised his driver, saying: "Sebastian has driven better than ever this season and has fought his way back into this championship, he's never given up and you saw that in today's race."

The Daily Mirror lauded Red Bull designer Adrian Newey for making the decision to change the engine mapping on Vettel's car after reviewing photos of the damage sustained in the first lap accident. Newey was quoted saying: "So we photographed it going past, saw huge crease in exhaust, which usually means it will soon crack and the bodywork catch fire. ... So we changed the engine mapping to keep the exhaust as cool as we could, even though it meant lost performance."

Championship runner-up Fernando Alonso expressed pride for his team, going so far as to call the 2012 Formula One season "the best season of my career". During the podium interview with Nelson Piquet, he asserted: "Obviously we lost the championship now, but I don't think, as you said, that we lost here in Brazil, we lost in some races where we were a little bit unlucky. But this is a sport, but when you do something with your heart, when you do something with 100 per cent, you have to be proud of your team, happy for them, and we will try next year." The press later pointed out Alonso's "grace after the race", contrasting him to Vettel who had criticized the competition's "dirty tricks" during his post-race press conference.

Speaking about his victory, Jenson Button congratulated his team, saying: "This is the perfect way to end the season. We have had ups and downs and to end on a high bodes well for 2013." His victory in this race would turn out to be his last in Formula One. It would also be McLaren's last victory until the 2021 Italian Grand Prix, which was won by Daniel Ricciardo.

Upon his second and final retirement from the sport, Michael Schumacher commented on the three years at Mercedes GP. He said: "I have tried that mission to end successful. It didn't work this time but I'm quite happy to finish from here and go for a different life again." Commenting on the outcome of the season, former team owner Eddie Jordan said he believed Alonso would have deserved the title more, considering the "less competitive machine". BBC columnist and former Formula One driver Jaime Alguersuari took a different viewpoint, saying the German deserved the title, having gone into the last race with "the most difficult position ... – he had everything to lose".

Three days after the race, Ferrari announced they were contemplating filing an appeal with the FIA due to video footage allegedly showing Vettel overtaking Jean-Éric Vergne under yellow flags. Should the allegations have proven valid, the FIA could have added 20 seconds to Vettel's finishing time, demoting him to 8th in the race result, handing the driver's title to Alonso. Just two days later, Ferrari opted not to appeal the result after receiving additional information from the FIA clarifying that Vettel's overtake on Vergne happened under green flags. Formula One CEO Bernie Ecclestone had previously stated that he considered Ferrari's allegations "a shame" and "a joke".

After losing 10th place in the Constructors' Championship to Caterham, Marussia's director of engineering Nikolai Fomenko accused driver Charles Pic of deliberately letting Vitaly Petrov pass him due to Pic having already signed a contract with Caterham for the next season. No actions were taken following these accusations. In August 2018, Red Bull team principal Christian Horner revealed that Vettel felt that his teammate Mark Webber was responsible for his bad start by pushing him towards the wall in the first turn of the race, and that the Multi 21 controversy at the 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix was Vettel's payback for it.

Classification

Qualifying

Pos.No.DriverConstructorPart 1Part 2Part 3Grid123456789101112131415161718192021222324[107% time](107-time): 1:20.330Source:
4GBR Lewis HamiltonMcLaren-Mercedes**1:15.075**1:13.398**1:12.458**1
3GBR Jenson ButtonMcLaren-Mercedes1:15.4561:13.5151:12.5132
2AUS Mark WebberRed Bull-Renault1:16.1801:13.6671:12.5813
1DEU Sebastian VettelRed Bull-Renault1:15.644**1:13.209**1:12.7604
6BRA Felipe MassaFerrari1:16.2631:14.0481:12.9875
18VEN Pastor MaldonadoWilliams-Renault1:16.2661:13.6981:13.17416
12DEU Nico HülkenbergForce India-Mercedes1:15.5361:13.7041:13.2066
5ESP Fernando AlonsoFerrari1:16.0971:13.8561:13.2537
9FIN Kimi RäikkönenLotus-Renault1:16.4321:13.6981:13.2988
8DEU Nico RosbergMercedes1:15.9291:13.8481:13.4899
11GBR Paul di RestaForce India-Mercedes1:15.9011:14.12110
19BRA Bruno SennaWilliams-Renault1:15.3331:14.21911
15MEX Sergio PérezSauber-Ferrari1:15.9741:14.23412
7DEU Michael SchumacherMercedes1:16.0051:14.33413
14JPN Kamui KobayashiSauber-Ferrari1:16.4001:14.38014
16AUS Daniel RicciardoToro Rosso-Ferrari1:16.7441:14.57415
17FRA Jean-Éric VergneToro Rosso-Ferrari1:16.7221:14.61917
10FRA Romain GrosjeanLotus-Renault1:16.96718
21RUS Vitaly PetrovCaterham-Renault1:17.07319
20FIN Heikki KovalainenCaterham-Renault1:17.08620
24DEU Timo GlockMarussia-Cosworth1:17.50821
25FRA Charles PicMarussia-Cosworth1:18.10422
23IND Narain KarthikeyanHRT-Cosworth1:19.57623
22ESP Pedro de la RosaHRT-Cosworth1:19.69924

;Notes:

  • – Pastor Maldonado received a ten-place grid penalty after receiving his 3rd reprimand of the season, for missing a call in to the weighbridge from the FIA.
  • – Pedro de la Rosa received a five-place grid penalty for replacing his gearbox.

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints12345678910111213141516171819RetRetRetRetRetSource:
3**GBR Jenson Button****McLaren-Mercedes**711:45:22.6562**25**
5**ESP Fernando Alonso****Ferrari**71+2.7547**18**
6**BRA Felipe Massa****Ferrari**71+3.6155**15**
2**AUS Mark Webber****Red Bull-Renault**71+4.9363**12**
12**DEU Nico Hülkenberg****Force India-Mercedes**71+5.7086**10**
1**DEU Sebastian Vettel****Red Bull-Renault**71+9.4534**8**
7**DEU Michael Schumacher****Mercedes**71+11.90713**6**
17**FRA Jean-Éric Vergne****Toro Rosso-Ferrari**71+28.65317**4**
14**JPN Kamui Kobayashi****Sauber-Ferrari**71+31.25014**2**
9**FIN Kimi Räikkönen****Lotus-Renault**70+1 Lap8**1**
21RUS Vitaly PetrovCaterham-Renault70+1 Lap19
25FRA Charles PicMarussia-Cosworth70+1 Lap22
16AUS Daniel RicciardoToro Rosso-Ferrari70+1 Lap15
20FIN Heikki KovalainenCaterham-Renault70+1 Lap20
8DEU Nico RosbergMercedes70+1 Lap9
24DEU Timo GlockMarussia-Cosworth70+1 Lap21
22ESP Pedro de la RosaHRT-Cosworth69+2 Laps24
23IND Narain KarthikeyanHRT-Cosworth69+2 Laps23
11GBR Paul di RestaForce India-Mercedes68Accident10
4GBR Lewis HamiltonMcLaren-Mercedes54Collision1
10FRA Romain GrosjeanLotus-Renault5Accident18
18VEN Pastor MaldonadoWilliams-Renault1Accident16
19BRA Bruno SennaWilliams-Renault0Collision11
15MEX Sergio PérezSauber-Ferrari0Collision12

Final Championship standings

  • Bold text and an asterisk indicates the World Champions. ;Drivers' Championship standings
Pos.DriverPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]1GER **Sebastian Vettel***281
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]2ESP Fernando Alonso278
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]3FIN Kimi Räikkönen207
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]4GBR Lewis Hamilton190
[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 15GBR Jenson Button188

;Constructors' Championship standings

Pos.ConstructorPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]1AUT **Red Bull-Renault***460
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]2ITA Ferrari400
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]3GBR McLaren-Mercedes378
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]4GBR Lotus-Renault303
[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]5GER Mercedes142
  • Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.}}

References

|Previous_year's_race = 2011 Brazilian Grand Prix |Next_year's_race = 2013 Brazilian Grand Prix

References

  1. "Formula 1 Grande Prêmio Petrobras do Brasil 2012". Formula One.
  2. (25 November 2012). "FORMULA 1 GRANDE PRÊMIO PETROBRAS DO BRASIL 2012 (Race)". [[F1Standings]].
  3. Collantine, Keith. (7 December 2011). "United States Grand Prix remains on unchanged 2012 F1 calendar". Keith Collantine.
  4. Collantine, Keith. (4 October 2012). "Michael Schumacher announces F1 retirement". Keith Collantine.
  5. Straw, Edd. (1 December 2012). "HRT fails to find buyer before 2013 Formula 1 entry deadline".
  6. (19 November 2012). "Teams to trial 2013 prototype Pirelli tyres in Brazil". Formula One.
  7. (16 October 2012). "Pirelli reveal tyre choices for final three rounds". Formula One.
  8. Smith, Luke. (2020-05-11). "When Vettel crashed and triumphed in F1's last great title decider".
  9. "F1 2012 Brazilian Grand Prix qualifying: Hamilton battles Vettel for pole".
  10. (24 November 2012). "McLaren remain quickest as Brazil practice ends".
  11. "Brazilian GP: Lewis Hamilton leads Sebastian Vettel in second practice". BBC Sport.
  12. "Formula 1 Brazilian Grand Prix Weather Forecast".
  13. "Brazilian GP: Lewis Hamilton on pole ahead of Jenson Button". BBC Sport.
  14. (24 November 2012). "Brazilian GP: Michael Schumacher says Mercedes' wet set-up backfired".
  15. (24 November 2012). "Hamilton on pole as Vettel and Alonso struggle". Eurosport UK.
  16. (24 November 2012). "Maldonado handed 10-place grid penalty". Eurosport UK.
  17. (25 November 2012). "Alonso keen to just enjoy race now". Eurosport UK.
  18. "Massa upset with notion he could take Vettel out". ESPN.
  19. Collantine, Keith. (2012-11-25). "Button wins intense race as Vettel recovers to seal third championship".
  20. (25 November 2012). "Button wins intense race as Vettel recovers to seal third championship".
  21. (26 November 2012). "Räikkönens kuriose Irrfahrt: 'Vor elf Jahren war das Tor noch offen'". Spiegel Online.
  22. (27 November 2012). "Red Bull thanks 'gracious' Schumacher for giving Vettel sixth".
  23. (25 November 2011). "Brazilian Grand Prix 2012: as it happened". Daily Telegraph UK.
  24. (25 November 2011). "Brazilian Grand Prix 2012: as it happened". BBC Sport.
  25. (24 November 2012). "Interview with 2012 F1 champion Sebastian Vettel after Brazilian Grand Prix".
  26. "Sebastian Vettel wins F1 title after rollercoaster Brazilian Grand Prix". Guardian.
  27. (25 November 2012). "So ein Rennen habe ich noch nie erlebt". Welt Online.
  28. (4 December 2012). "Überholmanöver-Rekord in São Paulo aufgestellt". Spiegel Online.
  29. Baldwin, Alan. (25 November 2012). "Vettel is F1's youngest triple champion". [[Reuters]].
  30. "Sebastian Vettel says Brazilian Grand Prix was 'toughest race ever'". Guardian.
  31. (16 November 2017). "Brazilian GP 2012 revisited: Was this Formula 1's most dramatic race?". [[Sky Sports]].
  32. Smith, Luke. (25 April 2020). "Brazil 2012: The race that could have changed an F1 nearly-man's career". [[Autosport]].
  33. (25 November 2012). "Vettel clinches Drivers' Championship hat-trick".
  34. (25 November 2012). "Photo finish: Design genius Adrian Newey has camera lens to thank for Vettel's success".
  35. (26 November 2012). "Vettel Takes His Third Straight Formula One Title". The New York Times.
  36. "Brazilian GP – Sunday – Press Conference".
  37. "'Vettel overcame the odds'".
  38. "Sebastian Vettel wins his third F1 world championship for Red Bull". BBC Sport.
  39. (27 November 2016). "Jenson Button's final race ends in disappointment with early Abu Dhabi Grand Prix retirement". [[The Daily Telegraph.
  40. (12 September 2021). "2021 Italian Grand Prix race report and highlights: Ricciardo leads stunning McLaren 1-2 at Monza after Verstappen and Hamilton collide again".
  41. "Michael Schumacher prepares for a second Formula One retirement before riding off into the sunset".
  42. "Eddie Jordan Alonso more than earned the title than Vettel".
  43. "Jaime Alguersuari column: Sebastian Vettel deserved title". BBC Sport.
  44. "Ferrari contemplate challenge to Sebastian Vettel's F1 world title win". Guardian.
  45. (30 November 2012). "Ferrari drops Vettel appeal". ESPN.
  46. (30 November 2012). "Formel-1-Boss Ecclestone über Ferrari-Verdacht: "Es ist eine Schande"". Spiegel Online.
  47. link. (16 December 2012). [[Izvestia]]. News Media
  48. Larkam, Lewis. (14 August 2018). "'Multi 21' was Vettel's payback to Webber's tactics – Horner". crash.net.
  49. Beer, Matt. (24 November 2012). "Hamilton leads all-McLaren front row". [[Haymarket Media Group.
  50. (24 November 2012). "Maldonado relegated ten places". ESPN F1.
  51. (25 November 2012). "2012 Brazilian Grand Prix result".
  52. "Brazil 2012 - 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 2012 Brazilian 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