Go Back   Sports Car Forum - MotorWorld.net > General Discussion > Motorsport News And Discussion



Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 10-09-2005, 02:14 PM   #31
nthfinity
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Detroit
Posts: 9,929
Default

1 9 Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes 53 1:29:02.212 17 10

2 6 Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 53 +1.6 secs 3 8

3 5 Fernando Alonso Renault 53 +17.4 secs 16 6

4 7 Mark Webber Williams-BMW 53 +22.2 secs 7 5

5 3 Jenson Button BAR-Honda 53 +29.5 secs 2 4

6 14 David Coulthard Red Bull Racing 53 +31.6 secs 6 3

7 1 Michael Schumacher Ferrari 53 +33.8 secs 14 2

8 17 Ralf Schumacher Toyota 53 +49.5 secs 1 1

9 15 Christian Klien Red Bull Racing 53 +51.9 secs 4

10 12 Felipe Massa Sauber-Petronas 53 +57.5 secs 10

11 2 Rubens Barrichello Ferrari 53 +60.6 secs 9

12 11 Jacques Villeneuve Sauber-Petronas 53 +83.2 secs 8

13 18 Tiago Monteiro Jordan-Toyota 52 +1 Lap 20

14 20 Robert Doornbos Minardi-Cosworth 51 +2 Laps 15

15 19 Narain Karthikeyan Jordan-Toyota 51 +2 Lap 11

16 21 Christijan Albers Minardi-Cosworth 49 +4 Laps 13

DSQ 4 Takuma Sato BAR-Honda 52 +1 Lap 5

Ret 8 Antonio Pizzonia Williams-BMW 9 Spin 12

Ret 16 Jarno Trulli Toyota 9 Accident 19

Ret 10 Juan Pablo Montoya McLaren-Mercedes 0 Accident 18

Fastest Lap: Kimi Räikkönen 1:31.540
Raikkonen steals victory in Japan


Finn enjoys possibly his finest hour for McLaren

A stunning last-lap pass gives Kimi Raikkonen victory from 17th on the grid at Suzuka, with the Renaults of Giancarlo Fisichella and Fernando Alonso second and third. The result ensures the constructors’ championship battle is wide open going to China.







The afternoon was all about motor racing, and Raikkonen, Alonso and Michael Schumacher gave fans around the world a fabulous exhibition of Grand Prix driving at its finest.

Off the grid poleman Ralf Schumacher led fast-starting Fisichella and Jenson Button, but the safety car was deployed as the field started its second lap after Juan Pablo Montoya’s attempt to go round the outside of Jacques Villeneuve at the chicane had ended with the Colombian’s McLaren hitting the outer wall and losing its left rear wheel.

When racing resumed on lap six Schumacher Jnr continued to lead Fisichella and Button, with David Coulthard maintaining fourth from Mark Webber. But Schumacher Snr and Alonso had already made electrifying progress and were sixth and seventh, with Raikkonen chasing down Villeneuve, Antonio Pizzonia and Christian Klien.

Schumacher Jnr refuelled for the first of three times after only 13 laps - he was the first to make a scheduled stop - and then the real pattern was established with Fisichella leading from Button. Alonso had some dramas as he lost ground going off in the chicane and dirtying his tyres on the 8th lap as he passed Klien. He duly let the Austrian back through then immediately re-passed him into Turn 1. However, stewards decided that the Spaniard had still gained an advantage and he was forced to slow, let the Red Bull back through and then finally re-pass for good.

Alonso soon recovered so that by lap 15 he was the meat in a Schumacher-Raikkonen sandwich as they fought over fifth place. Lap after lap Schumacher kept the Spaniard and the Finn behind, but then Alonso pulled a brilliant move on the former champion, going round the outside on the entry to the notorious 130R corner. Immediately he pulled well clear of the Ferrari as Raikkonen closed in. But the Finn could not quite make the same move, and when he and Schumacher both pitted on the 26th lap (four laps later than Alonso), the German got back out ahead. By this time Fisichella was still the easy leader as Schumacher Jnr’s rise to second place was negated by another stop. Button was second from Webber after Coulthard had lost a lot of time in his pit call.

Initially Raikkonen could do no more about Schumacher Snr than Alonso could, further back, about the Saubers and Coulthard. But gradually both men began to make progress. On lap 30 Raikkonen finally pulled off a superb pass on Schumacher by going round the outside of the Ferrari in Turn One, and thereafter he started to hack into the deficit to Webber and Button. Two laps later Alonso was virtually touching the back of the Ferrari going past the pits, and also swept by Schumacher Snr going into the first corner.

The denouement was set up when Fisichella refuelled for the second time on lap 38. That briefly put Button in the lead from a menacing Webber, until they too refuelled on lap 41. Just as they had with Coulthard earlier on, Williams got their man out ahead of BAR’s, but now Raikkonen was the new leader with Fisichella back up to second. The question now became: could the Finn really be on a single-stop strategy?

His fast lap times confirmed that he could not be, and sure enough in he swept for fuel again on lap 45. With only eight laps left Fisichella now surely had the race in the bag. But Raikkonen was not finished. He was 5.4s behind after 46 laps, but then slashed that to only 4.3s a lap later. By lap 50 the writing was on the wall as the Renault and the McLaren went past the pits separated by only half a second. The gap was two-tenths next time around, and a tenth on lap 52. As they went into the braking area for Turn One Raikkonen was wheel-to-wheel with the hapless Italian and pulled off a fantastic move to go round the outside and into the lead. It was classic racing.

As Fisichella immediately dropped back to finish a bitterly disappointed second, Raikkonen celebrated a remarkable triumph, his seventh of the season. 15.8s further back, Alonso’s superb drive saw him take third place after catching Webber by surprise as they went into Turn One on lap 49, dipping his right wheels onto the grass in the process.

The Australian nevertheless impressed with a very strong fourth, with an unhappy Button fifth and Coulthard an elated sixth. After his never-say-die effort Schumacher Snr deserved a lot better than seventh place for Ferrari as he headed home his brother, who took the final point for Toyota.

Christian Klien’s dramatic qualifying lap did not translate into points for the second race running, and the Austrian led home the Sauber duo of Felipe Massa and Jacques Villeneuve, the latter switching to a single stop strategy after the safety car deployment.

Rubens Barrichello lost a lot of time after going off the track in Turn One at the start, and the Brazilian headed home Takuma Sato, the man he will replace at BAR next year. Sato also went off in Turn One at the start after a stand-off with Klien, then later took Jarno Trulli out with an ill-judged overtaking attempt. Behind them Tiago Monteiro got back to finishing races with 14th for Jordan, followed by Minardi’s Robert Doornbos and his own team-mate Narain Karthikeyan. Behind them Christijan Albers was the final classified finisher in 17th place after his Minardi briefly caught fire during its refuelling stop on lap 34.

Besides Montoya and Trulli, the other retirement was Pizzonia, who spun off at the Degner Curve on lap 10.

As Schumacher Snr moved ahead again of Montoya in the fight for third place in the drivers’ championship, Renault’s 14 point haul pushed them back in front of McLaren in the constructors’, 176 points to 174, setting up a great title climax in Shanghai.

__________________
www.nthimage.com
Car photography website
nthfinity is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-09-2005, 09:04 PM   #32
gis
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Lancashire,United Kingdom
Posts: 3,846
Default

Kimi first as i predicted (well either of the mclarens) and renault in there aswell.

what a race by Kimi though,if he can keep it like this,IMO were lookin at next years champ.would have been this year if it wasnt for a few failures.lol still,he has won 1 more race than Alonso this year.
__________________

http://img402.imageshack.us/img402/5803/dansigsp7.jpg
gis is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-09-2005, 11:52 PM   #33
bmagni
Regular User
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Mexico
Posts: 3,544
Default

did anyone see MS move to the left and make the passing manouver easier to Alonso ? That was what i saw..
bmagni is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2005, 12:05 AM   #34
nthfinity
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Detroit
Posts: 9,929
Default

,if he can keep it like this,IMO were lookin at next years champ.
id say its going to be number 8 for Schumacher if the Ferrari is at least exactly as good as the mclaren for grip/speed/feel

and if the Ferrari is better, then it will be that much easier
__________________
www.nthimage.com
Car photography website
nthfinity is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2005, 01:51 AM   #35
5vz-fe
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Toronto
Posts: 6,167
Default

I wonder if Ron Dennis felt he made the wrong choice bring Montoya on board
__________________
5vz-fe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2005, 03:29 AM   #36
nthfinity
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Detroit
Posts: 9,929
Default

Originally Posted by 5vz-fe
I wonder if Ron Dennis felt he made the wrong choice bring Montoya on board
i think not, look at the races JPM has won for the team, similar to Senna, its either fast, or no finishing for him... very risky moves either mean you are very good, or very dumb... he has had his share of both this year, and years past
__________________
www.nthimage.com
Car photography website
nthfinity is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2005, 11:31 AM   #37
SFDMALEX
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Canada
Posts: 5,337
Default

Originally Posted by dani_d_mas
BTW, the spanish media are starting to criticize Renault again for their nasty pit stop strategy :roll: again, when Alonso wins is because he's the best driver EVER - when Alonso doesn't win... that's because the team, or Raikkonen, or whatever... bla bla bla
You gotta let him have it mate. He's a Spanish champ the nation is on a high from that. Let em have fun
SFDMALEX is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2005, 01:39 PM   #38
bultaco_metralla
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Bultaco's Drift Land
Posts: 1,007
Default

The Race was just Great and i think China is going to be almost same!!! waiting fo rit

Originally Posted by dani_d_mas
BTW, the spanish media are starting to criticize Renault again for their nasty pit stop strategy :roll: again, when Alonso wins is because he's the best driver EVER - when Alonso doesn't win... that's because the team, or Raikkonen, or whatever... bla bla bla
Based on Alonso quote!!! thats what he said!! and its true he had to pass schumi and wbber and klein etc... twice!!! But it was a GREAT RACE
bultaco_metralla is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2005, 03:08 PM   #39
bultaco_metralla
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Bultaco's Drift Land
Posts: 1,007
Default

i think He always do when he wins, every race he won he said that the Team was perfect!!! maybe in Interlagos he was not really clever with his first declaratioons, but after that he rectified... The team is very happy with him!!

or maybe you mean that spanish media dont talk about the excellent work of the team... i think its going to be that...

Btw tha overtake on 130R was awesome, and now i dont know what "year overtake" i would choose... ill make a poll here to know what you think heheheh...

1-. Schumacher - Button San Marino chicane
2-. Alonso - Schumacher Suzuka 130 R
bultaco_metralla is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-11-2005, 06:07 AM   #40
|Nuno|
Regular User
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Portugal
Posts: 1,236
Default

However, and totally off topic - the best overtaking of the last decade is the Montoya move over Schumacher (?) at the Bus Stop at Spa 2004, absolutely crazy!!
If we're going by craziness, I think Sato's move on Trulli wins it.



Anyway, finally we had an exciting race! Great drive by Kimi, although I think the overtaking on Fisi was more Fisi's fault than Kimi's merit. I honestly don't get why he took that line on the chicane... It's in stuff like that you see the difference between a good driver and a great driver - even with a much slower car, Shumacher was able to hold Kimi for much more laps.

Alonso did well too, I must admit. That move on Schumacher was very good, even if MS lifted to avoid a collision. MS who also did a great race - those first laps were amazing, and he did an excellent job on holding both Kimi and Alonso behing him. Shame about that last pitstop though...

It will be interesting to follow the battle for the WCC in China, too. I hope McLaren gets it.
__________________
|Nuno| is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump