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2004 European Grand Prix

Coordinates:50°20′08″N6°56′51″E / 50.33556°N 6.94750°E /50.33556; 6.94750
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2004 European Grand Prix
Race 7 of 18 in the2004 Formula One World Championship
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The Nürburgring
The Nürburgring
Race details
Date30 May 2004
Official name2004 Formula 1Allianz Grand Prix of Europe
LocationNürburgring,Nürburg,Germany
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course length5.148 km (3.2 miles)
Distance60 laps, 308.88 km (192 miles)
WeatherCloudy at start, sunny later
Pole position
DriverFerrari
Time1:28.351
Fastest lap
DriverGermanyMichael SchumacherFerrari
Time1:29.468 on lap 7
Podium
FirstFerrari
SecondFerrari
ThirdBAR-Honda
Lap leaders
Motor car race

The2004 European Grand Prix (officially the2004 Formula 1 Allianz Grand Prix of Europe)[1] was aFormula One motor race held on 30 May 2004 at theNürburgring. It was Race 7 of 18 in the2004 FIA Formula One World Championship.

Friday drivers

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The bottom 6 teams in the2003 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
BAR-HondaUnited KingdomAnthony Davidson
Sauber-Petronas-
Jaguar-CosworthSwedenBjörn Wirdheim
ToyotaBrazilRicardo Zonta
Jordan-FordGermanyTimo Glock
Minardi-CosworthBelgiumBas Leinders

Report

[edit]

Background

[edit]

Michael Schumacher in the drivers' championship with twelve points ahead of Rubens Barrichello and with 18 points ahead of Jenson Button. In the constructors' championship, Ferrari led Renault with 36 points and BAR-Honda with 48 points.

Earlier in the week, Williams announced important changes to its technical organization chart. After 26 years, in fact,Patrick Head left the position of technical director, being replaced bySam Michael, previously responsible for track operations. The replacement was also due to growing tensions between the English team and the BMW engine engineer, dissatisfied with the negative results in the first part of the season.[2][3]

Qualifying

[edit]

Michael Schumacher dominated qualifying and obtained his fifth pole position of the season with an advantage of more than six tenths over the second best time, set by Sato. Sato broke the overall lap record with a time of 1:27.691 in the first qualifying session, and also took his first front row start.[4]

Race

[edit]

At the start, Michael Schumacher retained the lead, behind the German driver Trulli overtook Sato, who, however, gave the place back to his rival in the first corner. Further back, Montoya was too late when braking for the corner: the Colombian ended up ramming his teammate Ralf Schumacher, who in turn hit da Matta's Toyota. The latter and the German driver had to abandon the race, while Montoya returned to the pits with a damaged front wing and rejoined the race in last place.

A few corners after the start, Sato braked and Trulli took the opportunity to take second place. However, the Japanese didn't give up and continued to have a heated duel with Trulli, in which he ultimately got the upper hand and Trulli lost places. At the end of the first lap, Michael Schumacher crossed the finish line ahead of Räikkönen, Alonso, Sato, Barrichello, Button and Trulli. The German Ferrari driver was significantly faster than Räikkönen, on whom he gained almost two seconds per lap. The Finn acted as a blocker against the chasing group, which was significantly faster, but could not overtake him and thus fell significantly behind Michael Schumacher.

Michael Schumacher opened the first series of pit stops on the 8th lap. A lap later, Räikkönen also refueled, and shortly after leaving the pits he parked his McLaren at the side of the track with a broken engine. In the following laps, all drivers made their first stop, with the exception of Barrichello, Coulthard and Fisichella, who started with a two-stop strategy. The Brazilian then led for a few laps before refueling on lap 16. The last driver to make his first stop was Fisichella on lap 24. Michael Schumacher continued to lead the race ahead of Sato, Barrichello, Button, Trulli, Alonso and Webber. Further back, Montoya struggled to recover from the first lap accident, while Coulthard retired after having to retire with engine failure like his teammate.

The second set of stops allowed Barrichello to overtake Sato; Behind the Japanese were Button, Trulli, Alonso and Webber. Virtually nothing happened until lap 42, when Alonso opened the third and final series of pit stops. Barrichello overtook Sato again, but the Japanese driver, who had less fuel on board, attacked him on lap 46. Sato's action was unsuccessful and in the end the two came into contact: the BAR driver damaged his front wing, while Barrichello's car suffered no significant damage. Sato returned to the pits to change the nose, but shortly afterwards his car's gearbox gave up. Button moved up to third place. There were no further notable events and Michael Schumacher won the sixth of seven races since the start of the season; Behind him were Barrichello, Button, Trulli, Alonso, Fisichella, Webber and Montoya.

Schumacher and Barrichello left the champagne unsprayed after the death of former Fiat chairmanUmberto Agnelli, who had died oflymphatic cancer aged 69 on 27 May.[5]

Classification

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Qualifying

[edit]
PosNoDriverConstructorQ1 TimeQ2 TimeGapGrid
11GermanyMichael SchumacherFerrari1:28.2781:28.3511
210JapanTakuma SatoBAR-Honda1:27.6911:28.986+0.6352
37ItalyJarno TrulliRenault1:29.9051:29.135+0.7843
46FinlandKimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes1:28.8971:29.137+0.7864
59United KingdomJenson ButtonBAR-Honda1:28.8161:29.245+0.8945
68SpainFernando AlonsoRenault1:29.0691:29.313+0.9626
72BrazilRubens BarrichelloFerrari1:29.0141:29.353+1.0027
83ColombiaJuan Pablo MontoyaWilliams-BMW1:29.0921:29.354+1.0038
94GermanyRalf SchumacherWilliams-BMW1:28.6551:29.459+1.1089
1017FranceOlivier PanisToyota1:29.2431:29.697+1.34610
1116BrazilCristiano da MattaToyota1:29.2721:29.706+1.35511
1215AustriaChristian KlienJaguar-Cosworth1:30.9331:31.431+3.08012
1318GermanyNick HeidfeldJordan-Ford1:32.2161:31.604+3.25313
1414AustraliaMark WebberJaguar-Cosworth1:30.5791:31.7971+3.44614
1519ItalyGiorgio PantanoJordan-Ford1:31.9281:31.979+3.62815
1612BrazilFelipe MassaSauber-Petronas1:31.8791:31.982+3.63116
1721HungaryZsolt BaumgartnerMinardi-Cosworth1:33.0611:34.398+6.047172
185United KingdomDavid CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:28.717No time4202
1911ItalyGiancarlo FisichellaSauber-Petronas1:29.327No time5182
2020ItalyGianmaria BruniMinardi-Cosworth1:33.0771:34.0223+5.671192
Source:[6]
Notes

Race

[edit]
PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
11GermanyMichael SchumacherFerrari601:32:35.101110
22BrazilRubens BarrichelloFerrari60+17.98978
39United KingdomJenson ButtonBAR-Honda60+22.53356
47ItalyJarno TrulliRenault60+53.67335
58SpainFernando AlonsoRenault60+1:00.98764
611ItalyGiancarlo FisichellaSauber-Petronas60+1:13.448183
714AustraliaMark WebberJaguar-Cosworth60+1:16.206142
83ColombiaJuan Pablo MontoyaWilliams-BMW59+1 Lap81
912BrazilFelipe MassaSauber-Petronas59+1 Lap16 
1018GermanyNick HeidfeldJordan-Ford59+1 Lap13 
1117FranceOlivier PanisToyota59+1 Lap10 
1215AustriaChristian KlienJaguar-Cosworth59+1 Lap12 
1319ItalyGiorgio PantanoJordan-Ford58+2 Laps15 
1420ItalyGianmaria BruniMinardi-Cosworth57+3 Laps19 
1521HungaryZsolt BaumgartnerMinardi-Cosworth57+3 Laps17 
Ret10JapanTakuma SatoBAR-Honda47Engine2 
Ret5United KingdomDavid CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes25Engine20 
Ret6FinlandKimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes9Engine4 
Ret4GermanyRalf SchumacherWilliams-BMW0Collision9 
Ret16BrazilCristiano da MattaToyota0Collision11 
Source:[7]

Championship standings after the race

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Drivers' Championship standings
+/–PosDriverPoints
1GermanyMichael Schumacher60
2BrazilRubens Barrichello46
3United KingdomJenson Button38
4ItalyJarno Trulli36
15SpainFernando Alonso25
Source:[8]
Constructors' Championship standings
+/–PosConstructorPoints
1ItalyFerrari106
2FranceRenault61
3United KingdomBAR-Honda46
4United KingdomWilliams-BMW36
5SwitzerlandSauber-Petronas10
Source:[8]

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"2004 FORMULA 1 Allianz Grand Prix of Europe - Race". Retrieved2 January 2021.
  2. ^"Williams Confirm Technical Team Reshuffle".Autosport.com. Retrieved10 December 2023.
  3. ^"Williams reshuffle".Autosport.com. Retrieved10 December 2023.
  4. ^"2004 FORMULA 1 Allianz Grand Prix of Europe - QUALIFYING 1".Formula 1 - The Official F1 Website. Retrieved2020-08-27.
  5. ^"Schumacher Dedicates Win to Umberto Agnelli". Retrieved20 October 2021.
  6. ^"2004 Grand Prix of Europe - Saturday Qualifying Results".Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. Archived fromthe original on 24 August 2013. Retrieved27 December 2015.
  7. ^"2004 Grand Prix of Europe - Race Results".Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. Archived fromthe original on 16 November 2014. Retrieved27 December 2015.
  8. ^ab"Europe 2004 - Championship • STATS F1".www.statsf1.com. Retrieved15 March 2019.
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50°20′08″N6°56′51″E / 50.33556°N 6.94750°E /50.33556; 6.94750

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