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1977 South African Grand Prix

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Formula One motor race held in 1977

1977 South African Grand Prix
Race 3 of 17 in the1977 Formula One season
Race details
Date5 March 1977
Official nameXXIIIThe Citizen Grand Prix of South Africa
LocationKyalami
Transvaal Province,South Africa
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course length4.104 km (2.550 miles)
Distance78 laps, 320.112 km (198.908 miles)
WeatherSunny
Pole position
DriverMcLaren-Ford
Time1:15.96
Fastest lap
DriverUnited KingdomJohn WatsonBrabham-Alfa Romeo
Time1:17.63 on lap 7
Podium
FirstFerrari
SecondWolf-Ford
ThirdTyrrell-Ford
Lap leaders
Motor car race

The1977 South African Grand Prix (formally theXXIII The Citizen Grand Prix of South Africa) was aFormula Onemotor race held atKyalami on 5 March 1977, won byNiki Lauda of Austria. The race is principally remembered for the accident that resulted in the deaths ofrace marshal Frederik Jansen van Vuuren and driverTom Pryce. It was also the last race forCarlos Pace, who was killed in an aircraft accident less than two weeks later.

Practice sessions

[edit]

The first two practice sessions were wet, and only a dozen cars took part in the first session, withHans-Joachim Stuck fastest in hisMarch despite having to abandon the session with an oil pressure issue. Eighteen cars took to the track during the second session, withTom Pryce fastest in theShadow despite brake problems. Three drivers did not take part in either timed session thus far:Patrick Depailler, Pryce's team-mateRenzo Zorzi (engine) andBoy Hayje.[1]

The last timed session was dry, and therefore all the qualifying times came from this session.James Hunt took his third consecutive pole position, withCarlos Pace beside him on the front row.Niki Lauda took third despite a broken seat and tyre problems, alongside Depailler, ahead ofRonnie Peterson.Mario Andretti was sixth despite an engine failure. Other drivers who experienced mechanical problems includedJochen Mass (handling),Vittorio Brambilla (engine),Hans Binder (engine), Pryce (engine), Zorzi (fuel metering unit, electrics, exhaust),Alex Ribeiro (handling), Hayje (brakes) andLarry Perkins (water pump), whileBrett Lunger only managed one flying lap before his engine failed.[1]

Race

[edit]

Start and first 21 laps

[edit]

James Hunt led off at the start, withNiki Lauda and local driverJody Scheckter following him afterCarlos Pace struggled.Tom Pryce lost ground at the start, leaving him 22nd, ahead only ofLarry Perkins, although he quickly gained places, climbing to 16th by the end of lap six.[1] On the same lapRonnie Peterson dropped out while eighth, with a fuel pressure problem. The order at the front stayed put until lap seven when Lauda took the lead and was never passed again, with Scheckter taking second from Hunt 11 laps later.

Lap 23 fatal incident

[edit]

On lap 22, theShadow-Ford of Italian driverRenzo Zorzi, running 19th, pulled off to the left side of the main straight, just after the brow of a hill and a bridge over the track. He was again having problems with hisfuel metering unit, and fuel was pumping directly onto the engine, which then caught fire. Zorzi did not immediately get out of his car as he could not disconnect the oxygen pipe from his helmet.[nb 1]

The situation caused two marshals from the pit wall on the opposite side of the track to intervene. The first marshal to cross the track was a 25-year-oldpanel beater named William (Bill). The second was 19-year-old Frederik "Frikkie" Jansen van Vuuren, who was carrying a 40-pound (18 kg)fire extinguisher.[2] George Witt, the chief pit marshal for the race, said that the policy of the circuit was that in case of fire, two marshals must attend and a further two act as back-up in case the first pair's extinguishers were not effective enough. Witt also recalled that both marshals crossed the track without prior permission.[3] The former narrowly made it across the track, but the latter did not. As the two men started to run across the track, the cars driven byHans-Joachim Stuck (12th) and Tom Pryce (13th) came over the brow of a rise in the track.[4]

"As we got to the top I suddenly sensed this marshal running across the track from my right, carrying an extinguisher. I took a big chance and I don't know how I got away with it. There was no time, I just reacted on pure instinct."

Hans-Joachim Stuck[5]

Pryce was directly behind Stuck's car along the main straight. Stuck saw Jansen van Vuuren and moved to the right to avoid both marshals, missing Bill by what journalist David Tremayne, calls "millimetres". From his position Pryce could not see Jansen van Vuuren and was unable to react as quickly as Stuck had done. He struck the teenage marshal at approximately 270 km/h (170 mph).[6] Jansen van Vuuren was thrown into the air and landed in front of Zorzi and Bill. He died on impact, and his body was badly mutilated by Pryce's car.[7] The fire extinguisher he had been carrying smashed into Pryce's head, before striking the Shadow's roll hoop. The force of the impact was such that the extinguisher was thrown up and over the adjacent grandstand. It landed in the car park to the rear of the stand, where it hit a parked car and jammed its door shut.[5]

The impact with the fire extinguisher wrenched Pryce's helmet upward sharply. Death was almost certainly instantaneous. Pryce's Shadow DN8, now with its driver dead at the wheel, continued at speed down the main straight towards the first corner, calledCrowthorne. The car left the track to the right, scraping the metal barriers, hitting an entrance for emergency vehicles, and veering back onto the track. It then hit 14th-placedJacques Laffite'sLigier, sending both Pryce and Laffite head-on into the catch fencing and a concrete wall.

Finish

[edit]

Lauda's Ferrari was barely able to finish the race after his car had picked up part of Pryce's roll bar in the underside of its monocoque, after the fatal accident. This damaged the car's water system and at the end of the race, the team found that only a third of the usual twelve litres of water remained in the system. Both the warnings for oil pressure and water temperature had been flashing at Lauda for the final 25 laps, in a car which he later described as 'completely finished'.[1]

Despite this, Lauda held on to win his first victory since his near-fatal crash at the1976 German Grand Prix the previous year. South African Scheckter was second, andPatrick Depailler's six-wheeler took third from Hunt in the closing laps. At first Lauda announced it was the greatest victory of his career, but when told on the victory podium of Pryce's death, he said that "there was no joy after that".[8]

Aftermath

[edit]

The sport reacted with sorrow at the loss of two young men.Tyrrell mechanic Trevor Foster viewed the incident from a distance, later recalling

I can remember quite vividly [Pryce's] teammate's car had already pulled off to the side of the track and it had started a small fire. Then the next thing I can remember is seeing Tom's car coming down the straight. I can almost remember now a momentary lift of the throttle much earlier than you would have expected and I looked and I saw something fly up from the car, which tragically turned out to be the marshal.[9]

David Tremayne, a veteran biographer and motor sports journalist, recalled the feelings of disbelief and horror following the aftermath of the incident;

The tragedy itself – the sheer randomness of it – is so hard to take and still is. You tend to focus your anger on someone and for a long time it would be focused on a 19-year-old kid, called Jansen van Vuuren, who ran across the track.

The event was included in the motor racing filmThe Quick and the Dead.

Classification

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Qualifying classification

[edit]
Pos.DriverConstructorTimeNo
1James HuntMcLaren-Ford1:15,961
2Carlos PaceBrabham-Alfa Romeo1:16,012
3Niki LaudaFerrari1:16,293
4Patrick DepaillerTyrrell-Ford1:16,334
5Jody ScheckterWolf-Ford1:16,355
6Mario AndrettiLotus-Ford1:16,386
7Ronnie PetersonTyrrell-Ford1:16,447
8Carlos ReutemannFerrari1:16,548
9Emerson FittipaldiFittipaldi-Ford1:16,649
10Gunnar NilssonLotus-Ford1:16,6510
11John WatsonBrabham-Alfa Romeo1:16,7111
12Jacques LaffiteLigier-Matra1:16,7412
13Jochen MassMcLaren-Ford1:16,9913
14Vittorio BrambillaSurtees-Ford1:17,0814
15Tom PryceShadow-Ford1:17,1115
16Clay RegazzoniEnsign-Ford1:17,2116
17Alex RibeiroMarch-Ford1:17,4417
18Hans-Joachim StuckMarch-Ford1:17,4918
19Hans BinderSurtees-Ford1:18,0719
20Renzo ZorziShadow-Ford1:18,4220
21Boy HayjeMarch-Ford1:19,5921
22Larry PerkinsBRM1:21,7722
23Brett LungerMarch-Ford1:24,3523

Race classification

[edit]
PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
111AustriaNiki LaudaFerrari781:42:21.639
220South AfricaJody ScheckterWolf-Ford78+ 5.256
34FrancePatrick DepaillerTyrrell-Ford78+ 5.744
41United KingdomJames HuntMcLaren-Ford78+ 9.513
52West GermanyJochen MassMcLaren-Ford78+ 19.9132
67United KingdomJohn WatsonBrabham-Alfa Romeo78+ 20.2111
719ItalyVittorio BrambillaSurtees-Ford78+ 23.614
812ArgentinaCarlos ReutemannFerrari78+ 26.78
922SwitzerlandClay RegazzoniEnsign-Ford78+ 46.216
1028BrazilEmerson FittipaldiFittipaldi-Ford78+ 1:11.79
1118AustriaHans BinderSurtees-Ford77+ 1 Lap19
126SwedenGunnar NilssonLotus-Ford77+ 1 Lap10
138BrazilCarlos PaceBrabham-Alfa Romeo76+ 2 Laps2
1430United StatesBrett LungerMarch-Ford76+ 2 Laps23
1514AustraliaLarry PerkinsBRM73+ 5 Laps22
Ret9BrazilAlex RibeiroMarch-Ford66Engine17
Ret10West GermanyHans-Joachim StuckMarch-Ford55Engine18
Ret5United StatesMario AndrettiLotus-Ford43Accident6
Ret33NetherlandsBoy HayjeMarch-Ford33Gearbox21
Ret26FranceJacques LaffiteLigier-Matra22Accident12
Ret16United KingdomTom PryceShadow-Ford22Fatal accident15
Ret17ItalyRenzo ZorziShadow-Ford21Fuel Leak20
Ret3SwedenRonnie PetersonTyrrell-Ford5Fuel System7
Source:[10]

Championship standings after the race

[edit]
Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
11South AfricaJody Scheckter15
12ArgentinaCarlos Reutemann13
33AustriaNiki Lauda13
4United KingdomJames Hunt9
25BrazilCarlos Pace6
Source:[11]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1ItalyFerrari22
2CanadaWolf-Ford15
13United KingdomMcLaren-Ford9
14United KingdomBrabham-Alfa Romeo7
5BrazilFittipaldi-Ford6
Source:[11]

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

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Oxygen pipes were used to prevent drivers being suffocated if they were trapped in the car in a fire.[2]

References

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  1. ^abcdHutchinson, Jeff (1977).Autosport, 10 March 1977. Haymarket. pp. 12–19.
  2. ^abTremayne (2006), pp. 232–233.
  3. ^Tremayne (2006), p. 239.
  4. ^"South African Grand Prix: Pryce tragedy overshadows Lauda victory". ESPN. 5 March 1977. Retrieved13 March 2015.
  5. ^abTremayne (2006), p. 235.
  6. ^Dalglish (2012), p. 39.
  7. ^Tremayne (2006), p. 234.
  8. ^Tremayne, David (2006).The Lost Generation: The Brilliant but Tragic Lives of Rising British F1 Stars Roger Williamson, Tony Brise and Tom Pryce. Haynes Publishing Group. p. 239.ISBN 1-84425-205-1.
  9. ^"North East Wales Sport – quotes". BBC. 24 March 2006.Archived from the original on 3 January 2009. Retrieved27 March 2010.
  10. ^"1977 South African Grand Prix". formula1.com. Archived fromthe original on 21 October 2014. Retrieved23 December 2015.
  11. ^ab"South Africa 1977 - Championship • STATS F1".www.statsf1.com. Retrieved5 March 2019.

Sources

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1977 Brazilian Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
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1977 United States Grand Prix West
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1976 South African Grand Prix
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