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2005 Japanese Grand Prix

Coordinates:34°50′35″N136°32′26″E / 34.84306°N 136.54056°E /34.84306; 136.54056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2005 Japanese Grand Prix
Race 18 of 19 in the2005 Formula One World Championship
← Previous raceNext race →
Race details
Date9 October 2005
Official name2005 Formula 1 Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix
LocationSuzuka International Racing Course,Suzuka,Mie,Japan
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course length5.807 km (3.608 miles)
Distance53 laps, 307.573 km (191.117 miles)
WeatherPartially cloudy and dry with temperatures reaching up to 25 °C (77 °F)[1]
Attendance320,000[2]
Pole position
DriverToyota
Time1:46.106
Fastest lap
DriverFinlandKimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes
Time1:31.540 on lap 44
Podium
FirstMcLaren-Mercedes
SecondRenault
ThirdRenault
Lap leaders
Motor car race

The2005 Japanese Grand Prix (officially known as the2005 Formula One Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix) was aFormula One race which was held atSuzuka International Racing Course on 9 October 2005. It was the eighteenth and penultimate round of the2005 Formula One World Championship, the thirty-first running of theJapanese Grand Prix and nineteenth to be held at Suzuka.

Kimi Räikkönen won the race after starting from seventeenth, overtaking long-time race leaderGiancarlo Fisichella on the final lap to win a race that saw many overtaking manoeuvres. Fisichella’s teammateFernando Alonso completed the podium, having come through from sixteenth, including an overtake onMichael Schumacher around the outside of 130R corner.[3]

The race markedRalf Schumacher’s sixth and final pole position inFormula One.[4]

This was also Räikkönen's last win until the2007 Australian Grand Prix, his last win forMcLaren and McLaren's last win until the2007 Malaysian Grand Prix. This was the last time that a driver would win from 17th on the grid or lower untilMax Verstappen at the2024 São Paulo Grand Prix, a gap of 19 years.

Background

[edit]

Fernando Alonso was crownedworld champion at theprevious round in Brazil, but the battle for theConstructors’ Championship betweenMcLaren-Mercedes andRenault continued at the penultimate round, with McLaren leading by two points.[5]

At a press conference before the Japanese Grand Prix, Honda announced the acquisition of all shares in BAR.[6] Toyota decided to bring the renewedTF105B to the last two races of the season.

Antônio Pizzonia, who was already at the wheel of Williams in the three previous Grands Prix, was confirmed as a replacement for the injuredNick Heidfeld for the last two races of the season as well.[7] One option to replace Heidfeld's in the last two races was test driverNico Rosberg. The fact that two races are run on new tracks prevented this possibility.[8]

Practice

[edit]

Teams that finished fifth or lower in the2004 Constructors’ Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers participated on Friday, but did not compete in qualifying or the race. Of the six teams, only four had third drivers at Suzuka:McLaren (Pedro de la Rosa),Red Bull (Vitantonio Liuzzi),Toyota (Ricardo Zonta) andJordan (Sakon Yamamoto).

Pedro de la Rosa was fastest in first free practice, completing 23 laps and finished more than half a second ahead of Ricardo Zonta, who was more than a second faster than Michael Schumacher in FP2.[9][10] The weather took a turn for the worse on Saturday and had an effect on the amount of running in the final two practice sessions. Michael Schumacher ended up top of the timesheets in FP3, over two seconds quicker than Kimi Räikkönen, with Giancarlo Fisichella clocking the fastest time in final practice, edging outNarain Karthikeyan by 0.014s.[11][12]

Qualifying

[edit]

Qualifying was held on a wet track, with conditions later deteriorating, forcing some of the usual front runners to qualify near the back of the grid. Ralf Schumacher qualified on pole, edging outJenson Button by 0.035s. Fisichella was third, with home favouriteTakuma Sato in fifth. The end of qualifying saw the top finishers from the last race attempt to set a lap time. But by this point the conditions had worsened and Michael Schumacher, Fernando Alonso, Kimi Räikkönen andJuan Pablo Montoya all qualifying in fourteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth places respectively. Montoya did not set a lap time.Jarno Trulli andTiago Monteiro also failed to set a time.

Qualifying classification

[edit]
PosNoDriverConstructorLapGapStart
117GermanyRalf SchumacherToyota1:46.1061
23United KingdomJenson ButtonBAR-Honda1:46.141+0.0352
36ItalyGiancarlo FisichellaRenault1:46.276+0.1703
415AustriaChristian KlienRed Bull-Cosworth1:46.464+0.3584
54JapanTakuma SatoBAR-Honda1:46.841+0.7355
614United KingdomDavid CoulthardRed Bull-Cosworth1:46.892+0.7866
77AustraliaMark WebberWilliams-BMW1:47.233+1.1277
811CanadaJacques VilleneuveSauber-Petronas1:47.440+1.3348
92BrazilRubens BarrichelloFerrari1:48.248+2.1429
1012BrazilFelipe MassaSauber-Petronas1:48.278+2.17210
1119IndiaNarain KarthikeyanJordan-Toyota1:48.718+2.61211
128BrazilAntonio PizzoniaWilliams-BMW1:48.898+2.79212
1321NetherlandsChristijan AlbersMinardi-Cosworth1:50.843+4.73713
141GermanyMichael SchumacherFerrari1:52.676+6.57014
1520MonacoRobert DoornbosMinardi-Cosworth1:52.894+6.78815
165SpainFernando AlonsoRenault1:54.667+8.56116
179FinlandKimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes2:02.309+16.203171
1810ColombiaJuan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-MercedesNo time18
1916ItalyJarno TrulliToyotaNo time19
2018PortugalTiago MonteiroJordan-ToyotaNo time20
Source:[13]
Notes
  • ^1 – Kimi Räikkönen received a 10-place grid penalty for an engine change.

Race

[edit]

Ralf Schumacher maintained the lead off the start, with Giancarlo Fisichella jumped Jenson Button and Red Bull'sDavid Coulthard moved from sixth to eighth. But local hero Sato ran wide into the gravel at turn one and his right-front tyre was sideswiped by Rubens Barrichello. Both continued, but the left rear of Barrichello's Ferrari was punctured, leading to a pit stop at the end of lap one. Alonso made a flying start and was up to seventh by the time the field was completing the first lap. Raikkonen went straight on at the Casio Triangle chicane, before teammate Juan Pablo Montoya crashed heavily while coming onto the pit straight after trying to drive around theSauber ofJacques Villeneuve, but the Canadian squeezed him and onto the gravel, making the Colombian the first retirement of the afternoon and severely damaging McLaren's Constructors' Championship hopes. The accident resulted in the safety car being deployed.

On lap 10, Sato attempted to overtake Trulli into the chicane, but never looked like pulling the move off and the resulting contact forced Trulli into retirement. Ralf was the first of the leaders to pit, coming in for the first of three stops at the end of lap 13. This counted him out of the running for the race victory, with Fisichella assuming the lead.

On lap 19, Alonso pulled off one of the most audacious overtaking manoeuvres with a pass around the outside of Michael Schumacher at the infamous 130R corner. Raikkonen had a sniff of passing the seven-time world champion into the very next turn, the Casio Triangle, but had to settle in behind the Ferrari. Alonso stopped first of the trio, but because he pitted for fuel before Michael and Raikkonen, he came back out behind the duo, with Raikkonen passing Michael on the pit straight on lap 29. On lap 32, Michael went deep into the chicane, giving Alonso the opportunity to pass again, which he did down the pit straight and swept into turn one ahead of the German.

Raikkonen made his final stop on lap 45, handing the lead back to Fisichella. But as he emerged from the pits, Raikkonen was about to go on a thrilling charge. Alonso had closed up to the back of theWilliams-BMW ofMark Webber by the end of lap 49 and despite being forced onto the grass, the world champion was able to complete the overtake on the Australian and took third place. Raikkonen took 1.3 seconds out of Fisichella's lead on lap 49 and was now right on the rear-wing of the Italian. Raikkonen lined up the overtake going into the chicane, but Fisichella went defensive, leaving him vulnerable to an attack from Raikkonen, who was given all the motivation he needed to slingshot past the Renault into turn one to complete a brilliant recovery drive for his seventh win of the season.

Post-race

[edit]

Jacques Villeneuve had 25 seconds added to his race time for causing Juan Pablo Montoya to crash out on the first lap, while Takuma Sato was disqualified from the final classification for his lap 10 collision with Jarno Trulli which caused the Italian to retire from the race.

Race classification

[edit]
Pos.No.DriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
19FinlandKimi RäikkönenMcLaren-MercedesM531:29:02.2121710
26ItalyGiancarlo FisichellaRenaultM53+1.63338
35SpainFernando AlonsoRenaultM53+17.456166
47AustraliaMark WebberWilliams-BMWM53+22.27475
53United KingdomJenson ButtonBAR-HondaM53+29.50724
614United KingdomDavid CoulthardRed Bull-CosworthM53+31.60163
71GermanyMichael SchumacherFerrariB53+33.879142
817GermanyRalf SchumacherToyotaM53+49.54811
915AustriaChristian KlienRed Bull-CosworthM53+51.9254
1012BrazilFelipe MassaSauber-PetronasM53+57.50910
112BrazilRubens BarrichelloFerrariB53+1:00.6339
1211CanadaJacques VilleneuveSauber-PetronasM53+1:23.22128
1318PortugalTiago MonteiroJordan-ToyotaB52+1 Lap20
1420MonacoRobert DoornbosMinardi-CosworthB51+2 Laps15
1519IndiaNarain KarthikeyanJordan-ToyotaB51+2 Laps11
1621NetherlandsChristijan AlbersMinardi-CosworthB49+4 Laps13
Ret8BrazilAntônio PizzoniaWilliams-BMWM9Spun off12
Ret16ItalyJarno TrulliToyotaM9Collision damagePL1
Ret10ColombiaJuan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-MercedesM0Accident18
DSQ4JapanTakuma SatoBAR-HondaM52Caused collision with Trulli35
Sources:[14][15]
Notes
  • ^1 – Jarno Trulli started from the pit lane.
  • ^2 – Jacques Villeneuve was handed a 25-second time penalty for his collision with Juan Pablo Montoya.
  • ^3 – Takuma Sato finished thirteenth but was disqualified from the final classification for his collision with Jarno Trulli.

Championship standings after the race

[edit]

Drivers' Championship standings

Pos.DriverPoints
Unchanged1SpainFernando Alonso123
Unchanged2FinlandKimi Räikkönen104
13GermanyMichael Schumacher62
14ColombiaJuan Pablo Montoya60
Unchanged5ItalyGiancarlo Fisichella53
Source:[16]

Constructors' Championship standings

Pos.ConstructorPoints
11FranceRenault176
12United KingdomMcLaren-Mercedes174
Unchanged3ItalyFerrari100
Unchanged4JapanToyota82
Unchanged5United KingdomWilliams-BMW64
Source:[16]

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

References

[edit]
  1. ^Weather info for the 2005 Japanese Grand Prix at Weather Underground
  2. ^"Formula 1 Honda Japanese Grand Prix 2022 – Media Kit"(PDF).Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 5 October 2022. Retrieved5 October 2022.
  3. ^Raikkonen steals Japanese GP win retrieved from BBC Sport, 9 October 2005
  4. ^Ralf charges to Japanese GP pole retrieved from BBC Sport, 8 October 2005
  5. ^Alonso clinches Formula One title retrieved from BBC Sport, 25 September 2005
  6. ^"Honda Acquires 100% of BAR".Autosport.com. Retrieved14 December 2023.
  7. ^"Pizzonia confirmed for Japan and China".Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. Archived fromthe original on 25 October 2007. Retrieved14 December 2023.
  8. ^"Pizzonia to Race for the Rest of the Season".Autosport.com. Retrieved14 December 2023.
  9. ^PRACTICE 1 retrieved from Formula One, 7 October 2005
  10. ^PRACTICE 2 retrieved from Formula One, 7 October 2005
  11. ^PRACTICE 3 retrieved from Formula One, 8 October 2005
  12. ^PRACTICE 4 retrieved from Formula One, 8 October 2005
  13. ^"QUALIFYING".Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. Archived fromthe original on 24 August 2013. Retrieved27 December 2015.
  14. ^"2005 FORMULA 1 Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix - Race".Formula1.com. Formula1.com Limited. Archived fromthe original on 17 January 2015. Retrieved27 December 2015.
  15. ^"2005 Japanese Grand Prix - Race Results & History - GP Archive".GPArchive.com. 9 October 2005. Retrieved8 January 2023.
  16. ^ab"Japan 2005 - Championship • STATS F1".www.statsf1.com. Retrieved18 March 2019.


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34°50′35″N136°32′26″E / 34.84306°N 136.54056°E /34.84306; 136.54056

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