2004 Belgian Grand Prix Review
By Pablo Elizalde, Spain
Atlas F1 News Editor
In stark contrast to the previous race in Hungary, Formula One's return to Spa offered one of the most exciting and dramatic events of the season. In the end, Kimi Raikkonen and McLaren completed their revival as Michael Schumacher made more history by clinching his seventh world title. Atlas F1's Pablo Elizalde reviews the events and results from the Belgian Grand Prix
In stark contrast to the Hungarian Grand Prix, last Sunday's Belgian race showed that the sport works well when it races at the right places. If you compare the two races you can't help but wonder what were the Formula One chiefs thinking when they left Spa out of the calendar last year.
It is undeniable that money did and does most of the talking in Grand Prix racing, yet there is an important lesson to remember which was highlighted by Sunday's event: Formula One is about racing, and racing is about drivers, cars, and circuits. If one of those elements fails to deliver, then the show is usually reduced to the sort of boredom witnessed two weeks ago in Hungary.
Whatever the reasons, Spa hardly ever fails to deliver.
Six different cars in the lead, three Safety Car periods, several incidents, and, above all, a lot of racing revived Formula One so much that the Hungarian and the Belgian Grands Prix could as well had belonged to two different championships. The fact that Spa had a different winner was an added bonus, but in Michael Schumacher's era there would be a lot less whining if the races were at least half as exciting as Sunday's event, even if the German won everything there was to win.
Spa hopefully reminded the powers that be that they would be wise to take Formula One to places where the racing is guaranteed, instead of taking it where the bigger cheques are. In any case, Grand Prix racing was revitalised by the Spa race even if Schumacher clinched his seventh title at the first attempt.
The Ferrari driver's title had been such a foregone conclusion that there was little excitement when Schumacher finally grabbed his deserved reward. After five consecutive titles, perhaps even the World Champion himself is getting accustomed to the lack of real competition.
Or perhaps the Spa race represented such an anti-climax in Schumacher's nearly flawless season that the German could not hide his disappointment.
Schumacher was beaten for the second time in 14 Grands Prix, but unlike Monaco he finished the race and showed he didn't have enough pace to hold off Kimi Raikkonen's challenge. Instead of celebrating another win at his favourite circuit, Schumacher had to settle for second place, being overshadowed by his rival, who made the headlines after completing McLaren's revival almost in a miraculous way.
Few believed Ron Dennis when, back in May, he said that McLaren would win a race this season. At the time, his team had scored five points in five races and looked more concerned about getting their cars to the chequered flag than to getting them up to competitive speed. Over three months later, Dennis got revenge on all his critics with one of the most spectacular turnarounds in recent times.
There is no denying that McLaren should have got it right from the start, or that they have the resources to complete a new car in a few months, but there was no demerit to Sunday's achievement. Williams and BAR also have huge budgets and after every race they look less and less likely to win this season. You could argue that neither have Raikkonen in their line-ups, especially after the Finn put a metronomic performance to score his second Grand Prix win.
Despite a disastrous qualifying, Raikkonen stormed to the front with a couple of bold overtaking manoeuvres and never looked back. Despite the Safety Car periods which allowed Schumacher to get himself right behind, the Finn's lead never seemed to be in danger as he put on a cool performance to lift his team's spirits after a nightmare season.
Raikkonen was, together with Schumacher, probably the only driver who steered clear of trouble during the 44-lap event, and it paid off. Rubens Barrichello finished third, but his race was not without problems, the Brazilian spending a lot of time in the pits after being involved in the incident at the first corner. The result was not enough to delay Schumacher's title celebrations, but given the circumstances it was the best he could have hoped for.
In a race which resembled a destruction derby, the other big winners of the day were the Sauber team, with Felipe Massa coming home in a career best fourth place despite also spending a long time in the pits at the start of the race. Giancarlo Fisichella was fifth as Sauber virtually secured sixth place in the Constructors' Championship in yet another demonstration of efficiency from the Swiss squad.
Apart from Christian Klien's first Formula One points with Jaguar, the rest of the field had little reason to celebrate after the Belgian Grand Prix.
Renault promised much in qualifying and in the early stages of the race, with both Jarno Trulli and Fernando Alonso leading at some point. Reliability, however, was their Achilles Heel once again and the French squad left Belgium with nothing to show for. Luckily for them, BAR had a similar day and the battle for second place in the Constructors' Championship had a null round.
Unlike Renault, the Honda-powered team had a terrible qualifying day and although Jenson Button looked relatively strong in the race, he was never in contention for the top positions. In the end the Briton was one of too many men who fell victim to the problems with the exploding Michelin tyres, just like David Coulthard and Juan Pablo Montoya in his Williams.
Montoya was one of the men of the race with his spectacular pass over Schumacher at the Bus Stop chicane, and with his not so successful attempt to overtake Trulli at the same place. But it was all to no avail as he too was forced to retire when his right rear tyre exploded.
Montoya's teammate Antonio Pizzonia was having the race of his life until his car suffered a mechanical problem which left McLaren just five points behind in the Championship with four races to go, and with the momentum very much on the Woking team's side.
Everybody in the paddock agreed after qualifying: the session had been a lottery. As it turned out, the Renault team had the winning ticket, with both their drivers using the right tyres at the right time before the heavens opened to make it impossible for everyone else to fight for the top spot. Despite that, qualifying highlighted Bridgestone's superiority in the wet, in a session which left everyone wondering what their real pace would be on Sunday's race.
The Grid
1. Jarno Trulli
That Trulli got it right and the rest didn't was the main reason for his second pole position of the 2004 season. There should be no demerit to the Italian driver's performance, because other drivers went out at the right moment too, but this time Trulli was very lucky and even the Italian himself admitted so later. The Renault driver went out with Michelin's intermediates and he was fortunate enough to complete his flying lap when the track was wet but the rain was yet to come.
2. Michael Schumacher
That he managed to finish less than a tenth of a second behind Trulli's time says a lot about Schumacher's ability in the wet, and more so about the performance of the Bridgestone tyres. After being easily the quickest in pre-qualifying, Schumacher had to come out when the track was at its worst. He used extreme weather tyres and despite the heavy rain he still managed to beat Trulli's time in the first two splits. Accelerating out of the Bus Stop, however, proved too big a burden and the German missed out on pole.
3. Fernando Alonso
4. David Coulthard
5. Giancarlo Fisichella
6. Rubens Barrichello
7. Mark Webber
8. Felipe Massa
9. Olivier Panis
10. Kimi Raikkonen
11. Juan Pablo Montoya
12. Jenson Button
13. Christian Klien
14. Antonio Pizzonia
15. Takuma Sato
16. Nick Heidfeld
17. Gianmaria Bruni
18. Zsolt Baumgartner
19. Giorgio Pantano
20. Ricardo Zonta
The Race
Although the weather at the Ardennes is usually unpredictable, the start of the race took place without a real threat of rain despite a somewhat cloudy sky. As usual, the La Source corner provided plenty of entertainment once the red lights extinguished.
Despite the best of efforts from Schumacher, Alonso immediately jumped ahead of the Ferrari driver as both Trulli and the Spaniard arrived at the first corner on top. Despite the short run before La Source, Schumacher had time to also lose out to Coulthard, who moved into third ahead of the German. Those four where pretty much the only drivers to escape trouble at the start, while behind Schumacher chaos began.
The first incident took place between Barrichello and Webber after the Jaguar driver left his braking too late and ran into the back of the Ferrari. Webber lost his front wing which stayed in the middle of the track and everybody was going by. On the outside, meanwhile, Massa and Raikkonen also made contact, which prompted Button to hit the Sauber's rear end, the Briton also losing his front wing.
Webber lost a couple of places as he headed toward Eau Rouge without a front wing, not an ideal prospect. At the exit of the corner, Webber went too wide and Sato hit him, the BAR being sent into a spin that caused ever more chaos as the rest of the field tried to avoid him. Bruni braked hard to escape a collision, but the Italian driver was hit from behind by his teammate Baumgartner, sending him into a spin into the tyre barriers. The Minardi stopped on track and Pantano was unable to avoid him, crashing into it.
The Safety Car was deployed immediately and after the mayhem, Trulli led from Alonso, Coulthard, Schumacher, Raikkonen, Montoya, Fisichella and Pizzonia, while Barrichello, Button, Massa, Panis, Heidfeld and Baumgartner headed for the pits to repair their cars. Barrichello and Massa came off worst and both had to return on the following lap to replace their rear wings.
The race was restarted on lap five, and with Schumacher struggling to get his tyres up to optimal temperature, he was an easy prey for Raikkonen, who passed him quickly after the restart. Montoya too was faster than the German and, coming into the Bus Stop, the Williams driver pulled a sensational manoeuver first around the outside and then down the inside of the chicane to emerge ahead of the Ferrari.
Raikkonen continued with his charge by overtaking Coulthard on the following lap, the Finn setting his sights on Alonso, who was right behind Trulli and looked faster than the Italian. Trulli was the first of the top runners to make his first scheduled stop, on lap 10, rejoining the race in ninth place. That allowed Alonso to run in clean air, but the Spaniard's joy was short-lived after he spun twice due to an oil leak in his car. The second left him out of the race and gave Raikkonen the lead.
For the Finn's teammate, however, things were not going great as Coulthard became the first victim of a tyre problem. The Scot lost the rear left and had to drive slowly until he made it to the pits, dropping to the back of the field. Raikkonen made his first stop right after the Scot left, and the Finn was followed by Montoya, leaving Schumacher on top.
The Ferrari driver pitted on lap 16 and managed to jump in front of Montoya. Pizzonia, who was still to pit, led the race from Raikkonen and Button, also still to stop. Trulli, struggling with his car's handling, had dropped down to fourth place. Zonta had managed to climb to sixth and was followed by Massa and Montoya, who was stuck behind after the Brazilian had emerged ahead in a wheel to wheel battle at Eau Rouge.
That marked the beginning of Montoya's problems, as only minutes later the Colombian would try to pass Trulli on the same spot he had passed Schumacher. This time, however, the move didn't work out as Trulli closed the door and the pair touched. The Renault was launched into the air and into a spin, while Montoya could continue after losing a position to Pizzonia. Trulli rejoined the race in eighth place but his pace continued to be very poor.
Button was one of the last men to stop for fuel and tyres on lap 21, the Briton returning to the track in seventh place behind Fisichella and ahead of Zonta. Barrichello, who had moved up to fifth place, also came into the pits for fuel and dropped down to 10th place with half the race gone.
Up in front, Raikkonen led Schumacher by over 12 seconds and the German never looked capable of running significantly quicker than his McLaren rival. Pizzonia was running in third some 25 seconds behind, while Montoya had caught his teammate after his incident with Trulli but did not seem to be trying to overtake the Brazilian.
Raikkonen made his second and final stop on lap 29, returning behind Schumacher. The Finn's advantage, however, would vanish seconds later, when Button's rear right tyre exploded as he was lapping Baumgartner at the top of the hill. The BAR swerved to the right and hit the Minardi at some 300 km/h. Luckily both men escaped unhurt, but the Safety Car had to be deployed for the second time.
Schumacher, as well as most of the men who had not made their second stop yet, seized the opportunity and pitted while the SC was on track. The World Champion returned just behind the Finn, with Pizzonia still in third ahead of Montoya. The young Brazilian's dream of a podium, however, came on an abrupt end when he lost his gearbox when the Safety Car was still on track.
When the race was about to get under way again, Raikkonen slowed down as much as possible to make Schumacher struggle to get his tyres warmed up. The move seemed to work and the German was unable to get close to the Finn as the race was restarted. Despite running on Michelins, Montoya could not get close enough to Schumacher and the German managed to open a comfortable gap.
Barrichello followed in fourth, with Zonta continuing with his strong performance in fifth place, ahead of Massa, Fisichella, and Klien. Coulthard was still working his way into the point-scoring positions, first passing Panis for ninth and then setting his sights on Klien. In the end, and with seven laps remaining, the Scot moved into the top eight, not after passing Klien but after Montoya's rear right tyre also exploded.
The Colombian, the third victim of the same problem, limped back to the pits, but his Williams had sustained too much damage to continue and so Montoya's day was over. And so was Coulthard's just moments later, when the Scot crashed into the back of Klien's Jaguar as he tried to pass him at the exit of Eau Rouge. The McLaren driver lost his front wing and went off track, touching the barriers but managing to drive back to the pits.
For the third time, the Safety Car was sent out and the race looked set for a thrilling finish. The race was restarted with just three laps to go, and despite the best of his efforts Schumacher could do nothing to get within striking distance of Raikkonen.
There was enough time for more drama, however, as Zonta's race came to an end with an engine failure. Ironically, and tragically for the Brazilian after his strong showing, it was Toyota's first engine blow-up of the season.
Zonta's retirement left only nine cars on track, with Trulli the only man outside the points after being passed by Coulthard. The Scot also moved ahead of Panis and despite all the dramas of his race, he managed to score two points with his seventh place behind Klien, who despite the incident with the Scot continued in the race and scored his first points by finishing sixth.
Raikkonen's lead never looked in danger as Schumacher settled for title-winning second place, the Finn taking his first win since last year's Malaysian Grand Prix. "We have had a difficult season and when we got the 19B out we got some speed but we have still been struggling to finish. Now we have finally got what we deserved," said Raikkonen after the race. "Hopefully we can keep it up and challenge next year for the title."
Schumacher, meanwhile, celebrated his seventh title but had to concede Ferrari were not up to Raikkonen's speed this time. By the World Champion's standards, however, the day had been below par.
"I would have preferred to clinch the title with a win, but today we simply weren't strong enough at crucial moments," he said.
© 2007 autosport.com
. This service is provided under the Atlas F1 terms and conditions.
Please Contact Us for permission to republish this or any other material from Atlas F1. |
|