2004 European Grand Prix Review
By Pablo Elizalde, Spain
Atlas F1 News Editor
Last weekend's European Grand Prix was business as usual for Michael Schumacher who, following the disappointment of Monaco one week earlier, was back in dominant form. Atlas F1's Pablo Elizalde reviews the events and results from the seventh round of the 2004 season
Following the most exciting race of the year in Monaco just seven days earlier, the Formula One fraternity was hopeful, if not confident, that Jarno Trulli's win at the principality wold mark the start of a comeback from Ferrari's rivals after five consecutive wins in the first fives races of the season.
Schumacher, however, had other plans.
The World Champion was pretty mad when he left the Monaco race due to one of the silliest accidents he has been involved in. Mortals have to guess that that's what happens when you have the potential to win all Grands Prix in a season, or when you are still hungry for victories after 75 of them or after six world titles.
So Schumacher had the chance to get revenge only a week later, in his home race, and on a track where everyone was expecting the Ferrari to be the class of the field following the Monaco hiccup. And so the German grabbed the opportunity with both hands and stormed to his sixth victory in seven races, making it very clear that this year is better not to make him angry.
Schumacher has made it very clear that he was even hungrier for victory following the Monaco fiasco, and that reflected in the way the sextuple World Champion flew to his fifth pole position of the season and in how he demolished the opposition in the Nurburgring race. The Ferrari star's only concern could have been the start of the race, but not even then he was troubled by his rivals, who saw him disappear into the distance at a rate of over two seconds per lap in the initial part of the Grand Prix.
Once he had built a big enough gap, Schumacher settled into a normal rhythm and let the laps go by as his rivals and teammate fought each other for the "best of the rest" place, which luckily for the fans provided some of the on-track action missing at the top of the field.
So in the end it was business as usual for Schumacher, who no matter how you look at it, seems to be already the champion elect. History, statistics, and even the calendar favour Schumacher, who could reach ten victories before the Formula One circus goes on vacation at the end of July. With back-to-back races in Canada and USA, and then France and England, chances are the German will have the Championship nearly wrapped up for the summer.
Ferrari's perfect race was completed by Rubens Barrichello's drive to second place, which consolidated the Brazilian's second place in the Championship despite struggling to match the pace of his Championship leading teammate at the moment. In reality Barrichello was lucky to finish second, because Schumacher's main challenger for most of the race looked to be BAR's Takuma Sato.
The Japanese driver managed to emerge out of Jenson Button's shadow to be BAR's top man for most of the Grand Prix weekend. Sato first eclipsed his British teammate in qualifying and then continued with his strong showing in the race, only to go out with an engine failure which came following a clash with Barrichello which had already dented all his chances of a podium finish.
So it was Button who, once more, delivered the goods for BAR, who again looked like Ferrari's closest rivals in terms of pace. Reliability-wise, however, there is still a long way to go for the Brackley-based outfit, who left Germany with a bigger gap to Renault as the French squad saw both their cars making it to the end of the race.
The French squad lacked the pace showed in Monaco, but both Jarno Trulli and Fernando Alonso drove well enough to bring their cars home in fourth and fifth respectively. Renault's reliability was rewarded with the consolidation of second place in the Constructors' Championship 15 points ahead of BAR and 25 ahead of the Williams team, who were lucky to score one point on a track where just one year earlier they scored a one-two finish.
The British squad seemed to take another step backwards in terms of performance, and their life was not made any easier by yet another incident involving their drivers. As if they hadn't had enough incidents with their rivals this season, Ralf Schumacher and Juan Pablo Montoya crashed into each other at the start, putting the German out of the race and leaving the Colombian at the back of the field.
"Obviously it's totally stupid for the team," said BMW motorsport director Mario Theissen after the race, "but it was just a normal racing accident. It can happen. It's history."
Even with the incident and Williams' poor weekend, BMW must have left their first home race happy that, at least, they were not in Mercedes-Benz situation after another disastrous weekend for their partners McLaren. The good news was that the team showed better pace than in past races, with Kimi Raikkonen even leading the race briefly when Schumacher pitted.
The bad news, however, was the their reliability record continued to be dismal, with both Raikkonen and David Coulthard going out of the race before the halfway point with blow engines. In the Scot's case it was the second time that his Mercedes unit had failed during the weekend, while it was also Raikkonen's fifth failure in seven races.
It surely must be painful for the Woking-based squad to look at the standings, having scored five points - 101 less than what Ferrari have managed. Ron Dennis tried to see the positive side of the situation claiming "the reliability problems we are experiencing at the moment are linked with our efforts to increase the team's competitiveness as fast as possible". The fighting talk is there, but they will need results soon to back it up.
The slippery surface of the Nurburgring saw several drivers in trouble since the start of the Grand Prix weekend. Complaints about the lack of grip and the poor balance of the car were the most common for most of the three days. In the end, there was only one driver who had no reasons whatsoever to complain.
The Grid
1. Michael Schumacher
2. Takuma Sato
3. Jarno Trulli
4. Kimi Raikkonen
5. Jenson Button
6. Fernando Alonso
7. Rubens Barrichello
8. Juan Pablo Montoya
9. Ralf Schumacher
10. Olivier Panis
11. Cristiano da Matta
12. Christian Klien
13. Nick Heidfeld
14. Mark Webber
15. Giorgio Pantano
16. Felipe Massa
17. Zsolt Baumgartner
18. David Coulthard
19. Giancarlo Fisichella
20. Gianmaria Bruni
The Race
With the fast starting Sato and Trulli right behind him, Schumacher's main concern was to keep them behind arriving at the first corner, a task that did not look easy especially considering the Renault driver had gained positions at the start in almost all races thanks to the French squad's efficient starting system.
As predicted, Trulli made a good start, but so did Schumacher, who despite Trulli's pressure arrived at the first corner in the lead, with Sato regaining second place under braking, with Trulli in third and Raikkonen right behind in fourth.
Further back it was disaster for Williams as Montoya blocked his wheels to avoid hitting the back of Barrichello's Ferrari. The Colombian's car hit the right rear wheel of Ralf's car, which was sent into a spin right in front of Montoya, who was unable to avoid it. The accident ended Ralf's race, not before the German crashed into the Toyota of da Matta, who was also out of the Grand Prix at the first corner. Montoya, meanwhile had to pit to change his front wing, rejoining the race at the back of the field.
"When I made it to the first corner Rubens Barrichello, who was in front of me, braked quite early and both Ralf and I locked the tyres," was Montoya's take of the incident. "Then Ralf went for the outside and I stayed behind Rubens but when I was going around the corner Panis dived up the inside hitting my front tyre which threw me straight into Ralf."
Sato and Trulli, meanwhile, battled it out for second place on the first corners of the opening lap. At turn four, however, Sato ran wide and Trulli dived down the inside. The Japanese driver closed the door and their cars banged wheels, both running wide into the dirt while Raikkonen passed. In the confusion of the incident, Trulli engaged the pitlane speed limiter and dropped further down the order.
The incident benefitted Schumacher, who at the end of the first lap led the slower Raikkonen from Alonso, Sato, Barrichello, Button, Trulli and Panis. With Raikkonen slowing down his rivals and with Schumacher lapping nearly three seconds quicker than the Finn, the gap became huge within minutes: by lap five, the Ferrari driver was almost 12 seconds ahead of Raikkonen.
The McLaren driver was under pressure from Alonso, who led a group of cars which was following right behind, although the Spaniard could do nothing to pass and Schumacher continued to open the gap. Luckily for his rivals, the German was running with very little fuel and pitted on lap eight, when he was over 17 seconds ahead of Raikkonen. Schumacher returned to the race in sixth place, but would soon move up the order as the rest of his rivals pitted.
Raikkonen came into the pits on the following lap, only to retire with a broken engine as the familiar plumb of smoke erupted from the back of his McLaren, much to the dismay and frustration of the Finn. When those on three stops had completed their first pitstops, Barrichello, on a two-stopper, emerged in the lead, followed by Schumacher, Sato, Coulthard - also yet to pit - and Button. Alonso, meanwhile, had dropped behind Trulli after going wide on lap 14.
Barrichello made his first pitstop on lap 15, rejoining the race in third place behind Schumacher and Sato, the BAR driver some 15 seconds behind the World Champion. Sato's teammate Button, meanwhile, was stuck behind Coulthard, who like Klien, Webber and Fisichella - who completed the top eight - was still to make his first stop. Button finally passed Coulthard with a gutsy move around the outside of turn one on lap 19.
Sauber's Fisichella, charging back from the bottom of the field, was the last man to stop, on lap 24, dropping from fifth to eighth. The Italian would gain a position only minutes later, when the Mercedes engine of Coulthard's car also blew up to complete McLaren's nightmare weekend.
The second round of pitstops for those on a three-stop strategy didn't change the order much. Schumacher continued in the lead ahead of Barrichello, who was still to stop, with Sato in third followed by Button, Trulli and Alonso. Webber and Fisichella completed the top eight, while Montoya was out of the points in ninth after climbing back from the bottom.
Barrichello finally pitted for the second and final time on lap 38, when he was over 10 second behind Schumacher and some five ahead of Sato. The Brazilian driver returned to the race in third place right in front of Button, who was still to pit again.
With the order unchanged at the top, Schumacher pitted for the last time with 16 laps to go, the German suffering a scare when rejoining the track, as Webber was just arriving at the first corner. Their cars almost touched and Schumacher was visibly not thrilled. The World Champion was followed by Sato and Trulli, the Japanese driver rejoining the race right behind Barrichello, whose two-stop strategy seemed to work out nicely. The Ferrari driver, however, was clearly slower than Sato, who quickly caught the Brazilian.
On lap 46, Sato went for it all and, from very far back, he dived down the inside of Barrichello at the end of the straight. The Ferrari driver was turning for the corner when he saw the BAR in his mirrors and steered left to avoid him. That, however, did not work, and the cars touched, Barrichello losing a bargeboard and Sato his front wing.
"I am sorry to say it but I think it was a bit too amateur from Sato to do that because he wasn't in a position to actually try and overtake," said the Brazilian, to which the Japanese responded: "I had to laugh when I heard him say that. What he said was totally untrue. He never looked at the replay. I was totally in control."
Barrichello continued in the race, while Sato was forced to pit, dropping down to fifth. His race would last just seconds though, as his Honda engine would let go right at the start of the straight.
With the Ferraris in total control of the race, the final laps went by quietly, Schumacher cruising to an easy victory ahead of Barrichello, who secured the Italian squad's fourth one-two finish of the season on a day where Ferrari were mourning the death of Fiat's chairman Umberto Agnelli.
Button came home in third place for his fifth podium of the season, while the Renaults of Trulli and Alonso had to settle for fourth and fifth. Sixth place went to Fisichella, who had driven a superb race from the back of the field to finish ahead of Webber and Montoya, who was lucky to get a point after his troubled weekend.
The result, however, was little consolation for Williams, who left Germany 70 points behind Ferrari in the standings. For the BMW-powered team, and for most of Ferrari's rivals as well, it looked as if things could only get better.
Lap 1: At the start Michael Schumacher gets away well and Jarno Trulli is with him, seemingly leaving Takuma Sato behind, but the Japanese driver makes a huge lunge under braking and emerges in second place. As the cars head down the hill Sato and Trulli kick up the dust and as a result Kimi Raikkonen, fourth at the first corner, finds himself in second place with Fernando Alonso and Sato chasing. At the first corner Juan Pablo Montoya locks up and moves to the left to avoid running into Rubens Barrichello. As a result he tips his Williams team-mate into a spin and the German loses his front wing. He slides off the track into the path of Cristiano da Matta's Toyota and the two cars make contact and both retire. At the end of the lap Montoya has to stop for repairs. This means that behind Sato is Barrichello with Jenson Button and Jarno Trulli; Olivier Panis, David Coulthard and Nick Heidfeld giving chase. At the back Felipe Massa is left on the grid and Mark Webber is very slow away. At the end of the lap Schumacher has a lead of 2.4secs but Raikkonen is under pressure from Alonso.
Lap 2: Schumacher increases his lead to 3.9secs while behind Raikkonen there is a train of cars.
Lap 3: Michael Schumacher is in the perfect position and increases his lead to 6.3secs as his rivals are frustrated behind Raikkonen. Towards the back of the field Massa passes Zsolt Baumgartner to move to 16th place.
Lap 5: Schumacher has continued to benefit from Raikkonen's lack of speed and his lead is up to 11.5secs. Down at the back Massa passes Gianmaria Bruni for 15th
Lap 7: The status quo remains with Schumacher pulling away to increase his lead to a massive 17secs. The order behind is unchanged.
Lap 8: Schumacher goes into the pits, indicating that he was running very light in qualifying. He rejoins in seventh place. Raikkonen leads with Alonso and the rest right behind him. At the back Montoya passes Baumgartner for 17th.
Lap 9: Raikkonen finally pits and Alonso takes the lead. Also pitting is Trulli, who has been stuck in the line behind Raikkonen.
Lap 10: Alonso stops and so Sato goes into the lead with Barrichello up to second and Button third. Further back Panis heads also for the pits. Raikkonen goes out with a blown engine. At the same time Coulthard runs over the chicane. At the back Montoya overtakes Bruni for 15th.
Lap 11: Sato stays in the lead with Barrichello chasing him but Michael Schumacher moves to third as Button pits. This puts Coulthard up to fourth with Christian Klien fifth and Button rejoining in sixth.
Lap 12: Sato goes into pit lane and so Barrichello leads from Schumacher. Sato rejoins the race third. In the midfield ninth-placed Giorgio Pantano stops and falls down the order to 15th and at the back the Minardis begin their stops.
Lap 13: Button passes Klien for fourth position.
Lap 14: Alonso makes a mistake and looses a lot of time. Nick Heidfeld, who has risen to seventh place stops and falls back down the order.
Lap 15: Barrichello finally stops and drops back to third place behind Schumacher and Sato. Coulthard is yet to stop and is holding up Button. Klien is still going in sixth with Webber behind him and they are being chased by Giancarlo Fisichella.
Lap 16: Klien pits and so Webber moves to sixth place.
Lap 18: Webber stops and further back in the field Massa also stops for the first time.
Lap 19: Button goes around the outside of Coulthard at the first corner to grab fourth place.
Lap 20: Coulthard finally pits and falls back into the midfield fight.
Lap 22: Montoya has worked his way up to 10th by staying out after his first lap stop. Behind him Heidfeld passes Klien for 11th.
Lap 23: Panis has his second pit stop and falls from eighth to 10th. When he rejoins he almost collides with Schumacher, the leader having to go very wide to avoid an impact.
Lap 24: Fisichella finally pits, indicating that he is on a two-stop strategy. He falls from fifth to eighth but comes out behind Coulthard.
Lap 25: The situation is unchanged at the front but Button comes into the pits for his second stop. He falls behind the two Renaults. Further back Pantano has his second stop and emerges 14th. Behind him Montoya passes Panis for 14th.
Lap 26: Sato stops for the second time and Barrichello moves back to second. Coulthard, who is running seventh goes out with a mechanical problem.
Lap 27: Montoya passes Massa for 11th position.
Lap 28: Schumacher and Trulli both pit. Michael is so far ahead now that he rejoins in the lead, still six seconds ahead of Barrichello. Trulli drops from fourth to sixth. Montoya continues his progress by passing Klien for 10th.
Lap 29: Massa overtakes Klien to move up to 11th place.
Lap 30: Alonso and Heidfeld head for the pits and so Button moves to fourth again. Alonso rejoins in sixth position while Heidfeld's stop has put him back from ninth to 12th.
Lap 36: The order at the front has not changed at all but two-stopper Klien now pits and drops from 12th to 14th.
Lap 38: Barrichello stops for the last time but he is behind Sato, although the Japanese driver will need to stop again. Rubens is being chased by Button. In the midfield Webber has his second stop but loses only one place to Montoya although the Williams will soon have to stop again.
Lap 40: Michael Schumacher continues to control the race, 17 seconds ahead of Sato. The two men both have a stop to make. Barrichello has a full tank of fuel and is third but is able to hold off Button. Further back in fifth and sixth are the Renaults of Trulli and Alonso, both running on a three-stop strategy. Fisichella is on a two-stop strategy and is seventh. Montoya is in eighth but must stop again. Further back Massa (on a two-stop strategy) comes into pit lane and drops from 10th to 12th.
Lap 41: Montoya stops and falls behind Webber.
Lap 42: Alonso comes in for his last stop and falls behind Fisichella. Further back Panis stops for the third time and drops from 11th to 13th.
Lap 43: Pantano stops for the third time but speeds in pit lane and will later have to return to the pits for a drive-through penalty.
Lap 44: Schumacher, Sato, Trulli and Fisichella all stop. As Sato rejoins Barrichello passes him. As Michael comes out of the pits he nearly collides with Webber and has to go wide to avoid the Australian.
Lap 45: Button has his final pit stop and stays in fourth place.
Lap 46: Sato tries to pass Barrichello for second place at the first corner and the two cars collide. Sato loses part of his front wing and has to pit. The Japanese drops to fifth behind Trulli.
Lap 48: Sato goes out with an engine failure. The order is now set with Schumacher comfortably ahead of Barrichello. Button is third and closing but unlikely to catch Rubens. Trulli is fourth and Alonso fifth while Fisichella is sixth and under attack from Webber. A lap down Montoya is eighth while Massa and Heidfeld dispute ninth all the way to the finish.
Lap 60: Michael Schumacher wins a dominant victory with Ferrari getting a 1-2 with Barrichello staying ahead of Button, who backs off on the last lap.
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