2002 Great
Britian Formula 1 Grand Prix Race Report
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2001
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Great Britain Formula One Grand
Prix
7th July, 2002. Silverstone.
Round 10.
2001
1/ Mike Hakkinen (McLaren);
2/ Michael Schumacher (Ferrari);
3/ Rubens Barrichello (Ferrari);
4/ J.B.Montoya (Williams);
5/ K.Raikkonen (Sauber);
6/ N.Heidfeld (Sauber)
Mika Hakkinen finally gets the car
he deserves from McLaren-Mercedes and dominated the Silverstone. He was
never headed after overtaking pole positioned Ferrari rival Michael Schumacher.
Michael Schumacher extends his lead in the Driver's Championship to 37 points
clear of his nearest rival David Coulthard, who retired early this race after a
collision.
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Last year's winner: David Coulthard (McLaren) - 2000 race report here
Silverstone, the home of British
motor racing, played host to the first ever World Championship Grand Prix event
in 1950. Since then the 3.194 mile / 5.141 km track has been revised on a number
of occasions but still incorporates features such as the famous sweeping
right-hander of Copse. It was at Silverstone in 1985 that Keke Rosberg lapped
the track at an average speed of 160mph / 257kph, making Silverstone the fastest
circuit on the calendar.
Situated in the Northamptonshire countryside, some 70 miles / 112 km north of
London, Silverstone is a medium grip circuit that is quite hard on tyres.
Round 11 of
the FIA Formula One World Championship, the British Grand Prix, takes
place at Silverstone and the West McLaren Mercedes team arrives at its
home race occupying second positions in both the Drivers` and
Constructors` World Championships. Since the Mobil 1 French Grand Prix, the West McLaren Mercedes team has been testing at the Monza circuit in Italy, with David Coulthard, Mika Hakkinen and Alex Wurz at the wheel. Alex set the fastest time of the day on Wednesday, with David topping Thursday`s time sheets. McLaren has an impressive British Grand Prix record, having won the race on eleven occasions. Since its Formula One debut in 1966, the team has secured points finishes in all 34 British events entered, 22 of which were podiums. McLaren took its first victory in 1973 with Peter Revson at the wheel. Recent years have also seen success for the West McLaren Mercedes team, with David securing victory in 1999 and 2000. At last year`s race Mika completed a successful weekend for the West McLaren Mercedes team when he took second position and also set the fastest lap of the race. After alternating between Aintree, Brands Hatch and Silverstone for a number of years, the British Grand Prix has resided at the Silverstone venue, which has hosted the event 34 times, since 1987. |
Beckett Racing & Motorsports |
Lap of the
Silverstone circuit - West McLaren Mercedes driver David Coulthard You start a lap of Silverstone with Copse Corner. This is very challenging as its extremely fast and also its off-camber at the exit. Just as you manage to catch your breath you are into Maggots where you have to be extra careful as this is where you drive past the pit exit. You then go into one of the best complex of corners we have at any Grand Prix track. Becketts is an extremely fast right left right flick on to the Hanger straight, which is taken flat out in sixth gear. Then its Stowe, which is a long right hander and quite challenging. However because of the late nature of the apex you are braking all the way into the corner, flicking down the gears. The worst thing you can get here is understeer as it will affect your lap time a lot in that particular corner. You then roll out into a very straight forward exit down into Club where under braking you develop a bit of oversteer. Then there is a straightforward acceleration from second to sixth gear out of Club Corner which has been made easier by traction control. Then you go down the straight to Abbey Corner, which is taken in third gear and has a very fast entry and is a good place for overtaking. There is a short exit before you flick right and go up and over the hill into Bridge Corner which although taken flat and people talk about it as being interesting is not that big a deal for the drivers - if your car has a lot of front end grip you take it flat and if you don`t, you lose next to nothing. There is then quite a quick entry into Luffield in fourth gear. It`s quite fun to drift the car out there and it tends to dance around with the back end. You come out of Luffield and then you are on the brakes straight away coming into Luffield 2 and then Woodcote. This section is very low speed as it`s designed to be one corner and two apexes so it`s quite tricky and then you have completed a flying lap of Silverstone. |
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2001 Great Britain Formula One Grand Prix |
Lap |
Race Report |
Start | All drivers got away well. |
1st Corner | David Coulthard collides with Jano Trulli, sending Trulli off. Coulthard rejoins the race in next to last position. Villeneuve connects with his BAR team mate Olivier Panis who is forced off into retirement in the gravel. |
Lap 1 | 1/ M.Schumacher 2/ Hakkinen 3/ Montoya 4/ Barrichello 5/ R.Schumacher 6/ Raikkonen 7/ Heidfeld 8/ Frentzen 9/ Alesi 10/ Villeneuve 11/ Verstappen 12/ De La Rosa 13/ Button 14/ Bernoldi 15/ Irvine 16/ Alonso 17/ Fisichella |
Lap 4 | Coulthard retires with rear suspension failure. Coulthard is running second in the Drivers Championship, and with leader M.Schumacher still running, his chances of catching him for the title are now much less. |
Lap 4 | M.Hakkinen fastest lap 1:25.861 |
Lap 5 | Hakkinen overtakes M.Schumacher for the lead. Michael was out of shape out of Copse’s corner, and with the superior McLaren set up, Mika was able to take advantage - and Mika immediately began to slip sway in the lead. |
Lap 10 | Hakkinen fastest lap 1:24.072 Mika is now 11.6 seconds clear of M.Schumacher |
Lap 13 | Hakkinen 17 seconds clear of M.Schumacher |
Lap 15 | Hakkinen fastest lap
1:23.964 Hakkinen 20 seconds clear of M.Schumacher |
Lap 16 | 1/ Hakkinen 2/ M.Schumacher 3/ Montoya 4/ Barrichello 5/ R.Schumacher 6/ Raikkonen |
Lap 16 | Montoya overtakes M.Schumacher for second place. |
Lap 18 | Hakkinen 24 seconds clear of Montoya |
Lap 18 | Raikkonen pits 9.7 seconds |
Lap 19 | Race leader Hakkinen pits, rejoins in second place, less than a second behind Montoya |
Lap 20 | The two lead cars, Williams and McLaren record the same top speed of 303 Km/H |
Lap 23 | Verstappen pit stop 9.0 seconds Button pit stop 8.5 seconds |
Lap 23 | 1/ Montoya 2/ Hakkinen 3/
M.Schumacher 4/ Barrichello 5/ R.Schumacher 6/ Frentzen 7/ Villeneuve Bernoldi pit stop 8.7 seconds |
Lap 25 | Frentzen pit stop 9.2 seconds from 6th place, rejoins in 9th place. |
Lap 25 | Hakkinen sets fastest lap and new lap record 1:23.728 (average speed of 138 MPH) |
Lap 26 | 1/ Hakkinen; 7.7 seconds ahead of: 2/ Montoya; 3/ M.Schumacher; 4/ Barrichello; 5/ R.Schumacher 6/ Villeneuve |
Lap 26 | Hakkinen new lap record 1:23.728 |
Lap 27 | Hakkinen new lap record 1:23.514 |
Lap 27 | Irvine pit stop 7.5 seconds Alesi pit stop 11.7 seconds (Irvine overtakes Alesi during the stop) |
Lap 28 | Race leader Montoya pit stop |
Lap 33 | 1/ Hakkinen 2/ M.Schumacher 3/ Barrichello 4/ Raikkonen 5/ Heidfeld 6/ Frentzen ... |
Lap 33 | Hakkinen laps up to 9th position Villeneuve pits from 8th place 11.4 seconds rejoins in 11th place |
Lap 34 | Hakkinen new lap record 1:23.405 |
Lap 36 | R.Schumacher pit stop from 4th
position, 12.5 seconds (fuel hose gets stuck) De La Rosa pits from 9th place |
Lap 37 | Frentzen and Heidfeld swap positions a few times as they duel with late braking and slip streaming. |
Lap 37 | Montoya right behind Barrichello |
Lap 38 | R.Schumacher retires with mechanical troubles. |
Lap 39 | Race leader Hakkinen pit stop,
rejoins in the lead. M.Schumacher pit stop 8.2 seconds, rejoins behind Montoya for fourth position. |
Lap 39 | 1/ Hakkinen; 2/ Barrichello; 3/ Montoya; 4/ M.Schumacher; 5/ Raikkonen; 6/ Heidfeld; 7/ Frentzen; 8/ Verstappen; 9/ Villeneuve; 10/ Irvine; 11/ Alesi; 12/ Button; 13/ Bernoldi; 14/ Aaalonso; 15/ De La Rosa; 16/ Fisichella |
Lap 40 | Button pit stop 9.0 seconds Montoya pit stop 10.9 seconds (fuel hose stuck - same thing happened to his team mate R.Schumacher) Montoya on 2 stop strategy |
Lap 43 | Heidfeld pit stop 8.2 seconds
from 5th place Frentzen pit stop from 6th place - they rejoin in the same order they came in. |
Lap 43 | Barrichello pit stop 8.5 seconds, rejoins ahead of Montoya in 3rd place. |
Lap 44 | Alonso loses a wheel - luckily in front of the pit lane, so he calls in for a replacement. |
Lap 44 | 1/ Hakkinen; 2/ M.Schumacher; 3/ Barrichello; 4/ Montoya; 5/ Raikonnen; 6/ Heidfeld; 7/ Frentzen; 8/ Villeneuve; 9/ Irvine; 10/ Verstappen; 11/ Alesi 12/ De La Rosa; 13/ Fisichella; 14/ Bernoldi; 15/ Button; Alonso |
Lap 44 | Fisichella pit stop 7.5 seconds |
Lap 46 | Hakkinen 22 seconds ahead of
M.Schumacher Irvine pits 7.5 seconds Hakkinen laps De La Rosa for second time |
Lap 58 | 1/ Hakkinen; 2/ M.Schumacher; 3/ Barrichello; 4/ Montoya; 5/ Raikonnen; 6/ Heidfeld; 7/ Frentzen; 8/ Villeneuve; 9/ Irvine; 10/ Verstappen; 11/ Alesi 12/ De La Rosa; 13/ Fisichella; 14/ Bernoldi; 15/ Button; Alonso |
Lap 59 | Hakkinen 33 seconds ahead of M.Schumacher |
Lap 62 RACE END
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1/ Hakkinen (McLaren); 2/ M.Schumacher (Ferrari); 3/ Barrichello (Ferrari); 4/ Montoya (Williams); 5/ Raikonnen (Sauber); 6/ Heidfeld (Sauber); 7/ Frentzen; 8/ Villeneuve; 9/ Irvine; 10/ Verstappen; 11/ Alesi 12/ De La Rosa; 13/ Fisichella; 14/ Bernoldi; 15/ Button; Alonso |
Comments from Mika Hakkinen
after winning the British GP
Q: You`ve never won here before, indeed, you haven`t won for over a year. How
does it feel?
Mika HAKKINEN: It feels really good. Obviously after all the trouble that`s been
going on this year, it feels good to win it obviously, and particularly here at
Silverstone because I drive for an English team and in front of an English
crowd. We made a great show.
Q: You seemed to be driving right to the final section of the final lap. Is that
because you were thinking of the final lap of the Spanish Grand Prix earlier
this year where you pulled off?
MH: No. What I was planning to do, I was really wanting to push really hard to
make a big gap so that when I came down I would park the car and have a cup of
tea and then come back.
Q: Mika, you seemed relax from the start of the weekend; are we now going to see
more wins from you?
MH: Hopefully there will be more wins before the end of the season. Before this
Grand Prix we had a very good test, we were able to get a good balance in the
car and the tyres we were using here were suiting a lot my driving style so I
was able to attack the corners and I was able to have a car which didn`t
understeer so much and gave me the opportunity to chose the line in the corners
that I wanted to, so probably that can explain my speed here a little bit.
Otherwise everything was at it has always been.
Q: Mika, how special is this win here at Silverstone?
MH: It`s probably difficult to understand 100 per cent how important it is for
me, because first of all, I always wanted to win in Canada and I did that not
last year but the year before. I always wanted to win that because it`s a very
special Grand Prix, as is the Silverstone Grand Prix and it happened today, so
it`s something incredible, something that`s missing from my black book. I won
quite a few times in Formula Three, but never in Formula One.
Q: Why did you slow so much at the end?
MH: I just wanted to see the crowd, just to slow down, I wasn`t in any rush.
There was a big gap to these guys, so I decided to take it easy.
Q: You weren`t thinking of Spain?
MH: No, no, not at all, no. Of course I was thinking about that too! The last
lap I was sure that something was going to happen, dear God don`t. But it was
OK.
Q: What`s your version of the overtaking manoeuvre with Michael?
MH: Simply I was surprised what happened to Michael to be honest because he was
reasonably quick in the first sector and not so quick on the last sector and the
mid sector so I was surprised what happened to him. I don`t know if it was a
mistake or his car was difficult or something but it gave me the opportunity to
overtake him and I got beside him and we continued like that in turn two and
turn three. I even gave him a little bit of room in case he wanted to race for a
couple of corners but he lifted so he doesn`t a reason to race with me at the
moment I think.
Q: How important was it for you to get past him?
MH: It was very important. I tell you what. If I had been stuck behind him for
longer it would have been very difficult to get the distance and the gap that I
needed because of my two stops.
Q: But in the end, that strategy was right.
MH: Absolutely. It was quicker to go two stops and to stop reasonably early and
it worked fine. I was really surprised what these guys did, to be honest.
Q: Mika, this was a good Grand Prix for you; do you feel you are getting closer
to Ferrari?
MH: I really cannot answer that question, no. We`ll see what happens at
Hockenheim. It`s a different Grand Prix. Let`s see what happens.
Q: Mika, during this hard period, were you worried that you would never win
again?
MH: I suppose it`s a fear for every Grand Prix driver who has won a Grand Prix
that you think that you`re never going to win again. That`s why I kept pushing
very hard to win again because you know it`s a great feeling. I feel that way,
the car that we have, the team that we have, we have all the great possibilities
to do that. So I`m confident. In these six Grands Prix I`m sure there will be a
McLaren winning.
GREAT BRITAIN QUALIFYING SESSION | ||||
Position | Driver | Team | Time | Comment |
1/ - POLE 1st row |
M.Schumacher | Ferrari | 1'20.447 | |
2/ 1st row | Mika Hakkinen | McLaren/Mercedes | 1'20.529 | 0.082 |
3/ 2nd row | David Coulthard | McLaren/Mercedes | 1'20.927 | 0.480 |
4/ 2nd row | Jarno Trulli | Jordan/Honda | 1'20.930 | 0.483 |
5/ 3rd row | H-H.Frentzen | Jordan/Honda | 1'21.217 | 0.770 |
6/ 3rd row | R.Barrichello | Ferrari | 1'21.715 | 1.268 |
7/ 4th row | Kimi Raikkonen | Sauber/Petronas | 1'22.023 | 1.576 |
8/ 4th row | J.P.Montoya | Williams/BMW | 1'22.219 | 1.772 |
9/ 5th row | Nick Heidfeld | Sauber/Petronas | 1'22.223 | 1.776 |
10/ 5th row | Ralf Schumacher | Williams/BMW | 1'22.283 | 1.836 |
11/ 6th row | Olivier Panis | BAR/Honda | 1'22.316 | 1.869 |
12/ 6th row | J.Villeneuve | BAR/Honda | 1'22.916 | 2.469 |
13/ 7th row | Pedro de la Rosa | Jaguar/Cosworth | 1'23.273 | 2.826 |
14/ 7th row | Jean Alesi | Prost/Acer | 1'23.392 | 2.945 |
15/ 8th row | Eddie Irvine | Jaguar/Cosworth | 1'23.439 | 2.992 |
16/ 8th row | Luciano Burti | Prost/Acer | 1'23.735 | 3.288 |
17/ 9th row | Jos Verstappen | Arrows/Asiatech | 1'24.067 | 3.620 |
18/ 9th row | Jenson Button | Benetton/Renault | 1'24.123 | 3.676 |
19/ 10th row | G.Fisichella | Benetton/Renault | 1'24.275 | 3.828 |
20/ 10th row | Enrique Bernoldi | Arrows/Asiatech | 1'24.606 | 4.159 |
21/ 11th row | Fernando Alonso | Minardi/European | 1'24.792 | 4.345 |
22/ 11th row |
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