1997 Hungarian Grand Prix

The 1997 Hungarian Grand Prix (formally the XIII Marlboro Magyar Nagydij) was a Formula One motor race held at Hungaroring, Mogyoród, Pest, Hungary on 10 August 1997. The race, contested over 77 laps, was the eleventh race of the 1997 Formula One season and was won by Jacques Villeneuve, driving a Williams-Renault, with Damon Hill second in an Arrows-Yamaha and Johnny Herbert third in a Sauber-Petronas.

1997 Hungarian Grand Prix
Race 11 of 17 in the 1997 Formula One World Championship
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Race details
DateAugust 10, 1997
Official nameXIII Marlboro Magyar Nagydij
LocationHungaroring, Mogyoród, Pest, Hungary[1]
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course length3.968 km (2.466 miles)
Distance77 laps, 305.536 km (189,851 miles)
WeatherSunny, Dry Track, 27°C
Pole position
DriverFerrari
Time1:14.672
Fastest lap
DriverGermany Heinz-Harald FrentzenWilliams-Renault
Time1:18.372 on lap 25
Podium
FirstWilliams-Renault
SecondArrows-Yamaha
ThirdSauber-Petronas
Lap leaders

Defending World Champion Hill, who had been having a poor year in the uncompetitive and unreliable Arrows, had led comfortably for most of the race, after qualifying third behind championship challengers Michael Schumacher and Villeneuve. However, a hydraulic failure resulted in Villeneuve passing him on the final lap. It was to be the closest the Arrows team ever came to a Grand Prix victory and would turn out to be their final podium finish.

The win was Villeneuve's fifth of the season and moved him to within three points of Schumacher in the Drivers' Championship, the Ferrari driver having only managed fourth in the race. Shinji Nakano scored his last world championship points at this race.

Report edit

Background edit

Heading into the eleventh round of the season, Ferrari driver Michael Schumacher was leading the Drivers' Championship with 53 points; ahead of Williams driver Jacques Villeneuve on 43 points, and the two Benetton drivers, Jean Alesi and Gerhard Berger, on 22 and 20 points respectively. The Constructors' Championship was closer at the front, with Ferrari on 71 points leading Williams on 62 points.

Practice and qualifying edit

Hill, as defending world champion, until then had experienced a bad year in the back runner Arrows-Yamaha car and was 17th in overall championship standings. But arriving at Hungary, he set the fifth fastest time on Friday practice after just a single flying lap, after sitting for 55 minutes in the garage while his mechanics tore the gearbox off the car, looking for an electronic sensor problem. Later, Hill qualified in 3rd place behind Villeneuve, with Schumacher claiming pole position. Hill's teammate Pedro Diniz qualified in 19th position.[2]

Damon Hill led most of the race in the Arrows Yamaha

Race edit

Hill made a strong start from his third position, overtaking Villeneuve, and he then caught race leader Schumacher on lap 6. Schumacher had to use a spare car for the race and soon struggled with the pace all the race long. By then, both drivers had pulled away from the rest of the field. On lap 11, Hill overtook Schumacher, and would eventually be leading the race by over 35 seconds from Villeneuve.

The slow pace of the German driver permitted several drivers to close on him. Mika Hakkinen, one of the drivers chasing Schumacher, retired on lap 12, meanwhile the Ferrari driver would soon pitted for the first of three times on the race. The slow Schumacher permitted Hill to open a reasonable gap to the others behind and never was contested for the lead, specially after a slow pit stop for Jacques Villeneuve.

For most of the race, Coulthard chased Villeneuve closely for second place, being denied with another mechanical retiring. On the other hand, struggling Schumacher formed a trail behind him being chased for his brother Ralf, Shinji Nakano and teammate Eddie Irvine. Yellow lights turned on at Arrows when Pedro Diniz retired with mechanical failure.

On lap 74, with three laps left, the hydraulic pump failed on Hill's car, causing it to become stuck in third gear and have an intermittent throttle. As a result, Hill started losing time and was overtaken by Villeneuve part-way through the final lap. Villeneuve won the race with Hill finishing second, and Johnny Herbert took the third place on the podium. Eddie Irvine, who had passed Nakano for the final point, lost it on last lap for the Japanese driver when his car broke down. [3]

After the race, the problem, which denied Arrows, Bridgestone, and Yamaha their first ever victories (in the case of Arrows and Yamaha, their only ever victories), was diagnosed as a throttle linkage failure, caused by a broken washer worth 50 pence.[4]

Johnny Herbert scored his only podium of the season, while Shinji Nakano equalled his career-best finish of 6th. Gianni Morbidelli returned for Sauber in place of Norberto Fontana after missing three races through injury. Hill's second position also marked the best ever result for Yamaha engines in Formula One.

Classification edit

Qualifying edit

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeDifference
15 Michael SchumacherFerrari1:14.672
23 Jacques VilleneuveWilliams-Renault1:14.859+ 0.187
31 Damon HillArrows-Yamaha1:15.044+ 0.372
49 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes1:15.140+ 0.468
56 Eddie IrvineFerrari1:15.424+ 0.752
64 Heinz-Harald FrentzenWilliams-Renault1:15.520+ 0.848
78 Gerhard BergerBenetton-Renault1:15.699+ 1.027
810 David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:15.705+ 1.033
97 Jean AlesiBenetton-Renault1:15.905+ 1.233
1016 Johnny HerbertSauber-Petronas1:16.138+ 1.466
1122 Rubens BarrichelloStewart-Ford1:16.138+ 1.466
1214 Jarno TrulliProst-Mugen-Honda1:16.297+ 1.625
1312 Giancarlo FisichellaJordan-Peugeot1:16.300+ 1.628
1411 Ralf SchumacherJordan-Peugeot1:16.686+ 2.014
1517 Gianni MorbidelliSauber-Petronas1:16.766+ 2.094
1615 Shinji NakanoProst-Mugen-Honda1:16.784+ 2.112
1723 Jan MagnussenStewart-Ford1:16.858+ 2.186
1818 Jos VerstappenTyrrell-Ford1:17.095+ 2.423
192 Pedro DinizArrows-Yamaha1:17.118+ 2.446
2020 Ukyo KatayamaMinardi-Hart1:17.232+ 2.560
2119 Mika SaloTyrrell-Ford1:17.482+ 2.810
2221 Tarso MarquesMinardi-Hart1:18.020+ 3.348
107% time: 1:19.899
Source:[5]

Race edit

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
13 Jacques VilleneuveWilliams-Renault771:45:47.149210
21 Damon HillArrows-Yamaha77+9.07936
316 Johnny HerbertSauber-Petronas77+20.445104
45 Michael SchumacherFerrari77+30.50113
511 Ralf SchumacherJordan-Peugeot77+30.715142
615 Shinji NakanoProst-Mugen-Honda77+41.512161
714 Jarno TrulliProst-Mugen-Honda77+1:15.55212 
88 Gerhard BergerBenetton-Renault77+1:16.4097 
96 Eddie IrvineFerrari76Spun off5 
1020 Ukyo KatayamaMinardi-Hart76+1 lap20 
117 Jean AlesiBenetton-Renault76+1 lap9 
1221 Tarso MarquesMinardi-Hart75+2 laps22 
1319 Mika SaloTyrrell-Ford75+2 laps21 
Ret10 David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes65Electrical8 
Ret18 Jos VerstappenTyrrell-Ford61Gearbox18 
Ret2 Pedro DinizArrows-Yamaha53Electrical19 
Ret12 Giancarlo FisichellaJordan-Peugeot42Spun off13 
Ret4 Heinz-Harald FrentzenWilliams-Renault29Fuel leak6 
Ret22 Rubens BarrichelloStewart-Ford29Engine11 
Ret9 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes12Hydraulics4 
Ret17 Gianni MorbidelliSauber-Petronas7Engine15 
Ret23 Jan MagnussenStewart-Ford5Accident17 
Source:[6]

Championship standings after the race edit

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

References edit

  1. ^ "1997 Hungarian Grand Prix". Motor Sport. Retrieved 8 June 2022.
  2. ^ "Grand Prix Results: Hungarian GP, 1997". grandprix.com. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  3. ^ Medland, Chris (2012-08-20). "The Broken Arrow". ESPN. Retrieved 2015-11-19.
  4. ^ Hungarian GP factfile, ITV F1, 2008-07-30, archived from the original on 2008-08-06, retrieved 2015-11-19
  5. ^ F1, STATS. "Hungary 1997 - Qualifications • STATS F1". www.statsf1.com. Retrieved 13 October 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ "1997 Hungarian Grand Prix". formula1.com. Archived from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 24 December 2015.
  7. ^ a b "Hungary 1997 - Championship • STATS F1". www.statsf1.com. Retrieved 18 March 2019.
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