1979 Belgian Grand Prix - Spa FrancorchampsQualifyingFormula One's first visit back to Spa since 1970, when Pedro Rodriguez took a shock win around the old triangle-shaped track. 9 years on, however, albeit with a much shorter track (4.3 miles), another shock was in store: Gianfranco Brancatelli taking his and RAM's first pole position. Carlos Reutemann and Jean-Pierre Jabouille line up bevhind him, and will be hoping to actually finish the race for a change. Niki Lauda was on-hand to provide another shock, lining the Brabham up 4th, ahead of Calum McAllister, Gilles Villeneuve, Jody Scheckter and Rene Arnoux in 8th place. A dissapointing qualifying session for Ligier saw Laffite in 10th behind Geoff Lees, and Ed Kevin all the way down in 18th! The Lotii were in 12th and 13th, with a much-improved Shadow taking 15th and 16th on the grid, ahead of Piquet in the other Brabham. Beppe Gabbiani pulled off miracles to ahul the Jenkins up to 19th place, ahead of de Cesaris. Jan Lammmers had problems all day and could only manage 22nd, ahead of both Wolfs, and Andretti. McLaren and Merzario were left scratching their heads; Guilliame Gauthier set the second-slowest time while Andretti was 25th, and Vittorio Brambilla could not qualify on his F1 return; setting the 32nd fastest time. Surer put in a huge lap to haul the Rebaque to 27th, ahead of Fittipaldi, with Sedlak and Horford just scraping through into the race. Rossler, Brambilla, Stuck, Depault, Ongais, Rebaque, Gauthier and Jenkins all fail to qualify, albeit with improved pace from ATS.
Race - 40 Laps (Average Lap time: 2:15.000
A good start from Brancatelli saw him lead away from the line and into the first corner, with Lees making an even better start to end up 5th! Reutemann went around the outside of Brancatelli around La Source, with the extra turbo boost helping him to get ahead before Eau Rouge. A spin from Marc Surer saw him at the back of the grid after a promising qualifying. At the end of the lap, McAllister had jumped Jabouille into 3rd place, and the Ferraris were stuck behind Takagi in 8th. 1 lap later, Geoff Lees and Jabouille went through Eau Rouge/Radillion side by side! Brancatelli's defence of second place looke rather futile and had allowed Reutemann to extend his advantage to 3 seconds, but McAllister barged through down the inside into Les Combes demoting Brancatelli to 3rd. By the end of the lap, McAllister was just 1 second behind Reutemann and Niki Lauda had slipped down to 8th. Reutemann found McAllister right on his gearbox through Pouhon, but before he had a chance to defend his position, the Renault engine let go after just 3 laps, sidelining Reutemann for the 5th time in 6 races. Jean-Pierre Jabouille and Scheckter both found their way past Brancatelli over the course of lap 4, with the Italian finding himself in the clutches of Villeneuve. A move two laps later by Jabouille into the Bus Stop saw him take the lead, with Villeneuve passing Brancatelli on the inside into Rivage. Brancatelli went backwards, with Arnoux and Lees both going through as well. Across the line to start lap 9, the top 5 of Jabouille, Scheckter, McAllister, Villeneuve, Arnoux and Lees were all nose-to-tail into La Source, with Villeneuve diving down th inside of McAllister. The duo were side-by-side on the run down to Eau Rouge, but Villeneuves turbo advantage saw him streak ahead, and Arnoux followed him through. Lees demoted McAllister to 6th into Les Combes, providing more misery for the Spaniard. Scheckter went back past Arnoux into La Source a lap later. John Watson had worked his way up to 11th position, a great showing from the Englishman, with Laffite in 7th behind McAllister.
Arnoux pulled over to the side of track on lap 11, the Ferrari turbo having enough exiting La Source. More misery for Ferrari, when Villeneuve retired with brake failure at Stavelot, luckily Villeneuve managed to bring the car to a stop without crashing into the barriers. Brancatelli spun out from 7th but managed to rejoin in last place behind Emerson Fittipaldi. With both Ferraris and Reutemann out of the way and 13 laps gone, Jabouille lead from Scheckter, McAllister, Laffite, Harvey Jones, and Geoff Lees in 6th. A lap later, and Scheckter had a better run out of Radillion than Jabouille, and used the slipstream to take the lead into Les Combes, with Laffite up to 3rd after finding a way past McAllister on lap 13. John Watson was up to 7th and having a fine race in the Shadow, but his defensive driving didn't hold a resurgent Ed Kevin off for long, with the Irishman taking 7th place. By lap 16, Kevin had caught and passed Lees for 5th. Jabouille's race lasted all of 16 laps, the second Renault throwing in the towel approaching Pouhon, while Renault mechanics were seen literaly jumping up and down and throwing spanners in frustration in the pit lane. Laffite, meanwhile, was uanble to pass Scheckter dispite being faster, but the Frenchman finally found a way through into Les Combes. However, Scheckter didn't give up easily, the two going side by side through the next 2 corners, with Laffite finally getting through into Rivage. On Lap 22 Kevin passed Harvey Jones for 4th, albeit 20 seconds off of Laffite's lead. Laffite was unable to pull away, and 3 laps later, on lap 25, Scheckter got through into Les Combes, with McAlister poised to take the spoils if the two collided. However, Scheckter's lead was short-lived, with Laffite re-taking the lead at the same place a lap later, despite Scheckter's best efforts.
By lap 32, however, Scheckter was in the lead again, with McAllister still 3rd, 3 seconds back, with Kevin 15 seconds back from the lead. John Watson found himself in 7th place after de Cesaris's retirement, holding off Jan Lammers on a storming drive from 22nd on the grid, and Michael Andretti. Two laps later, and Scheckter was just about holding Laffite off for the lead, but down the Kemmel Straight, smoke emerged from under the rear wing, the Williams slowing until coming to a stop between Rivage and turn 11. Heartbreak for Scheckter, who desperatly needed to score to take advantage of both Ferraris retiring. Scheckter kicked the guardrail in frustration. Laffite found himself in the lead, but on lap 35, he was unable to keep McAllister behind into the Fagnes chicane. McAllister now led! The Williams mechanics didn't celebrate too soon however, even with 4 laps left. Laffite proved them back by taking the lead again into Les Combes a lap later, but on lap 37, just 3 laps from home to take his second victory of 1979, fate twisted again: Laffite pulled over, his engine on fire! Heartbreak for the Frenchman, a win snatched away by a twist of fate so close from the end, and a chance to lead the championship vanished too. He was seen with his head in his hands sitting by a tree, contemplating what might have been.
McAllister now found himself in the lead with two laps to go, and despite Ed Kevin going on a charge, nothing could take the win away. Calum McAllister crossed the line to win the Belgian Grand Prix and to take his first win, 11 seconds ahead of Ed Kevin, with Nelson Piquet taking a superb podium for Brabham after Laudas retirement early on. Harvey Jones took 4th place and 5 points, with Jan Lammers taking a great 5th. John Watson pulled off the best drive in years to take 6th in his Shadow, fending off Andretti till the very end. Takagi took the last point in 8th, ahead of Brancatelli, after an amazing comebeack drive to finish 9th, albeit 57 seconds behind the leader. Beppe Gabbiani and Marc Surer notched up a 12th and 13th place respectively, essiential in the extremely close battle being fought out in the bottom 5 of the Constructors championship.
Pictures (Ignore '1990 Belgian GP' at the top left of some of the screens. That is the name of the track.)
The grid

Brancatelli leads into La Source

Surer spins

Into Eau Rouge

Top 3 at the end of lap 1

Looking back to 3rd place

Lees and Jabouille side-by side through Eau Rouge...

...and through Radillion

Lauda in the garage

Jabouille takes the lead

Villeneuve passes Brancatelli

The top 5 at the start of lap 9

Villeneuve passes McAllister...

...and Arnoux follows him through

Arnoux retires with engine failure

Villeenuve retires with brake failure half a lap later

Watson on the defensive from Takagi

Scheckter passes Jabouille for the lead

Kevin passes Lees

Jabouille retires

Laffite dives down the inside...

...and makes it stick

Kevin passes Harvey Jones

Scheckter retires

McAllister goes into the lead, only to be repassed a lap later

Laffite retires

McAllister takes an emotional first victory
Championship TablesDriver's Championship-After 6 rounds1: Callum McAllister - 22
2: Ed Kevin - 21
3: Rene Arnoux - 19
4: Jody Scheckter - 18
= Jacques Laffite - 18
6: Gilles Villeneuve - 17
7: Jan Lammers - 15
8: Harvey Jones - 12
9: Nelson Piquet - 11
10: Gianfranco Brancatelli - 9
= Hiroshi Takagi - 9
12: Carlos Reutemann - 8
= Alan Jones - 8
= Mario Andretti - 8
15: James Hunt - 6
= Alain Prost - 6
17: Jean-Pierre Jabouille - 5
18: Andrea de Cesaris - 4
= Geoff Lees - 4
= Guilliame Gauthier - 4
21: Niki Lauda - 3
= John Watson - 3
23: Roberto Horford - 2
24: Kieran Sutherland - 1
Constructor's Championship-After 6 rounds1: Williams-Ford - 40
2: Ligier-Ford - 39
3: Ferrari - 36
4: Lotus-Ford - 20
5: Ram-Ferrari -19
6: Renault - 13
= Tyrrell-Ford - 13
= McLaren-Ford - 13
= Brabham-Ford - 13
10: Alfa Romeo - 8
11: Wolf-Ford - 6
12: RAM-Ford -5
= Arrows-Ford - 5
14: Shadow-Ford - 3