Round 15 - Luxembourg Grand Prix - 27 September, 1998Qualifying
Race![Image](https://i.imgur.com/1wARAen.png)
Drivers' standings
1. Greg Moore - 69
2. Michael Schumacher - 59
3. Giancarlo Fisichella - 53
4. Dario Franchitti - 42
5. Jacques Villeneuve - 35
6. Mika Hakkinen - 30
7. Heinz-Harald Frentzen - 29
8. Jos Verstappen - 21
9. Alessandro Zanardi - 10
10. Tom Kristensen - 9
11. Eddie Irvine - 9
12. Jean Alesi - 7
13. Alexander Wurz - 7
14. Rubens Barrichello - 3
15. Damon Hill - 2
16. Pedro Lamy - 2
17. Olivier Panis - 1
18. Pedro de la Rosa - 1
19. Mika Salo - 1
Teams' standings
1. Ferrari - 112
2. McLaren-Mercedes - 111
3. Williams-Mecachrome - 64
4. Benetton-Playlife - 51
5. Jordan-Peugeot - 19
6. Sauber-Petronas - 16
7. Prost-Mugen Honda - 7
8. Stewart-Ford - 5
9. Tyrrell-Peugeot - 2
10. Lola-Ford - 1
11. Arrows - 1
12. Dome-Mugen Honda - 1
F1 Racing wrote:Moore scores maiden F1 title!
Despite his retirement from the Luxembourg Grand Prix, Greg Moore has secured the 1998 Formula 1 title as Michael Schumacher could not finish first or second to take the title to the final round.
Moore needed Schumacher to finish third or lower - and Schumacher's third means that even if he wins at Suzuka with Moore retiring, Moore would win the title on countback if the two were tied on points.
Schumacher attempted a two-stop strategy to climb from his fourth-place starting berth, but got caught in traffic after his first pitstop and allowed race winner Dario Franchitti and Heinz-Harald Frentzen to build enough of a gap to secure first and second.
Williams has all but secured third in the standings with a double-points finish, while Jordan opened out the gap to Sauber in the battle for fifth overall.
Hill to call time at the end of the season
Damon Hill has elected to bring his F1 career to an end after the 1998 season finale at Suzuka, having become disillusioned with the championship.
Hill has endured a miserable year with Tyrrell, and the prolonged period of poor reliability has resulted in him scoring just two points all year.
Fittingly, the 1996 world champion will bow out at the venue in which he memorably clinched the title two years ago.