Round 16: Adelaide, Australia
Saturday, 29 November 2014THE GRIDCode: Select all
1 – 8 Y. Ide Super Aguri 1'30.191
2 – 36 M. Apicella Dome 1'30.240
3 – 10 Þ. Einarsson Viking 1'30.279
4 – 27 L. Badoer Forti 1'31.042
5 – 18 F. Barbazza Monteverdi 1'31.116
6 – 26 P. Alliot SPAM 1'31.208
7 – 1 C. Dagnall F1RM 1'31.290
8 – 7 S. Nakano Super Aguri 1'31.295
9 – 11 P. Chaves SAC 1'31.389
10 – 15 H. Noda Leyton House 1'31.509
11 – 16 B. Giacomelli Leyton House 1'31.542
12 – 33 G. Foitek Spyker 1'31.681
13 – 12 P. McCarthy SAC 1'31.805
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14 – 32 J. Villeneuve Stefan 1'31.941
15 – 20 E. Bertaggia EuroBrun 1'32.185
16 – 28 A. Montermini Forti 1'32.481
17 – 9 J. Magnussen Viking 1'32.523
18 – 34 O. Beretta Spyker 1'32.743
19 – 19 C. Langes EuroBrun 1'32.824
20 – 2 J-D. Délétraz F1RM 1'32.871
21 – 30 M. Asmer Simtek 1'33.454
22 – 3 G. Tarquini AGS 1'33.464
23 – 21 J. Winkelhock ATS Rial 1'34.022
24 – 5 R. Firman Toleman 1'34.185
25 – 35 E. Naspetti Dome 1'34.403
26 – 29 P. Belmondo Simtek 1'34.440
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---------------- DID NOT QUALIFY ----------------
DNQ – 4 P-H. Raphanel AGS 1'34.535
DNQ – 6 A. McNish Toleman 1'34.571
DNQ – 22 V. Weidler ATS Rial 1'34.574
DNQ – 25 S. Sarrazin SPAM 1'35.035
DNQ – 17 O. Grouillard Monteverdi 1'35.330
DNQ – 37 P. Kralev David Price 1'35.385
DNQ – 38 C. Hurni David Price 1'35.726
DNQ – 23 A. Yoong Minardi 1'35.934
DNQ – 24 E. Tuero Minardi 1'36.487
DNQ – 39 F. Fauzy GTM 1'36.533
DNQ – 31 K. Nakajima Stefan 1'36.816
DNQ – 40 R. Teixeira GTM 1'37.455
One final qualifying session, and that means one final chance for a pole before the well-earned winter downtime – or summer, as they'd call it here. The spring rain fell on Adelaide before the Friday session, easing enough to have a dry line starting to form – before there was more rain that caught out several of the bigger names and gave some of those rear-midfield teams, and some of the backmarkers, a chance to shine.
Not caught out in any way was Yuji Ide, who thundered to pole just at the right time, and accompanying him, with a truly superb lap that on any other day would have taken that pole, was his old team-mate, Marco Apicella. There always was speed in that Dome... if only there had been two capable drivers to take advantage of it. Þorvaldur Einarsson kept watch from the second row, the third of the drivers to shatter the 1'31 barrier. Luca Badoer was the first not to do so, but fourth was still a highly respectable effort. On row three, though, came two monumental performances; Fabrizio Barbazza for Monteverdi, and Philippe Alliot for SPAM, both utterly out-performing their cars, although the rain certainly helped. Row four was occupied by Chris Dagnall, saying goodbye to a trying season, and Shinji Nakano, slightly overshadowed by his charging team-mate. Pedro Chaves took ninth for SAC ahead of the two Leyton Houses, unable to use all their power on the slippery surface of this tight street circuit. Gregor Foitek, in 12th, was another one of those who benefited from the weather, hauling his Spyker to a grid slot it hardly deserves to be, and beat Perry McCarthy for good measure.
Starting the second half of the grid, incredibly, was Jacques Villeneuve in the reticent Stefan; that, again, is what unpredictable weather can do, especially seeing who ended up behind him. Enrico Bertaggia couldn't break the 1'32 barrier, and neither could two very large scalps – Andrea Montermini, for Forti, and Jan Magnussen, for Viking – all the way down in 16th and 17th. Neither driver thought to put in a banker lap before the clouds descended again and paid the price for it. Olivier Beretta couldn't repeat his team-mate's magic, but at least beat Claudio Langes – hey, look, two EuroBruns in the race! That's novel. Behind him, in 20th, was Jean-Denis Délétraz; what he was doing was going out for his hot lap at exactly the wrong time. Down in the 1'33s, Marko Asmer had an equally difficult afternoon, as did Gabriele Tarquini, and qualifying by the skin of their teeth in the 1'34 bracket were Joachim Winkelhock, Ralph Firman, Emanuele Naspetti – in a car that was good enough for the front row, remember – and Paul Belmondo.
There really is a horribly familiar look about the DNQs, many of which contain candidates for both Deadbeat Team-Mate Of The Year and Reject Of The Year. Pierre-Henri Raphanel, Stéphane Sarrazin and Olivier Grouillard would certainly all qualify for the first of those awards, Sarrazin getting a particular beating this time because his non-qualification now means it is impossible for SPAM to escape pre-qualifying next year, short of some of the larger teams going to the wall. Allan McNish and Volker Weidler, despite not exactly shining and also missing the cut here, can probably consider themselves to have escaped DBTMOTY nomination, the Toleman car having been a bit of a shocker for most of the year, and the Audi diesel having catapulted ATS Rial out of next year's pre-qualifying lottery, and it's been about a half-and-half effort points-wise. Meanwhile, in the lower half of the DNQs, who would possibly be surprised here? Maybe to find that the David Prices were first and second out of the "bottom seven", beating both Minardis, both GTMs and Kazuki Nakajima... but at this end of the timesheets, it's all for pride, or maybe avoiding the dishonour of the wooden spoon. Today, it's Ricardo Teixeira's turn. But at least he managed to get into one race this year... Christophe Hurni has gone through the whole season without ever doing so, and that includes the Grand Reversal where he had a Viking at his disposal.
CLASSIFICATIONCode: Select all
1 – 15 H. Noda Leyton House 81 2h 07'48.426
2 – 26 P. Alliot SPAM 81 2h 07'51.640
3 – 9 J. Magnussen Viking 81 2h 07'59.085
4 – 7 S. Nakano Super Aguri 80 + 1 lap (DNF, engine)
5 – 36 M. Apicella Dome 80 + 1 lap (DNF, electrical)
6 – 10 Þ. Einarsson Viking 80 + 1 lap (DNF, electrical)
7 – 1 C. Dagnall F1RM 80 + 1 lap
8 – 20 E. Bertaggia EuroBrun 80 + 1 lap
9 – 33 G. Foitek Spyker 80 + 1 lap
10 – 18 F. Barbazza Monteverdi 80 + 1 lap
11 – 11 P. Chaves SAC 80 + 1 lap
12 – 30 M. Asmer Simtek 80 + 1 lap
13 – 12 P. McCarthy SAC 80 + 1 lap
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14 – 3 G. Tarquini AGS 80 + 1 lap
15 – 27 L. Badoer Forti 79 + 2 laps (DNF, electrical)
16 – 2 J-D. Délétraz F1RM 79 + 2 laps
17 – 19 C. Langes EuroBrun 79 + 2 laps
18 – 34 O. Beretta Spyker 79 + 2 laps
19 – 29 P. Belmondo Simtek 79 + 2 laps
20 – 28 A. Montermini Forti 79 + 2 laps
21 – 21 J. Winkelhock ATS Rial 79 + 2 laps
22 – 16 B. Giacomelli Leyton House 73 + 8 laps (DNF, turbo)
23 – 35 E. Naspetti Dome 58 crash
24 – 32 J. Villeneuve Stefan 54 transmission
25 – 5 R. Firman Toleman 42 suspension
26 – 8 Y. Ide Super Aguri 7 transmission
So, a very moist season finale, even if it wasn't quite in the same league as previous F1 visits to Adelaide in 1989 and 1991, and with considerably less carnage.
As it always seems to be, the results do not tell the story of the race. Hideki Noda, as it would turn out, took his second win of the season... but it should, by all rights, have been a different Japanese victory. Shinji Nakano had made a lightning start from eighth on the grid, to hack his way through to second behind Yuji Ide at the end of the first lap; when Ide's transmission broke after only seven laps, leaving the lead Super Aguri driver as frustrated as he has been on seven occasions this year now, Nakano inherited the lead. He kept it for the whole race, leaving the rest of the field for dead. But it all had to come undone, on the last lap, as the tell-tale blast of a cloud of blue smoke showed that his engine had screamed enough. Nakano beat his fists on the steering wheel as Noda rocketed past the stricken Super Aguri to save Japanese honour for the day – but even that could so easily have changed. Philippe Alliot, having had an unusually strong qualifying, threw everything he could at the Leyton House, ending up just over three seconds adrift of an amazing first win for SPAM – they've had a torrid season, though not quite as much as 2011-12 when the old Prost team was genuinely hopeless. The boost for the team was amazing, the result lifting Alliot six places in the Drivers' Championship at the last gasp, and SPAM up to eleventh in the Constructors' table – though that would not see them out of the pre-qualifying horrors for 2015. And also on the podium was Jan Magnussen, who had fluked it. He had been out-driven by both cars ahead of him, Shinji Nakano, and several others – all of whom perished in the final stages. Bruno Giacomelli had been the first of those, with eight laps to go his turbo had blown, so he remained the last classified finisher. Luca Badoer was plagued by electrical gremlins and was classified two laps down, and the same problem struck Marco Apicella and Þorvaldur Einarsson, who'd been eyeing up the podium themselves. All three put the blame squarely at the wet track, though some suggested the meat pie monster may have been nibbling on the wires... anyway, Nakano was finally classified fourth, little compensation for losing the win, Apicella was fifth which jumped Dome ahead of Simtek in the final table, and the Thundergod's sixth position meant he cracked 200 points for the season.
Genuinely a lap down were Chris Dagnall, unable to find enough grip on the wet track with his underpowered engine threatening to spit him off the track several times during the race, Enrico Bertaggia took eighth to celebrate a return to the grid after five successive DNQs, Gregor Foitek kept his car on the island and all the pieces of the fragile chassis intact to take ninth place, two points and
finally score for Spyker at the final attempt for the season, and Fabrizio Barbazza trundled in a forlorn tenth after being mugged at the start – his race never really recovered. Pedro Chaves, Marko Asmer and Perry McCarthy all failed to score, the SAC and Simtek teams having a bizarrely uncompetitive weekend, and Gabriele Tarquini was left to round out the once-lapped cars. Luca Badoer, as mentioned, was the first to be two laps down with his electrical problems, but Jean-Denis Délétraz had no such excuse – F1RM's setup may have been a bit dodgy, but he should not have been
this slow. Claudio Langes, Olivier Beretta and Paul Belmondo were all also down in the dumps, but none quite so much as Andrea Montermini – the only Forti to finish, but two laps down and 20th? That he was as much help to his team-mate as Délétraz was for Daggers counts just as much against him, and as Badoer was sidelined at the end with electrical gremlins, thus losing them the season-long battle with F1RM for four-pot turbo supremacy, that gets
Forti a
Reject Of The Race award, only one race after Luca Badoer took it outright. There are things to be thought of at the Brazilian team over the winter, which will be summer in parts of Brazil and no particular season in the rest of it.
As for the rest: Joachim Winkelhock was the last of the finishers, two laps down, although Bruno Giacomelli was still classified eight laps behind with his turbo problems. Yuji Ide had been the first retirement, his transmission giving up the ghost early, which meant the glory should have been handed to Nakano, but ultimately wasn't; Super Aguri's SA14 chassis escaped the ROTR award only because the team were secure in third place for the championship. Ralph Firman was going well until his suspension failed after 42 laps, Jacques Villeneuve's chronically unreliable Stefan once again could not get to the finish, on one of its few attempts to do so, and Emanuele Naspetti was the only driver to crash out of the race on the wet track.
So it's all over for another season. Awards will be handed out, and the nominations will follow shortly. Until then, the Series Management leaves F1RMGP fans in the capable(ish) hands of the journalists who will undoubtedly get the Silly Season going all the way through the winter.
Before we go, though...
Honours are settled in the final tables in favour of:- Hideki Noda finishes ahead of Bruno Giacomelli in the inter-Leyton House battle.
- Chris Dagnall and F1RM ahead of Luca Badoer and Forti; it was predicted that one team would absolutely crush the other, but in the end, both teams were level going into this race, and it's come down to a difference of six points.
- Dome jumped Simtek for seventh at the last gasp, despite Marko Asmer's brilliant win earlier in the season.
- Philippe Alliot jumped from 19th to 13th in one race, and SPAM moved up to 11th in the Constructors' table... but they'll be pre-qualifying next year. Diesel rivals ATS Rial won't.
- Gregor Foitek and Spyker scored at the last possible moment, to get 15 teams on the scoreboard! Formula One can't match that...
DRIVERS' CHAMPIONSHIP: FINAL STANDINGSCode: Select all
1 – * 10 Þ. Einarsson Viking 207 - CHAMPION
2 – 9 J. Magnussen Viking 170
3 – 15 H. Noda Leyton House 154
4 – 16 B. Giacomelli Leyton House 129
5 – 8 Y. Ide Super Aguri 114
6 – 1 C. Dagnall F1RM 109
7 – 27 L. Badoer Forti 105
8 – 11 P. Chaves SAC 88
9 – 36 M. Apicella Dome 83
10 – 7 S. Nakano Super Aguri 75
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11 – 3 G. Tarquini AGS 52
12 – 30 M. Asmer Simtek 48
13 – 26 P. Alliot SPAM 38
14 – 29 P. Belmondo Simtek 35
15 – 2 J-D. Délétraz F1RM 31
16 – 28 A. Montermini Forti 29
17 – 21 J. Winkelhock ATS Rial 28
18 – 22 V. Weidler ATS Rial 24
19 – 12 P. McCarthy SAC 22
20 – 20 E. Bertaggia EuroBrun 20
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21 – 18 F. Barbazza Monteverdi 15
22 – 19 C. Langes EuroBrun 11
23 – 5 R. Firman Toleman 9
24 – 4 P-H. Raphanel AGS 8
25 – 6 A. McNish Toleman 4 (4 × DNQ)
26 – 35 E. Naspetti Dome 4 (7 × DNQ)
27 – 33 G. Foitek Spyker 2 (4 × DNQ)
28 – 25 S. Sarrazin SPAM 2 (11 × DNQ)
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NC – 34 O. Beretta Spyker 0 (4 × DNQ)
NC – 32 J. Villeneuve Stefan 0 (9 × DNQ)
NC – 24 E. Tuero Minardi 0 (11 × DNQ, 11th × 1)
NC – 23 A. Yoong Minardi 0 (11 × DNQ, 12th × 1)
NC – 17 O. Grouillard Monteverdi 0 (13 × DNQ, 13th × 1)
NC – 39 F. Fauzy GTM 0 (13 × DNQ, 14th × 1)
NC – 31 K. Nakajima Stefan 0 (13 × DNQ, 20th × 1)
NC – 37 P. Kralev David Price 0 (15 × DNQ, DNF × 1)
NC – 40 R. Teixeira GTM 0 (15 × DNQ, DNF × 1)
NC – 38 C. Hurni David Price 0 (16 × DNQ)
DRIVERS' CHAMPIONSHIP: STATISTICSMost wins: Þorvaldur Einarsson (5)
Most podiums: Þorvaldur Einarsson and Hideki Noda (7)
Number of winners: 8 (the top seven, and Marko Asmer)
Number of podium scorers: 14 (the top thirteen, and Jean-Denis Délétraz)
Highest ranked driver without a win: Pedro Chaves (8th, one 2nd)
Lowest ranked driver with a win: Marko Asmer (12th)
Highest ranked driver without a podium: Paul Belmondo (14th)
Lowest ranked driver with a podium: Jean-Denis Délétraz (15th)
Number of drivers with at least one DNQ: 24
Highest ranked driver with a DNQ: Marco Apicella (9th)
Lowest ranked driver with no DNQs: Fabrizio Barbazza (21st)
Most DNQs for a driver on the scoreboard: Stéphane Sarrazin (11)
Most DNQs: Christophe Hurni, obviously... (16)
Highest ranked driver who is still a reject: Volker Weidler (18th, one 5th so far)
Lowest ranked driver who is unrejectified: Allan McNish (25th, unrejectified Britain 2013)
CONSTRUCTORS' CHAMPIONSHIP: FINAL STANDINGSCode: Select all
1 – * Viking 377 - CHAMPIONS
2 – Leyton House 283
3 – Super Aguri 189
4 - F1RM 140
5 - Forti 134
6 – SAC 110
7 – Dome 87
8 – Simtek 83
9 – AGS 60
10 – ATS Rial 52
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11 – SPAM 40
12 – EuroBrun 31
13 – Monteverdi 15
14 – Toleman 13
15 – Spyker 2
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NC – Minardi 0 (22 × DNQ, 11th × 1)
NC – Stefan 0 (22 × DNQ, 12th × 1)
NC – GTM 0 (28 × DNQ)
NC – David Price 0 (31 × DNQ)
CONSTRUCTORS' CHAMPIONSHIP: STATISTICSMost wins: Viking (8)
Most podiums: Viking (13)
Number of winning teams: 6 (the top five, and Simtek)
Highest ranked team without a win: SAC (6th, one 2nd)
Lowest ranked team with a win: Simtek (8th)
Highest ranked team without a podium: ATS Rial (10th, two 5ths)
Lowest ranked team with a podium: SPAM (11th, one 2nd)
Number of teams with at least one DNQ: 14 (all but the top five)
Highest ranked team with a DNQ: SAC (6th)
Lowest ranked team with no DNQs: Forti (5th)
Most DNQs for a team on the scoreboard: EuroBrun (17)
Most DNQs: David Price (31)
UNREJECTIFIED DRIVERS: THE COMPLETE COLLECTORS' EDITION2014 drivers:Yuji Ide (Monaco 2011)
Jean-Denis Délétraz (Canada 2011)
Fabrizio Barbazza (Brazil 2012)
Marco Apicella (Brazil 2012)
Jan Magnussen (San Marino 2012)
Chris Dagnall (San Marino 2012)
Paul Belmondo (Monaco 2012)
Þorvaldur Einarsson (Mexico 2012)
Gabriele Tarquini (Italy 2012)
Pedro Chaves (Japan 2012)
Luca Badoer (USA 2013)
Philippe Alliot (Monaco 2013)
Ralph Firman (Monaco 2013)
Andrea Montermini (Canada 2013)
Perry McCarthy (Britain 2013)
Allan McNish (Britain 2013)
Claudio Langes (Hungary 2013)
Hideki Noda (Mexico 2014)
Shinji Nakano (Mexico 2014)
Bruno Giacomelli (San Marino 2014)
Enrico Bertaggia (Andorra 2014)
Joachim Winkelhock (France 2014)
Marko Asmer (Hungary 2014)
Past drivers:Gilles Villeneuve (entered 2011; USA 2011)
Michael Andretti (entered 2011-2012; USA 2011)
James Hunt (entered 2011; USA 2011)
Scott Speed (entered 2011-2013; USA 2011)
HWNSNBM (entered 2011-2012; Brazil 2011)
Slim Borgudd (entered 2011; Brazil 2011)
Taki Inoue (entered 2011-2013; San Marino 2011)
Nelson Piquet Jr. (entered 2011; Mexico 2011)
Rrrrrmmmnn Grrrrjjjjnnn (entered 2012; USA 2012)
Pedro Diniz (entered 2012; USA 2012)
Drivers with scores counting towards unrejectification:Volker Weidler (one 5th)
Ralf Schumacher (entered 2011; two 6ths)
Pierre-Henri Raphanel (one 6th)
Gregor Foitek (one 6th)