Difference between revisions of "Canadian Grand Prix"
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! colspan=2 |{{flagiconCanada}} '''[[Canada|Canadian]] Grand Prix<br>''Grand Prix du Canada''<br>''' | ! colspan=2 |{{flagiconCanada}} '''[[Canada|Canadian]] Grand Prix<br>''Grand Prix du Canada''<br>''' | ||
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Latest revision as of 20:32, 4 November 2009
Canadian Grand Prix Grand Prix du Canada | |
---|---|
Circuit | Mosport Park 1961-1977 Mont-Tremblant 1968-1970 Circuit Île Notre-Dame 1978-1981 Circuit Gilles Villeneuve (1982-) |
Laps | 70 |
Circuit length km | 4.361 |
Circuit length mi | 2.709 |
Race length km | 305.270 |
Race length mi | 189.694 |
First held | 1961 |
Last held | 2008 |
Most wins driver | Michael Schumacher (7) |
Most wins constructor | Ferrari (13) |
Current year | 2008 |
Pole driver | Lewis Hamilton |
Pole team | McLaren-Mercedes |
Pole time | 1:17.886 |
Winner | Robert Kubica |
Winning team | BMW Sauber |
Winning time | 1h 36m 24.447s (189.987 km/h) |
Second | Nick Heidfeld |
Second team | BMW Sauber |
Second time | +16.495s |
Third | David Coulthard |
Third team | Red Bull-Renault |
Third time | +23.352s |
Fastest lap driver | Kimi Räikkönen |
Fastest lap team | Ferrari |
Fastest lap | 1:17.387 |
The Canadian Grand Prix (known in French as the Grand Prix du Canada) is an auto race held in Canada since 1961. It has been part of the Formula One World Championship since 1967. It was first staged at Mosport Park in Bowmanville, Ontario as a sports car event before it alternated between Mosport and Circuit Mont-Tremblant, Quebec after Formula One took over the event. After 1971 safety concerns led to the Grand Prix moving permanently to Mosport. In 1978 the Canadian Grand Prix moved to its current home on Île Notre-Dame in Montreal.
In 2005, the Canadian Grand Prix was the most watched Formula One GP in the world. The race was also the third most watched sporting event on the planet, behind the first place Super Bowl XXXIX and the UEFA Champions League Final.
History
The early Canadian Grand Prix was one of the premier events of the new Canadian Sports Car Championship, a series which had been created alongside the Canadian Grand Prix at Mosport in 1961. Several international sports car as well as Formula One drivers participated in the event. For the first five years, the event would be won by drivers with either prior Formula One experience, or would enter the championship after winning the Canadian Grand Prix. In 1966 the Canadian-American Challenge Cup ran the event, with American Mark Donohue winning. Formula One took over the following year, although the CSCC and Can-Am series continued to compete at Mosport in their own events.
The first winner in Montreal was Quebec native Gilles Villeneuve who died in 1982 on the final qualifying lap for the Belgian Grand Prix. A few weeks after his death, the race course in Montreal was named Circuit Gilles Villeneuve after him. Gilles Villeneuve was one of the first inducted into the Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame, and the only Canadian winner at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve.
The 1982 Canadian Grand Prix, in the shadow of the death of Villeneuve a month earlier, saw another accident when Villeneuve's teammate Didier Pironi stalled on the grid. Raul Boesel struck the stationary vehicle, and Riccardo Paletti then struck the rear of Pironi's Ferrari. Pironi and F1 doctor Sid Watkins came to Paletti's aid to try to extract him from his car, which briefly caught fire. After a half hour, Paletti was extracted and flown to a nearby hospital, where he succumbed to his injuries.
In 1987, the race was not held due to sponsorship dispute between two local breweries, Labatt and Molson. During the break the track was modified, and starting line moved to its current position.
Ferrari's Jean Alesi won the 1995 edition, which occurred on his 31st birthday and which would be the only win of his career. Alesi had inherited the lead when Michael Schumacher pitted with electrical problems and Damon Hill's hydraulics failed. the victory was a popular one for Alesi, particularly after several unrewarded drives the year before, namely in Italy. Alesi's win at Montreal was voted the most popular race victory of the season by many, as it was the number 27 Ferrari - once belonging to the famous Gilles Villeneuve at his much loved home Grand Prix. Schumacher gave Alesi a lift back to the pits after Alesi's car ran out of fuel just before the Pits Hairpin.
The 1997 Canadian Grand Prix was stopped early due to a crash involving Olivier Panis. He was sidelined for nine races and some see it as a turning point in the career of the 1996 Monaco Grand Prix winner.
In 1999, the final corner of Circuit Gilles Villeneuve became well-known for crashes involving former World Champions. Damon Hill, Michael Schumacher and Jacques Villeneuve all crashed into the same wall which had the slogan Bienvenue au Québec (Welcome to Quebec in English) on it. The wall became ironically known as the "Wall of Champions". The wall also was involved in a crash with Ricardo Zonta, who was, at the time, the reigning FIA GT sports car champion. In recent years, GP2 Champion Nico Rosberg and CART Champion Juan Pablo Montoya have also fallen victim to the wall.
In 2001, there was the first sibling 1-2 finish in the history of Formula 1, as Ralf and Michael Schumacher topped the podium. The Schumacher brothers would finish 1-2 in the 2003 edition as well. 2001 was also noted for Jean Alesi achieving Prost's best finish of the season; he celebrated his fifth place by doing several donuts in his vehicle, and throwing his helmet into the crowd.
The 2007 race was the site of rookie Lewis Hamilton's first win. On lap 67, Takuma Sato overtook the McLaren-Mercedes's Fernando Alonso, to cheers around the circuit, just after overtaking Ralf Schumacher and having overtaken Ferrari's Kimi Räikkönen earlier in the race.[1][2] The race saw Sato move from the middle of the grid to the back of the pack and to a high of fifth before a pit-stop error caused him to move back to eleventh. Sato he fought up 5 places in the field in the last 15 laps to finish sixth. Sato was voted "Driver of the Day" on the ITV website over Lewis Hamilton's first win.
In the weeks leading up the Grand Prix, city officials trap as many groundhogs as they can in and around the race course, and transport the animals to nearby Ile Ste-Helene.[3] Nonetheless, in 2007, a groundhog disrupted the practice session of Ralf Schumacher. On race day itself, Anthony Davidson had been running in third until he struck a groundhog, initially thought to be a beaver, which forced him to pit and repair the damage to his front wing. In 2008, a groundhog crossed the track at the hairpin in the 2nd practice session but luckily did not disrupt the session.
Sponsors
- Pepsi Cola Canadian Grand Prix 1961-1966
- Player's Canadian Grand Prix 1967-1971
- Labatt's Canadian Grand Prix 1972-1977
- Grand Prix Labatt du Canada 1980-1986
- Grand Prix Molson du Canada 1988-1996
- Grand Prix Player's du Canada 1997-1998
- Grand Prix Air Canada 1999-2005
- RBS Grand Prix Du Canada 2006-
Because of tobacco legislation which prohibited further such sponsorship, new venues, and a maximum of 17 races on the schedule, the Canadian Grand Prix was initially removed from the 2004 F1 schedule. However, Canadian officials were able to raise enough money to keep a Grand Prix race, with the FIA allowing expansion to an 18 race schedule.[4][5]
Winners of the Canadian Grands Prix
Repeat Winners
Only includes World Championship events
Number of wins | Driver | Years |
---|---|---|
7 | Michael Schumacher | 1994, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004 |
3 | Nelson Piquet | 1982, 1984, 1991 |
2 | Jacky Ickx | 1969, 1970 |
Jackie Stewart | 1971, 1972 | |
Alan Jones | 1979, 1980 | |
Ayrton Senna | 1988, 1990 |
Year by year
A light gray background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship.
Year | Driver | Constructor | Location | Report |
---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | Robert Kubica | BMW Sauber | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
2007 | Lewis Hamilton | McLaren-Mercedes | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
2006 | Fernando Alonso | Renault | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
2005 | Kimi Räikkönen | McLaren-Mercedes | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
2004 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
2003 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
2002 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
2001 | Ralf Schumacher | Williams-BMW | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
2000 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1999 | Mika Häkkinen | McLaren-Mercedes | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1998 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1997 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1996 | Damon Hill | Williams-Renault | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1995 | Jean Alesi | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1994 | Michael Schumacher | Benetton-Ford | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1993 | Alain Prost | Williams-Renault | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1992 | Gerhard Berger | McLaren-Honda | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1991 | Nelson Piquet | Benetton-Ford | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1990 | Ayrton Senna | McLaren-Honda | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1989 | Thierry Boutsen | Williams-Renault | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1988 | Ayrton Senna | McLaren-Honda | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1987 | Not held | |||
1986 | Nigel Mansell | Williams-Honda | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1985 | Michele Alboreto | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1984 | Nelson Piquet | Brabham-BMW | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1983 | René Arnoux | Ferrari | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1982 | Nelson Piquet | Brabham-BMW | Circuit Gilles Villeneuve | Report |
1981 | Jacques Laffite | Ligier-Matra | Circuit Île Notre-Dame | Report |
1980 | Alan Jones | Williams-Ford | Circuit Île Notre-Dame | Report |
1979 | Alan Jones | Williams-Ford | Circuit Île Notre-Dame | Report |
1978 | Gilles Villeneuve | Ferrari | Circuit Île Notre-Dame | Report |
1977 | Jody Scheckter | Wolf-Ford | Mosport Park | Report |
1976 | James Hunt | McLaren-Ford | Mosport Park | Report |
1975 | Not held | |||
1974 | Emerson Fittipaldi | McLaren-Ford | Mosport Park | Report |
1973 | Peter Revson | McLaren-Ford | Mosport Park | Report |
1972 | Jackie Stewart | Tyrrell-Ford | Mosport Park | Report |
1971 | Jackie Stewart | Tyrrell-Ford | Mosport Park | Report |
1970 | Jacky Ickx | Ferrari | Mont-Tremblant | Report |
1969 | Jacky Ickx | Brabham-Ford | Mosport Park | Report |
1968 | Denny Hulme | McLaren-Ford | Mont-Tremblant | Report |
1967 | Jack Brabham | Brabham-Repco | Mosport Park | Report |
1966 | Mark Donohue | Lola-Chevrolet | Mosport Park | Report |
1965 | Jim Hall | Chaparral-Chevrolet | Mosport Park | Report |
1964 | Pedro Rodríguez | Ferrari | Mosport Park | Report |
1963 | Pedro Rodríguez | Ferrari | Mosport Park | Report |
1962 | Masten Gregory | Lotus-Climax | Mosport Park | Report |
1961 | Peter Ryan | Lotus-Climax | Mosport Park | Report |
External links
- Official website
- Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame
- Canadian Grand Prix Statistics
- Satellite Photo
- Montreal Grandprix Event
- Intel sponsored Canadian Grand Prix site
- AskMen.com - Grand Prix 2006 Coverage
- 2006 attendance was 332,000
- [6]
Races in the Formula One championship: | |
---|---|
2007 championship Grand Prix events: | |
Australian |
Malaysian |
Bahrain |
Spanish |
Monaco |
Canadian |
U.S. |
French |
British | |
Past championship Grand Prix events: | |
Argentine |
Austrian |
Dutch |
Indy 500 |
Las Vegas |
Luxembourg |
Mexican |
Morocco | |
Confirmed future Grand Prix events: | |