- Australian Grand Prix
F1 race
Name =Australia n Grand Prix
Circuit =Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit
Circuit_
Laps = 58
Circuit_length_km = 5.303
Circuit_length_mi = 3.295
Race_length_km = 307.574
Race_length_mi = 191.110
First_held = 1928
Last_held = 2008
Most_wins_driver = flagicon|AustraliaLex Davison (4) flagicon|GermanyMichael Schumacher (4)
Most_wins_constructor = flagicon|Italy Ferrari (10)
flagicon|UKMcLaren (10)
Current_year = 2008
Pole_driver = flagicon|UKLewis Hamilton
Pole_team =McLaren -Mercedes
Pole_time = 1:26.714
Winner = flagicon|UKLewis Hamilton
Winning_team =McLaren -Mercedes
Winning_time = 1h 34m 50.616s
(194.577 km/h)
Second = flagicon|GermanyNick Heidfeld
Second_team =BMW Sauber
Second_time = +5.478s
Third = flagicon|GermanyNico Rosberg
Third_team = Williams-Toyota
Third_time = +8.163s
Fastest_lap_driver = flagicon|FinlandHeikki Kovalainen
Fastest_lap_team =McLaren -Mercedes
Fastest_l
The Australian Grand Prix is aFormula One race that is part of the annual Formula One championship season. It is held at theMelbourne Grand Prix Circuit at Albert Park inMelbourne . The event was held annually since 1928 at various venues in Australia, before it became part of the Formula One championship in 1985. The race was held at theAdelaide Street Circuit inAdelaide from 1985 to 1995, before moving to Melbourne in 1996.The Australian Grand Prix is the first round of the Championship, having been the first race of each year, excluding 2006, since the event moved to Melbourne. During its years in Adelaide, the Australian Grand Prix was the final round of the Championship, replacing the
Portuguese Grand Prix in that respect. As the final round of the season, the Grand Prix hosted a handful of memorable Grand Prix, most notably the 1986 and 1994 event which saw those respective titles decided.In terms of Grand Prix victories,
Michael Schumacher andFerrari are the most successful driver and team respectively.David Coulthard ,Rubens Barrichello andGiancarlo Fisichella are the only drivers to have started every single Melbourne race.In November 2006 ING became the naming rights sponsor of the Australian Grand Prix in a three-year deal.
History
Origins
Australian Grands Prix, which were not part of the World Championship but did feature F1-style open-wheeler racing vehicles, were held at various circuits around Australia for many decades, dating back into the 1920s, making the race one of the oldest surviving races today. Like the
French Grand Prix the race wandered from circuit to circuit for much of its life, and was for a time rotated amongst the states of Australia. The race was held at Australia's most famous racetrack,Mount Panorama Circuit four times between 1938 and 1958. Another notable venue in the 1950s was a road circuit at Albert Park inMelbourne , on two occasions. In this eraLex Davison won the race four times, a record that would last until 2004 when it was equalled byMichael Schumacher . In the 1960s the race was an integral part of theTasman Series which attracted the leading Formula 1 teams of the day and also influenced the careers of a generation of Australian and New Zealand drivers on their way to Europe withJack Brabham ,Denny Hulme andBruce McLaren prominent figures of the era. During the 1970s the race lost its international lustre as aFormula 5000 race. The early 1980s regained some of lost glory when leading Formula 1 drivers were hired to race inFormula Atlantic cars atCalder Park Raceway . The Atlantic era was dominated byRoberto Moreno , winning three times against star-studded fields. The last domestic Grand Prix was held in 1984.Formula 1
Australia became part of the F1 world championship in 1985 with the last race of the season held on the street circuit in
Adelaide . The circuit, whilst not as tight as Monaco, was notoriously tough on drivers and gearboxes.Fact|date=February 2007 TheAdelaide Street Circuit , which held its last Formula One race in 1995, has often been stated as being one of, if not, the greatest street circuits in the world. Whenever the teams came to Adelaide they enjoyed the party atmosphere. [ [http://www.adelaidereview.com.au/archives.php?subaction=showfull&id=1111107077&archive=1112321192&start_from=&ucat=2& The Adelaide Review : Archives ] ]In 1993 prominent Melbourne businessman Mr
Ron Walker AC CBE, currentChairman of the Australian Grand Prix began working with the then Kennett government to make Melbourne the host of the event. After the government ofJeff Kennett spent an undisclosed (but speculated to be quite large) amount, it was announced in late 1993 (days after a South Australian election) that the race would be shifted to a rebuilt Albert Park street circuit inMelbourne . The race moved to Melbourne in 1996. The decision to hold the race there was controversial. A series of protests were organised by the "Save Albert Park" group, who claimed that the race turned a public park into a private playground for one week per year. Additionally, they claimed that the race cost a great deal of money that would be better spent, if it were to be spent on motor racing, on a permanent circuit elsewhere. Finally, they said that the claimed economic benefits of the race were false or exaggerated. The race organisers and the government claimed that the economic benefits to the state outweighed the costs, and highlighted that the park's public amenities have been greatly improved from the World War II vintage facilities previously located at Albert Park; the Melbourne Sports and Aquatc Centre (scene of many Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games events) being the centre piece and best known of the revitalised facilities.The idea of a permanent racing circuit has never really been addressed, but there is much speculation that the real reason for a street circuit is to provide a distinctive backdrop for television - a permanent race circuit would be unidentifiable and, from the perspective of the Formula One organisers, may as well be held in Europe at much lesser cost and inconvenience to them. In any case, a substantial number of people do embrace (and attend) the race at the
Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit .The Melbourne era
Bernie Ecclestone, the president of Formula One Management, the group that runs modern-day Formula One in conjunction with the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA), once famously said that it took 10 minutes to do the deal with Melbourne that would see the Victorian capital host the Australian Grand Prix from 1996. It is thought that Melbourne’s unsuccessful quest to stage the 1996 Olympic Games, and the subsequently successful bid by northern rival city Sydney to host the 2000 Olympics, was a driving force behind Melbourne’s motivation to wrest the Australian Grand Prix away from Adelaide.
Albert Park, within easy reach of the Melbourne central business district, became home to the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne. A 16-turn circuit, which measures 5.3 kilometres in its current guise, was built utilising a combination of public roads within the park. The circuit is renowned as being a smooth and high-speed test for Formula One teams and drivers, and its characteristics are similar to the only other street circuit set in a public park currently used for a race in the Formula One World Championship, the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal, Canada.
The promotional theme for the first race in Melbourne was “Melbourne – What a Great Place for the Race”. Some 401,000 people turned out for the first race in 1996, which remains a record for the event. The logistics of creating a temporary circuit and hosting an event of the magnitude of a Formula One Grand Prix from scratch weren’t lost on the international visitors, with Melbourne winning the F1 Constructors’ Association Award for the best organised Grand Prix of the year in its first two years of 1996 and 1997.
The move of the Australian Grand Prix to Melbourne saw a change in the time of year that the F1 teams and personnel made their annual voyage Down Under. Adelaide, for each of its 11 years, was the final race of the F1 season, usually in October or November, while Melbourne has been the first race of the season in every year since 1996 with the exception of 2006, when it was the third race of the year to allow for the Commonwealth Games to take place in the city. As such, the Albert Park circuit has seen the Formula One debuts of every prominent driver in the last decade. 1997 World Champion Jacques Villeneuve made his race debut in Melbourne’s first year of 1996, and became one of three men to secure pole position in his maiden Grand Prix. Other prominent names to debut in Melbourne are two-time World Champion Fernando Alonso, Juan Pablo Montoya and Kimi Räikkönen in 2001, and Australia’s current F1 driver, Mark Webber, in 2002.
As part of celebrations for the 10th running of the event at Albert Park in 2005, Webber drove his Williams F1 car over the Sydney Harbour Bridge in a promotional event, and the Melbourne city streets hosted a parade of F1 machinery and V8 Supercars, Australia’s highest-profile domestic motor sport category.
Races in Melbourne
It took just three corners for the Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park to gain worldwide attention. On the first lap of the first race in 1996, Jordan’s Martin Brundle was launched into the air in an enormous accident. Footage of the crash, and Brundle’s subsequent rush back to the pits to take the spare car for the re-start, ensured the first race in Melbourne gained widespread coverage. The race was won by Williams’ Damon Hill. The 1997 race saw McLaren, through David Coulthard, break a drought of 50 races without a victory. The next year was a McLaren benefit, with Mika Häkkinen and Coulthard lapping the entire field en route to a dominant 1-2 finish. The result was clouded by controversy when Coulthard pulled over with two laps remaining to allow Häkkinen to win, honouring a pre-race agreement between the pair that whoever made it to the first corner in the lead on lap one would be allowed to win. Ferrari won its first Grand Prix in Melbourne in 1999, but it wasn’t with team number one Michael Schumacher. Irishman Eddie Irvine took his maiden victory after the all-conquering McLarens of Häkkinen and Coulthard retired before half-distance. Schumacher broke his Melbourne drought the following year when he headed a dominant Ferrari 1-2 with new teammate Rubens Barrichello.
The 2001 event, won by Michael Schumacher, was marked by tragedy when volunteer marshal Graham Beveridge was killed after a high-speed accident involving Ralf Schumacher and Jacques Villeneuve on lap five. Villeneuve’s B.A.R rode up across the back of Schumacher’s Williams and crashed into the fence, behind which Beveridge was standing.
The start of the 2002 race saw pole-sitter Barrichello and Williams’ Schumacher come together at Turn One in a spectacular accident that saw 11 of the 22 cars eliminated before the end of the opening lap. Michael Schumacher dominated thereafter to post a third straight Melbourne win, but his achievements were overshadowed by the fifth place of Australian Mark Webber on his Formula One debut. Webber, in an underpowered and underfunded Minardi, had to recover from a botched late pit stop and resist the challenges of Toyota’s Mika Salo in the closing stages, and took to the podium after the race with Australian team owner Paul Stoddart in one of Melbourne’s more memorable Grand Prix moments.
The next year, 2003, saw Coulthard again win for McLaren in a race held in variable conditions. Normal service was resumed in 2004 with the Ferraris of Schumacher and Barrichello running rampant – within two laps of Friday practice, Schumacher had obliterated the Albert Park lap record, and sailed to a crushing win.
In 2005, the race was won by Renault’s Giancarlo Fisichella after a storm during Saturday qualifying produced a topsy-turvy grid. Barrichello and Fisichella’s teammate Fernando Alonso came through the field from 11th and 13th on the grid respectively to join pole-sitter Fisichella on the podium. In 2006, Alonso took his first Australian win in an accident-marred race that featured four safety car periods.
Notable Australian Grands Prix
; 1986:
Nigel Mansell andNelson Piquet in a Williams-Honda andAlain Prost , in a comparatively underpowered McLaren, were competing for the drivers' title. Mansell needed only third to guarantee the title, whilst Prost and Piquet needed to win and for Mansell to finish lower than third to take the title. Whilst comfortably in the top three with a few laps to go, Mansell's Williams suffered a spectacular mechanical failure, with a rear tyre puncture at very high speed near the end of the main straight creating a huge shower of sparks as the floor of the vehicle dragged along the bitumen surface. Mansell fought to control the violently veering car and steered it to a safe stop. Prost took the lead, as Mansell's teammate Piquet had pitted as a pre-cautionary measure, and won the race and the championship. Prost himself came incredibly close to failure, as his vehicle coasted to a halt on his warm-down lap, out of fuel.; 1991: The race was notable for being held in extremely wet and tricky conditions and the race was eventually stopped on lap 14 of the scheduled 82 and
Ayrton Senna was declared the winner. This race has the record of the shortest everFormula One race as it only lasted 52 kilometres/24 minutes.; 1994: Following his win at the Japanese Grand Prix,
Damon Hill was now one point behind championship leaderMichael Schumacher .Nigel Mansell was on pole but a poor start resulted in the two championship rivals Hill and Schumacher battling for the lead. But on lap 36, Schumacher went off the track, a result of oversteer, and this allowed Hill to catch up with Schumacher and the Brit took the inside line for the next corner. But the German turned on Hill's Williams, whether it was on purpose or accidentally is unknown, which sent the Benetton on two wheels and into the tyre barrier, Schumacher retiring on the spot. Hill came out of the incident with a broken wishbone on his front-left suspension and the Brit pitted and retired from the race, handing the title to Schumacher. The sister Williams of Nigel Mansell went onto win the race, becoming the oldest Grand Prix winner since Jack Brabham in 1970.; 2001 : The 2001 race saw
Michael Schumacher take pole position and win the race and three drivers,Fernando Alonso ;Kimi Räikkönen andJuan Pablo Montoya , all made their Formula One debuts during this race. The race, however, was struck by tragedy in when a flying tyre from a crash between Williams'Ralf Schumacher and BAR'sJacques Villeneuve flew through a gap in the barrier fence and killed a volunteer track marshal, Graham Beveridge, who was 52 years old.; 2002 : The 2002 event saw the best performance by an Australian driver when
Mark Webber , in the perennially uncompetitiveMinardi , took advantage of the misfortune of other competitors ,after an first lap pile up eliminated 9 cars, to finish an unlikely fifth, holding off a fast-closingMika Salo in a much faster Toyota. He and the Australian-born team ownerPaul Stoddart became instant national celebrities well beyond the motor racing world, the minor placing receiving far more attention in Australia thanMichael Schumacher 's win.; 2006 : Traditionally, Melbourne hosted the opening round of the championship. In 2006, Melbourne hosted the 3rd round because it was hosting the Commonwealth Games when it would normally host the Grand Prix.
Spain 'sFernando Alonso won the event from third on the grid.; 2007 :
Lewis Hamilton led his first F1 race and eventually finished in third place.Kimi Räikkönen was in 1st place for the whole of the race except for when he pitted. Räikkönen became the first Ferrari driver to win on debut sinceNigel Mansell in 1989. Kimi Räikkönen also achieved a triple, a win, pole and fastest lap.; 2008 : Lewis Hamilton won from pole in a chaotic race that featured 3 safety car periods and was notable for none of the Ferrari powered cars making the finish in the blistering heat. It was also notable for the least number of finishers in a Formula One race since the
1996 Spanish Grand Prix .Recent Attendance
An area of recent debate regarding the move of the Australian Grand Prix to
Melbourne is the dwindling crowd attendances. Crowd numbers have not peaked since the Melbourne record of 401,000 in 1996. This has resulted in many questioning whether the event is bringing the economic benefits first promised when it was announced Melbourne would host the race in 1993. A possible reason for the drop in attendance is that since the Grand Prix has moved to Melbourne, the race organisers have significantly decreased the number of support events at the Grand Prix. Instead of using the event to showcase Australian motor sport, many classes featured in the past have been replaced by celebrity and corporate sponsored events. For instance, while the Grand Prix Corporation has used the presence of Australian driver, Mark Webber, as an advertising draw card for the event, the class in which Mark first started coming to attention, Formula Ford, was dropped from the 2006 programme. Another factor possibly influencing the crowds in 2007 was the withdrawal of Australia's most popular domestic racing series,V8 Supercar , from the support program, although the size of the attendance drop from 2006 to 2007 does not support the assertion.
*2008 - 303,000 [ [http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/03/16/2190889.htm Aust GP enjoys healthy crowds - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) ] ]
*2007 - 301,000 [ [http://www.austadiums.com/stadiums/stadiums_crowds.php?id=176 Albert Park F1 Circuit Crowds] ]
*2006 - 301,500 [ [http://www.austadiums.com/sport/event.php?eventid=4223 Australian Stadiums :: Australian F1 GP (d4) ] ]
*2005 - 359,000 [ [http://cars.grandprix.com.au/ 2008 FORMULA 1™ ING Australian Grand Prix ] ]
*1996 - 401,000Future
Beyond 2010, the Victorian Government announced that Melbourne would retain the Australian Grand Prix until at least 2015 [http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,23967558-39478,00.html Green light for dusk Formula One Grand Prix at Albert Park] ] . The race starting time will be moved to 5pm in order to satisfy Bernie Ecclestone's ultimatum earlier this year, stating to the "Sunday Mail" that the only way Melbourne would retain the race is a move to a night race in order to increase European television audiences. However the later start will not result in a 'night race' as Geoscience Australia has forecast dusk for 29th of March 2009 at 7:45pm [ [http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,23970916-39478,00.html Melbourne Grand Prix's seven-year deal] ]
ponsors
Mitsubishi Australian Grand Prix 1985
Fosters Australian Grand Prix 1986-1993, 2002-2006
EDS Australian Grand Prix 1995Transurban Australian Grand Prix 1996Qantas Australian Grand Prix 1997-2001
ING Australian Grand Prix 2007-
There was no naming rights sponsor in 1994.Winners
Multiple winners (drivers)
"Wins which did not count towards the Formula One World Championship are indicated by a pink background."
Footnote
External links
* [http://cars.grandprix.com.au/ The Australian Grand Prix official website]
* [http://www.f1db.com/f1/page/Fosters_Australian_Grand_Prix_2005 Australian Grand Prix Statistics]
* [http://www.4mula1.ro/formula1race-melbourne-2006.html Melbourne Formula 1 Statistics]
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