Race
Australian driver Alan Jones , driving a Williams FW07B , won his second consecutive Canadian Grand Prix, and coupled with the retirement of the Brabham BT49 of Brazilian driver Nelson Piquet due to the failure of its Cosworth DFV engine, this allowed Jones to secure the 1980 World Drivers' Championship. Jones became only the second Australian to claim the world championship, a title last won by Jack Brabham in 1966 . It was also the first World Drivers' Championship for Williams Grand Prix Engi... The brief comeback of Vittorio Brambilla had come to an end with the Italian veteran retiring from Formula One. Alfa Romeo replaced him with someone younger and Andrea de Cesaris made his Grand Prix debut, as did teenage New Zealander Mike Thackwell . Thackwell stepped aboard a third Tyrrell 010 breaking the record as the youngest ever driver to start a Grand Prix, a record held for 19 years by the late Mexican teenager Ricardo Rodríguez . The record would stand for 29 years until broken by Jaim... First and second in the championship were decided with the 1980 United States Grand Prix still to come. Jones led Piquet by 8 points but Piquet had already had five points-scoring finishes in the second half of the season. If Piquet won at Watkins Glen he would have to drop the two points from his fifth-place finish in Austria, leaving him one point behind Jones even if Jones failed to finish. Third place in the championship was theoretically open with Laffite eight points behind Reutemann. Seco...
Qualifying
Jones took up the lead again until Pironi forced his way into a lead which was clouded over a jumped start for which he was eventually assigned a 60-second penalty. Pironi took the chequered flag first but would be classified third behind Jones and Reutemann. Alain Prost could have been third or even second until a suspension failure saw his McLaren M30 crash. Watson was ahead of Reutemann as well when he spun and finished fourth in his McLaren. Local hero Villeneuve claimed fifth for Ferrari on...
Race Result
| Pos | No. | Driver | Team | Time | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 5 | Nelson Piquet | Brabham-Ford | 1:27.328 | - |
| 2 | 27 | Alan Jones | Williams-Ford | 1:28.164 | + 0.836 |
| 3 | 25 | Didier Pironi | Ligier-Ford | 1:28.322 | + 0.994 |
| 4 | 23 | Bruno Giacomelli | Alfa Romeo | 1:28.575 | + 1.247 |
| 5 | 28 | Carlos Reutemann | Williams-Ford | 1:28.663 | + 1.335 |
| 6 | 21 | Keke Rosberg | Fittipaldi-Ford | 1:28.702 | + 1.374 |
| 7 | 7 | John Watson | McLaren-Ford | 1:28.755 | + 1.427 |
| 8 | 22 | Andrea de Cesaris | Alfa Romeo | 1:29.026 | + 1.698 |
| 9 | 26 | Jacques Laffite | Ligier-Ford | 1:29.130 | + 1.802 |
| 10 | 6 | Héctor Rebaque | Brabham-Ford | 1:29.377 | + 2.049 |
Championship Standings After This Race
The Paddock Breakdown
Barry · Gary · KatGary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues
Let's examine Jones's Williams FW07B; the engine, a Ford-Cosworth DFV, was operating at approximately 680 horsepower during that final stint – a significant increase from the initial race pace driven by aggressive gearbox mapping. Observe the tire degradation; the slick compound, a hard compound, exhibited a shockingly rapid wear rate, suggesting a deliberate strategy by the team to manage the overall stint length and exploit the Brabham's struggling rear end. The gearbox, a Hewland unit, was shifted with a remarkable 1. 7 seconds, a testament to the precision of the Williams's engineering.
Let's examine the confluence of factors that delivered Jones his victory today. The Williams FW07B's differential, specifically the 3. 2 seconds separating it from the second-placed Ligier, speaks volumes about Renault's engine development; a margin rarely seen this late in the season. Considering the Brabham's engine woes – Piquet's retirement alone – the statistical outlier is the FW07B's consistent pace, a testament to a perfectly calibrated setup. This 3. 2-second advantage represents a significant portion of the circuit, suggesting a level of aerodynamic refinement that was, frankly, devastating for its rivals.
Kat — 30 · Technical journalist
The gearbox. Observe the shudder through Jones's steering – a precisely timed shift, a momentary loss of traction. The Williams's Hewland unit, a complex dance of helical gears and limited-slip differential, is working overtime. Piquet's engine, a screaming Cosworth DFV, had been running flawlessly until this very point. The Montreal asphalt, slick with oil and the remnants of a desperate battle, is amplifying every micro-movement. Jones is managing the slipstream, a master of torque vectoring, extracting every last ounce of performance. A victory secured, not just by speed, but by an intimate understanding of the machine's limits.
Jones. a man possessed. The way he wrestled that FW07B into Turn 1, a perfect apex, a fraction of a second gained. You could almost *feel* the gearbox shifting, a precise, almost brutal application of torque. The Williams team, a calculated risk with that suspension geometry—a daring gamble that paid dividends today. Consider the implications for the DFV, the Cosworth team are working overtime, analyzing the data from Jones's car, a relentless pursuit of performance. This isn't just a victory; it's a statement.