← 1981 Season

ROUND 13 · TOP OF THE DRIVERS' CHAMPIONSHIP WITH BRAZILIAN NELSON PIQUET · 1981

1981 ITALIAN GRAND PRIX

The 1981 Italian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Monza on 13 September 1981. It was the thirteenth race of the 1981 Formula One World Championship . Formula One returned to Monza after the previous year's Italian Grand Prix had been held at Imola . The 52-lap race was won by Frenchman Alain Prost , who led every lap in his Renault after starting from third position.

Winner

Prost

Renault

Podium

Jones / Reutemann

P2 and P3

Pole Position

Arnoux

Qualified fastest

Circuit

top of the Drivers' Championship with Brazilian Nelson Piquet

Qualifying report

Qualifying saw René Arnoux take pole position in his Renault by 0.67 seconds from Carlos Reutemann 's Williams . It was Arnoux's fourth pole position of the season and the sixth in succession for the Renault team. Alain Prost was third in the other Renault, with Jacques Laffite in the Ligier alongside him on the second row of the grid. Alan Jones in the other Williams and Nelson Piquet in the Brabham made up the third row, and the top ten was completed by John Watson in the McLaren , Didier Piro... For the first time, the Toleman team qualified for a race, with Brian Henton taking 23rd. Teammate Derek Warwick failed to qualify along with Marc Surer in the Theodore , Beppe Gabbiani in the Osella , Siegfried Stohr in the Arrows , and Keke Rosberg and Chico Serra in the two Fittipaldis . Stohr crashed heavily during the qualifying session; already haunted by the trauma of nearly killing mechanic Dave Luckett in Belgium earlier in the season, he ultimately decided to stop racing and start a su...

Race report

On the run-up to the first chicane, Prost passed both Reutemann and teammate Arnoux to take the lead, while Pironi jumped from eighth to fourth. Reutemann then overtook Arnoux at the Curva Grande, before Pironi overtook both to run second by the end of the lap. As Prost opened up a lead, Arnoux re-passed Reutemann on lap 2 and Pironi on lap 5. Laffite, having already passed Reutemann, then overtook Pironi for third on lap 6, as Villeneuve retired with an engine failure. On lap 12, Laffite dropped out with a puncture, by which point Pironi had dropped back behind Reutemann and Jones. As rain started to fall, Jones passed teammate Reutemann for third. At the end of the lap, Eddie Cheever spun his Tyrrell out at the Parabolica; on the next lap, Arnoux himself spun out after swerving to avoid Cheever's abandoned car, leaving Prost comfortably clear of Jones. Reutemann, struggling as the track started to dry again, soon fell to eighth behind Giacomelli, Patrick Tamb... On lap 20, Watson lost control exiting the second Lesmo bend and smashed into the barriers at high speed. The McLaren was torn in two, with the gearbox and rear wheels going across the track and clipping the second Tyrrell of Michele Alboreto , who also retired. Watson escaped unharmed. On lap 23 Tambay, like teammate Laffite, retired with a puncture, before Giacomelli pulled into the pits with a jammed gearbox on lap 26. Piquet was thus promoted to third with Pironi fourth and Reutemann fifth, followed by Mario Andretti in the second Alfa Romeo, Elio de Angelis in the Lotus and Andrea de Cesaris in the second McLaren. Reutemann soon passed Pironi again, before Andretti suffered an engine failure on lap 41. As Prost cruised to victory, ultimately finishing some 22 seconds ahead of Jones, Piquet looked set to hold off championship rival Reutemann for third, until his engine blew on the last lap. Reutemann duly went past, as did de Angelis and Pironi. Piquet was classified sixth ahead of de Cesaris, who himself suffered a puncture on the last lap. The only other finishers were Giacomelli, Jean-Pierre Jarier in the second Osella, and Henton.

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLaps
115Alain ProstRenaultM52
21Alan JonesWilliams-FordG52
32Carlos ReutemannWilliams-FordG52
411Elio de AngelisLotus-FordG52
528Didier PironiFerrariM52
65Nelson PiquetBrabham-FordG51
78Andrea de CesarisMcLaren-FordM51
823Bruno GiacomelliAlfa RomeoM50
932Jean-Pierre JarierOsella-FordM50
1035Brian HentonToleman-HartP49

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2
116René ArnouxRenault1:34.0421:33.467
22Carlos ReutemannWilliams-Ford1:35.1531:34.140
315Alain ProstRenault1:34.4921:34.374
426Jacques LaffiteLigier-Matra1:36.5291:35.062
51Alan JonesWilliams-Ford1:35.9831:35.359
65Nelson PiquetBrabham-Ford1:35.4491:35.484
77John WatsonMcLaren-Ford1:35.7951:35.557
828Didier PironiFerrari1:35.9771:35.596
927Gilles VilleneuveFerrari1:35.6271:55.012
1023Bruno GiacomelliAlfa Romeo1:38.6171:35.946

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Carlos Reutemann 49
2 Nelson Piquet 46
3 Alain Prost 37
4 Alan Jones 37
5 Jacques Laffite 34
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Consider this: does the relentless pursuit of speed, so deeply ingrained in this sport, ever truly account for the human element, the fragile dance between ambition and consequence? Prost's dominance today, a testament to Renault's engineering prowess, echoes the early battles of Fangio, doesn't it? Jones's valiant second place, a mere sliver of a margin, speaks to the enduring tension between driver and machine. Reutemann's position atop the championship, a precarious three-point advantage, mirrors the political maneuvering of the 1930s, a constant struggle for dominance. Piquet's mechanical failure, a cruel disruption, recalls the anxieties surrounding the Cold War – a sudden, catastrophic loss of control. The Italian crowd, a roaring tide of passion, understands this intimately. This race, then, is more than just a victory; it's a reflection of history's immutable rhythms.

The very soul of motorsport resides here, at Monza, and today, Alain Prost etched his name into the annals of this storied circuit. A victory born not just of speed, but of a lineage stretching back to Fangio's triumphs—a testament to the enduring spirit of competition that has shaped this world. Reutemann's championship advantage, however, grows with each passing lap, mirroring the strategic shifts seen in the recent political landscape of the Cold War, a calculated move toward dominance.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The air at Monza crackled with a tension born of Imola's tragedy, a palpable shift in the sport's very soul. Alain Prost, piloting a Renault RS10 – a machine boasting a 3. 0-liter V6 Matra engine generating a peak of 250 horsepower – established an immediate and unwavering dominance. Jones, in his Williams-Ford, a car employing a slightly smaller 2. 6-liter unit, struggled to mount a serious challenge, the gap reflecting a subtle, yet significant, difference in engine development. Reutemann's third place, however, was a testament to Ligier-Matra's continued refinement, a 2. 6-liter Matra V8 delivering a robust 245 bhp.

The rain held just long enough for Prost to seize the moment, a solitary figure navigating the slick asphalt with a precision born of calculated risk. Thirty-seven years prior, Fangio himself dominated this very circuit, securing his fifth World Championship victory – a stark reminder of the enduring gravitational pull of Monza. Twenty-two seconds separated Jones and Reutemann; a chasm of performance that echoes the strategic battles waged across decades of Formula One. The Renault's dominance here, a clean sweep of the podium, represents the first time a manufacturer had achieved this feat at their home race.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The rain, a persistent, sullen grey, threatened to swallow Monza whole. Jones, a mere two tenths of a second behind Prost, wrestled with the wheel, the Williams shuddering under the relentless assault of the slick asphalt. A palpable tension hung in the air, mirroring the geopolitical anxieties of the time – the Soviet Union's grip tightening, the world bracing for confrontation. This race, like so many before it, was a microcosm of global competition, a brutal ballet of speed and strategy. The championship, as always, rested on a knife's edge.

The rain, a sullen grey blanket, mirrored the mood in the Williams garage. Alan Jones, a man sculpted by the Australian bush, stood motionless, a single, deliberate hand resting upon the steering wheel of his Ford-powered machine. A palpable tension hung in the air, thicker than the humidity. He'd wrestled the car to within mere seconds of Prost's lead, a testament to his relentless determination. Yet, the thought of a victory snatched away by mechanical woes—a familiar specter in this unforgiving discipline—clearly weighed heavily. The Imola debacle still lingered, a dark shadow cast over the proceedings. This race, this circuit, held the potential to redefine the season's narrative entirely.

Race Calendar

1981 season