Qualifying
In Montreal, David Coulthard secured his third pole position of the season, achieving the fastest time at the very end of the session. Mika Häkkinen encountered a lot of traffic during his quick laps. Michael Schumacher was third with a lap time only 0.2 seconds behind Coulthard's. The night before qualifying, Eddie Irvine had released a comment saying that the Canadian Grand Prix would be crucial for Ferrari , with Schumacher expressing the same opinion.
Race
At the second start, Michael Schumacher's Ferrari got a poor start, and was instantly overtaken by Giancarlo Fisichella . However, even more chaos would ensue. Häkkinen's gearbox jammed causing Ralf Schumacher to take avoiding action; he also went across the grass and spun in the middle of the track and then pulled off the track with a broken gearbox. This caused mayhem in the pack behind him. Trulli mounted Alesi's car and in total five cars retired after the second start: Häkkinen (gearbox), R... Michael Schumacher managed to overtake Giancarlo Fisichella on the first lap but due to all the retirements the safety car was sent out. After five laps, the safety car came back in and the order was, David Coulthard followed by Schumacher, Fisichella, Jacques Villeneuve , Rubens Barrichello , and Heinz-Harald Frentzen . The accident involving Salo and Herbert sent out the safety car for a third time, and Michael Schumacher took advantage by making a pitstop. When he got back out and yellow flags were waved to show that there was to be no overtaking, coming out of the pit lane on lap 20 Schumacher shot across to block Frentzen for turn one. Frentzen steered off the track and onto the grass and spun into the gravel at the end of turn one to retire from the Grand Prix. Williams team principal, Patrick Head , furious at what had just happened, went to Ferrari team principal Jean Todt to have strong words with him about the racing incident: "We [Williams] will do everything to get him [Schumacher] thrown out of this race and no we will not tolerate it". As the restart Fisichella led, ahead of Villeneuve, Michael Schumacher, Damon Hill , Magnussen and Shinji Nakano . Villeneuve immediately tried to go around the outside of Fisichella and take the lead in the race at home, but he got it all wrong, went off the track and damaged his rear wing. On lap 35, Schumacher was given a 10-second stop-and-go penalty due to the 'incident' with Frentzen. This momentarily put him behind Hill, but Schumacher overtook him and regained second place on lap 38. Dam...
Race Result
| Pos | No | Driver | Constructor | Lap Time | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7 | David Coulthard | McLaren-Mercedes | 1:18.213 | |
| 2 | 8 | Mika Häkkinen | McLaren-Mercedes | 1:18.282 | +0.069 |
| 3 | 3 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | 1:18.497 | +0.284 |
| 4 | 5 | Giancarlo Fisichella | Benetton-Playlife | 1:18.826 | +0.613 |
| 5 | 10 | Ralf Schumacher | Jordan-Mugen-Honda | 1:19.242 | +1.029 |
| 6 | 1 | Jacques Villeneuve | Williams-Mecachrome | 1:19.588 | +1.375 |
| 7 | 2 | Heinz-Harald Frentzen | Williams-Mecachrome | 1:19.614 | +1.401 |
| 8 | 4 | Eddie Irvine | Ferrari | 1:19.616 | +1.403 |
| 9 | 14 | Jean Alesi | Sauber-Petronas | 1:19.693 | +1.480 |
| 10 | 9 | Damon Hill | Jordan-Mugen-Honda | 1:19.717 | +1.504 |
Championship Standings After This Race
The Paddock Breakdown
Barry · Gary · KatGary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues
The humid Montreal air hung thick, a palpable tension clinging to Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. Coulthard's Benetton, a snarling beast of 780 horsepower—the Ford Cosworth V10 at its most ferocious— snatched pole by a scant 0. 3 seconds, a testament to meticulous tire management and the Scot's unflinching nerve. Häkkinen, hampered by a sluggish McLaren-Mercedes MP4/13, a car struggling with rear-end oversteer, finished a frustrating second, the engine's 720 bhp a distant echo of Schumacher's potential. A fractured beginning, then.
The humid Montreal air hung thick, a palpable tension clinging to Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. A curious thing, this: Coulthard's consistent front-row showings mirrored the Williams team's own ambition, a desperate attempt to translate mechanical prowess into tangible results.
Kat — 30 · Technical journalist
The rain hadn't relented, a sullen grey curtain drawn across Montreal. Häkkinen, a ghost in the McLaren, wrestled with the car, a frustrated sigh swallowed by the engine's roar. Then, a blur of scarlet – Coulthard, impossibly fast, snatching pole with a final, defiant surge. But the air hung thick with a different kind of anticipation, a tremor of something darker. You could almost taste the tension radiating from Schumacher, a coiled spring of ambition. This wasn't just a race; it was a crucible, and the youngest driver already felt the heat.
The rain hadn't bothered Coulthard, not a scrap. He stood, a granite statue amidst the slick asphalt, the weight of that third pole a tangible thing – a promise, a burden, a reflection of the relentless ambition simmering beneath his blue McLaren. Häkkinen, however, wrestled with the ghosts of Spa, a frustrated sigh escaping him as he navigated the serpentine track, the memory of that dominant performance a sharp contrast to this afternoon's congested dance. Schumacher, a silent observer, already began to dissect the battlefield, his gaze fixed on the unforgiving curves of Villeneuve, calculating angles, anticipating chaos. This Montreal air, thick with humidity and the scent of wet concrete, felt like a prelude to something…violent.