← 1998 Season

ROUND 1 · START THE MCLARENS GOT AWAY WELL · 1998

1998 SPANISH GRAND PRIX

Mika Häkkinen qualified in pole position, 0.7 seconds ahead of his McLaren teammate David Coulthard in second place, with Ferrari's Michael Schumacher a further 0.8 seconds behind in third. The race proved to be a formality for Häkkinen, winning the race ahead of Coulthard in second, and Schumacher in third. Arrows driver Pedro Diniz started from the pit lane due to stalling on the warm up lap.

Winner

Häkkinen

McLaren-Mercedes

Podium

Coulthard / Schumacher

P2 and P3

Circuit

start the McLarens got away well

Race summary

Mika Häkkinen qualified in pole position, 0.7 seconds ahead of his McLaren teammate David Coulthard in second place, with Ferrari's Michael Schumacher a further 0.8 seconds behind in third. The race proved to be a formality for Häkkinen, winning the race ahead of Coulthard in second, and Schumacher in third. Arrows driver Pedro Diniz started from the pit lane due to stalling on the warm up lap. At the start the McLarens got away well, but Schumacher made a poor start and fell back to fifth behind his teammate Eddie Irvine and Benetton 's Giancarlo Fisichella . They ran in these positions until the first round of pit stops, when Irvine delayed Fisichella sufficiently for his teammate Schumacher to emerge ahead of them both and regain third. Fisichella and Irvine continued to battle until lap 28, when...

Race

The Stewart of Rubens Barrichello earned two points by finishing in fifth place, which were team's first of the season, this was made possible by the new engine and chassis the team used (however teammate Jan Magnussen ran with the old chassis). Reigning World Champion Jacques Villeneuve finished in sixth place, after Williams had their worst qualifying result since the 1989 United States Grand Prix . On the final lap, Williams driver Heinz-Harald Frentzen passed Prost 's Jarno Trulli for eight place when Trulli was incorrectly shown the blue flags as the marshalls had mistaken the Williams for a Ferrari. "I am truly angry because I had to give up a great battle, and it isn't fair to lose a position because they are blind and can't recognise one car from another. Of course it doesn't matter much to finish eighth or ninth, but for a racer it matters. In a case of a blue flag I didn't have an alternative". Jarno Trulli

References

41°34′9.9″N 2°15′26.9″E / 41.569417°N 2.257472°E / 41.569417; 2.257472

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorLap TimeGap
18Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes1:20.262
27David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:20.996+0.734
33Michael SchumacherFerrari1:21.785+1.523
45Giancarlo FisichellaBenetton-Playlife1:21.894+1.632
56Alexander WurzBenetton-Playlife1:21.965+1.703
64Eddie IrvineFerrari1:22.350+2.088
715Johnny HerbertSauber-Petronas1:22.794+2.532
89Damon HillJordan-Mugen-Honda1:22.835+2.573
918Rubens BarrichelloStewart-Ford1:22.860+2.598
101Jacques VilleneuveWilliams-Mecachrome1:22.885+2.623

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Mika Häkkinen 36
2 David Coulthard 29
3 Michael Schumacher 24
4 Eddie Irvine 11
5 Alexander Wurz 9
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Can you *feel* the tension? The air itself vibrates with the anticipation of a massacre! Diniz's pitlane start… a calculated gamble, or a desperate plea for redemption? McLaren's dominance at the outset is brutal, isn't it? Coulthath's relentless pressure, Häkkinen's cold precision – this isn't simply racing; it's a psychological war waged at 180mph. Schumacher, lurking, a shadow, waiting for an opening. The question isn't *if* he'll challenge, but *when*! This is Formula 1 distilled – a brutal ballet of speed and strategy.

"The very soul of motorsport hung in the balance this morning!" A procession it seemed, until the lights ignited and Mika Häkkinen, with the ruthless precision of a predator, seized control. Coulthard, a shadow at his side, battled valiantly, but the McLaren's sheer dominance was simply breathtaking.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

Here we go! The air crackles – a palpable tension as the lights ignite! Häkkinen, in his McLaren-Mercedes MP4/10E, a beast boasting 675 horsepower, explodes from the line! Coulthard, a mere fraction behind, claws at the McLaren's rear, a desperate attempt to deny Häkkinen the early advantage. This isn't just a race; it's a psychological battle waged on the asphalt, a brutal contest for supremacy!

"Hold on…hold. Just…hold it!" The Catalan sun bleeds onto the track, and there it is – Häkkinen, a blur of orange and black, exploding from the line! Coulthard, relentlessly close, mirroring his teammate's every move, a coiled serpent anticipating the kill. Schumacher, a distant third, already plotting his ambush, a shadow lurking in the heat. This isn't just a race; it's a brutal chess match played at 180mph, and the opening moves are proving utterly decisive.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

Coulthard's right rear! A searing flash, a monstrous plume of smoke – the McLaren's gearbox has detonated! The crowd roars, a primal scream of mechanical fury! Häkkinen, unfazed, stretches his lead, a predator savoring the kill. This isn't just a race; it's a brutal, unforgiving ballet of speed and steel. Schumacher, a shadow in his Ferrari, watches helplessly, the championship slipping further away with every agonizing second. The tension is suffocating, a palpable weight pressing down on the Circuit de Catalunya.

The rain…it's a cruel mistress, isn't it? Look at Schumacher, a storm brewing in his eyes, a desperate attempt to wrestle control from that McLaren surge. Coulthard's a shadow, a magnificent ghost trailing Häkkinen's raw power. That McLaren is a predator, isn't it? A hungry beast, and Häkkinen… he's savoring every inch. Diniz, a tragic figure, battling the elements and the pit lane – a reminder that brilliance alone doesn't guarantee success. This isn't just a race; it's a brutal test of will, a psychological war waged at 200mph.

Race Calendar

1998 season