← 1999 Season

ROUND 1 · ALBERT PARK CIRCUIT · 7 MARCH 1999

1999 AUSTRALIAN GRAND PRIX

The 1999 Australian Grand Prix (formally the 1999 Qantas Australian Grand Prix ) was a Formula One motor race held on 7 March 1999 at the Albert Park Circuit . The 57-lap race was the first round of the 1999 Formula One World Championship , the 50th World Championship season in the history of Formula One.

Winner

Irvine

Ferrari

Podium

Frentzen / Schumacher

P2 and P3

Circuit

Albert Park Circuit

7 March 1999

Friday

Heinz-Harald Frentzen was the first car on track and initially topped the list, but Mika Häkkinen took the lead halfway through the first session. After several improvements he ended the session with a time of 1 minute and 33.213 seconds, with McLaren teammate David Coulthard in second place. The Stewart team performed well; Rubens Barrichello and Johnny Herbert ended the session in sixth and seventh position, behind Heinz-Harald Frentzen , Giancarlo Fisichella and Jarno Trulli . The debutants (... Coulthard was fastest for a short while in the second session, but Häkkinen quickly reset the order with a time of 1 minute and 31.985 seconds. On his next attempt, Häkkinen spun and crashed into the wall in the last turn before the main straight, causing the first red flag of the season. The session was stopped for 15 minutes; Häkkinen was unhurt, but the McLaren was badly damaged and his practice session was over. In the final minute Coulthard beat his time by one hundredth of a second. Stewar... After the break Michael Schumacher had been the first to go out, but he could not do better than seventh, with a gap of over 1.5 seconds to the McLarens. Several drivers went off the track again including Coulthard, Frentzen, Hill, Ralf Schumacher and Zanardi. The Sauber team had somewhat more serious problems: Pedro Diniz stopped on track as a precaution when warning lights lit up, while his teammate Jean Alesi hit the wall. Zanardi and Zonta also stopped on track; Zonta's transmission broke an...

Saturday

After the break Wurz spun into the tyre barriers and caused a red flag. Both the Sauber drivers, as well as de la Rosa and Trulli ended their session prematurely after a spin, while most drivers missed a corner once or twice, getting used to the lower grip level of the new 4-grooved front tires. Despite that, the dominance of McLaren took on breath-taking form. Häkkinen was fastest with a time of 1 minute and 30.324 seconds, six-tenths quicker than teammate Coulthard and a full 2.2 seconds faste...

Qualifying

Barrichello's fourth place behind Michael Schumacher was impressive. Not so impressive were Zanardi's 15th place, Alesi's 16th and most notably Panis' 20th position. As in the earlier practice sessions, many drivers left the track momentarily; Michael Schumacher even three times. Gené ended his session in the gravel, and the yellow flags spoiled a quick run for many drivers. To add to Gené's problems, Häkkinen's very fast lap time at the end of the session had pushed him off the starting grid, b...

Race

Mika Häkkinen and David Coulthard had dominated all sessions throughout the weekend with laptimes over a second quicker than anybody else, and with both cars starting from the front row of the grid, the race was looking to be an easy win for the McLaren team. The first signs of trouble came before the race had even begun; while the other drivers made their way to the dummy grid, pole sitter Häkkinen was still in the pits with a problem. At the last minute the team decided that he would have to u... On lap 27, Michael Schumacher had a puncture but he made it back to the pits. The front wing of his Ferrari had been damaged by vibrations and it was replaced with a wing originally intended for Irvine's car, bearing the number 4. On lap 28, Diniz had to retire from 4th with a transmission problem. Barrichello was now 4th, followed by Zonta and Takagi. On the next lap Wurz had a spectacular spin when his rear suspension failed. On lap 32, Barrichello came into the pits to take his stop-and-go pe...

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorLapGap
11Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes1:30.462
22David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:30.946+0.484
33Michael SchumacherFerrari1:31.781+1.319
416Rubens BarrichelloStewart-Ford1:32.148+1.686
58Heinz-Harald FrentzenJordan-Mugen-Honda1:32.276+1.814
64Eddie IrvineFerrari1:32.289+1.827
79Giancarlo FisichellaBenetton-Playlife1:32.540+2.078
86Ralf SchumacherWilliams-Supertec1:32.691+2.229
97Damon HillJordan-Mugen-Honda1:32.695+2.233
1010Alexander WurzBenetton-Playlife1:32.789+2.327

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Eddie Irvine 10
2 Heinz-Harald Frentzen 6
3 Ralf Schumacher 4
4 Giancarlo Fisichella 3
5 Rubens Barrichello 2
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Was it ever truly about the speed, this relentless pursuit around a sun-drenched circuit? The air hung thick with the scent of high-octane fuel and anticipation, a palpable tension woven into the roar of engines. Eddie Irvine, a name then largely absent from the grand narratives, seized the moment, a sudden, brilliant burst of defiance against the established order. The MP4/14, a testament to Newey's brilliance and McLaren's ambition, faltered, revealing the precarious nature of innovation. A victory born not of flawless design, but of a driver's instinct, a fleeting advantage snatched from the jaws of mechanical uncertainty. The Albert Park rain, a subtle, persistent presence, mirrored perhaps, the unpredictable heart of motorsport itself.

Eddie Irvine, a name now etched into the annals, seized the opportunity, a testament to courage and the capricious nature of speed.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The air hung thick with the scent of eucalyptus and burning rubber – a peculiar perfume for the dawn of a new millennium. A McLaren, the MP4/14, pushed a staggering 780 horsepower through its Ford-Cosworth V10, a brutal symphony of engineering attempting to tame the Albert Park asphalt. Schumacher, aboard a Ferrari, wrestled with a 580-horsepower V10, the Italian team's strategy clearly geared toward tire degradation, a calculated gamble that ultimately favored Irvine.

Fifty-seven laps, a history-laden season's debut, and the McLaren machines, so utterly dominant in the practice sessions, succumbed to the elements. A curious statistic emerges amidst the chaos: before this day, Mika Häkkinen had secured pole position in *every* Australian Grand Prix he'd contested. The numerical anomaly, a stark reminder of racing's capricious nature, offered a strange counterpoint to Eddie Irvine's hard-won triumph.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The rain, a sudden, vicious curtain, slammed down. Frentzen's Ferrari, a predatory shadow in the grey, edged ahead – a fleeting, desperate gamble. A scent of ozone and wet asphalt, a primal aroma of mechanical fury, hung heavy in the air. Irvine, cool and deliberate, answered, his Ferrari's engine a low growl of calculated aggression. The crowd, a muted roar, sensed the shift, a tangible tremor in the heart of the race. This wasn't merely a battle for victory; it was a reckoning, a brutal assertion of will under the relentless Australian sky.

The rain, a sullen grey drape over Albert Park, mirrored the apprehension in Eddie Irvine's eyes. He'd watched, a silent, intense observer, as Michael, that titan of the grid, wrestled with a persistent engine misfire – a mechanical tremor threatening to shatter his composure. It was a familiar dance, this tension between the two titans, a microcosm of the Ferrari strategy, a desperate gamble for a single, decisive advantage. The scent of wet asphalt and high-octane fuel hung heavy in the air, a primal perfume of speed and risk. Irvine, however, remained steadfast, a granite presence amidst the chaos, absorbing the drama with a focused gaze. A victory here, a sudden, glorious surge, would etch his name into the annals of motorsport, a testament to daring and resilience. The crowd, a murmuring sea of anticipation, sensed it too – the potential for a truly unforgettable moment.

Race Calendar

1999 season