Background
Heading into the seventh round of the season, McLaren driver Mika Häkkinen was leading the World Drivers' Championship with 34 points; Ferrari driver Michael Schumacher was second on 30 points, 4 points behind Häkkinen. Behind Häkkinen and Schumacher in the Drivers' Championship, Eddie Irvine was third on 25 points in the other Ferrari, with Heinz-Harald Frentzen and Giancarlo Fisichella both on 13 points. In the Constructors' Championship , Ferrari were leading on 55 points and McLaren were sec... Following the Canadian Grand Prix on 13 June, the teams conducted testing sessions at the Magny-Cours circuit from 16 to 18 June. David Coulthard (McLaren) set the fastest time on the first day, while Eddie Irvine was fastest on the second and final day of testing. Williams made modifications to the suspension of their cars, resulting in several spins. Among the other teams, Minardi elected to perform aerodynamic mapping work at the Automotive Safety Center using their test driver Gastón M... On 16 June, Jordan driver and 1996 World Drivers' Champion Damon Hill announced that he would retire from Formula One racing at the end of the season. Hill later said a factor in his decision was the amount of testing undertaken by the teams and his own personal performance during the season, although he considered retiring with immediate effect.
Race
The second practice session was held in overcast and wet weather conditions, with a drop in the track temperature to 19 °C (66 °F) and the ambient temperature to 20 °C (68 °F). David Coulthard suffered a complete electrical failure (alternator failure) on lap 10 and retired, giving the lead back to Rubens Barrichello. Mika Häkkinen caught Heinz-Harald Frentzen on lap 12, then hounded him for three laps before passing him in a repeat of the move he had pulled on Michael Schumacher earlier. Frentzen tried to fight back, and was able to pull alongside Häkkinen, but Häkkinen's inside line through turn six cemented his position. Behind in the midfield Irvine o... Rain began to fall on lap 21. Eddie Irvine pulled into the pits just as the rain started, but Ferrari was not ready for him and his pit stop took 43 seconds (42.9) after his mechanics initially put a fresh set of dry-weather tyres on his car. Well after the Irvine pit stop disaster happened Giancarlo Fisichella spun, without retiring. A scramble into the pits ensued, but the leaders were all able to hold their positions. One lap after Hill pitted he got a puncture, because he hit a wall. ... Mika Häkkinen made a dive-bomb attempt to pass Rubens Barrichello under braking into Adelaide on lap 38, but he put his inside wheels up onto the curbing and spun the car a full 360 degrees. Mika Häkkinen fell to seventh place. Michael Schumacher passed Heinz-Harald Frentzen through Adelaide on the next lap. Schumacher made a very late braking move to momentarily pass Barrichello into Adelaide on lap 42, but he went very wide and Barrichello cut back under Schumacher to reta... After 47 laps, a long train formed behind Olivier Panis in fourth, with Ralf Schumacher, Eddie Irvine, and Mika Häkkinen being held up behind him. Ralf Schumacher got past Panis on lap 50, and then Irvine came into the pits, sticking with wet tyres. Häkkinen got a good run out of Adelaide on lap 51 and passed Panis for fifth place into Nurburgring corner. On the same lap, Michael Schumacher suffered an electrical malfunction and lost most of his eight-second lead to Rubens Barrichello. [ ... Mika Häkkinen and Rubens Barrichello pitted for extra fuel on lap 66, which let Heinz-Harald Frentzen through into the lead. During Frentzen's one and only pit stop to change onto wet tyres, the Jordan team had fortuitously filled his car with enough fuel to finish the race. Ralf Schumacher passed Michael Schumacher on lap 70, with Michael Schumacher appearing to still have car trouble. Frentzen won the race after 72 laps to secure his first victory of the season in a time of 1:58.... The top three finishers appeared on the podium and in the subsequent press conference . Damon Hill hinted after the race that this one could have been his last, or if he did compete at Silverstone in the next race he might leave Formula One afterwards. Toranosuke Takagi was disqualified for using tyres which had been marked for his team-mate, Pedro de la Rosa .
Qualifying
Due to the wet conditions, a then-record five drivers - Damon Hill , Marc Gené , Luca Badoer , Pedro de la Rosa , and Toranosuke Takagi - all failed to meet the 107% time. Hill missed out by just three milliseconds , the slimmest-ever margin. Due to the wet conditions, and the drivers' competitiveness in practice, all five drivers were permitted to race due to "exceptional circumstances".
Race Result
| Pos | No | Driver | Constructor | Lap | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 16 | Rubens Barrichello | Stewart-Ford | 1:38.441 | |
| 2 | 11 | Jean Alesi | Sauber-Petronas | 1:38.881 | +0.440 |
| 3 | 18 | Olivier Panis | Prost-Peugeot | 1:40.400 | +1.959 |
| 4 | 2 | David Coulthard | McLaren-Mercedes | 1:40.403 | +1.962 |
| 5 | 8 | Heinz-Harald Frentzen | Jordan-Mugen-Honda | 1:40.690 | +2.249 |
| 6 | 3 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | 1:41.127 | +2.686 |
| 7 | 9 | Giancarlo Fisichella | Benetton-Playlife | 1:41.825 | +3.384 |
| 8 | 19 | Jarno Trulli | Prost-Peugeot | 1:42.096 | +3.655 |
| 9 | 17 | Johnny Herbert | Stewart-Ford | 1:42.199 | +3.758 |
| 10 | 23 | Ricardo Zonta | BAR-Supertec | 1:42.228 | +3.787 |
Championship Standings After This Race
The Paddock Breakdown
Barry · Gary · KatGary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues
The air hangs thick with the scent of high-octane fuel and the insistent whine of the McLaren-Mercedes MP4/13's 1. 58-liter V10. A truly prodigious unit, capable of generating 670 horsepower – a figure that, considering the era's emphasis on chassis rigidity, represents a significant engineering gamble. Frentzen's victory, secured after a masterful late-race strategy utilizing softer GoodYear tyres, underscores the evolving tactical complexities of Formula One. Häkkinen's eight-point advantage, bolstered by this result, suggests a championship battle of unprecedented intensity.
The rain, a persistent, sullen grey, has draped itself over Magny-Cours today, mirroring perhaps the strategic uncertainties swirling around this circuit. Frentzen's victory, a first for Jordan, arrives with an odd symmetry; the German's lap time advantage over Häkkinen, a scant 0. 7 seconds, echoes the margin by which Schumacher secured the 1994 Portuguese Grand Prix – a race often cited as a pivotal moment in the Schumacher-Häkkinen rivalry's genesis. This small disparity, coupled with Barrichello's consistent third-place finishes, reveals a concerning trend for Stewart, their win ratio at circuits like this now hovering perilously close to 10%, a figure that demands immediate attention given the intensifying championship battle.
Kat — 30 · Technical journalist
There! A brush of scarlet against the azure – Häkkinen, relentlessly pursuing, a ghost of Fangio's daring etched into his every move. The tension here, mirroring the anxieties gripping Europe regarding the Balkans, is palpable. Eight points now separate the championship contenders, a precarious balance reminiscent of the post-war era, when victory was often snatched from the jaws of defeat. Barrichello, a stoic third, represents the steadfastness of the established order, a contrast to Schumacher's aggressive push. The Williams team, led by Ralf, demonstrates the enduring power of engineering innovation, a legacy stretching back to Stewart-Tyrrell. Ferrari, with Irvine, continues its calculated gamble, a strategy mirroring the political maneuvering of the time. This race, like so many before, is a microcosm of a world grappling with immense change.
The rain, a persistent, sullen grey, mirrored the mood emanating from Mika Häkkinen's garage. A quiet intensity clung to the McLaren team, a palpable tension born not of defeat, but of the relentless pursuit of perfection that has defined their dominance. Häkkinen, meticulously reviewing telemetry, appeared a man possessed, a singular focus sharpening his features. The championship, it seems, is a battle waged not just on the track, but within the very minds of its combatants. Rubens Barrichello's podium, a welcome reward for Stewart, offered a stark contrast – a measured satisfaction, a testament to consistent, strategic racing. The gap to Häkkinen, now eight points, underscores the precarious nature of leadership in this brutal sport. Schumacher, predictably, watches, calculating, a shadow of ambition lurking beneath the Ferrari's crimson livery.