← 1999 Season

ROUND 15 · NEW SEPANG INTERNATIONAL CIRCUIT · 17 OCTOBER 1999

1999 MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX

The 1999 Malaysian Grand Prix , formally the 1999 Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix , was a Formula One race held on 17 October 1999 at the new Sepang International Circuit . It was the fifteenth race of the 1999 Formula One World Championship .

Winner

Irvine

Ferrari

Podium

Schumacher / Häkkinen

P2 and P3

Circuit

new Sepang International Circuit

17 October 1999

Report

This was the first Malaysian Grand Prix since a Formula Holden event in 1995, and the first time at Formula One world championship level. Michael Schumacher returned to Formula One having recovered from his broken leg, and took pole position by nearly a second from Ferrari teammate Eddie Irvine , with the McLarens of David Coulthard and Mika Häkkinen third and fourth, respectively. At the start, Schumacher led away from Irvine, Coulthard, Häkkinen, and Rubens Barrichello . On lap 4, ... Back in second place, Schumacher slowed again in order to allow Irvine to build an advantage. As the first round of pit stops loomed, Schumacher accelerated the pace in order to stay ahead of Häkkinen. Realising this, McLaren gambled on giving Häkkinen half a tank of fuel, hoping it would be enough to get him out of the pits ahead of Schumacher. The gamble failed, as Schumacher stayed ahead of the Finn and proceeded to block him again, allowing Irvine to extend his lead to 20 seconds. Irvine's lead was not big enough for him to stay ahead after his second pit stop. Despite this, Ferrari were sure that Häkkinen would have to stop again, which he did, emerging in fourth place behind Johnny Herbert in the Stewart . Schumacher slowed once again to allow Irvine to retake the lead, while Häkkinen forced his way past Herbert for third. Irvine duly took the chequered flag one second ahead of Schumacher, with Häkkinen a further eight seconds back. Immediately after the race, the Ferraris were disqualified due to an infringement on their bargeboards . This meant that Häkkinen and McLaren were effectively handed their respective championships by default. Ferrari appealed against the FIA's decision in court and both drivers were subsequently reinstated.

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorLapGap
13Michael SchumacherFerrari1:39.688
24Eddie IrvineFerrari1:40.635+0.947
32David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:40.806+1.118
41Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes1:40.866+1.178
517Johnny HerbertStewart-Ford1:40.937+1.249
616Rubens BarrichelloStewart-Ford1:41.351+1.663
710Alexander WurzBenetton-Playlife1:41.444+1.756
86Ralf SchumacherWilliams-Supertec1:41.558+1.870
97Damon HillJordan-Mugen-Honda1:42.050+2.362
1022Jacques VilleneuveBAR-Supertec1:42.087+2.399

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Eddie Irvine 70
2 Mika Häkkinen 66
3 Heinz-Harald Frentzen 51
4 David Coulthard 48
5 Michael Schumacher 38
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Schumacher, sidelined by injury and a strange, almost hesitant, surrender—what demons were battling within that Ferrari cockpit? Häkkinen watches, a shadow of doubt lengthening across the McLaren, the championship slipping like sand through his fingers. This isn't just a race, is it? This is a brutal dissection of ambition, a chilling reminder that the fastest car doesn't always guarantee the crown.

The air crackles with a tension so thick, you could cut it with a slickside. This, folks, is what happens when ambition clashes with legacy, a brutal ballet of speed and strategic surrender unfolding beneath the Malaysian sun. The championship's fate hangs precariously, a glittering shard threatening to shatter with every daring move.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

Hold on to your helmets! The air here in Sepang is thick with the scent of burning rubber and, frankly, simmering tension. Irvine, a second-place start transformed into a victory snatched from the jaws of destiny – a testament to raw aggression and a Ferrari engine, churning out a staggering 785 horsepower, pushing him through the shadows. Schumacher, returning from that brutal British GP, ceded the lead, a strategic concession that speaks volumes about the championship battle's intensity, and the McLaren's 678 horsepower felt suddenly… inadequate. Häkkinen, a stoic third, represents the unwavering might of McLaren-Mercedes, a team battling for supremacy with 678 stallions under the hood.

Hold on to your helmets! The air here in Sepang is thick with tension, a palpable thing you can almost taste. Irvine… he's *hunting* Schumacher, isn't he? Just look at the way he's shadowing the German, a predator sizing up his prey. This isn't just a race; this is a psychological battle for the ages, a chess match played at 200 miles an hour.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

Here we go! "SCHUMACHER! Letting him pass! The absolute audacity! A fractured leg, a shattered championship dream, and he gifts the lead to Irvine?! This isn't just a race, this is a psychological war waged on the asphalt. The tension is a physical thing, a suffocating blanket over Sepang. Häkkinen watches, a glacial expression – does he recognize the calculated surrender? The crowd roars, a wave of disbelief and fury. This could rewrite the entire season, wouldn't you say?".

The rain…it's a serpent, isn't it? Coiling around the track, a venomous whisper promising chaos. Look at Schumacher, a glacial stare fixed on Irvine – a predator assessing his prey. The tension! You can *taste* it, thick and metallic, hanging in the air. That pole position, a cruel joke delivered by a circuit that simply refuses to yield. A broken leg, a championship battle, and now… this. This is what F1 *is*, isn't it? Pure, unadulterated, breathtaking drama.

Race Calendar

1999 season