← 2000 Season

ROUND 3 · AUTODROMO ENZO E DINO FERRARI · 2000

2000 SAN MARINO GRAND PRIX

The 2000 San Marino Grand Prix (formally the 20 o Gran Premio Warsteiner di San Marino ) was a Formula One motor race held at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari in Imola , Emilia-Romagna , Italy on 9 April 2000. It was the third race of the 2000 Formula One World Championship and the season's first European event. Ferrari 's Michael Schumacher won the 62-lap race after starting in second.

Winner

Schumacher

Ferrari

Podium

Häkkinen / Coulthard

P2 and P3

Circuit

Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari

Race

Schumacher's victory extended his World Drivers' Championship lead to 21 championship points over Ferrari teammate Rubens Barrichello and 22 championship points over Benetton 's Giancarlo Fisichella . In the World Constructors' Championship, McLaren scored their first championship points of the season, moving into second place with 10 championship points, 29 championship points behind Ferrari with 14 races remaining. Several teams tested their cars , setups and components on European racing tracks for the San Marino Grand Prix. Arrows , Benetton, British American Racing (BAR), Jaguar , Jordan, McLaren, Prost and Williams tested at the Silverstone Circuit in England in mixed weather conditions from 28 to 30 March 2000. Benetton also spent a day at Santa Pod Raceway 's dragstrip , where their drivers tested a new clutch and practiced starts to determine how durable the clutch was. [... Ferrari began the season with Michael Schumacher winning the first two Grands Prix in Australia and Brazil . McLaren, meanwhile, scored no points due to their unreliable car, and their driver David Coulthard was disqualified from second place in Brazil for a technical infringement. Despite the strong start to the season, Michael Schumacher said, "Twenty points from two races is ideal, but I want to ask everybody to stay quiet. The championship has only just started and it would be ... Some teams modified their cars for the Grand Prix, focusing on braking systems to cope with the Imola circuit's demands. Ferrari used lightweight brake discs just for Saturday morning practice sessions, while Michael Schumacher drove with a new engine for qualifying only and a new rear wing specification. Sauber changed its rear wing specification following car component issues that forced the team to withdraw from the previous Brazilian Grand Prix. The Impact Protect... The Grand Prix, which began at 14:00 local time, drew between 100,000 and 120,000 spectators. [ b ] The weather conditions for the race's start were cool and overcast, with a 60% probability of rain. Heidfeld's engine stalled and he was left stranded on the starting grid during the formation lap . His team attempted to repair the problem on the grid, but he began the race from the pit lane. When the race began, Häkkinen retained his p... Villeneuve made a quick start, moving from ninth to fifth place. Ralf Schumacher lost momentum after putting his left-hand tyres on the grass at the Tamburello chicane's left-hand turn to avoid hitting Coulthard due to Michael Schumacher's blocking manoeuvre. He fell from fifth to ninth. Häkkinen led Michael Schumacher by 1.2 seconds at the end of the first lap, followed by Barrichello, Coulthard, Villeneuve, and Trulli, the latter having passed Irvine and his teammate... On lap six, Button's engine made odd noises and failed nearing the Villeneuve chicane, forcing him to retire in the gravel. Gené noticed Button ahead of him and drove into the gravel trap after slipping on Button's oil on the circuit. Häkkinen set a series of fastest laps to draw 3.3 seconds ahead of Michael Schumacher by lap 22, while Barrichello and Coulthard were separated by less than a second and were distanced by the former two. Meanwhile, Verstappe... Trulli was the first of the leading drivers to make a pit stop on lap 24. His 9.3-second stop moved Ralf Schumacher to sixth. Heidfeld experienced a drop in hydraulic pressure, which became so low that his car stopped running, forcing him to retire from the race at the track's side on that lap. When lap 25 ended, Coulthard made his first fuel stop, hoping to pass Barrichello by staying on the track for longer. He rejoined the track in seventh owing to a temporary... At the completion of the first round of pit stops for drivers making two pit stops, Häkkinen led Michael Schumacher by 4.5 seconds, with Barrichello 35 seconds behind in third and Coulthard close behind in fourth. Michael Schumacher was able to either equal his lap times from before his pit stop or be slightly slower until the fuel burned out, at which point he could lap quicker until his second set of tyres wore out. Behind the top four, Villeneuve, Ralf Schumacher, Salo, Ir... The top three drivers appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and later spoke to the media at a press conference. Michael Schumacher commended his team's approach for helping him win the Grand Prix, saying, "the strategy was just right. Those four laps were crucial – and we did it, for the tifosi ." Häkkinen was disappointed to lose the victory through strategy, although he noted that running over debris on the track and his engine cutting out were also contributing factor... The Italian press praised Ferrari for their victory. Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo praised Michael Schumacher's work and commended Brawn for devising the race-winning strategy, "It was very tough and (Mika) Hakkinen drove very well but I am very happy with this win." He added "I know where we have been and I know what we have done and this was an emotional day for the fans, we have two great drivers and the car gave a perfect performance." Barrichello e... McLaren team principal Ron Dennis stated that second and third place were not the anticipated results, but that they still had the capacity to win races in the remaining rounds and were looking forward to the following British Grand Prix . Mercedes-Benz's motorsport director Norbert Haug said McLaren's drivers had "made the best out of their situation". Haug called it "a very mature performance by the whole team", adding, "The harder times of having cars stranded with engine failur... The result meant Michael Schumacher continued to lead the World Drivers' Championship with a maximum of 30 championship points scored. Barrichello moved from third to second with 9 championship points. Fisichella scored no points and dropped from second to third with 8 championship points. Häkkinen was fourth with 6 championship points and Ralf Schumacher had the same number of points in fifth. Ferrari continued to lead the World Constructors' Championship with 39 championship points. McL...

Qualifying

Trulli, eighth, reported good car balance despite slower cars on his penultimate run and yellow flags on his final run. Villeneuve took ninth on soft compound tyres after race engineer Jock Clear improved his car's balance during qualifying, after losing four tenths of a second owing to yellow flags. Diniz, tenth, raced with greater car traction and reached sixth before other drivers lapped faster late in the session. Benetton's Alexander Wurz took 11th d...

References

44°20′38″N 11°43′00″E / 44.34389°N 11.71667°E / 44.34389; 11.71667

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGap
11Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes1:24.714
23Michael SchumacherFerrari1:24.805+0.091
32David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:25.014+0.300
44Rubens BarrichelloFerrari1:25.242+0.528
59Ralf SchumacherWilliams-BMW1:25.871+1.157
65Heinz-Harald FrentzenJordan-Mugen-Honda1:25.892+1.178
77Eddie IrvineJaguar-Cosworth1:25.929+1.215
86Jarno TrulliJordan-Mugen-Honda1:26.002+1.288
922Jacques VilleneuveBAR-Honda1:26.124+1.410
1016Pedro DinizSauber-Petronas1:26.238+1.524

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Michael Schumacher 30
2 Rubens Barrichello 9
3 Giancarlo Fisichella 8
4 Mika Häkkinen 6
5 Ralf Schumacher 6
Sources: Sources: Sources:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Was it merely speed that carried Schumacher through Imola's unforgiving asphalt, or did he navigate a current of calculated aggression, a silent understanding of the track's hungry embrace? Häkkinen, a ghost in the McLaren orange, yielded the lead, a momentary surrender to the relentless rhythm of the Italian circuit. Coulthard, a steadfast presence, mirrored his teammate's dedication, a bronze reflection in the afternoon sun. The air, thick with the scent of burning rubber and the distant roar of the crowd, held the weight of a nation's sporting pride. This wasn't simply a victory; it was a conversation etched into the very bones of the Autodromo, a testament to the enduring allure of a battle waged with precision and passion.

The scent of rain-soaked asphalt and high-octane dreams still clings to Imola; a ghost of speed etched into the very stones of this hallowed circuit. Michael Schumacher, with calculated aggression, seized the initiative, rewriting the narrative of a race that promised only the fleeting brilliance of Mika Häkkinen's early lead. This, gentlemen, is where legends are forged – and sometimes, tragically, broken.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The rain, a sullen grey veil descending upon Imola, seemed to hold its breath just before the lights extinguished. McLaren's MP4-13, a symphony of 887 horsepower – a V10's frantic pulse – wrestled with the slick asphalt, Häkkinen's initial advantage born of a tire compound choice that, in hindsight, proved fatally susceptible to the track's evolving conditions. The Jordan's Mugen engine, a comparatively stout 875 units, strained valiantly, showcasing the inherent difference in mechanical prowess between the titans. A truly sobering reminder that speed alone doesn't guarantee victory.

Forty-four laps – a meticulously crafted symphony of speed and precision – evaporated with the mist, leaving Schumacher poised to seize his opportunity. The numerical ghost of Senna lingered, a stark reminder of the fragility of dominance within this ancient, unforgiving sport.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The rain, a venomous grey, lashed across the Imola asphalt – a biblical deluge threatening to swallow the race whole. Häkkinen's McLaren, a predatory shadow, wrestled with the slick track, the engine's scream a desperate plea against the storm's fury. Schumacher, relentless, stalked the McLaren's tail, the Ferrari's gearbox a precise instrument of calculated aggression. A brief, blinding spray, a flash of scarlet – the German surged, seizing the lead with brutal efficiency. The scent of wet rubber and ozone hung thick in the air, a primal aroma of speed and peril. A legend was being forged in the heart of Italy's most unforgiving circuit.

The rain, a bruised grey slick upon the Imola asphalt, mirrored the worry etched across Mauro Forlani's face. As the race director, he'd spent the preceding days wrestling with the track's treacherous conditions, a silent battle against a force far greater than any engine. He adjusted his spectacles, a small, almost apologetic gesture, as the first cars tentatively emerged from the pitlane. A shiver ran through him—not of cold, but of the memory of the previous year's tragedy, a specter that haunted every corner, every braking zone. Schumacher, poised in second, already sensed the shift in momentum, a subtle tightening of the Ferrari grip. The scent of wet tarmac and high-octane fuel hung heavy in the air, a potent cocktail of speed and impending danger.

Race Calendar

2000 season