Race
In preparation for the Grand Prix, the Ferrari team tested its chassis, the F2001 , the only constructor to do so. The outfit conducted a six-hour and 45-minute shakedown session on 28 June at the Fiorano Circuit with their test driver, Luca Badoer , who drove 45 km (28 mi) to test the functionality of the car electrical system and also concentrated on launch control system practice starts. After an FIA World Motor Sport Council meeting in Paris on 27 June 2001, all of the eleven tea... Coulthard had won the 2000 French Grand Prix and spoke of his anticipation that McLaren would be within four-tenths of a second of Ferrari depending on the amount of tyre degradation, "So, in qualifying, again, unless the tyre that we have available to us works well on our car there, I don't think we have something in the set-up that we can change. It's probably something a bit more fundamental." He said that he did not want to be drawn into discussion over the Drivers' Championship and s... A total of 11 teams (each representing a different constructors ) entered two drivers each for the event. Some teams made modifications to their cars for the race. The Renault engine manufacturer débuted a revised specification of its V10 power unit in the Benetton B201s of Giancarlo Fisichella and Jenson Button . This however did not increase the overall top speed of the cars and they remained slow throughout the race meeting. All of the primary teams did not bring any major aerody... Barrichello had a fast gateway, rising from eighth to fifth by the end of the first lap. Räikkönen moved up four positions over the same distance. Montoya passed Trulli and the manoeuvre caused the latter to lose momentum and allow Barrichello to overtake him. At the end of the first lap, Ralf Schumacher led by 0.3 seconds from Michael Schumacher, who was in turn was followed by Coulthard, Montoya, Barrichello, Trulli, Frentzen, Villeneuve, Räikkönen, Heidfeld, Irvine, Panis, Burti... That lap, Bernoldi retired with an engine failure. Irvine was challenging Panis for ninth though he was not able to pass and he fell back slightly before the first round of pit stops. In the meantime, the top five drivers were covered by a gap of ten seconds as all of them lapped in the 1 minute and 16 second range and began to lap slower drivers for the first time. Barrichello was the first lead driver to make a pit stop on the 21st lap. He rejoined the track in seve... After the pit stops, Michael Schumacher led Ralf Schumacher by 7.2 seconds, who in turn, was 1.1 seconds ahead of the third-placed Coulthard. Barrichello was another two seconds behind in fourth and the rest of the top six was completed by Montoya and Trulli. On lap 31, the stewards informed the McLaren team that Coulthard had incurred a ten-second stop-and-go penalty because he was observed going 5 km/h (3.1 mph) above the 80 km/h (50 mph) pit lane speed limit because he disengage... At the end of lap 42, Irvine drew to the right of Frentzen and out-braked him at the Imola chicane as Frentzen cut the corner to retain eighth. Irvine gesticulated at the Jaguar gantry on the pit lane to signal that Frentzen performed an illegal manoeuvre. Frentzen then ceded the position to Irvine to avoid incurring a penalty. On lap 44, the technical director of the Williams team Patrick Head went to his outfit's gantry on the pit wall to instruct Ralf Schumacher to enter the pit... Coulthard drew close to Barrichello at the Adelaide hairpin on lap 58 after the latter ran wide. He dropped back from Barrichello through Estroil corner three laps later. Button pirouetted through 720 degrees into the gravel trap at the Adelaide hairpin because he pushed too hard and had oversteer on the 63rd lap though he continued. He consequently had too deal with heavy vibrations at high speeds from flat-spotting a tyre after locking the wheels for a long period o... The top three drivers appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and spoke to the media in a later press conference. Michael Schumacher said he was delighted to take the 50th victory of his career though he explained his priority was to win the race and focus on securing the Drivers' Championship, "People seem to misunderstand my feeling about these statistics – I always said they were second priority but they do mean something to me." Ralf Schumacher expressed his happiness ... Coulthard learned about his ten-second stop-and-go penalty over the radio and admitted his surprise and disappointment over incurring it as he believed he had exited the pit lane, "The fact is the penalty for speeding cost me points. I was just a bit too keen with the button. It has cost me dearly", and, "I knew I had a penalty, at first I didn't know what for. Then the team explained it to me. I wasn't gutted because you never know what can happen during the rest of the race. I knew I had to ke... The result enabled Michael Schumacher (on 78 points) to increase his Drivers' Championship lead over Coulthard in second to 31 points. Ralf Schumacher's second-place finish moved him past Barrichello for third. Montoya remained in fifth place despite he retirement. Ferrari further extended its advantage in the Constructors' Championship to 52 points over the McLaren team in second. Williams remained in third place with 43 points while Heidfeld's sixth-place finish meant Sauber broke its ti... Drivers who scored championship points are denoted in bold .
Qualifying
A handling balance problem that made his car anxious under braking and launched over the kerbs at the turn 13/14 chicane restricted Barrichello to eighth. Heidfeld made minor adjustments to improve the vehicle's balance and took ninth. Villeneuve used the first half an hour to adjust his front and rear flaps and took tenth, although he lost time through turn one. Panis took 11th after heavy traffic slowed his final timed lap. Irvine, 12th, spun twice during the session and Räikköne...
Warm-up
The drivers took to the track at 09:30 Central European Summer Time ( UTC+2 ) for a 30-minute warm-up session in warm and dry weather conditions. All drivers fine-tuned their race set-ups against the weather conditions of the time, undertook laps in their spare cars and Barrichello changed the setting of his rear wing. Although he spun towards the conclusion of the session, Häkkinen drove better than in qualifying and he was fastest with a lap of 1 minute and 15.428 s...
Race Result
| Pos | No. | Driver | Constructor | Lap | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 5 | Ralf Schumacher | Williams-BMW | 1:12.989 | — |
| 2 | 1 | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | 1:12.999 | +0.010 |
| 3 | 4 | David Coulthard | McLaren-Mercedes | 1:13.186 | +0.197 |
| 4 | 3 | Mika Häkkinen | McLaren-Mercedes | 1:13.268 | +0.279 |
| 5 | 12 | Jarno Trulli | Jordan-Honda | 1:13.310 | +0.321 |
| 6 | 6 | Juan Pablo Montoya | Williams-BMW | 1:13.625 | +0.636 |
| 7 | 11 | Heinz-Harald Frentzen | Jordan-Honda | 1:13.815 | +0.826 |
| 8 | 2 | Rubens Barrichello | Ferrari | 1:13.867 | +0.878 |
| 9 | 16 | Nick Heidfeld | Sauber-Petronas | 1:14.095 | +1.106 |
| 10 | 10 | Jacques Villeneuve | BAR-Honda | 1:14.096 | +1.107 |
Championship Standings After This Race
The Paddock Breakdown
Barry · Gary · KatGary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues
Hold on to your helmets! The air here at Magny-Cours is thick with tension – a palpable surge of ambition from every corner. Michael Schumacher, that relentless machine, seized the lead after 23 laps, exploiting a crucial 670bhp advantage afforded by the Ferrari's 3. 0-liter V10. Ralf Schumacher, momentarily dominant, wrestled with tire degradation, a brutal reminder of the strategic dance unfolding beneath the French sun. Coulthard's penalty, a ten-second sting for a gearbox infringement, threatens to unravel his championship hopes.
Magnificent! The heat, the tension…it's almost unbearable out there. Schumacher, seizing the moment, a calculated aggression that's utterly ruthless. Twenty-three laps, and Ralf Schumacher, a whirlwind of blue, dictated the pace – a stunning display of raw speed. Just look at that lap time differential, a full 1. 3 seconds separating him from the field, a statistical anomaly that underscores the sheer dominance of that Williams car.
Kat — 30 · Technical journalist
Magnificent! Schumacher explodes past Ralf into Turn Six – a brutal assertion of dominance! The German's tightening his grip on this championship, isn't he? Coulthard's still lurking, a viper in McLaren colours, but the Ferrari's pace is simply…unstoppable. This isn't just a race, people, this is a battle for the ages! The tension is palpable, a suffocating blanket over the Magny-Cours circuit. Can anyone truly challenge the Scuderia's relentless surge?
The rain, a venomous serpent, slithering across the track – you could almost *hear* Ralf's frustration, a guttural growl from the cockpit. Twenty-three laps, a brutal, dominant surge, and then… nothing. The grip vanished, the momentum bled away, and suddenly, he was adrift, swallowed by the slick. A desperate gamble with the slick tires, a miscalculation of catastrophic proportions. Schumacher, cool, collected, seizing the opportunity with a predatory grace. The Italian champion wasn't just winning; he was dismantling the challenge. Coulthard's penalty, a cruel twist of fate, only served to amplify the drama. This wasn't just a race; it was a psychological war waged on a track slick with uncertainty.