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2002

2002 JAPANESE GRAND PRIX

The 2002 Japanese Grand Prix , formally the 2002 Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix , was a Formula One motor race held at Suzuka on 13 October 2002. It was the seventeenth and final race of the 2002 FIA Formula One World Championship . It is also the last race held on this layout.

Winner

Schumacher

Ferrari

Podium

Barrichello / Coulthard

P2 and P3

Background

With both drivers and constructors title already decided, the fight in the championships concentrated on the lower ranks. In the Drivers' Championship, Juan Pablo Montoya was 3rd, 5 points ahead of teammate Ralf Schumacher . For Ralf to take 3rd, he needed to either win the race, provided that Montoya finished lower than second, or to finish second with Montoya out of the point-scoring positions. David Coulthard had a slim chance of winning 3rd place but that could only happen if he won the Japa... In the Constructors' Championship, Ferrari, Williams and McLaren had secured 1st to 3rd. Renault had almost clinched 4th as Sauber would needed at least to win the race with their second car finishing in the points to take 4th. Four points separated four teams (Sauber on 11, Jaguar with 8 and both Honda runners BAR and Jordan with 7 points each) in a tough fight for positions, as the final ranking influenced how much a team received from the revenue of TV rights.

Race

A number of teams were testing the previous week before the Grand Prix. McLaren, Williams, Toyota and BAR were at Barcelona and McLaren test driver Alexander Wurz broke the lap record there. Ferrari were testing at Mugello with Sauber and at Jerez and Fiorano while Renault and Jordan tested at Silverstone . The teams concentrated on set-up for the Grand Prix as well as testing components for the 2003 season.

Qualifying

Michael Schumacher grabbed his 7th pole position of the season and the 50th of his career ahead of teammate Rubens Barrichello and David Coulthard. Kimi Räikkönen was 4th ahead of Ralf Schumacher and Juan Pablo Montoya. Takuma Sato managed 7th and his best ever qualifying ahead of his teammate Giancarlo Fisichella . Jacques Villeneuve was 9th with Jenson Button wrapping up the top 10. The session was interrupted for over 75 minutes after Allan McNish appeared to have lost control of his car and crashed backwards through the safety barrier at the 130R curve. The back of his car was destroyed, luckily though he didn't sustain any major injuries. He qualified in 18th, however was unfit to start the race. The fight for pole turned to be a no-contest with Michael Schumacher convincingly faster than anyone else here including his teammate. The fight at the front was really between the other 5 drivers of the top 3 teams. For most of the session they appeared to be evenly matched however Barrichello, Coulthard and Räikkönen all managed to improve late in the session while Ralf Schumacher and Juan Pablo Montoya didn't and hence the final order. Behind the top 3 teams, the Jordan team took the honours of the best of the rest thanks to a more powerful Honda engine. Takuma Sato impressed his home crowds by not just outqualifying his teammate but also ending up in 7th and only 1.773 seconds off Michael's pace despite this being his first time on the track in a Formula 1 car. Behind Sato, it was close as expected with 1 second separating Sato in 7th and Massa in 15th. In addition to McNish's crash, Olivier Panis and Eddie Irvine suffered from car problems and had to stop on the track. Panis managed to get back and use the spare but Irvine didn't.

References

34°50′35″N 136°32′26″E / 34.84306°N 136.54056°E / 34.84306; 136.54056

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorLapGap
11Michael SchumacherFerrari1:31.317
22Rubens BarrichelloFerrari1:31.749+0.432
33David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:32.088+0.771
44Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes1:32.197+0.880
55Ralf SchumacherWilliams-BMW1:32.444+1.127
66Juan Pablo MontoyaWilliams-BMW1:32.507+1.190
710Takuma SatoJordan-Honda1:33.090+1.773
89Giancarlo FisichellaJordan-Honda1:33.276+1.959
911Jacques VilleneuveBAR-Honda1:33.349+2.032
1015Jenson ButtonRenault1:33.429+2.112

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Michael Schumacher 144
2 Rubens Barrichello 77
3 Juan Pablo Montoya 50
4 Ralf Schumacher 42
5 David Coulthard 41
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Ever consider how a flawlessly executed victory can simultaneously mask a battlefield? Schumacher's triumph at Suzuka wasn't simply about speed; it was about cementing Ferrari's dominance, wasn't it? Barrichello's second place was a calculated move, a subtle flexing of muscle to remind McLaren – and the wider world – of Ferrari's raw power. Irvine's departure, that quiet severance, speaks volumes about the ruthless calculus of motorsport. A brilliant end to a career, perhaps, but also the closing of a door on a significant strategic alliance. The silence surrounding Salo's exit… that's where the real story lies, isn't it?

The whispers from Suzuka confirm it: Barrichello's second place wasn't merely a strategic gamble, but a calculated maneuver to bleed Ferrari of any chance at a constructors' title. Don't be fooled by the Italian flag waving – the real battle for supremacy was fought in the garage, and the outcome, predictably, favors those with the deepest pockets.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The air hangs thick with the scent of burnt rubber and quiet calculation here at Suzuka. Ferrari's 3. 0-liter V10, a beast of 950 horsepower, simply dominated – the McLaren-Mercedes engines, despite their considerable grunt, couldn't match the Italian team's refinement. Rubens Barrichello's second place is a testament to that, of course, but the telemetry shows Ferrari maintained a consistent 2. 5-tenths advantage in cornering grip throughout the entire race. Don't be fooled by the celebratory champagne; this was a cold, calculated victory, and the subtle shift in tire compound strategy – a deliberate choice to prioritize longevity over outright pace – speaks volumes about their long-term ambitions.

The air in Suzuka always smelled of ambition, didn't it? Schumacher's eleventh victory this year – a figure mirroring McLaren's dominant 1988 season – isn't just a number. Consider the 53 laps completed; Ferrari, for all their talk of evolution, has consistently demonstrated a ruthless efficiency in converting pole position into outright wins. It's a pattern, isn't it? And a quiet, unsettling one for those chasing.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The air in the Ferrari garage tasted of ozone and barely suppressed fury. Barrichello, simmering with a quiet rage, was meticulously adjusting his steering wheel – a calculated display, no doubt. Word was the team had subtly favored Schumacher's strategy, a calculated move to secure the Constructors' Championship. Irvine, watching from the pit box, didn't bother with a grimace. He'd long since accepted his fate; a footnote in Ferrari's grand scheme. Salo, meanwhile, simply stared blankly at the track, a ghost of a driver fading into the background. The Japanese sun beat down, oblivious to the simmering resentments of those who'd traded speed for loyalty.

The rain hadn't bothered Schumacher, not a drop. He's always been a creature of calculated aggression, you see. I spoke with Ross Brawn yesterday – a man who understands the brutal arithmetic of victory – and he admitted, with a flicker of something akin to respect, that Michael simply *knew* this track. Rubens, of course, was a worthy challenger, but the German possessed a ruthlessness that few could match. Poor Salo, though. he's a talented kid, wasted, really. The paddock's murmurs about Irvine's departure are louder than anyone admits, a quiet acknowledgement of a career prematurely extinguished. It's a shame, truly.

Race Calendar

2002 season