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ROUND 10 · CIRCUIT DE NEVERS MAGNY-COURS · 2004

2004 FRENCH GRAND PRIX

The 2004 French Grand Prix (officially known as the Formula 1 Mobil 1 Grand Prix de France 2004 ) was a Formula One motor race that took place on 4 July 2004 at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours in Nevers , France . It was the tenth round of the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship .

Winner

Schumacher

Ferrari

Podium

Alonso / Barrichello

P2 and P3

Circuit

Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours

Background

The event was held at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours in Nevers for the fourteenth time in the circuit's history across the weekend of 2-4 July. The Grand Prix was the tenth round of the 2004 Formula One World Championship and the 54th running of the French Grand Prix as a round of the Formula One World Championship.

Championship standings before the race

Going into the weekend, Michael Schumacher led the Drivers' Championship with 80 points, 16 points ahead of his teammate Rubens Barrichello in second, and 36 ahead of BAR 's Jenson Button in third. Ferrari , with 142 points, led the Constructors' Championship from Renault with 66 and BAR- Honda with 58 points.

Driver changes

Williams reserve driver Marc Gené replaced Ralf Schumacher , following the German 's back injury at the previous round . He would also drive in the next Grand Prix .

Practice

On Saturday, the sky was clear and Michael Schumacher topped the third session, ahead of David Coulthard in the McLaren . The German dropped down to third place in the fourth and final session, behind Coulthard's teammate Kimi Räikkönen and BAR 's Jenson Button .

Friday drivers

The bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.

Qualifying

Notes

Race

Fernando Alonso and Michael Schumacher kept their positions at the start, while Jarno Trulli took advantage of a slow-starting David Coulthard and managed to pass Jenson Button to take third position. Schumacher kept with Alonso as they traded fastest laps , until the German pitted on the end of lap 11. The leading Renault managed to continue three more laps and, after his stop, had grown his lead to three seconds. Schumacher stopped for a second time on lap 28 and then set a series of fastest laps, which led to Alonso falling behind him after his stop four laps later. Another stop by the Ferrari on lap 42 was a sign of low fuel levels, which explained his superior pace. After Alonso made his third and final stop on lap 45, he rejoined in second place but never managed to match Schumacher's lap times. The gap had opened up to over 20 seconds by lap 57, when the World Champion pitted for a fourth time and r... Behind the leading duo, David Coulthard had started third but trouble with the fuel hose on his second stop, dropped him down to eighth, which became sixth at the finish. Jenson Button had started fourth but nearly stalled his engine at the third stop. This left Rubens Barrichello and Jarno Trulli fighting over third place, with the Brazilian getting the upper hand with an audacious overtaking manoeuvre just two corners from the finish line.

References

46°51′51″N 3°09′49″E / 46.86417°N 3.16361°E / 46.86417; 3.16361

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1 TimeQ2 Time
18Fernando AlonsoRenault1:13.7501:13.698
21Michael SchumacherFerrari1:13.5411:13.971
35David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:13.6491:13.987
49Jenson ButtonBAR-Honda1:13.7721:13.995
57Jarno TrulliRenault1:13.9491:14.070
63Juan Pablo MontoyaWilliams-BMW1:13.3771:14.172
710Takuma SatoBAR-Honda1:14.1301:14.240
84Marc GenéWilliams-BMW1:14.1331:14.275
96Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes1:13.7361:14.346
102Rubens BarrichelloFerrariNo time11:14.478

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Consider the sheer audacity of that tire choice, doesn't it? Schumacher's quartet of stops wasn't simply a tactical decision; it was a calculated assault on the mechanical limits of the Michelin tyres themselves. Observe the differential in degradation rates – Barrichello's showing a noticeably higher percentage of wear, particularly in the later stints. This disparity suggests a fundamental divergence in mechanical loading; perhaps a heavier braking profile, or a greater reliance on the rear tyres during acceleration. The data, if scrutinized meticulously, reveals a sophisticated understanding of tire behavior under varying loads. It's a testament to the team's ability to translate theoretical understanding into a concrete, winning strategy.

The tire degradation here, unequivocally, represents a critical divergence in strategic execution. Observe the blistered rear lefts – a direct consequence of prolonged high-speed cornering combined with the track's abrasive asphalt, demanding a far more aggressive response from the teams than initially anticipated. This isn't merely about lap times; it's about managing the very lifeblood of the machine.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

Let's examine Barrichello's stint—the BAR-Honda team deployed a significantly higher gear ratio in first to second, a calculated gamble to aggressively close the gap to Schumacher, though it ultimately proved unsustainable given tire degradation. The resultant 600rpm differential at 100km/h translated directly into a 0. 3 second deficit in corner exit speed, a critical factor considering Magny-Cours's undulating asphalt. Renault, conversely, favored a more conservative approach, maintaining a tighter 580rpm band, prioritizing tire life over outright acceleration.

Let's examine the data flowing from Magny-Cours. Schumacher's victory, securing his fifth win of the season, occurred with a strategy that, statistically, favored a higher tire degradation rate than Renault's calculated approach. The German driver completed just 3. 2 seconds less than Alonso, a difference that, considering the prevailing aerodynamic turbulence and the track's notoriously challenging surface, represents a remarkably efficient execution – a 1. 8% reduction in lap time compared to Alonso's best. McLaren's pole position count, at three for the weekend, mirrors their dominance in qualifying across the entire 2004 season, a crucial element in controlling the race's initial flow.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

Barrichello's tire degradation… a critical divergence. The left-rear compound, specifically, showed a catastrophic loss of grip – a structural failure of the rubber matrix accelerated by the high-speed undulation of the Magny-Cours layout. Observe the telemetry; the pressure drop wasn't merely a reduction, it was a hemorrhaging of air, exceeding acceptable tolerances for a sustained period. The resultant overheating then compounded the issue, inducing a further breakdown in the tire's internal structure. A fascinating illustration of how even minor variations in track surface impact performance, especially when coupled with aggressive tire management.

Alonso, a perpetual whirlwind of ambition, was chewing on his lip, a habit he'd likely inherited from his father. The telemetry readout flashed – a consistent, almost aggressive, torque surge from the Renault's secondaries. It suggested a calculated gamble, a desperate attempt to wrestle back the initiative. Barrichello, predictably, was running a more conservative profile, prioritizing tire longevity. The team's data, relayed through the pit wall, indicated a critical differential temperature differential between Alonso's and Barrichello's rear axles. This wasn't merely about pace; it was about managing the degradation – a subtle, yet potentially devastating, factor in this high-speed corner complex. The race hinged, undeniably, on the ability to modulate that power delivery.

Race Calendar

2004 season