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ROUND 11 · 2005

2005 BRITISH GRAND PRIX

The 2005 British Grand Prix (officially the 2005 Formula 1 Foster's British Grand Prix ) was a Formula One race held in Silverstone Circuit on 10 July 2005 at 13:00 BST ( UTC+1 ). It was the eleventh race of the 2005 Formula One World Championship and the last race for then Minardi driver Patrick Friesacher .

Winner

Alonso

Renault

Podium

Räikkönen / Button

P2 and P3

Friday drivers

The bottom 6 teams in the 2004 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.

Race

The weather was hot, with air temperature at 30 °C, and the track temperature at 45 °C as the cars completed the formation lap. Sato stalled as he came to the grid, after he had mistakenly pressed the kill switch on his steering wheel, but race director Charlie Whiting nonetheless started the race, with the safety car being deployed on lap 2 to allow the marshals to safely return the BAR to the pit lane. Sato would eventually rejoin the race, two laps behind the leaders. Montoya made a fast star... Montoya made his first pit stop on lap 21, a lap earlier than planned due to traffic. Alonso followed on lap 23, rejoining the race almost side-by-side with Montoya, who again held his line. Fisichella led for the next two laps, setting the fastest lap in the process, before making his first stop. On lap 28, with every driver except Sato having pitted, Montoya led Alonso by three seconds, followed by Fisichella, Button, Barrichello, Räikkönen, Michael Schumacher and Trulli. On lap 32 Barrichello, on a three-stop strategy, made his second stop. This enabled Räikkönen, now the fastest man on the track, to close up behind Button. Montoya responded to his team-mate's pace, and to Alonso, by setting back-to-back fastest laps on laps 40 and 41, increasing his lead over the Spaniard to over six seconds. On lap 43, Räikkönen took fourth when Button made his second stop, easily retaining this position after his own stop two laps later. Montoya pitted on lap 44, putting Alon... Alonso led for five laps before pitting on lap 49, but lost time trying to lap Trulli. This meant that he did not have a big enough lead to make his stop and rejoin the race in front of Montoya, though he was comfortably ahead of Räikkönen. In the end, the Colombian took his first win for McLaren by 2.7 seconds. The result allowed Alonso to increase his lead over Räikkönen in the Drivers' Championship by two points, 77 to 51. Michael Schumacher remained in third on 43 points, while Montoya moved up to sixth with 26. In the Constructors' Championship, McLaren reduced the deficit to Renault by three points, 102 to 87, Ferrari remaining in third on 74.

References

52°04′43″N 1°01′01″W / 52.07861°N 1.01694°W / 52.07861; -1.01694

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorLapGap
15Fernando AlonsoRenault1:19.905
29Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes1:19.932+0.027
33Jenson ButtonBAR-Honda1:20.207+0.302
410Juan Pablo MontoyaMcLaren-Mercedes1:20.382+0.477
516Jarno TrulliToyota1:20.459+0.554
62Rubens BarrichelloFerrari1:20.906+1.001
76Giancarlo FisichellaRenault1:21.010+1.105
84Takuma SatoBAR-Honda1:21.114+1.209
917Ralf SchumacherToyota1:21.191+1.286
101Michael SchumacherFerrari1:21.275+1.370

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Let's consider this grid position shift – a catastrophic engine failure for Räikkönen, a ten-place penalty applied retrospectively. Was McLaren's strategy truly reliant on a flawless qualifying run, or did this mechanical issue expose a vulnerability within their power unit's reliability protocols? The ripple effect, of course, extends beyond simply Alonso's lead; it's a critical data point regarding the durability of the MP4-19. Observe the differential geometry of the McLaren's rear suspension – the inherent stresses during a qualifying lap, particularly at Silverstone's notoriously abrasive kerbs, seem to have amplified this failure. The team's simulation models, undoubtedly, must now be re-evaluated. A fascinating divergence, wouldn't you agree?

The gearbox, quite simply, dictated the entire weekend's narrative. Räikkönen's catastrophic engine failure, compounded by a misjudged activation of the traction control system – a critical error given the slick Silverstone asphalt – wasn't merely a mechanical issue; it was a cascade of data points revealing a fundamental instability in the McLaren powertrain's management.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

Let's examine Räikkönen's plummet; the McLaren's 3. 0 V10 unit experienced a catastrophic sensor failure during his qualifying lap, reducing effective horsepower output by an estimated 80 bhp – a critical differential against Alonso's meticulously calibrated 680. Considering the already tight margins of 2005, this disruption fundamentally altered McLaren's strategic options for the race. Toyota's engine, running at a consistent 650 bhp, would likely have presented a more resilient, predictable performance.

Let's examine this Silverstone spectacle. Räikkönen's plummet from second to sixteenth—a consequence of that catastrophic engine issue—exposes a critical vulnerability within McLaren's operational framework. The statistical deviation here is stark: a ten-place penalty, compounded by a lost qualifying lap, effectively neutralized nearly a full second of potential race advantage. Considering McLaren's dominance in the championship standings, this represents a significant disruption to their strategic calculations.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

Räikkönen's gearbox. A catastrophic failure, utterly stripping the McLaren of any momentum. The telemetry screams it – a violent, uncontained separation of the second gear cluster. Observe the rotational forces; the software flagged a critical stress exceeding allowable tolerances during that late-lap push. The consequence? A ten-place demotion, effectively neutralizing his advantage and gifting pole to Alonso. A brutal reminder of the inherent fragility within these sophisticated systems, especially when pushed to their absolute limit.

The rain, a persistent, sullen grey, mirrored the frustration etched across Adrián Sutil's face. He'd spent the better part of an hour coaxing a tenth out of the Force India's suspension, a delicate dance of ride height and damper settings. The bottom six, as always, a frustrating lottery – a chance to explore the limits, a glimpse at potential, and ultimately, a stark reminder of the financial gulf. Räikkönen's engine woes, predictably, had shifted the landscape, but the real battle, the quiet, insistent one, was being waged here, amongst the Friday practice sessions, a desperate scramble for data against a seemingly insurmountable deficit.

Race Calendar

2005 season