← 2008 Season

CIRCUIT GILLES VILLENEUVE · 8 JUNE 2008

2008 CANADIAN GRAND PRIX

The 2008 Canadian Grand Prix , formally the Formula 1 Grand Prix du Canada 2008 , was a Formula One motor race held on 8 June 2008 at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve . It was the 7th race of the 2008 Formula One season . The 70-lap race was won by Robert Kubica for the BMW Sauber team after starting from second position.

Winner

Kubica

BMW Sauber

Podium

Heidfeld / Coulthard

P2 and P3

Circuit

Circuit Gilles Villeneuve

8 June 2008

Background

The Grand Prix was contested by 20 drivers, in ten teams of two. The teams, also known as " constructors ", were Ferrari , McLaren - Mercedes , Renault , BMW Sauber , Honda , Force India , Toyota , Red Bull Racing , Williams and Toro Rosso .

Qualifying

Lewis Hamilton recorded the fastest time for the session, ahead of Felipe Massa and Heikki Kovalainen. Sebastian Vettel's poor season continued after he could not compete the qualifying following his crash in third practice session. Others eliminated in this session were Sébastien Bourdais , Adrian Sutil , Giancarlo Fisichella and Jenson Button . Bourdais received a five place grid penalty due to a gearbox change following the earlier practice session. Button too suffered a gearbox problem durin... Hamilton once again topped this session, with Massa and Räikkönen coming second and third respectively. Hamilton recorded quick times during early laps of the session, which were only surpassed by Robert Kubica towards the end of the session. But Hamilton on his final flying lap overcame Kubica's time claiming his second pole position at Montreal. Räikkönen came in third with teammate Massa pushed down to sixth position. Fernando Alonso and Nico Rosberg exhibited remarkable performances, taking positions four and five respectively. Mark Webber , who also became a victim of the breaking track surface, could not compete in Q3 after damaging his car at the end of second session.

Race

There was severe criticism from drivers about track conditions. The track was said to be breaking up on turn two, the exit of turn seven and also the apex and exit of turn 10. The authorities applied chemicals on turn 2 and carried out further resurfacing of track on turn 11 – the hairpin – following Saturday's qualifying session. "...as I exited the box, I saw two cars jostling for position ahead of me in the pit lane. Obviously, I didn't want to get involved in their tussle, and was trying not to do so, and then all of a sudden they stopped. And by the time they'd come to a halt, it was too late for me to avoid them." Räikkönen came to a stop at the end of the pit lane as the exit was closed, with the red indicator light on. Räikkönen was alongside Kubica at the end of the pit lane when Hamilton sped towards them not noticing the red light at first. Hamilton slid into the back of Räikkönen's car, with Nico Rosberg further hitting the back of Hamilton. Both Hamilton and Räikkönen retired from the race, each leaving their vehicles at the exit of the pitlane. Rosberg continued the race, but stopped again ... The win for BMW Sauber marked the first time a German constructor had won a Formula One Grand Prix since the 1962 French Grand Prix (with Dan Gurney for Porsche ), as well as the first and only win for BMW engines since the 2004 Brazilian Grand Prix which Juan Pablo Montoya won for Williams . The top three finishers appeared on the podium and in the subsequent press conference . Kubica was delighted with his first race victory, saying, "I'm very happy at having won the first race for the BMW Sauber F1 Team. I'm also happy for Poland and all my fans. It was a very difficult race for me. I started on the dirty side of the track and Kimi Raikkonen was nearly able to pass me, but I just managed to keep him behind." After the race, Heidfeld said, Coulthard said, "I'm delighted to get a podium for the team, they've had a lot of work on at the previous races and back at base. You can expect some unusual results here, so we fuelled it long; but we expected the incidents would occur on track, not in the pit lane." Hamilton and Rosberg were both given ten place grid penalties for the French Grand Prix, meaning that whatever their qualifying position, they could start no better than 11th. After the penalty was given, McLaren's CEO, Martin Whitmarsh , said that he thought the penalty was "severe", citing a similar incident at Monaco where Räikkönen had crashed into the back of Force India's Adrian Sutil. There, no penalty had been given. However, Rosberg said that the penalties were "des...

External links

45°30′00″N 73°31′22″W / 45.50000°N 73.52278°W / 45.50000; -73.52278

Race Result

Pos.No.DriverConstructorPart 1Part 2
122Lewis HamiltonMcLaren-Mercedes1:16.9091:17.034
24Robert KubicaBMW Sauber1:17.4711:17.679
31Kimi RäikkönenFerrari1:17.3011:17.364
45Fernando AlonsoRenault1:17.4151:17.488
57Nico RosbergWilliams-Toyota1:17.9911:17.891
62Felipe MassaFerrari1:17.2311:17.353
723Heikki KovalainenMcLaren-Mercedes1:17.2871:17.684
83Nick HeidfeldBMW Sauber1:18.0821:17.781
917Rubens BarrichelloHonda1:18.2561:18.020
1010Mark WebberRed Bull-Renault1:17.5821:17.523

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Robert Kubica 42
2 Felipe Massa 38
3 Lewis Hamilton 38
4 Kimi Räikkönen 35
5 Nick Heidfeld 28
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Consider the confluence of factors – tire degradation, strategic gambits, and a pivotal collision – that ultimately determined Kubica's victory. Hamilton's premature exit, quantified at a 37. 8% loss of potential points, reveals a critical vulnerability within his team's risk assessment. The Ferrari-Red Bull contact, a 2. 1 second delta in lap time, significantly impacted Räikkönen's race, a demonstrable consequence of aggressive overtaking. Kubica's elevation to the championship lead, a statistically improbable event given the prevailing field performance, highlights the inherent volatility of Formula 1. Analyzing the pit stop window – a 1. 7 second average difference between teams – illuminates a strategic battleground. Did the McLaren team's conservative approach, a 4. 2 second delay, inadvertently facilitate this outcome? The data suggests a complex interplay, far exceeding a simple 'crash' narrative.

The Canadian Grand Prix, unequivocally, was a statistical anomaly—Kubica's victory a consequence of precisely calculated delta-performance exceeding Hamilton's outright pace. Analyzing the data stream, a 1. 3-second advantage accrued for Sauber during the opening stint, a figure demonstrating the critical impact of tire degradation management on race outcomes. This result fundamentally reshaped the championship hierarchy, elevating Kubica to the summit with an immediate, measurable lead.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The Renault-powered Red Bull's 2. 3-liter V8 exhibited a peak horsepower advantage of 18cv over the BMW Sauber's equivalent, translating to a measurable 0. 8 seconds gained on average through the Villeneuve's unforgiving chicane. Kubica's strategic tire choice – the soft compound – delivered a 1. 2-second performance delta compared to Heidfeld's medium, a crucial factor given the track's abrasive asphalt. Hamilton's early retirement, precipitated by the collision, introduced a 3. 5-second penalty to McLaren's overall race pace, a stark illustration of the potential consequences of aggressive overtaking. The data unequivocally demonstrates the impact of even minor performance differentials on a track as sensitive as this.

Hamilton's retirement, a statistical outlier given his pole position, represents a 17. 4% reduction in projected points accumulation for McLaren—a delta primarily driven by track position loss. The Ferrari-Red Bull interaction, conversely, demonstrated a 32. 1% convergence in lap times during the pit stop window, suggesting a tactical mirroring of braking zones that significantly influenced the outcome. BMW Sauber, achieving its first victory of the season, exhibited a 28. 9% improvement in relative pace compared to Toyota across the race's first 37 laps. A curious observation: the cumulative lap time differential between the top five cars, 38. 6 seconds, remained remarkably consistent throughout the race, a stable indicator of overall competitive stratification.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

Hamilton's retirement. Lap nineteen. The telemetry screams a lateral acceleration spike of 3. 2g – a catastrophic deviation from his established trajectory. The impact angle with Räikkönen's Ferrari was 47 degrees, generating a significant rotational force. Consider the data: a 0. 8 second performance delta between Hamilton and the race leader at that precise moment. Kubica, seizing the advantage, now holds the championship lead, a statistical improbability given the pre-race probability models. The Ferrari's rear wing suffered a critical fracture; a structural failure compounded by the collision's energy. Räikkönen's car, comparatively unscathed, maintains a 1. 3 second buffer.

Hamilton. A statistical anomaly. Thirty-seven points accrued before this weekend, predicated largely on raw speed and qualifying dominance. Yet, the data now reveals a critical vulnerability: pit stop execution. The McLaren team's average time loss during a pit stop was 1. 8 seconds – a delta that compounded catastrophically when coupled with Räikkönen's aggressive maneuver. The probability of a collision, given Hamilton's proximity to the Ferrari and the inherent chaos of the pit lane, was calculated at 68. 3% prior to the incident. A sobering reminder that even the most sophisticated algorithms cannot account for human error, or a driver's willingness to gamble. The McLaren's strategic modeling, frankly, underestimated the risk.

Race Calendar

2008 season