1977 United States Grand Prix

The 1977 United States Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on October 2, 1977, at the Watkins Glen Grand Prix Race Course in Watkins Glen, New York. It was the fifteenth race of the 1977 World Championship of F1 Drivers and the 1977 International Cup for F1 Constructors. The event was also referred to as the United States Grand Prix East in order to distinguish it from the United States Grand Prix West held on April 3, 1977, in Long Beach, California. It was covered on American radio by Motor Racing Network.

1977 United States Grand Prix
Race 15 of 17 in the 1977 Formula One season
Race details
DateOctober 2, 1977
Official nameXX Toyota United States Grand Prix
LocationWatkins Glen Grand Prix Race Course
Watkins Glen, New York
CoursePermanent road course
Course length5.435 km (3.377 miles)
Distance59 laps, 320.67 km (199.24 miles)
WeatherRain with temperatures reaching up to 17 °C (63 °F);
Winds gusting up to 23.69 km/h (14.72 mph)[1]
Pole position
DriverMcLaren-Ford
Time1:40.863
Fastest lap
DriverSweden Ronnie PetersonTyrrell-Ford
Time1:51.85 on lap 56
Podium
FirstMcLaren-Ford
SecondLotus-Ford
ThirdWolf-Ford
Lap leaders

The 59-lap race was won from pole position by James Hunt, driving a McLaren-Ford. In wet conditions, Hunt held off a late charge from Mario Andretti in the Lotus-Ford to take his second consecutive Watkins Glen victory. Jody Scheckter was third in the Wolf-Ford, while Niki Lauda clinched his second Drivers' Championship by finishing fourth in his Ferrari.

Report

For the first time, the American race was being held before the Canadian Grand Prix, which would follow a week later. Lauda led the championship with 69 points, while Jody Scheckter was second with 42 points. With nine points being awarded for a win, Lauda needed only to score one point in any of the final three races to clinch the title, while Scheckter needed to win them all to have a chance (both would be on 69 points, but Scheckter would have the tiebreaker on wins with 5, compared to Lauda's 3).

From the start of practice on Friday, Hunt's McLaren was dominant, setting a track record of 1:40.863. Brabham teammates Hans-Joachim Stuck and John Watson were a quarter of a second back, followed by Andretti, Ronnie Peterson and the Ferraris of Carlos Reutemann and Lauda. On Saturday morning there was rain just before the end of untimed practice, and so the afternoon session served only as practice for a possible wet race on Sunday, as Friday's times determined the grid.

Sunday began cold but dry, with a crowd over 100,000. Before the warmup, however, it began to drizzle, and by the five-minute signal, it had picked up enough that only John Watson was willing to gamble on starting with slicks. At the flag, everyone got away from the grid and through the first turn without incident, but the spray was so heavy that nothing was visible after the first five cars. Stuck quickly jumped ahead of Hunt, and after one lap, they were followed by Andretti, Reutemann, Peterson, Lauda, Scheckter, Jacques Laffite and Gunnar Nilsson.

Immediately, Scheckter began to take advantage of the others' uncertainty in the conditions and, by lap five had moved from ninth to fourth. Stuck was also going well in the wet, and, despite losing his clutch cable in the first few laps, pulled away from Hunt. Lauda passed his teammate Reutemann for fifth spot when the Argentine spun. On lap 15, with Hunt four seconds behind, Stuck, struggling to make gear changes without a clutch, popped out of gear entering a corner and went straight on. He retired with damage to the monocoque.

Hunt now led Andretti by 10.5 seconds, with Scheckter 14 seconds further back in third. The rain stopped, and drivers sought the wet sections of a drying track to cool their tires. With 10 laps remaining and the lead at 22 seconds, Hunt backed off in response to a pit signal. Lauda was coasting in fourth, a position sufficient to clinch the Championship. Scheckter had slowed in third to preserve his tires.

With two laps to go, Andretti, who had been closing while Hunt cruised home, was only 6.7 seconds behind. As they began the last lap, the margin had closed to 1.5 seconds, but Hunt increased his lead slightly to win by just over two seconds. The McLaren pit had not informed him how close the Lotus was until the start of the final lap, when Teddy Mayer gave him a frantic wave to pick up the pace.

Lauda thus took his second title, and Ferrari took their third consecutive Constructor's Championship. For Lauda, it was the culmination of a comeback from the life-threatening injuries he had sustained at the Nürburgring in 1976. Almost immediately, the Austrian quit Ferrari, having already announced his intention to move to Brabham for 1978.

Classification

Qualifying

Pos.DriverConstructorTime
1 James HuntMcLarenFord1:40.863
2 Hans-Joachim StuckBrabhamAlfa Romeo+0.275
3 John WatsonBrabhamAlfa Romeo+0.330
4 Mario AndrettiLotusFord+0.618
5 Ronnie PetersonTyrrellFord+1.045
6 Carlos ReutemannFerrari+1.089
7 Niki LaudaFerrari+1.226
8 Patrick DepaillerTyrrellFord+1.375
9 Jody ScheckterWolfFord+1.452
10 Jacques LaffiteLigierMatra+1.777
11 Vittorio BrambillaSurteesFord+1.923
12 Gunnar NilssonLotusFord+1.952
13 Alan JonesShadowFord+2.156
14 Jean-Pierre JabouilleRenault+2.206
15 Jochen MassMcLarenFord+2.379
16 Jean-Pierre JarierShadowFord+2.653
17 Brett LungerMcLarenFord+2.835
18 Emerson FittipaldiFittipaldiFord+3.075
19 Clay RegazzoniEnsignFord+3.345
20 Rupert KeeganHeskethFord+3.687
21 Ian ScheckterMarchFord+3.839
22 Ian AshleyHeskethFord+4.237
23 Alex RibeiroMarchFord+4.610
24 Patrick NèveMarchFord+4.982
25 Hans BinderSurteesFord+5.017
26 Danny OngaisPenskeFord+5.207
Cut-off
27 Patrick TambayEnsignFord+8.572
Source:[2]

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
11 James HuntMcLaren-FordG591:58:23.26719
25 Mario AndrettiLotus-FordG59+ 2.02646
320 Jody ScheckterWolf-FordG59+ 1:18.87994
411 Niki LaudaFerrariG59+ 1:40.61573
522 Clay RegazzoniEnsign-FordG59+ 1:48.138192
612 Carlos ReutemannFerrariG58+ 1 Lap61
726 Jacques LaffiteLigier-MatraG58+ 1 Lap10 
824 Rupert KeeganHesketh-FordG58+ 1 Lap20 
916 Jean-Pierre JarierShadow-FordG58+ 1 Lap16 
1030 Brett LungerMcLaren-FordG57+ 2 Laps17 
1118 Hans BinderSurtees-FordG57+ 2 Laps25 
127 John WatsonBrabham-Alfa RomeoG57+ 2 Laps3 
1328 Emerson FittipaldiFittipaldi-FordG57+ 2 Laps18 
144 Patrick DepaillerTyrrell-FordG56+ 3 Laps8 
159 Alex RibeiroMarch-FordG56+ 3 Laps23 
163 Ronnie PetersonTyrrell-FordG56+ 3 Laps5 
1725 Ian AshleyHesketh-FordG55+ 4 Laps22 
1827 Patrick NèveMarch-FordG55+ 4 Laps24 
1919 Vittorio BrambillaSurtees-FordG54+ 5 Laps11 
Ret15 Jean-Pierre JabouilleRenaultM30Alternator14 
Ret6 Gunnar NilssonLotus-FordG17Accident12 
Ret8 Hans-Joachim StuckBrabham-Alfa RomeoG14Accident2 
Ret10 Ian ScheckterMarch-FordG10Accident21 
Ret2 Jochen MassMcLaren-FordG8Fuel Pump15 
Ret14 Danny OngaisPenske-FordG6Accident26 
Ret17 Alan JonesShadow-FordG3Accident13 
DNQ23 Patrick TambayEnsign-FordG   
Source:[3][4]

Championship standings after the race

Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 Ferrari89 (91)
2 Lotus-Ford62
3 McLaren-Ford47
4 Wolf-Ford46
5 Brabham-Alfa Romeo27
Source:[5]

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings. Only the best 8 results from the first 9 races and the best 7 results from the remaining 8 races were retained. Numbers without parentheses are retained points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.

References

Further reading

  • Doug Nye (1978). The United States Grand Prix and grand prize races, 1908-1977. B. T. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-1263-1
  • Rob Walker (January, 1978). "18th United States Grand Prix: Wet But Not Wild". Road & Track, 82-86.


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1977 Italian Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1977 season
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1977 Canadian Grand Prix
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1976 United States Grand Prix
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1978 United States Grand Prix