1999 Italian Grand Prix

The 1999 Italian Grand Prix (formally the 70º Gran Premio Campari d'Italia[2]) was a Formula One motor race held on 12 September 1999 at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza near Monza, Italy. It was the thirteenth race of the 1999 Formula One World Championship, and the last held on this layout.

1999 Italian Grand Prix
Race 13 of 16 in the 1999 Formula One World Championship
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Autodromo Nazionale di Monza (last modified in 1995)
Autodromo Nazionale di Monza (last modified in 1995)
Race details
Date12 September 1999
Official name70º Gran Premio Campari d'Italia
LocationAutodromo Nazionale di Monza
Monza, Lombardy, Italy
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course length5.770 km (3.585 miles)
Distance53 laps, 305.810 km (190.022 miles)
WeatherHot and dry with temperatures reaching up to 30 °C (86 °F)[1]
Pole position
DriverMcLaren-Mercedes
Time1:22.432
Fastest lap
DriverGermany Ralf SchumacherWilliams-Supertec
Time1:25.579 on lap 48
Podium
FirstJordan-Mugen-Honda
SecondWilliams-Supertec
ThirdFerrari
Lap leaders

The 53-lap race was won by Heinz-Harald Frentzen, driving a Jordan-Mugen-Honda, after McLaren's Mika Häkkinen, seeking to defend his Drivers' Championship title, spun off while leading comfortably. Ralf Schumacher was second in a Williams-Supertec, with Mika Salo third in a Ferrari. Häkkinen's rival Eddie Irvine finished sixth in the other Ferrari, thus moving level on points with the Finn at the top of the Drivers' Championship.

Though the victory moved Frentzen to within ten points of Häkkinen and Irvine, it would turn out to be his third and last victory in Formula One, as well as the last for engine suppliers Mugen. It was also the Jordan team's only victory in dry conditions, their others coming in the rain.

Report

Qualifying

Going into the race, McLaren's Mika Häkkinen led the Drivers' Championship by a single point from Ferrari's Eddie Irvine, with Jordan's Heinz-Harald Frentzen and Häkkinen's team-mate David Coulthard also still in contention. Häkkinen was expected to do well on the fast Monza circuit, and duly claimed pole position by half a second from Frentzen. Coulthard was third, while Alessandro Zanardi, who had been having a poor year with Williams, was fourth, just ahead of teammate Ralf Schumacher. On Ferrari's home soil, Irvine had a poor qualifying session and could only manage eighth, behind teammate Mika Salo in sixth and Stewart's Rubens Barrichello – who had just signed with Ferrari to replace Irvine in 2000 – in seventh. Completing the top ten were Damon Hill in the second Jordan and Olivier Panis in the Prost.

Race

At the start, Häkkinen led away while Zanardi shot past Coulthard and Frentzen into second. Frentzen quickly re-passed Zanardi, but Coulthard fell further back, behind Schumacher and Salo. Meanwhile, at the back of the field, Minardi's Marc Gené tangled with Arrows' Pedro de la Rosa at the Roggia chicane and became the first retirement, while on the second lap Benetton's Giancarlo Fisichella and Sauber's Pedro Diniz both spun off at the Rettifilo chicane.

On lap 3, Zanardi ran over a kerb and damaged the underside of his car. He managed to hold on to third place for another 15 laps, while Häkkinen and Frentzen pulled away. Barrichello passed Coulthard on lap 11 and then Salo on lap 19, while Zanardi waved Schumacher past on lap 18. On lap 24, there was more drama at the back as Toranosuke Takagi in the second Arrows tried to overtake Luca Badoer in the second Minardi at the Rettifilo, only to run into the back of Badoer and end his race.

Barrichello overtook Zanardi on lap 26; Salo did the same at the start of lap 28. At this point, Häkkinen led Frentzen by eight seconds, with Schumacher a further two-and-a-half seconds back. But on lap 30, going into the Rettifilo, Häkkinen made a mistake changing gear – selecting first instead of second[3] – and spun off, in a virtual repeat of his unforced error at San Marino earlier in the year. In a rare show of emotion, the Finn burst into tears at the side of the track.

Frentzen thus inherited the lead as the front-runners began to make their pit stops. When these had been completed, Salo had moved back ahead of Barrichello and into third, while Coulthard and Irvine had both leapfrogged Zanardi and were now fifth and sixth.

Over the closing laps, Frentzen retained a comfortable lead over Schumacher – despite the Williams driver setting the fastest lap of the race on lap 48 – while Coulthard tried unsuccessfully to find a way past Barrichello, allowing Salo to pull away from both of them. Frentzen's eventual margin of victory was 3.2 seconds, with a further eight seconds back to Salo and another six back to Barrichello. Coulthard finished half a second behind the Stewart driver, but nine ahead of Irvine, who himself held off Zanardi for the final point.

This point moved Irvine level with Häkkinen in the Drivers' Championship on 60 points apiece, while the win put Frentzen just ten points behind on 50, with Coulthard on 48. In the Constructors' Championship, Ferrari cut McLaren's lead to six points, 108 to 102.

Classification

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorLapGap
11 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes1:22.432
28 Heinz-Harald FrentzenJordan-Mugen-Honda1:22.926+0.494
32 David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes1:23.177+0.745
45 Alessandro ZanardiWilliams-Supertec1:23.432+1.000
56 Ralf SchumacherWilliams-Supertec1:23.636+1.204
63 Mika SaloFerrari1:23.657+1.225
716 Rubens BarrichelloStewart-Ford1:23.739+1.307
84 Eddie IrvineFerrari1:23.765+1.333
97 Damon HillJordan-Mugen-Honda1:23.979+1.547
1018 Olivier PanisProst-Peugeot1:24.016+1.584
1122 Jacques VilleneuveBAR-Supertec1:24.188+1.756
1219 Jarno TrulliProst-Peugeot1:24.293+1.861
1311 Jean AlesiSauber-Petronas1:24.591+2.159
1410 Alexander WurzBenetton-Playlife1:24.593+2.161
1517 Johnny HerbertStewart-Ford1:24.594+2.162
1612 Pedro DinizSauber-Petronas1:24.596+2.164
179 Giancarlo FisichellaBenetton-Playlife1:24.862+2.430
1823 Ricardo ZontaBAR-Supertec1:25.114+2.682
1920 Luca BadoerMinardi-Ford1:25.348+2.916
2021 Marc GenéMinardi-Ford1:25.695+3.263
2114 Pedro de la RosaArrows1:26.383+3.951
2215 Toranosuke TakagiArrows1:26.509+4.077
107% time: 1:28.202
Source:[4]

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
18 Heinz-Harald FrentzenJordan-Mugen-Honda531:17:02.923210
26 Ralf SchumacherWilliams-Supertec53+ 3.27256
33 Mika SaloFerrari53+ 11.93264
416 Rubens BarrichelloStewart-Ford53+ 17.63073
52 David CoulthardMcLaren-Mercedes53+ 18.14232
64 Eddie IrvineFerrari53+ 27.40281
75 Alessandro ZanardiWilliams-Supertec53+ 28.0474 
822 Jacques VilleneuveBAR-Supertec53+ 41.79711 
911 Jean AlesiSauber-Petronas53+ 42.19813 
107 Damon HillJordan-Mugen-Honda53+ 56.2599 
1118 Olivier PanisProst-Peugeot52Engine10 
Ret17 Johnny HerbertStewart-Ford40Clutch15 
Ret15 Toranosuke TakagiArrows35Spun Off22 
Ret14 Pedro de la RosaArrows35Withdrew21 
Ret1 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Mercedes29Spun Off1 
Ret19 Jarno TrulliProst-Peugeot29Overheating12 
Ret23 Ricardo ZontaBAR-Supertec25Wheel Bearing18 
Ret20 Luca BadoerMinardi-Ford23Collision19 
Ret10 Alexander WurzBenetton-Playlife11Electrical14 
Ret12 Pedro DinizSauber-Petronas1Spun Off16 
Ret9 Giancarlo FisichellaBenetton-Playlife1Spun Off17 
Ret21 Marc GenéMinardi-Ford0Collision20 
Sources:[5][6]

Championship standings after the race

Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 McLaren-Mercedes108
2 Ferrari102
3 Jordan-Mugen-Honda57
4 Williams-Supertec30
5 Stewart-Ford17
Source: [7]

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References


Previous race:
1999 Belgian Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1999 season
Next race:
1999 European Grand Prix
Previous race:
1998 Italian Grand Prix
Italian Grand PrixNext race:
2000 Italian Grand Prix