2007 Spanish Grand Prix

The 2007 Spanish Grand Prix (formally the Formula 1 Gran Premio de España Telefónica 2007)[2] was a Formula One motor race, the fourth race of the 2007 FIA Formula One World Championship, won by Felipe Massa. It was held on 13 May 2007 at the Circuit de Catalunya in Spain.

2007 Spanish Grand Prix
Race 4 of 17 in the 2007 Formula One World Championship
Circuit de Catalunya in Barcelona
Circuit de Catalunya in Barcelona
Race details
Date13 May 2007
Official nameFormula 1 Gran Premio de España Telefónica 2007
LocationCircuit de Catalunya, Montmeló, Catalonia, Spain[1]
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course length4.655 km (2.892 miles)
Distance65 laps, 302.449 km (187.934 miles)
Scheduled distance66 laps, 307.164 km (190.938 miles)
WeatherSunny and warm
Attendance140,700
Pole position
DriverFerrari
Time1:21.421
Fastest lap
DriverBrazil Felipe MassaFerrari
Time1:22.680 on lap 14
Podium
FirstFerrari
SecondMcLaren-Mercedes
ThirdMcLaren-Mercedes
Lap leaders

Report

Background

Prior to the Spanish Grand Prix, the Circuit de Catalunya went through some circuit revisions to encourage overtaking and make the racing more exciting and also to improve safety standards.[3] The revisions included a chicane placed at the final two corners. "Although I have always really enjoyed the final two corners and their speed, the new chicane at the end of the track will hopefully lead to more overtaking during the race, which is great for the spectators," Fernando Alonso commented.[3] Because of the revisions, the fastest lap of the race, recorded by Massa, was fractionally over six seconds longer than the fastest lap of the race in 2006, also recorded by Massa.

Just over a week before the weekend of the grand prix, there was an organised test session at the track[4] for four days, with primary focus on aerodynamic set-ups. However, due to heavy rain on the Tuesday,[5] many teams abandoned their initial test schedule and instead looked to focus on wet-weather set-ups. Both Ferrari and Red Bull took advantage of these conditions and scored first and second fastest times respectively on both Tuesday and Wednesday.[6] The wet weather eventually led to a fourth day of testing, in which Red Bull driver David Coulthard broke Ferrari's run and set the fastest time by 0.2 seconds.[7]

The aerodynamic focus was evident in the unveiling of two new and radical front aero designs by both the Honda[8] and McLaren[9] teams. Both teams would be understandably reluctant to release figures to support their reasoning for using such radical winglets, although McLaren's consistent speed throughout the testing is noted by only having out-paced championship rivals Ferrari once.[7] Honda, however, ended up half a second down on the nearest car on the final day of testing where they unveiled their "elephant ear"[8] winglets. McLaren punctuated their need for aero testing over rain testing by withdrawing on the rained-out Tuesday.[5]

Practice

Lewis Hamilton headed the first practice session in his McLaren, just 0.4seconds ahead of team-mate Fernando Alonso, who was in front of his home crowd. Kimi Räikkönen was third in his Ferrari, but his team-mate Felipe Massa was demoted to fifth in the closing moments, as Robert Kubica took fourth in his BMW. Anthony Davidson finished sixth in his Super Aguri,[10] with the Toyotas of Jarno Trulli and Ralf Schumacher in 7th and 8th. Nico Rosberg and Jenson Button rounded out the top ten.[11]

Alonso turned the tables on Hamilton in the second practice session, with Alonso three tenths ahead of the rest of the field, but Hamilton was back in fifth. McLaren team boss Ron Dennis said that they had made the "best possible start to the weekend".[12] The Renaults of Giancarlo Fisichella and Heikki Kovalainen produced a late surge to finish 2nd and 3rd, ahead of both Ferraris, who were down in 4th and 6th. However, Renault's engineering director Pat Symonds played down the times, saying they were "done with a lower fuel load" and "are therefore unrepresentatively high in the timesheets".[13] Behind the top three teams, Nico Rosberg was again in the top ten in his Williams, with engineering director Patrick Head saying they've been "playing catch up today",[14] after a high-speed crash by Rosberg during the Barcelona test.[15] Although out of the top six, Nick Heidfeld said his eighth place "doesn't reflect how competitive we are",[16] with Webber and Scott Speed rounding out the top ten.[17]

It was the second McLaren one-two of the weekend as Hamilton took first ahead of Alonso in Saturday practice. Behind them, both BMWs were in front of both Ferraris. They were split by David Coulthard in the Red Bull. Anthony Davidson put in another good practice performance with eighth in his Super Aguri, with Nico Rosberg and Heikki Kovalainen rounding out the top ten.[18]

Qualifying

Fernando Alonso looked likely to take pole at his home Grand Prix. Alonso crossed the line at the end of Q3 to take pole, unaware that Felipe Massa still had one lap in hand. The Brazilian pipped pole from the home hero by three-one hundredths of a second.

Race

Lewis Hamilton's second place put him into the lead of the championship without any race wins at the time.

The first start was aborted when Toyota driver Jarno Trulli stalled on the grid, forcing another formation lap and decreasing the race length to 65 laps. The race got underway shortly thereafter with both Felipe Massa and World Champion Fernando Alonso going into the corner ahead of their team-mates Kimi Räikkönen and Lewis Hamilton respectively. This order was short-lived as Alonso and Massa touched briefly going into the first corner, sending Alonso over the gravel with him returning to the track behind Räikkönen's Ferrari in fourth.[19]

The first lap saw the first of eight retirements, that being Austrian Alexander Wurz as he was caught unaware by Toyota driver Ralf Schumacher braking suddenly to avoid Giancarlo Fisichella, as the Italian returned to the track after a minor off.[19] Six laps later, as Massa was building a lead over Hamilton, Australian Red Bull driver Mark Webber retired when the hydraulic problems that plagued him during qualifying returned. A lap later, Trulli, who had started from the pit lane after stalling on the grid, also pulled into the pits and retired due to a failing fuel line.

On lap nine the electrics on Kimi Räikkönen's Ferrari failed, leaving him to coast to the pits from half way around the track. Scott Speed's tyre failed spectacularly on the main straight shortly afterwards, leaving debris that remained there for the rest of the race.

As the first round of pit-stops took place, a fire briefly lit into full blaze on the back the remaining Ferrari of race leader Felipe Massa. The car was undamaged and after all the cars had stopped he was still some ten seconds ahead of Briton Lewis Hamilton. The remaining Toro Rosso of Vitantonio Liuzzi suffered similar hydraulic problems to those befell him in qualifying.

Italian Renault driver, Giancarlo Fisichella, battled with the Honda of Rubens Barrichello, passing the Brazilian after the second stops. While most drivers negotiated their second stops smoothly, BMW Sauber driver Nick Heidfeld lost a probable fourth position, which would have been his fourth in as many races, when his right front wheel was not properly secured during the pit stop. He coasted around the circuit for another stop and returned to the track more than a lap down.

More drama followed the Hondas as drivers Barrichello and Jenson Button touched as the latter exited the pits. Button was forced to return to the pits for a new front wing[19] whilst Barrichello raced on, futilely attempting to catch Fisichella's Renault.

Through all the retirements and bungled pit-stops, Red Bull driver David Coulthard raced to what became a strong fifth position despite losing third gear in the team's new quick shift gearbox. Despite Williams driver Rosberg's best attempts, he was unable to pass the Scot. This was Red Bull's strongest result so far this season and highlighted the improving performance of the Adrian Newey designed RB3 chassis.

Renault's day went sour after problems with the refuelling rig meant that both Fisichella and Kovalainen had to pit again forcing Heikki down to 7th of what would have been a probable 5th and pushed Giancarlo out of the points altogether. He still remained ahead of the Hondas of Button and Barrichello and the Super Aguri for Anthony Davidson.

Ralf Schumacher retired with 20 laps remaining in the race. On American SPEED Channel coverage, commentator Bob Varsha joked that Schumacher was pitting from "somewhere around Andorra" alluding to the German's very slow pace all day.

Massa went on to win the race by almost seven seconds[20] over the McLaren pair of Hamilton and Alonso, respectively second and third. This result meant that Hamilton, after a Formula One career of only four races, led the championship despite never previously taking a race victory. He is the youngest driver to do so, taking the record from McLaren team founder, Bruce McLaren.[19]

Pole Robert Kubica made up for his team-mate's gearbox induced retirement by continuing the team's run of fourth-place finishes, while Aguri Suzuki's Japanese Super Aguri team notched up their first ever points with an eighth place by Takuma Sato. "I just cannot describe how happy we are and a point means much more than anything else for us and this is an absolutely fantastic result" Sato went on to say.[21]

Classification

Qualifying

Pos.No.DriverConstructorQ1Q2Q3Grid
15 Felipe MassaFerrari1:21.3751:20.5971:21.4211
21 Fernando AlonsoMcLaren-Mercedes1:21.6091:20.7971:21.4512
36 Kimi RäikkönenFerrari1:21.8021:20.7411:21.7233
42 Lewis HamiltonMcLaren-Mercedes1:21.1201:20.7131:21.7854
510 Robert KubicaBMW Sauber1:21.9411:21.3811:22.2535
612 Jarno TrulliToyota1:22.5011:21.5541:22.3246
79 Nick HeidfeldBMW Sauber1:21.6251:21.1131:22.3897
84 Heikki KovalainenRenault1:21.7901:21.6231:22.5688
914 David CoulthardRed Bull-Renault1:22.4911:21.4881:22.7499
103 Giancarlo FisichellaRenault1:22.0641:21.6771:22.88110
1116 Nico RosbergWilliams-Toyota1:21.9431:21.96811
128 Rubens BarrichelloHonda1:22.5021:22.09712
1322 Takuma SatoSuper Aguri-Honda1:22.0901:22.11513
147 Jenson ButtonHonda1:22.5031:22.12014
1523 Anthony DavidsonSuper Aguri-Honda1:22.295no time15
1618 Vitantonio LiuzziToro Rosso-Ferrari1:22.508no time16
1711 Ralf SchumacherToyota1:22.66617
1817 Alexander WurzWilliams-Toyota1:22.76918
1915 Mark WebberRed Bull-Renault1:23.39819
2020 Adrian SutilSpyker-Ferrari1:23.81120
2121 Christijan AlbersSpyker-Ferrari1:23.99021
2219 Scott SpeedToro Rosso-Ferrarino time22
Source:[22]

Race

Pos.No.DriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
15 Felipe MassaFerrari651:31:36.230110
22 Lewis HamiltonMcLaren-Mercedes65+6.79048
31 Fernando AlonsoMcLaren-Mercedes65+17.45626
410 Robert KubicaBMW Sauber65+31.61555
514 David CoulthardRed Bull-Renault65+58.33194
616 Nico RosbergWilliams-Toyota65+59.538113
74 Heikki KovalainenRenault65+1:02.12882
822 Takuma SatoSuper Aguri-Honda64+1 Lap131
93 Giancarlo FisichellaRenault64+1 Lap10
108 Rubens BarrichelloHonda64+1 Lap12
1123 Anthony DavidsonSuper Aguri-Honda64+1 Lap15
127 Jenson ButtonHonda64+1 Lap14
1320 Adrian SutilSpyker-Ferrari63+2 Laps20
1421 Christijan AlbersSpyker-Ferrari63+2 Laps21
Ret9 Nick HeidfeldBMW Sauber46Gearbox7
Ret11 Ralf SchumacherToyota44Mechanical17
Ret18 Vitantonio LiuzziToro Rosso-Ferrari19Hydraulics16
Ret19 Scott SpeedToro Rosso-Ferrari9Tyre22
Ret6 Kimi RäikkönenFerrari9Electrical3
Ret12 Jarno TrulliToyota8Fuel Pressure6
Ret15 Mark WebberRed Bull-Renault7Hydraulics19
Ret17 Alexander WurzWilliams-Toyota1Collision18
Source:[23]

Championship standings after the race

Constructors' Championship standings
+/–Pos.ConstructorPoints
1 McLaren-Mercedes58
2 Ferrari49
3 BMW Sauber23
4 Renault11
15 Williams-Toyota5
Source:[24]

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

See also

References


Previous race:
2007 Bahrain Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
2007 season
Next race:
2007 Monaco Grand Prix
Previous race:
2006 Spanish Grand Prix
Spanish Grand PrixNext race:
2008 Spanish Grand Prix

41°34′9.9″N 2°15′26.9″E / 41.569417°N 2.257472°E / 41.569417; 2.257472