This Sunday sees the 34th edition of the Hungarian Grand Prix,
traditionally the last race before the Formula 1 mandated summer
shutdown, which comes as a welcome break to all the teams. It has only
ever been held at one venue, the Hungaroring, on the outskirts of
Budapest, although the track has undergone several modifications, albeit
minor ones. Scuderia Ferrari has won here seven times.
Behind the iron curtain.
The race first appeared on the calendar in 1986, when the fact that
Formula 1 was going behind the iron curtain caused quite a stir,
especially as the fallout from the boycotting of the 1980 and ’84
Olympics in Moscow and Los Angeles respectively was still fresh in the
memory. But the decision proved to be the right one and, to this day, it
still draws one of the biggest crowds, even though the track is narrow,
short, slow, usually dusty and does not exactly feature much
overtaking. Nevertheless, it has produced some dramatic moments over the
years.
1989’s incredible win. One of those
moments came courtesy of Nigel Mansell and Scuderia Ferrari. The
Englishman had a terrible time of it in qualifying and could do no
better than twelfth on the grid. In the race, Nigel got away well and
immediately made up four places. Leading the field was Riccardo Patrese
with Ayrton Senna right behind. Mansell continued to carve his way
through the field, occasionally lapping a second quicker than anyone
else. When Patrese went out, the race was fought out between Senna and
Mansell, but the idea that the Ferrari man could pull off a passing move
seemed far fetched. But he did it with a truly masterful move. He and
Senna came up behind the backmarker Stefan Johansson in the Onyx and,
when the Brazilian hesitated for the briefest of moments, Nigel seized
the day and the opportunity, going on to win by 25 seconds. It had been
an incredible drive.
The Schumacher era. The next
time a Ferrari triumphed in Hungary was in 1998, courtesy of Michael
Schumacher. And once again, the German produced a master-class. Michael
was quicker than the two McLarens ahead of him and so, in conjunction
with Ross Brawn, the team’s technical director, the decision was taken
to switch from a two stop strategy to a three stopper. For this to work,
it would require Schumacher to run at qualifying pace. Michael did just
that, thus getting the better of Mika Hakkinen and David Coulthard. In
2001, winning in Hungary was extra special for the ace from Kerpen and
for Ferrari, as the victory, ahead of team-mate Rubens Barrichello, saw
him take the world title with four races still remaining. The following
year, the same pairing crossed the line together with the Brazilian just
edging it for the win. Schumacher won again in 2004, equalling
Hakkinen’s record of nine fastest race laps in a season and Alberto
Ascari’s of seven consecutive wins.
Frightening moment.
The Hungararoring has also been the scene of a very frightening moment
for Scuderia Ferrari. In qualifying in 2009, Felipe Massa was hit on the
helmet by a damper that came loose on Barrichello’s Brawn GP car. The
Brazilian lost consciousness and crashed into the barrier. He was
seriously injured and spent some time in a Budapest hospital and then
sat out the rest of the year, returning for the start of the 2010
season.
Sebastian. The last two wins at the
Magyar circuit for Scuderia Ferrari are down to Sebastian Vettel. In
2015, the German and team-mate Kimi Raikkonen started from the second
row, but they both got the jump on the two Mercedes ahead of them, in a
crazy race, which saw several appearances from the Safety Car and plenty
of drama. Vettel won, followed home by the Red Bull duo of Daniil Kvyat
and Daniel Ricciardo. In 2017, it was a Ferrari one-two, as Sebastian
won, despite problems with his steering and he was followed home by Kimi
Raikkonen.
FERRARI STATS
GP participations 981
Seasons in F1 70
Debut Monaco 1950 (Alberto Ascari 2nd; Raymond Sommer 4th; Luigi Villoresi ret.)
Wins 235 (23,95%)
Pole positions 222 (22,62%)
Fastest laps 251 (25,58%)
Total podiums 761 (77,57%)
FERRARI STATS HUNGARIAN GP
GP participations 33
Debut 1986 (Stefan Johansson 4th, Michele Alboreto Ret.)
Wins 7 (21,21%)
Pole positions 8 (24,24%)
Fastest laps 9 (27,27%)
Total podiums 24 (72,72%)
Sebastian Vettel #5
“Hungaroring
is a pretty physical track in a current Formula 1 car, because there
aren`t any long straights and it’s a very stop-start circuit, which
means you are always working away at the wheel. And given the time of
year, it’s usually boiling hot, which definitely doesn’t help.
Also
if it is dry, the circuit gets very dusty, particularly at the start of
the weekend and it’s not a given that it will improve over the weekend,
as wind and off track excursions brings back the sand that the cars
running clear off the track. That means it will punish you hard if you
get offline, or if you make a mistake, because you lose time and other
drivers will be waiting to take advantage.
The key corners are 1 and
14. Turn 1 you can think about a passing move but it’s a bit risky, as
the straight before is too short really. There`s also potential, if
you`ve had a god run on the exit of 14, but there are no guarantees”.
Charles Leclerc #16
“The
Hungaroring is definitely one of the most technical circuits of the
season and there are aspects of it which remind me of a karting track.
The corners follow on from each other in quick succession and as a
driver, you don’t even have much time to think. There is no part of it
where you can catch your breath, because it is so frenetic.
I
personally like it, because it’s never easy to be competitive here. It
is especially difficult to put together the perfect qualifying lap,
because you have to push hard, while remembering to look after your
tyres so that they last through the final sector.”
Mattia Binotto Team Principal
“Budapest
is a track where cooling is usually an important factor and where cars
run in maximum downforce configuration. The tyres come under a lot of
stress, because of the type of corners and that even applies over a
single lap in qualifying.
It will be important to see if this race
provides further confirmation that our car has improved on various types
of track. We will be able to count on the various elements we
introduced recently, as well as some aerodynamic updates.
Of course, we are focusing on resolving our recent reliability problems to ensure they do not occur again.”
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Home
2019 Hungarian GP
Charles Leclerc
Ferrari
Hungaroring
Mattia Binotto
Pre-Race
Sebastian Vettel
HUNGARIAN GRAND PRIX – BREATHTAKING BUDAPEST
HUNGARIAN GRAND PRIX – BREATHTAKING BUDAPEST
Tags
# 2019 Hungarian GP
# Charles Leclerc
# Ferrari
# Hungaroring
# Mattia Binotto
# Pre-Race
# Sebastian Vettel
About MkFormula1
Sebastian Vettel
Labels:
2019 Hungarian GP,
Charles Leclerc,
Ferrari,
Hungaroring,
Mattia Binotto,
Pre-Race,
Sebastian Vettel
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
MakFormula1
MakFormula1 is a blogger site, a provider of high quality Formula Image Stories. The main mission of MakFormula1 is to provide the best quality photos of each racing weekend.
No comments:
Post a Comment