2005 Bahrain Grand Prix

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  2005 Bahrain Grand Prix
Race details
Race 3 of 19 in the 2005 Formula One season

Date April 3, 2005
Official name Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix
Location Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain
Course Permanent racing facility
5.42 km (3.37 mi)
Distance 57 laps, 308.238 km (191.530 mi)
Weather Sunny, hot
Pole position
Driver Fernando Alonso Renault
Time 3:01.902 (aggregate)
Fastest lap
Driver Pedro de la Rosa McLaren-Mercedes
Time 1:31.447 on lap 43
Podium
First Fernando Alonso Renault
Second Jarno Trulli Toyota
Third Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes

The 2005 Bahrain Grand Prix was a Formula One race held from April 1 to April 3, 2005 at Bahrain International Circuit.

Summary

The 2005 Bahrain Grand Prix was only the second Formula One grand prix held in the Middle East, bringing the challenges of high temperatures and dusty conditions. The race was held the day after Pope John Paul II died, with several teams and drivers offering their respects, most notably Ferrari, who raced with blackened nose cones as a mark of respect. The celebrations on the podium were also muted.

The circuit had been modified slightly from 2004, with turn 4 in particular being widened on the exit.

First qualifying on Saturday resulted in few surprises– for the first few drivers, the circuit was still somewhat sandy, providing poor grip, while the later runners performed well, with Fernando Alonso taking provisional pole with a lap time of 1:29.848.

Final qualifying on Sunday morning again passed without major incident, with Alonso taking pole position, and Michael Schumacher taking second, driving the brand-new F2005 car. Rubens Barrichello, having had gearbox problems on Friday and Saturday, qualified 15th, and elected to change his engine, resulting in him starting from the back of the grid.

Race afternoon brought some of the highest ever temperatures experienced at a grand prix, with air temperature of 40°C, (104°F) and track temperatures of 56°C (about 132°F). This ties the record temperatures of the 1955 Argentine Grand Prix and the 1984 Dallas Grand Prix. Christian Klien failed to get away from his seventh position on the grid for the formation lap. His car was pushed into the pits but could not be restarted, and he became the first of eight retirements.

The leaders made a clean start, with Alonso first to turn one. Schumacher moved from his second grid slot across to the clean side of the track, ahead of Jarno Trulli, who made a strong challenge to pass Schumacher in the first two corners, without success. Barrichello makes an aggressive start, moving up to tenth by the end of lap one.

Giancarlo Fisichella's engine began to smoke during lap two, and he pulled into the pits to retire. However, as he applied the pit lane speed limiter, he felt power return, and was waved through by his team. But the resurgence was short-lived, and he was back in the pits on lap four to retire.

Schumacher continued to closely pursue Alonso until lap 12, when the world champion overshot turn nine, and performed a 270° turn in the run-off area. At the end of the lap, Schumacher coasted back to the pits, making this his first mechanically-induced retirement since the 2001 German Grand Prix– a remarkable run of 58 consecutive grands prix. It later emerged that his hydraulics had failed, meaning he could not downshift to use engine braking for corners. Trulli now took second place, 2.7 seconds behind Alonso, with Mark Webber in third.

On lap 18, Ralf Schumacher in fourth place made the first scheduled pit stop of the front-runners, and rejoined in 12th place. Alonso, Trulli and then Webber all pitted over the next few laps, in what appeared to be the now fairly standard three-stop pattern. After the pit stops shook out, Alonso retained the lead, followed by Trulli, Webber, Kimi Räikkönen, Ralf, and Barrichello.

Nick Heidfeld was the next retirement, with a blown engine on lap 25, although it took him around half a lap to pull off the track to stop. He was shortly followed by Takuma Sato, whose front brakes had been smoking for a while, and who spun and then retired in the pits on lap 27. His teammate Jenson Button's brakes also appeared to be giving off more dust than usual, as Button fought to keep Pedro de la Rosa from taking his seventh place. De la Rosa was making his first start for McLaren, replacing the sidelined Juan Pablo Montoya. De la Rosa finally managed to pass Button on lap 33, outbraking him at turn one.

The following lap, Webber lost control out of turn eight, spun on the entrance to turn nine, and allowed Räikkönen and Ralf Schumacher to pass– on a circuit with very forgiving run-off areas, Webber's race was not compromised.

In the next few laps, before the second pit stops, the closest fight was between Barrichello in sixth, and de la Rosa in seventh. De la Rosa continually pressured the remaining Ferrari, but initially he only succeeded in pushing himself too far, running wide at turn one, and allowing Button to close up behind him. Eventually, though, he was able to take sixth place in the final corner.

Alonso put in several fast laps to extend his lead, and pitted on lap 41. The other drivers also pitted without incident, until Button, who stalled his BAR-Honda because; after several attempts at restarting the engine, he almost took his rear jack with him back into the race– only to retire at the end of the pit-lane due to a clutch failure, making this the second race in a row where both BAR drivers had retired. After the second round of pit stops, Alonso still led the race, followed by Trulli, Räikkönen, Ralf Schumacher, Webber, de la Rosa, Barrichello, and Felipe Massa.

In the closing stages, the main fight was between Webber and de la Rosa for fifth place. Webber was forced to perform some strong defending, but de la Rosa eventually overcame him two laps from the end of the race. Jacques Villeneuve retired from ninth place into the pits on the penultimate lap, while Barrichello slipped further and further back, allowing Massa to take seventh place and score points in his Sauber team's 200th Grand Prix, and David Coulthard eighth place on the last lap, making Ferrari scoreless for the first time since the 2003 Brazilian Grand Prix.

Alonso won the race by a comfortable 13.4 seconds from Trulli, bringing Renault engines their 100th World Championship Grand Prix win.

Classification

Qualifying

Grid pos No Driver Constructor Q1 order Q1 time Q1 pos Q1+Q2 time
1 5 Fernando Alonso Renault 20 1:29.848 1 3:01.902
2 1 Michael Schumacher Ferrari 14 1:30.237 3 3:02.357
3 16 Jarno Trulli Toyota 19 1:29.993 2 3:02.660
4 8 Nick Heidfeld Williams-BMW 18 1:30.390 4 3:03.217
5 7 Mark Webber Williams-BMW 5 1:30.592 6 3:03.262
6 17 Ralf Schumacher Toyota 16 1:30.952 11 3:03.271

Race

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 5 Fernando Alonso Renault 57 1:29:18.531 1 10
2 16 Jarno Trulli Toyota 57 +13.409 3 8
3 9 Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes 57 +32.063 9 6
4 17 Ralf Schumacher Toyota 57 +53.272 6 5
5 10 Pedro de la Rosa McLaren-Mercedes 57 +1:04.988 8 4
6 7 Mark Webber Williams-BMW 57 +1:14.701 5 3
7 12 Felipe Massa Sauber-Petronas 56 +1 Lap 12 2
8 14 David Coulthard Red Bull-Cosworth 56 +1 Lap 14 1
9 2 Rubens Barrichello Ferrari 56 +1 Lap 20  
10 18 Tiago Monteiro Jordan-Toyota 55 +2 Laps 16  
11 11 Jacques Villeneuve Sauber-Petronas 54 Suspension 15  
12 20 Patrick Friesacher Minardi-Cosworth 54 +3 Laps 19  
13 21 Christijan Albers Minardi-Cosworth 53 +4 Laps 18  
Ret 3 Jenson Button BAR-Honda 46 Clutch 11  
Ret 4 Takuma Sato BAR-Honda 27 Brakes 13  
Ret 8 Nick Heidfeld Williams-BMW 25 Engine 4  
Ret 1 Michael Schumacher Ferrari 12 Hydraulics 2  
Ret 6 Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 4 Engine 10  
Ret 19 Narain Karthikeyan Jordan-Toyota 2 Electrical 17  
DNS 15 Christian Klien Red Bull-Cosworth 0 Electrical 7  

Standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 Fernando Alonso 26
2 Jarno Trulli 16
3 Giancarlo Fisichella 10
4 David Coulthard 9
5 Ralf Schumacher 9
Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 Renault 36
2 Toyota 25
3 McLaren-Mercedes 19
4 Williams-BMW 13
5 Red Bull-Cosworth 12
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.


Previous race:
2005 Malaysian Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
2005 season
Next race:
2005 San Marino Grand Prix
Previous race:
2004 Bahrain Grand Prix
Bahrain Grand Prix Next race:
2006 Bahrain Grand Prix

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Before the Race

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