1975 Monaco Grand Prix

From WOI Encyclopedia Italia


XXXIII Gran Prix de MonacoF1
Country Image:22px-Flag_of_Monaco.png
Grand Prix Image:22px-Flag_of_Monaco.png
Date May 11
Year 1975
Race No 5
Season No 14
Location Circuit de Monaco, Monte Carlo, Monaco
Course Street circuit
Course mi 2.037
Course km 3.278
Distance laps 75
Distance mi 152.764
Distance km 245.850
Scheduled laps 78
Scheduled mi 158.874
Scheduled km 255.684
Weather Rain, later drying
Pole Driver Niki Lauda
Pole Team Ferrari
Pole Time 1:26.40
Pole Country flagiconAustria
Fast Driver Patrick Depailler
Fast Team Tyrrell-Ford
Fast Time 1:28.67
Fast Lap 68
Fast Country flagiconFrance
First Driver Niki Lauda
First Team Ferrari
First Country flagiconAustria
Second Driver Emerson Fittipaldi
Second Team McLaren-Ford
Second Country flagiconBrazil
Third Driver José Carlos Pace
Third Team Brabham-Ford
Third Country flagiconBrazil

The 1975 Monaco Grand Prix was a Formula One race held at Monaco on May 11, 1975. It was the fifth race of the 1975 Formula One season

Race summary

The future of Grand Prix racing was under scrutiny following the disastrous Spanish race. Actions had to be taken quickly: extra guard rails and catch fences were erected, kerbing resited and the chicane was modified. New measures were introduced: the grid was staggered and in addition would be restricted to just 18 cars. This last rule took Graham Hill's chance to qualify: the 5-time Monaco winner had all sorts of practice problems and failed to qualify by 0.377 seconds. John Watson and Clay Regazzoni collided in practice, whilst the Surtees team was ordered to remove pro-Europe political stickers from its cars.

Niki Lauda, on Ferrari, claimed pole position, but sensationally sharing the front row was Tom Pryce, on Shadow, who just 12 months earlier had been deemed 'too inexperienced' to compete. Jean-Pierre Jarier and Ronnie Peterson filled the second row. The race began under rain conditions, so everyone went for wet tyres. Lauda was fastest at the start, whole Pryce had a slow start and was passed by Jarier; the Frenchman soon attempted to pass Lauda in an ill-advised overtaking manoeuvre, and hit the barriers at the Mirabeau; his car was damaged in the collision and handled badly, so he hit the wal again at the chicane and retired. Peterson went into the second place with Vittorio Brambilla third, until Pryce hit the Italian's wheel. Regazzoni stopped to change a tyre and the nosecone of his car, and James Hunt stopped to change onto slick tyres, anticipating a drying of the track surface. However, the team's pit work was really slow and he lost a substantial amount of time.

Ronnie Peterson's victory chances were damaged at his pit stop when a wheel nut was lost under the car. Tom Pryce came in to replace a broken nosecone, and by that time Niki Lauda led by 15 seconds from Emerson Fittipaldi and Carlos Pace. Many accidents happened during the race: Jochen Mass and James Hunt tangled at Mirabeau, and Patrick Depailler got embroiled in their accident; Clay Regazzoni hit the chicane and suffered damage; John Watson spun and stalled the engine of his car; Pryce hit the barrier and had to retire; Mario Andretti entered the pits with his car on fire; Mark Donohue hit the barrier, whilst Alan Jones broke a wheel.

In the last laps Lauda's oil pressure was fading and Fittipaldi was closing. With 3 laps left the gap was 2.75 seconds, however,the 2 hour time limit was reached and the race was stopped, with Lauda winning. Ferrari had won their first Monaco Grand Prix in 20 years; the tragedy of the Spanish Grand Prix was being forgotten and the Championship race was back on.

Classification

Pos No Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 12 Image:22px-Flag_of_Austria.png Niki Lauda Ferrari 75 2:01:21.31 1 9
2 1 Image:22px-Flag_of_Brazil.png Emerson Fittipaldi McLaren-Ford 75 + 2.78 9 6
3 8 Image:22px-Flag_of_Brazil.png Carlos Pace Brabham-Ford 75 + 17.81 8 4
4 5 Image:22px-Flag_of_Sweden.png Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford 75 + 38.45 4 3
5 4 Image:22px-Flag_of_France.png Patrick Depailler Tyrrell-Ford 75 + 40.86 12 2
6 2 Image:22px-Flag_of_Germany.png Jochen Mass McLaren-Ford 75 + 42.07 15 1
7 3 Image:22px-Flag_of_South_Africa.png Jody Scheckter Tyrrell-Ford 74 + 1 Lap 7  
8 6 Image:22px-Flag_of_Belgium_(civil).png Jacky Ickx Lotus-Ford 74 + 1 Lap 14  
9 7 Image:22px-Flag_of_Argentina.png Carlos Reutemann Brabham-Ford 73 + 2 Laps 10  
Ret 28 Image:22px-Flag_of_the_United_States.png Mark Donohue Penske-Ford 66 Accident 16  
Ret 24 Image:22px-Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.png James Hunt Hesketh-Ford 63 Accident 11  
Ret 26 Image:22px-Flag_of_Australia.png Alan Jones Hesketh-Ford 61 Wheel 18  
Ret 9 Vittorio Brambilla March-Ford 48 Accident 5  
Ret 16 Image:22px-Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.png Tom Pryce Shadow-Ford 39 Accident 2  
Ret 11 Image:20px-Flag_of_Switzerland.png Clay Regazzoni Ferrari 36 Accident 17  
Ret 18 Image:22px-Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.png John Watson Surtees-Ford 36 Spun Off 6  
Ret 27 Image:22px-Flag_of_the_United_States.png Mario Andretti Parnelli-Ford 9 Oil Leak 13  
Ret 17 Image:22px-Flag_of_France.png Jean-Pierre Jarier Shadow-Ford 0 Accident 3  
DNQ 21 Image:22px-Flag_of_France.png Jacques Laffite Williams-Ford    
DNQ 20 Arturo Merzario Williams-Ford    
DNQ 23 Image:22px-Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.png Graham Hill Hill-Ford    
DNQ 14 Image:22px-Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.png Bob Evans BRM    
DNQ 31 Image:22px-Flag_of_the_Netherlands.png Roelof Wunderink Ensign-Ford    
DNQ 25 Image:22px-Flag_of_Sweden.png Torsten Palm Hesketh-Ford    
DNQ 10 Lella Lombardi March-Ford    
DNQ 30 Image:22px-Flag_of_Brazil.png Wilson Fittipaldi Fittipaldi-Ford        

Notes

  • The race was originally scheduled for 78 laps, but was stopped after reaching the two hours limit.


Previous Race:
1975 Spanish Grand Prix
FIA 1975 Formula One
World Championship
Next Race:
1975 Belgian Grand Prix
Previous Race:
1974 Monaco Grand Prix
Monaco Grand Prix Next Race:
1976 Monaco Grand Prix