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1973 British Grand Prix

The 1973 British Grand Prix (formally the John Player Grand Prix) was a Formula One (F1) motor race held at Silverstone on 14 July 1973. It was race 9 of 15 in both the 1973 World Championship of Drivers and the 1973 International Cup for Formula One Manufacturers. The race is known for the first lap pile-up, which ultimately caused eleven cars to retire. The accident happened when Jody Scheckter, running fourth in his McLaren, spun across the track at Woodcote Corner at the end of the first lap, causing many other cars to collide and crash. The incident eliminated nine cars, including all three works Surtees cars, while Brabham driver Andrea de Adamich suffered a broken ankle that ended his F1 career. The race was stopped at the end of the second lap, before being restarted over the original 67-lap distance with 18 of the original 29 cars. David Purley and Graham McRae had retired in separate incidents.

1973 British Grand Prix
Race details
Date 14 July 1973
Official name John Player Grand Prix[1]
Location Silverstone Circuit, Northamptonshire, Great Britain
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 4.711 km (2.944 miles)
Distance 67 laps, 315.597 km (197.248 miles)
Weather Dry
Pole position
Driver Lotus-Ford
Time 1:16.3
Fastest lap
Driver James Hunt March-Ford
Time 1:18.6 on lap 50
Podium
First McLaren-Ford
Second Lotus-Ford
Third McLaren-Ford
Lap leaders

On the first start, a swift start by Jackie Stewart brought him from fourth to first in less than half a lap. At Becketts Corner, Stewart out-braked race leader Ronnie Peterson and took the lead. As the massive pile-up at the end of the first lap caused the race to be restarted, Stewart had to start from fourth again. This time it was Niki Lauda who had an excellent start and moved up behind Peterson into second, with Stewart third. Stewart passed Lauda on lap 2, and charged after Peterson. On lap 6, Stewart again tried to pass Peterson for the lead but the Swedish driver shut the door; Stewart lost control of his Tyrrell and spun off into the thick grass. Although he was able to continue, Stewart ended up finishing 10th, one lap down.

Another notable drive came from James Hunt in his Hesketh Racing March, who ran fourth for most of the race and was part of a four-way battle for the lead between himself, Peterson, Denny Hulme, and Peter Revson. American driver Revson took his first Grand Prix victory by 2.8 seconds from Peterson. The pile-up was to be a factor in this being the last World Championship F1 race held on the original Silverstone layout; a chicane would be added at Woodcote shortly before the 1975 British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Moto GP, which would come to Silverstone from the Isle of Man TT in 1977, would use the original layout until 1986.

Qualifying edit

Qualifying classification edit

Pos. Driver Constructor Time No
1 Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford 1:16.3 1
2 Denny Hulme McLaren-Ford 1:16.5 2
3 Peter Revson McLaren-Ford 1:16.5 3
4 Jackie Stewart Tyrrell-Ford 1:16.7 4
5 Emerson Fittipaldi Lotus-Ford 1:16.7 5
6 Jody Scheckter McLaren-Ford 1:16.9 6
7 François Cevert Tyrrell-Ford 1:17.3 7
8 Carlos Reutemann Brabham-Ford 1:17.4 8
9 Niki Lauda BRM 1:17.4 9
10 Clay Regazzoni BRM 1:17.5 10
11 James Hunt March-Ford 1:17.6 11
12 Mike Hailwood Surtees-Ford 1:18.0 12
13 Wilson Fittipaldi Brabham-Ford 1:18.1 13
14 Jochen Mass Surtees-Ford 1:18.3 14
15 Carlos Pace Surtees-Ford 1:18.3 15
16 David Purley March-Ford 1:18.4 16
17 Jean-Pierre Beltoise BRM 1:18.4 17
18 Howden Ganley Iso-Ford 1:18.6 18
19 Jacky Ickx Ferrari 1:18.9 19
20 Andrea de Adamich Brabham-Ford 1:19.1 20
21 Rikky von Opel Ensign-Ford 1:19.2 21
22 Roger Williamson March-Ford 1:19.5 22
23 John Watson Brabham-Ford 1:20.1 23
24 Mike Beuttler March-Ford 1:20.1 24
25 George Follmer Shadow-Ford 1:20.3 25
26 Jackie Oliver Shadow-Ford 1:20.3 26
27 Graham Hill Shadow-Ford 1:20.5 27
28 Graham McRae Iso-Ford 1:20.8 28
29 Chris Amon Tecno 1:21.0 29

Race edit

First start and multi-car pileup edit

The race started at 2.00 pm local time. It featured the most cars to start a Grand Prix as it featured 28 cars in rows of three by two.[2]

Ronnie Peterson led away but a very quick start by Jackie Stewart brought him from fourth to second, as Stewart passed Peterson to take the lead at Beckets. Carlos Reutemann was in third with Denny Hulme and Jody Scheckter behind him. As the exited Woodcote corner to complete the first lap, Stewart led Peterson and Reutemann but carnage was happening behind them. Scheckter tried to pass Hulme on the outside Scheckter's car went wide and spun right across the track and it hit the retaining wall of the pits and bounced back into the middle of the track. Hulme escaped undamaged, as Francois Cevert, James Hunt, Peter Revson, and Clay Regazzoni also went by. The big one then happened as Scheckter's car ricocheted back from the pit wall, Revson struck Scheckter's rear wing, and then all hell broke loose as the rest of the field crashed into the wrecks or dodged about to miss the wreckage. Nine cars were involved in the resulting carnage, Andrea de Adamich had crashed headlong into the barriers on the outside of the track and he was trapped in the cockpit of his Brabham with a broken ankle. Apart from minor bruises and shakings, no one else was hurt but the Surtees cars of Mike Hailwood, Carlos Pace, and Jochen Mass were smashed up. The Shadow's were also involved: Jackie Oliver's car was wrecked, while George Follmer's car was ripped open. The Embassy Hill-entered Shadow of Graham Hill was struck in the rear and a wishbone broken; Hill drove it round back to the pits under its own power. The BRM of Jean-Pierre Beltoise and the works March of Roger Williamson were wrecked, as was the McLaren of Scheckter.[3][4][5] It would F1's biggest race start crash until the 1998 Belgian Grand Prix took out thirteen cars; no one was injured.[6]

The race organisation acted instantly and the race was red flagged indicating without argument or discussion that the race was stopped and would be started again later. Meanwhile, those ahead of the accident were still racing until they ended the lap, when they all came to a rapid stop at the scene of the crash. It took 30 minutes to release de Adamich from the wreckage of the Brabham, plus an hour to clear away the wrecked cars and the debris. The cars that escaped were wheeled back to the starting grid and Hill's Shadow was repaired in the pits, and Niki Lauda's BRM that had been in the pits all the time had a new drive-shaft fitted. Hunt's March needed a new airbox as his original one was damaged in the wreck and borrowed Mike Beuttler's airbox from his car.[3][4][5]

Second start edit

Drivers were allowed to use spare cars but none were used, Lauda's BRM and Hill's Shadow having been repaired during the red flag period. Non-starters included de Adamich who had been taken to hospital, Scheckter who was barred by McLaren as several team bosses including John Surtees wanted to throw him out for causing the crash, Graham McRae's Iso-Marlboro which had a throttle issue and could not restart, and David Purley's March which had spun off before the big one and did not restart. Other drivers who did not take the restart included Oliver, Follmer, Beltoise, Williamson, Purley, Pace, Hailwood, and Mass. It was 3.30 p.m. before the track was clear and there were nineteen starters ready for the restart over the original distance on 67 laps. At 3:35 pm, the depleted field moved up on to the starting grid. Everyone took up their original positions, leaving gaps for those who had been eliminated. This time it was Lauda who had an excellent start and moved up behind Peterson into second, with Stewart third. Stewart passed Lauda on lap 2 and charged after Peterson. On lap 6, Stewart again tried to pass Peterson for the lead but the Swedish driver shut the door; Stewart lost control of his Tyrrell and spun off into the thick grass. Although he was able to continue, Stewart ended up finishing 10th, one lap down.[3][4][5]

Classification edit

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 8   Peter Revson McLaren-Ford 67 1:29:18.5 3 9
2 2   Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford 67 + 2.8 1 6
3 7   Denny Hulme McLaren-Ford 67 + 3.0 2 4
4 27   James Hunt March-Ford 67 + 3.4 11 3
5 6   François Cevert Tyrrell-Ford 67 + 36.6 7 2
6 10   Carlos Reutemann Brabham-Ford 67 + 44.7 8 1
7 19   Clay Regazzoni BRM 67 + 1:11.7 10  
8 3   Jacky Ickx Ferrari 67 + 1:17.4 19  
9 25   Howden Ganley Iso-Marlboro-Ford 66 +1 lap 18  
10 5   Jackie Stewart Tyrrell-Ford 66 +1 lap 4  
11 15   Mike Beuttler March-Ford 65 +2 Laps 24  
12 21   Niki Lauda BRM 63 +4 laps 9  
13 28   Rikky von Opel Ensign-Ford 61 +6 laps 21  
Ret 11   Wilson Fittipaldi Brabham-Ford 44 Oil leak 13  
Ret 1   Emerson Fittipaldi Lotus-Ford 36 Transmission 5  
Ret 29   John Watson Brabham-Ford 36 Fuel system 23  
Ret 12   Graham Hill Shadow-Ford 24 Chassis 27  
Ret 22   Chris Amon Tecno 6 Fuel system 29  
Ret 30   Jody Scheckter McLaren-Ford 0 Collision 6  
Ret 23   Mike Hailwood Surtees-Ford 0 Collision 12  
Ret 31   Jochen Mass Surtees-Ford 0 Collision 14  
Ret 24   Carlos Pace Surtees-Ford 0 Collision 15  
Ret 20   Jean-Pierre Beltoise BRM 0 Collision 17  
Ret 9   Andrea de Adamich Brabham-Ford 0 Collision 20  
Ret 14   Roger Williamson March-Ford 0 Collision 22  
Ret 16   George Follmer Shadow-Ford 0 Collision 25  
Ret 17   Jackie Oliver Shadow-Ford 0 Collision 26  
Ret 26   Graham McRae Iso-Marlboro-Ford 0 Throttle 28  
DNS 18   David Purley March-Ford 0 Spun Off 16  
Source:[7]

Championship standings after the race edit

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings. Only the best 7 results from the first 8 races and the best 6 results from the last 7 races counted towards the Championship. Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "1973 Formula 1 World Championship Programmes". The Programme Covers Project.
  2. ^ "The John Player Grand Prix". Racing Sports Car. 1973. pp. 16–17. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  3. ^ a b c Magazine, Motosport (August 1973). "1973 British GP Race Report". Motorsport Magazine. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Fearnley, Paul (27 June 2013). "1973 British GP – I attended". Motorsport Magazine. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  5. ^ a b c Henry, Alan (27 June 2013). "1973 British GP – A look back". McLaren. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  6. ^ "1998 F1 World Championship | Motorsport Database". Motor Sport. 1998. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
  7. ^ . formula1.com. Archived from the original on 3 September 2014. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  8. ^ a b "Britain 1973 - Championship • STATS F1". www.statsf1.com. Retrieved 13 March 2019.


1973, british, grand, prix, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 1973 British Grand Prix news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The 1973 British Grand Prix formally the John Player Grand Prix was a Formula One F1 motor race held at Silverstone on 14 July 1973 It was race 9 of 15 in both the 1973 World Championship of Drivers and the 1973 International Cup for Formula One Manufacturers The race is known for the first lap pile up which ultimately caused eleven cars to retire The accident happened when Jody Scheckter running fourth in his McLaren spun across the track at Woodcote Corner at the end of the first lap causing many other cars to collide and crash The incident eliminated nine cars including all three works Surtees cars while Brabham driver Andrea de Adamich suffered a broken ankle that ended his F1 career The race was stopped at the end of the second lap before being restarted over the original 67 lap distance with 18 of the original 29 cars David Purley and Graham McRae had retired in separate incidents 1973 British Grand PrixRace detailsDate14 July 1973Official nameJohn Player Grand Prix 1 LocationSilverstone Circuit Northamptonshire Great BritainCoursePermanent racing facilityCourse length4 711 km 2 944 miles Distance67 laps 315 597 km 197 248 miles WeatherDryPole positionDriverRonnie PetersonLotus FordTime1 16 3Fastest lapDriverJames HuntMarch FordTime1 18 6 on lap 50PodiumFirstPeter RevsonMcLaren FordSecondRonnie PetersonLotus FordThirdDenny HulmeMcLaren FordLap leaders On the first start a swift start by Jackie Stewart brought him from fourth to first in less than half a lap At Becketts Corner Stewart out braked race leader Ronnie Peterson and took the lead As the massive pile up at the end of the first lap caused the race to be restarted Stewart had to start from fourth again This time it was Niki Lauda who had an excellent start and moved up behind Peterson into second with Stewart third Stewart passed Lauda on lap 2 and charged after Peterson On lap 6 Stewart again tried to pass Peterson for the lead but the Swedish driver shut the door Stewart lost control of his Tyrrell and spun off into the thick grass Although he was able to continue Stewart ended up finishing 10th one lap down Another notable drive came from James Hunt in his Hesketh Racing March who ran fourth for most of the race and was part of a four way battle for the lead between himself Peterson Denny Hulme and Peter Revson American driver Revson took his first Grand Prix victory by 2 8 seconds from Peterson The pile up was to be a factor in this being the last World Championship F1 race held on the original Silverstone layout a chicane would be added at Woodcote shortly before the 1975 British Grand Prix at Silverstone Moto GP which would come to Silverstone from the Isle of Man TT in 1977 would use the original layout until 1986 Contents 1 Qualifying 1 1 Qualifying classification 2 Race 2 1 First start and multi car pileup 2 2 Second start 2 3 Classification 3 Championship standings after the race 4 See also 5 ReferencesQualifying editQualifying classification edit Pos Driver Constructor Time No1 Ronnie Peterson Lotus Ford 1 16 3 12 Denny Hulme McLaren Ford 1 16 5 23 Peter Revson McLaren Ford 1 16 5 34 Jackie Stewart Tyrrell Ford 1 16 7 45 Emerson Fittipaldi Lotus Ford 1 16 7 56 Jody Scheckter McLaren Ford 1 16 9 67 Francois Cevert Tyrrell Ford 1 17 3 78 Carlos Reutemann Brabham Ford 1 17 4 89 Niki Lauda BRM 1 17 4 910 Clay Regazzoni BRM 1 17 5 1011 James Hunt March Ford 1 17 6 1112 Mike Hailwood Surtees Ford 1 18 0 1213 Wilson Fittipaldi Brabham Ford 1 18 1 1314 Jochen Mass Surtees Ford 1 18 3 1415 Carlos Pace Surtees Ford 1 18 3 1516 David Purley March Ford 1 18 4 1617 Jean Pierre Beltoise BRM 1 18 4 1718 Howden Ganley Iso Ford 1 18 6 1819 Jacky Ickx Ferrari 1 18 9 1920 Andrea de Adamich Brabham Ford 1 19 1 2021 Rikky von Opel Ensign Ford 1 19 2 2122 Roger Williamson March Ford 1 19 5 2223 John Watson Brabham Ford 1 20 1 2324 Mike Beuttler March Ford 1 20 1 2425 George Follmer Shadow Ford 1 20 3 2526 Jackie Oliver Shadow Ford 1 20 3 2627 Graham Hill Shadow Ford 1 20 5 2728 Graham McRae Iso Ford 1 20 8 2829 Chris Amon Tecno 1 21 0 29Race editFirst start and multi car pileup edit The race started at 2 00 pm local time It featured the most cars to start a Grand Prix as it featured 28 cars in rows of three by two 2 Ronnie Peterson led away but a very quick start by Jackie Stewart brought him from fourth to second as Stewart passed Peterson to take the lead at Beckets Carlos Reutemann was in third with Denny Hulme and Jody Scheckter behind him As the exited Woodcote corner to complete the first lap Stewart led Peterson and Reutemann but carnage was happening behind them Scheckter tried to pass Hulme on the outside Scheckter s car went wide and spun right across the track and it hit the retaining wall of the pits and bounced back into the middle of the track Hulme escaped undamaged as Francois Cevert James Hunt Peter Revson and Clay Regazzoni also went by The big one then happened as Scheckter s car ricocheted back from the pit wall Revson struck Scheckter s rear wing and then all hell broke loose as the rest of the field crashed into the wrecks or dodged about to miss the wreckage Nine cars were involved in the resulting carnage Andrea de Adamich had crashed headlong into the barriers on the outside of the track and he was trapped in the cockpit of his Brabham with a broken ankle Apart from minor bruises and shakings no one else was hurt but the Surtees cars of Mike Hailwood Carlos Pace and Jochen Mass were smashed up The Shadow s were also involved Jackie Oliver s car was wrecked while George Follmer s car was ripped open The Embassy Hill entered Shadow of Graham Hill was struck in the rear and a wishbone broken Hill drove it round back to the pits under its own power The BRM of Jean Pierre Beltoise and the works March of Roger Williamson were wrecked as was the McLaren of Scheckter 3 4 5 It would F1 s biggest race start crash until the 1998 Belgian Grand Prix took out thirteen cars no one was injured 6 The race organisation acted instantly and the race was red flagged indicating without argument or discussion that the race was stopped and would be started again later Meanwhile those ahead of the accident were still racing until they ended the lap when they all came to a rapid stop at the scene of the crash It took 30 minutes to release de Adamich from the wreckage of the Brabham plus an hour to clear away the wrecked cars and the debris The cars that escaped were wheeled back to the starting grid and Hill s Shadow was repaired in the pits and Niki Lauda s BRM that had been in the pits all the time had a new drive shaft fitted Hunt s March needed a new airbox as his original one was damaged in the wreck and borrowed Mike Beuttler s airbox from his car 3 4 5 Second start edit Drivers were allowed to use spare cars but none were used Lauda s BRM and Hill s Shadow having been repaired during the red flag period Non starters included de Adamich who had been taken to hospital Scheckter who was barred by McLaren as several team bosses including John Surtees wanted to throw him out for causing the crash Graham McRae s Iso Marlboro which had a throttle issue and could not restart and David Purley s March which had spun off before the big one and did not restart Other drivers who did not take the restart included Oliver Follmer Beltoise Williamson Purley Pace Hailwood and Mass It was 3 30 p m before the track was clear and there were nineteen starters ready for the restart over the original distance on 67 laps At 3 35 pm the depleted field moved up on to the starting grid Everyone took up their original positions leaving gaps for those who had been eliminated This time it was Lauda who had an excellent start and moved up behind Peterson into second with Stewart third Stewart passed Lauda on lap 2 and charged after Peterson On lap 6 Stewart again tried to pass Peterson for the lead but the Swedish driver shut the door Stewart lost control of his Tyrrell and spun off into the thick grass Although he was able to continue Stewart ended up finishing 10th one lap down 3 4 5 Classification edit Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time Retired Grid Points1 8 nbsp Peter Revson McLaren Ford 67 1 29 18 5 3 92 2 nbsp Ronnie Peterson Lotus Ford 67 2 8 1 63 7 nbsp Denny Hulme McLaren Ford 67 3 0 2 44 27 nbsp James Hunt March Ford 67 3 4 11 35 6 nbsp Francois Cevert Tyrrell Ford 67 36 6 7 26 10 nbsp Carlos Reutemann Brabham Ford 67 44 7 8 17 19 nbsp Clay Regazzoni BRM 67 1 11 7 10 8 3 nbsp Jacky Ickx Ferrari 67 1 17 4 19 9 25 nbsp Howden Ganley Iso Marlboro Ford 66 1 lap 18 10 5 nbsp Jackie Stewart Tyrrell Ford 66 1 lap 4 11 15 nbsp Mike Beuttler March Ford 65 2 Laps 24 12 21 nbsp Niki Lauda BRM 63 4 laps 9 13 28 nbsp Rikky von Opel Ensign Ford 61 6 laps 21 Ret 11 nbsp Wilson Fittipaldi Brabham Ford 44 Oil leak 13 Ret 1 nbsp Emerson Fittipaldi Lotus Ford 36 Transmission 5 Ret 29 nbsp John Watson Brabham Ford 36 Fuel system 23 Ret 12 nbsp Graham Hill Shadow Ford 24 Chassis 27 Ret 22 nbsp Chris Amon Tecno 6 Fuel system 29 Ret 30 nbsp Jody Scheckter McLaren Ford 0 Collision 6 Ret 23 nbsp Mike Hailwood Surtees Ford 0 Collision 12 Ret 31 nbsp Jochen Mass Surtees Ford 0 Collision 14 Ret 24 nbsp Carlos Pace Surtees Ford 0 Collision 15 Ret 20 nbsp Jean Pierre Beltoise BRM 0 Collision 17 Ret 9 nbsp Andrea de Adamich Brabham Ford 0 Collision 20 Ret 14 nbsp Roger Williamson March Ford 0 Collision 22 Ret 16 nbsp George Follmer Shadow Ford 0 Collision 25 Ret 17 nbsp Jackie Oliver Shadow Ford 0 Collision 26 Ret 26 nbsp Graham McRae Iso Marlboro Ford 0 Throttle 28 DNS 18 nbsp David Purley March Ford 0 Spun Off 16 Source 7 Championship standings after the race editDrivers Championship standingsPos Driver Points nbsp 1 nbsp Jackie Stewart 42 nbsp 2 nbsp Emerson Fittipaldi 41 nbsp 3 nbsp Francois Cevert 33 nbsp 4 nbsp Ronnie Peterson 25 nbsp 5 nbsp Denny Hulme 23Source 8 Constructors Championship standingsPos Constructor Points nbsp 1 nbsp Lotus Ford 58 62 nbsp 2 nbsp Tyrrell Ford 53 57 nbsp 3 nbsp McLaren Ford 35 nbsp 1 4 nbsp Brabham Ford 12 nbsp 1 5 nbsp Ferrari 12Source 8 Note Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings Only the best 7 results from the first 8 races and the best 6 results from the last 7 races counted towards the Championship Numbers without parentheses are Championship points numbers in parentheses are total points scored See also editList of red flagged Formula One racesReferences edit 1973 Formula 1 World Championship Programmes The Programme Covers Project The John Player Grand Prix Racing Sports Car 1973 pp 16 17 Retrieved 14 February 2024 a b c Magazine Motosport August 1973 1973 British GP Race Report Motorsport Magazine Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b c Fearnley Paul 27 June 2013 1973 British GP I attended Motorsport Magazine Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b c Henry Alan 27 June 2013 1973 British GP A look back McLaren Retrieved 2 February 2021 1998 F1 World Championship Motorsport Database Motor Sport 1998 Retrieved 13 February 2024 1973 British Grand Prix formula1 com Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 22 December 2015 a b Britain 1973 Championship STATS F1 www statsf1 com Retrieved 13 March 2019 Previous race 1973 French Grand Prix FIA Formula One World Championship 1973 season Next race 1973 Dutch Grand PrixPrevious race 1972 British Grand Prix British Grand Prix Next race 1974 British Grand Prix Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1973 British Grand Prix amp oldid 1207098039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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