1950 Belgian Grand Prix

Motor car race From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1950 Belgian Grand Prix, formally titled the Grand Prix Automobile de Belgique,[2] was a Formula One motor race held on 18 June 1950 at Spa-Francorchamps. It was race five of seven in the 1950 World Championship of Drivers. The 35-lap race was won by Alfa Romeo driver Juan Manuel Fangio after he started from second position. His teammate Luigi Fagioli finished second and Talbot-Lago driver Louis Rosier came in third.

Date 18 June 1950
Course Permanent racing circuit
Quick facts Race details, Date ...
1950 Belgian Grand Prix
 Previous raceNext race 
Race details
Date 18 June 1950
Official name XII Grand Prix Automobile de Belgique
Location Spa-Francorchamps, Spa, Belgium
Course Permanent racing circuit
Course length 14.120 km (8.825 miles)
Distance 35 laps, 494.2 km (308.875 miles)
Weather Warm, dry and sunny
Pole position
Driver Alfa Romeo
Time 4:37.0
Fastest lap
Driver Italy Nino Farina Alfa Romeo
Time 4:34.1 on lap 18[1]
Podium
First Alfa Romeo
Second Alfa Romeo
Third Talbot-Lago-Talbot
Lap leaders
Close

Report

By the time of the Belgian Grand Prix, the pace of the season was beginning to tell, with only 14 cars arriving at the Spa circuit. These included the dominant Alfa Romeos of Nino Farina, Juan Manuel Fangio and Luigi Fagioli. Scuderia Ferrari was down to two 125s for Luigi Villoresi and Alberto Ascari, although Ascari had a new V12 engine to try out. The factory Talbot-Lago team had three cars for Louis Rosier, Yves Giraud-Cabantous and Philippe Étancelin (standing in for the injured Eugène Martin). The rest of the field was made up of Talbot-Lagos (notably one for Raymond Sommer), a single Alta and one Maserati for Toni Branca. This race was the final entry for Geoffrey Crossley, the sport's high costs forcing him, like many privateers, to retire after just a handful of races.

Farina and Fangio were fastest as usual in qualifying with Fagioli unable to match them. Sommer split the Ferraris in his old Talbot-Lago. The race would be a similar story. The Alfas went off on their own and Sommer battled with the two Ferraris. When the Alfa stopped for fuel, Sommer found himself in the unlikely position of being race leader. Unfortunately his engine blew up. Ascari took the lead but he had to stop for fuel and that meant that the Alfas went ahead again with Fangio leading Farina and Fagioli. Farina suffered transmission trouble in the closing laps and dropped to fourth behind the best of the surviving Talbot-Lagos being driven by Rosier. Ascari finished fifth.

Entries

Classification

Qualifying

Race

More information Pos, No ...
Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 10 Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio Alfa Romeo 35 2:47:26 2 8
2 12 Italy Luigi Fagioli Alfa Romeo 35 + 14 3 6
3 14 France Louis Rosier Talbot-Lago-Talbot 35 + 2:19 8 4
4 8 Italy Nino Farina Alfa Romeo 35 + 4:05 1 41
5 4 Italy Alberto Ascari Ferrari 34 + 1 Lap 7 2
6 2 Italy Luigi Villoresi Ferrari 33 + 2 Laps 4  
7 22 France Pierre Levegh Talbot-Lago-Talbot 33 + 2 Laps 10  
8 24 Belgium Johnny Claes Talbot-Lago-Talbot 32 + 3 Laps 14  
9 26 United Kingdom Geoffrey Crossley Alta 30 + 5 Laps 12  
10 30 Switzerland Toni Branca Maserati 29 + 6 Laps 11  
Ret 20 France Eugène Chaboud Talbot-Lago-Talbot 22 Oil Pipe 13  
Ret 6 France Raymond Sommer Talbot-Lago-Talbot 20 Oil Pressure 5  
Ret 16 France Philippe Étancelin Talbot-Lago-Talbot 15 Overheating 6  
Ret 18 France Yves Giraud-Cabantous Talbot-Lago-Talbot 2 Oil Pipe 9  
Source:[6]
Close
Notes
  • ^1 – Includes 1 point for fastest lap

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
More information Pos, Driver ...
Pos Driver Points
1 Italy Nino Farina 22
2 Italy Luigi Fagioli 18
3 Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio 17
2 4 France Louis Rosier 10
1 5 United States Johnnie Parsons 9
Source: [7]
Close
  • Note: Only the top five positions are listed. Only the best 4 results counted towards the Championship.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI