2006 Italian Grand Prix

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Date 10 September 2006
Official name Formula 1 Gran Premio Vodafone d'Italia 2006
Course Permanent racing facility
2006 Italian Grand Prix
Race 15 of 18 in the 2006 Formula One World Championship
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The Monza circuit after modified in 2000
The Monza circuit after modified in 2000
Race details
Date 10 September 2006
Official name Formula 1 Gran Premio Vodafone d'Italia 2006
Location Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, Monza, Italy
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 5.793 km (3.6 miles)
Distance 53 laps, 307.029 km (190.8 miles)
Weather Warm and sunny with temperatures reaching up to 27 °C (81 °F)[1]
Pole position
Driver McLaren-Mercedes
Time 1.21.484
Fastest lap
Driver Finland Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes
Time 1:22.559 on lap 13
Podium
First Ferrari
Second McLaren-Mercedes
Third BMW Sauber
Lap leaders

The 2006 Italian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Gran Premio Vodafone d'Italia 2006)[2] was a Formula One motor race held on 10 September 2006 at Autodromo Nazionale di Monza. It was the fifteenth race of the 2006 Formula One season, and was won by Michael Schumacher driving a Ferrari car.

Immediately following the race, Schumacher announced that he would retire from motor racing at the end of the 2006 season. Robert Kubica achieved his first career podium finish, in only his third Grand Prix. It was also only the second Grand Prix meeting appearance of Kubica's Friday driver successor, Sebastian Vettel. Vettel had impressed at the Turkish Grand Prix by setting the fastest time in one session, but he set the fastest time in both Friday practice sessions at this Grand Prix.[3][4] The race was also the first race to see the introduction of a new High Speed Barrier developed by the FIA Institute and the FIA. The system, which was installed at the end of the run-off areas at the circuit's second chicane and Parabolica corners, was designed for use at corners with high speed approaches and limited run-off areas.[5] Also this was the last race of the Red Bull driver Christian Klien, until his return to a race seat at the 2010 Singapore Grand Prix.

After the race, in the press conference, Schumacher announced his retirement from Formula One.[6] On the same day, it was announced that Ferrari would replace Schumacher with Kimi Räikkönen. The race was his 90th victory. Four years later however in 2010, Schumacher returned to F1 with Mercedes.

The bottom 6 teams in the 2005 Constructors' Championship and Super Aguri were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.

ConstructorNatDriver
Williams-Cosworth Austria Alexander Wurz
Honda United Kingdom Anthony Davidson
Red Bull-Ferrari Netherlands Robert Doornbos
BMW Sauber Germany Sebastian Vettel
MF1-Toyota Switzerland Giorgio Mondini
Toro Rosso-Cosworth Switzerland Neel Jani
Super Aguri-Honda France Franck Montagny

Race report

At the start Kimi Räikkönen got away in the lead with Michael Schumacher and Nick Heidfeld tussling over 2nd. By lap 2 Fernando Alonso was up to 6th past Heidfeld as Schumacher and Räikkönen begin to pull clear of the rest. On lap 10 Nico Rosberg lost power in his Williams and was the first retirement, his 4th consecutive retirement. On lap 15 Räikkönen pitted from the lead and two laps later Schumacher came in and jumped him, Robert Kubica took the lead stopping much later, on lap 23, which allowed Schumacher into the lead for the first time in the race. On lap 44 there was drama when Alonso pulled over with a smoky Renault after an engine failure, this caused a problem for Massa who locked up behind him and went off before pitting to change tyres. Michael Schumacher cruised to victory ahead of Räikkönen, with Kubica claiming his first podium in 3rd place.[7]

Classification

Qualifying

Pos. No. Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Q3 Grid
1 3Finland Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes 1:21.994 1:21.349 1:21.484 1
2 5Germany Michael SchumacherFerrari 1:21.711 1:21.353 1:21.486 2
3 16Germany Nick HeidfeldBMW Sauber 1:21.764 1:21.425 1:21.653 3
4 6Brazil Felipe MassaFerrari 1:22.028 1:21.225 1:21.704 4
5 12United Kingdom Jenson ButtonHonda 1:22.512 1:21.572 1:22.011 5
6 17Poland Robert KubicaBMW Sauber 1:22.437 1:21.270 1:22.258 6
7 4Spain Pedro de la RosaMcLaren-Mercedes 1:22.422 1:21.878 1:22.280 7
8 11Brazil Rubens BarrichelloHonda 1:22.640 1:21.688 1:22.787 8
9 2Italy Giancarlo FisichellaRenault 1:22.486 1:21.722 1:23.175 9
10 1Spain Fernando AlonsoRenault 1:21.747 1:21.526 1:25.688 102
11 8Italy Jarno TrulliToyota 1:22.093 1:21.924 11
12 10Germany Nico RosbergWilliams-Cosworth 1:22.581 1:22.203 12
13 7Germany Ralf SchumacherToyota 1:22.622 1:22.280 13
14 14United Kingdom David CoulthardRed Bull-Ferrari 1:22.618 1:22.589 14
15 21United States Scott SpeedToro Rosso-Cosworth 1:22.943 1:23.165 15
16 15Austria Christian KlienRed Bull-Ferrari 1:22.898 No time1 16
17 20Italy Vitantonio LiuzziToro Rosso-Cosworth 1:23.043 17
18 19Netherlands Christijan AlbersMF1-Toyota 1:23.116 18
19 9Australia Mark WebberWilliams-Cosworth 1:23.341 19
20 18Portugal Tiago MonteiroMF1-Toyota 1:23.920 20
21 22Japan Takuma SatoSuper Aguri-Honda 1:24.289 21
22 23Japan Sakon YamamotoSuper Aguri-Honda 1:26.001 22
Source:[8]
Notes
  • ^1 Christian Klien spun in the fifth corner and shut down her engine in Q1 and therefore did not get time in Q2.
  • ^2 Fernando Alonso originally qualified with a time of 1:21.829 in Q3, but had his three fastest Q3 times deleted, effectively demoting him from fifth to tenth, after Monza stewards controversially penalized him, judging he had impeded Ferrari's Felipe Massa during qualifying.[9]

Race

Pos.No.DriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
1 5Germany Michael SchumacherFerrari B 53 1:14:51.975 2 10
2 3Finland Kimi RäikkönenMcLaren-Mercedes M 53 +8.046 1 8
3 17Poland Robert KubicaBMW Sauber M 53 +26.414 6 6
4 2Italy Giancarlo FisichellaRenault M 53 +32.045 9 5
5 12United Kingdom Jenson ButtonHonda M 53 +32.685 5 4
6 11Brazil Rubens BarrichelloHonda M 53 +42.409 8 3
7 8Italy Jarno TrulliToyota B 53 +44.662 11 2
8 16Germany Nick HeidfeldBMW Sauber M 53 +45.309 3 1
9 6Brazil Felipe MassaFerrari B 53 +45.995 4
10 9Australia Mark WebberWilliams-Cosworth B 53 +72.602 19
11 15Austria Christian KlienRed Bull-Ferrari M 52 +1 lap 16
12 14United Kingdom David CoulthardRed Bull-Ferrari M 52 +1 lap 14
13 21United States Scott SpeedToro Rosso-Cosworth M 52 +1 lap 15
14 20Italy Vitantonio LiuzziToro Rosso-Cosworth M 52 +1 lap 17
15 7Germany Ralf SchumacherToyota B 52 +1 lap 13
16 22Japan Takuma SatoSuper Aguri-Honda B 51 +2 laps PL3
17 19Netherlands Christijan AlbersMF1-Toyota B 51 +2 laps 18
Ret 18Portugal Tiago MonteiroMF1-Toyota B 44 Brakes 20
Ret 1Spain Fernando AlonsoRenault M 43 Engine 10
Ret 4Spain Pedro de la RosaMcLaren-Mercedes M 20 Engine 7
Ret 23Japan Sakon YamamotoSuper Aguri-Honda B 18 Hydraulics 22
Ret 10Germany Nico RosbergWilliams-Cosworth B 9 Driveshaft 12
Source:[10]
Notes
  • ^3 Takuma Sato started the race from the pitlane after having replaced his car with the spare one due to a hydraulic problem that occurred during the formation lap.[11]

Championship standings after the race

See also

References

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