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Argentine Grand Prix Review
hore
Circuit Oscar Galvez, Argentina
10th - 12th March 1998
by Max Galvin, England
Considering the Circuit Oscar Galvez is one of the least liked circuits in F1 the
Argentine Grand Prix proved to be the most
entertaining of the year so far. The expected order was changed (although Ferrari fans
will say, "I told you so") and it looked,
for the first time, that we may have something other than a McLaren walkover to look
forward to in 1998.
Before the race
Once again, the new rules proved to be disastrous in the wet and, as in Brazil, a
surprising number of drivers had spins or
accidents in the wet. A combination of harder tyres and less rubber in contact with the
track has produced cars that seem to be
almost impossible to drive on the edge.
It seemed right from the start that Mika Hakkinen was going to have difficulty emulating
his performance of the last 2 races.
Mika was eclipsed by both his team mate David Coulthard and the Ferrari of Michael
Schumacher in free practice sessions and qualifying and didn't really look to be at ease
on the twisty track.
Biggest surprise of qualifying (other than Schumacher beating Hakkinen) was the position
of Tora Takagi. The young Japanese
driver has proved that his position on the grid in Australia was no fluke and confidently
stuck his Tyrrell in 13th place, ahead of
all the Prost and Stewart team cars, both works supported outfits.
For the first time this year the Jordan team were closer to the pace than they have been
previously (no doubt at least partly
down to the new Goodyear tyres) with Ralf Schumacher dominating Damon Hill and beating him
by 0.6 seconds and 4 grid
positions.
Also of note is that Jean Alesi outqualified Johnny Herbert for the first time. Although
this was only by 0.2 seconds, Alesi
looked a lot more at ease on the track than his team mate (except for when he crashed into
Herbert on his opening lap on
Friday) and a lot happier with the car.
All the Goodyear teams seemed to have a performance boost, but that was not only down to
the new Goodyear front tyre.
Bridgestone, expecting a hot race, took harder compounds than normal to Argentina and most
teams chose the harder of the
two options available. This meant that while the tyre didn't wear a great deal, there was
insufficient grip to get the best out of
their cars. While many point to this as the reason Ferrari were so competitive, my opinion
is that this is all part of racing and
shouldn't be thought of any differently to engine or chassis issues.
The race
With the clouds threatening rain there seemed to be a good chance of seeing our first wet
start of 1998, but as usual, the rain
stayed in the clouds and merely hovered above the grid looking menacing.
As the lights went out, David Coulthard made a great start and made the run down to the
first corner untroubled. Behind him,
Mika Hakkinen passed Michael Schumacher and Heinz-Harald Frentzen passed both Eddie Irvine
and Ralf Schumacher to slot into fourth place.
Ralf Schumacher had more problems than just slipping back one place, as his terrible start
eventually left him back in 13th,
having lost an amazing 8 places.
Immediately it seemed that Michael Schumacher was much faster as he started to pressure
Mika Hakkinen for second place.
While the Finn was able to keep him at bay for the first lap, it was obvious that the
Ferrari would get past before too long and
sure enough, on lap 1 Michael hustled his car past and gave chase to David Coulthard who
was already 3 seconds ahead.
Behind this battle, the second Ferrari, driven by Eddie Irvine, was pressuring the
Williams of Heinz-Harald Frentzen for fourth
place, with Jacques Villeneuve not too far behind.
Over the next two laps Frentzen was passed first by Irvine then by team mate Villeneuve. A
lap leter Jean Alesi's Sauber
slipped by the #2 Williams-Mecachrome and set off after the #1 car.
Over this period Michael Schumacher had been chasing David Coulthard knowing that both
McLarens would be on a
one-stop strategy where he was planning two. If Schumacher were going to win, he would
need to be ahead of the second
place driver by over 20 seconds when he came into the pits and this meant passing
Coulthard as quickly as possible.
It became apparent that although Schumacher didn't seem able to catch Coulthard too
quickly, the Scots driver felt under
pressure. On lap 4 the Ferrari driver was able to close to within a second after David
braked too late approaching the hairpin
before the esses.
Coulthard repeated this manoeuvre on lap 5 and Schumacher decided to take this opportunity
to take the lead of a race for the
first time in 1998. What happened next seems to differ depending on whether you are a
Schumacher fan, a Coulthard fan or
impartial but the facts are set in stone.
As Coulthard fought to recover from his mistake Schumacher tried to pass him on the inside
of the hairpin. With the track
relatively narrow on the exit and both drivers trying to keep the lead and line up for the
next corner unless one driver backed off there was sure to be an accident. Predictably
neither driver did, and the McLaren moved towards the Ferrari until contact was made,
spinning Coulthard off track.
Having watched the incident on video several times, it is clear that either driver could
have avoided the incident but it would
have cost Coulthard the lead and Schumacher his best chance of passing. With the Ferrari
barely level with the rear wheels of
the McLaren when the collision occurred, there is no way that it can be argued that the
corner "belonged" to Schumacher. To
say that this compares with the Villeneuve-Schumacher Jerez incident is stretching the
truth, as Schumacher was not past
Coulthard in any way, shape or form.
Regardless of your opinion on which driver (if any) was to blame, the end result was that
Michael Schumacher ended up in the
lead and David Coulthard ended up back in sixth behind Jean Alesi.
This left Schumacher over 7 seconds ahead of second placed Hakkinen who was clearly unable
to match the pace of the
Ferrari at this point. Part of Hakkinen's problem was that Eddie Irvine was now within a
second of the McLaren and doing his
best to make it a Ferrari 1-2.
Amazingly the entire field was still running by this point, a rarity in contemporary
Formula One, especially with the "innovative"
cars being run by Arrows and Stewart.
At the front, Michael Schumacher was pulling away from Mika Hakkinen at the rate of about
1-second per lap. Hakkinen was
able to maintain a lead of around 1.5 seconds over third placed Irvine. The two, in turn,
were getting away from Jacques
Villeneuve at approximately 0.5 seconds a lap. Villeneuve was clearly holding up the cars
behind him, with both Jean Alesi and
David Coulthard within 1 second of the Williams.
All this meant that on lap 10 the top 6 looked like this:
M.Schumacher -> 10.6s -> Hakkinen -> 1.7s -> Irvine -> 4.1s ->
Villeneuve ->0.3s -> Alesi -> 0.8s -> Coulthard
On lap 13 we saw the first retirement, with Pedro Diniz continuing his run of retirements
when his gearbox gave up.
By lap 14 it was becoming clear that Hakkinen had got into his stride and was able to
match the lap times of the Ferrari that
was by now 12.5 seconds ahead of him. Whether this was down to the tyres starting to work,
the lighter fuel load or just
because it had suddenly dawned on the Finn that he could win the race is beyond me, but
whatever it was meant that the first
Ferrari win of '98 was not yet assured.
Further back, the nothing was changing fast, with Irvine running well but losing ground on
the leading pair and the three way
battle for fifth dropping slowly further behind the Ferrari driver. The trio of drivers
scrapping over fifth were still in the same
order and still only separated by just over a second and there seemed little end in sight
with Villeneuve faster down the straights
than Alesi and Coulthard unable to close on the Sauber in the infield section.
On lap 17, the Stewart-Ford of Jan Magnussen retired, yet again because of gearbox
failure. Also on lap 17, Ralf Schumacher
blotted his copybook for the second race in a row by spinning off track while running in
13th, 4 places behind his team mate
Damon Hill. Following the spin, Ralf pitted as he felt there was something wrong with the
car but the team sent him out after
fitting new tyres.
By now Mika Hakkinen had actually started to gain on Schumacher, taking on average 0.5
seconds a lap out of the lead that
the former World Champion had built up. However, a reasonable amount of this was down to
the Ferrari encountering traffic
and soon the McLaren was also trying to pass lapped cars and some of the lost time was
regained.
The second Arrows of Mika Salo dropped off the timing sheets on lap 18 when it suffered
terminal gearbox failure making it a
clean sweep of 6 DNF's from 6 starts for Tom Walkinshaw's leading racing team. Luckily for
Tom, his trip to see the Volvo
BTCC team the following day resulted in a much more successful outcome.
On lap 22 Ralf Schumacher ended his afternoon with a final spin across the grass and into
an escape road. Afterwards he said
that his rear wishbone was broken hence the double spin, but 3 retirements from 3 races
may suggest something else.
All this time the leading pair were trading fastest race lap between them and keeping the
gap relatively stable at a little over 11
seconds and Irvine was still falling behind those in front and putting more space between
himself and those behind him. That
Jacques Villeneuve was still able to keep himself ahead of the obviously faster cars of
Jean Alesi and David Coulthard shows
that the new regulations have done nothing to "improve the spectacle" or
"make the racing closer".
On lap 27, Sauber and Jean Alesi obviously tired of waiting for an opportunity to pass and
pulled the #14 car into the pits for
fuel and tyres, in an attempt to get out ahead of Villeneuve and Coulthard.
Lap 29 and 30 saw both Michael Schumacher and Eddie Irvine respectively stop for fuel and
fresh rubber with Schumacher
rejoining in third (and back up to second when Irvine stopped) and Irvine in fifth place.
Three laps later, lap 32, David Coulthard also made an attempt to dispose of Jacques
Villeneuve and Jean Alesi by way of a pit stop. With McLaren looking for a 1-stop strategy
for the Scots driver, they needed to put more fuel in the car than Sauber had needed for
the 2-stopping Alesi. This and the time lost behind the Williams cost the team valuable
time, and ultimately track
position as Coulthard rejoined in 8th well behind Jean Alesi's Sauber (7th).
After this first round of stops, on lap 33 the top 6 looked like this:
Hakkinen -> 12.4s -> M.Schumacher -> 27.6s -> Villeneuve -> 1.6s ->
Irvine -> 6.8s -> Frentzen -> 0.4s -> Wurz
Again neither Hakkinen nor Schumacher could do anything about the gap between them, the
only real changes coming when
one of the drivers encountered traffic.
Lap 37 saw Jacques Villeneuve come in for tyres and fuel and despite his relatively slow
on track pace, the Williams pit crew
were able to get him out between Johnny Herbert (7th) and David Coulthard. This
effectively ruined the chances for the
McLaren driver to achieve much success in the race.
One lap later Heinz-Harald Frentzen stopped and was followed a lap later by Johnny
Herbert, both drivers getting back
underway without any problems, or so it seemed.
Almost as soon as Frentzen was back on track, he was awarded a 10-second penalty for
speeding in the pitlane. If the
weekend hadn't been ruined for the Williams driver before this, the 25 or so seconds lost
in coming in, stopping and getting
back onto the track certainly did.
Lap 40 saw Alex Wurz visit the pits for his first and last stop of the race, emerging in
fifth between Alesi and Villeneuve. So far
in the race Wurz had not seemed to be doing a great deal, but as in Brazil a one-stop
strategy and consistently fast lap times
had left him within reach of a podium finish.
Race leader Mika Hakkinen stopped on lap 43 emerging over 9 seconds behind Michael
Schumacher but a massive 26
seconds ahead of Eddie Irvine. This was the period that would surely decide the race. If
Schumacher could put around 22
seconds between himself and the Finn before he stopped, he was fairly sure to get out
ahead of the McLaren and then have a
straight race to the flag as leader rather than second place man.
So on lap 44, the top 6 looked like this:
M.Schumacher -> 13.8s -> Hakkinen -> 22.8s -> Irvine -> 22.8s -> Alesi
-> 6.7s -> Wurz -> 6.0s -> Villeneuve
With Schumacher running with low fuel, it was really a case of damage limitation for
Hakkinen so he was having to lose as little
time as possible as opposed to catch the Ferrari sitting at the front of the field. Sadly
for his legion of fans, Schumacher was as
much as a second a lap faster then the Flying Finn, and with the German due in somewhere
around lap 50 it would take a
massive effort for Mika to regain the lead.
On lap 46 Damon Hill made a desperate and, truth be told, ill judged lunge down the inside
of Johnny Herbert at the start of the Senna-S. Naturally both drivers have differing
opinions about the incident. Hill said Herbert chopped across him and Herbert replied that
his compatriot should have been far too experienced to try such a silly move at a corner
that offered as little opportunity for passing as that.
Whilst it seems that the Sauber driver was in the right, he was the one whose car was too
badly damaged to continue (puncture
leading to suspension damage) whilst Hill only needed to pit for a new nose to continue as
before (albeit a little further down the
field).
Lap 51 saw the start of the front runners second stops with Jean Alesi stopping and
getting back underway in fifth ahead of
Jacques Villeneuve and David Coulthard who were, by now, fighting hard over sixth place.
The very next lap, this close fighting came to a head as Coulthard tried to pass
Villeneuve on the outside on the way into the
Senna-S. As with the previous attempt there was contact, and Jacques Villeneuve was spun
around and promptly stalled his
engine, ending his race. David Coulthard ended up on the grass but was able to continue
having only lost on place, to the
Benetton-Playlife of Giancarlo Fisichella.
On lap 53, the battle for the lead came to a head as Michael Schumacher came into the pits
for his second stop. Before the
stop the German had a 21.2 second lead over McLaren and it seemed that it would be touch
and go as to whether he could
emerge in the lead. Surprisingly, as he emerged after a flawless stop, Mika was only just
coming into view down the pit straight
and unless the Finn had something left in reserve it looked like he would have to settle
for second place.
The gap between the Ferrari and the McLaren lap 54 was 2.7 seconds, 2 laps later it was
4.8 seconds and another lap later it
was up to 6.2 seconds. Regardless of whether he could catch the leader, Hakkinen seemed to
have settled for second place
and 6 World Championship points and appeared content to maintain his gap to third place.
The last of the important stops came on lap 56 when Eddie Irvine stopped and got underway
still in third place, but only just
ahead of a charging Alex Wurz.
As he showed in Brazil, Wurz is not one to be happy with his place if there is a better
one on offer and he immediately set
about looking for a way past the car in front. By lap 59, the Benetton was within 0.5
seconds of the Ferrari and 2 laps later he
had his first real chance.
By now the rain had started to fall a little and the slight change in grip caught Eddie
Irvine out a little and he ran wide into the
Senna-S. Wurz, sensing his opportunity tried to pass on the inside, but at such a narrow
corner there was never going to be a
great deal of opportunity for this to come off. Unlike the previous attempts at this
corner, although the two cars bumped, neither was spun and neither were damaged
sufficiently to cause any problems for the driver (although Wurz said his developed a push
in right hand corners after this).
Further back, Jean Alesi was having his own battle with Giancarlo Fisichella who, like his
team mate, had driven a steady race
rather than an exciting one and now looked to be in a position to reap the rewards.
On lap 63 Esteban Tuero broke the hearts of his home fans as well as his car when he
crashed heavily in turn one.
Alex Wurz finally got his chance on lap 64 when for the second time Irvine got caught out,
but this time it was at the hairpin
before the esses and the track was wide enough for his to get by without crashing. For
Irvine this seemed to the the end of his
podium chances as Wurz immediately started to put daylight between himself and the
Ferrari, gaining over 4 seconds before the
end of lap 56.
That wasn't the end of matter, however, as both Benetton drivers contrived to spin on lap
66, Wurz rejoining behind Irvine and
Fisichella behind David Coulthard who was yet again recovering relatively well from his
collision. Regardless of how fast the
McLarens are, they certainly seem built like tanks with Coulthard's mount sustaining 2
heavy bangs without suffering in the
slightest.
Lap 66 also saw an unexpected off-track excursion for Michael Schumacher, the Ferrari
drive having outbraked himself on the
slippery track on the entry to turn one. Showing tremendous presence of mind, he didn't
break or gun the throttle, rather he
kept the car running in a straight line until he was over the gravel and onto the escape
road. From here it was a simple trip back
onto the track (almost collecting Shinji Nakano when he rejoined) to continue untroubled
in the lead.
If Mika Hakkinen hadn't apparently given up earlier, the race would more than likely have
been his at that moment, but all
Schumacher had to show for the detour was a red face and the loss of 9 seconds from his
lead.
This left the top 6 like this on lap 67:
M.Schumacher -> 4.3s -> Hakkinen -> 57.1s -> Irvine -> 11.4s -> Wurz
-> 8.4 -> Alesi -> 0.5s -> Coulthard
With the track growing ever more slippery thanks to the rain, drivers were now lapping
around 10 seconds slower than they
had been before the shower. David Coulthard it seemed wasn't going slow enough and had his
third trip off the track of the
afternoon on lap 68 when he bounced across the gravel and got back underway without losing
a place (although this definitely
cost him fifth place).
The field circulated like this until the end, all the top 6 drivers save Alesi and
Coulthard having nothing to worry about from
anything other than their own mistakes.
In a few weeks this race will only be remembered as a "another Schumacher victory
against the odds" but although this was
certainly an intelligent drive, Michael himself has admitted that without that incident at
the hairpin he feels David Coulthard
would have won the race. This, in my opinion, throws into doubt his actions at that point
of the race. Despite all of this, I am
positive that McLaren will have a little more trouble than I, for one, expected them to
and that the race shows you can never
count Schumacher out until the fat lady has well and truly finished singing.
Fastest Lap: Alexander Wurz 1:28.179s
Počas 2. časti občasný dážď
P. No Driver Team - Car Time/Laps
1. 7 COULTHARD McLaren Mercedes 1'28"130 173.975 km/h
2. 3 M.SCHUM' Ferrari 1'29"114 + 0'00"984
3. 8 HAKKINEN McLaren Mercedes 1'29"488 + 0'01"358
4. 1 VILLENEUVE Williams Mecachrome 1'29"610 + 0'01"480
5. 4 IRVINE Ferrari 1'29"781 + 0'01"651
6. 10 R.SCHUM' Jordan Mugen-Honda 1'29"845 + 0'01"715
7. 21 TAKAGI Tyrrell Ford 1'30"054 + 0'01"924
8. 2 FRENTZEN Williams Mecachrome 1'30"317 + 0'02"187
9. 9 HILL Jordan Mugen-Honda 1'30"645 + 0'02"515
10. 14 ALESI Sauber Petronas 1'30"859 + 0'02"729
11. 5 FISICHELLA Benetton Mecachrome 1'30"963 + 0'02"833
12. 15 HERBERT Sauber Petronas 1'31"081 + 0'02"951
13. 11 PANIS Prost Peugeot 1'31"297 + 0'03"167
14. 12 TRULLI Prost Peugeot 1'31"612 + 0'03"482
15. 18 BARRICHELLO Stewart Ford 1'31"727 + 0'03"597
16. 20 ROSSET Tyrrell Ford 1'31"761 + 0'03"631
17. 6 WURZ Benetton Mecachrome 1'31"850 + 0'03"720
18. 17 SALO Arrows TWR 1'32"257 + 0'04"127
19. 16 DINIZ Arrows TWR 1'32"660 + 0'04"530
20. 22 NAKANO Minardi Ford 1'33"390 + 0'05"260
21. 23 TUERO Minardi Ford 1'33"731 + 0'05"601
22. 19 MAGNUSSEN Stewart Ford 1'34"829 + 0'06"699
2. voľný tréning
P. No Driver Team-Car Time/Laps
1. 3 M.SCHUM' Ferrari 1'27"737 174.754 km/h
2. 7 COULTHARD McLaren Mercedes 1'28"289 + 0'00"552
3. 2 FRENTZEN Williams Mecachrome 1'28"347 + 0'00"610
4. 8 HAKKINEN McLaren Mercedes 1'28"501 + 0'00"764
5. 9 HILL Jordan Mugen-Honda 1'28"701 + 0'00"964
6. 4 IRVINE Ferrari 1'28"987 + 0'01"250
7. 14 ALESI Sauber Petronas 1'29"151 + 0'01"414
8. 1 VILLENEUVE Williams Mecachrome 1'29"614 + 0'01"877
9. 10 R.SCHUM' Jordan Mugen-Honda 1'29"633 + 0'01"896
10. 5 FISICHELLA Benetton Mecachrome 1'29"781 + 0'02"044
11. 6 WURZ Benetton Mecachrome 1'29"842 + 0'02"105
12. 12 TRULLI Prost Peugeot 1'30"402 + 0'02"665
13. 18 BARRICHELLO Stewart Ford 1'30"432 + 0'02"695
14. 11 PANIS Prost Peugeot 1'30"722 + 0'02"985
15. 15 HERBERT Sauber Petronas 1'30"808 + 0'03"071
16. 19 MAGNUSSEN Stewart Ford 1'31"283 + 0'03"546
17. 16 DINIZ Arrows TWR 1'31"509 + 0'03"772
18. 20 ROSSET Tyrrell Ford 1'31"975 + 0'04"238
19. 17 SALO Arrows TWR 1'32"563 + 0'04"826
20. 23 TUERO Minardi Ford 1'32"883 + 0'05"146
21. 21 TAKAGI Tyrrell Ford 1'33"299 + 0'05"562
22. 22 NAKANO Minardi Ford 1'33"675 + 0'05"938
Kvalifikácia
Suchá trať
P. No Driver Team - Car Time/Laps
1. 7 COULTHARD McLaren Mercedes 1'25"852 178.591 km/h
2. 3 M.SCHUM' Ferrari 1'26"251 + 0'00"399
3. 8 HAKKINEN McLaren Mercedes 1'26"632 + 0'00"780
4. 4 IRVINE Ferrari 1'26"780 + 0'00"928
5. 10 R.SCHUM' Jordan Mugen-Honda 1'26"827 + 0'00"975
6. 2 FRENTZEN Williams Mecachroe 1'26"876 + 0'01"024
7. 1 VILLENEUVE Williams Mecachrome 1'26"941 + 0'01"089
8. 6 WURZ Benetton Mecachrome 1'27"198 + 0'01"346
9. 9 HILL Jordan Mugen-Honda 1'27"483 + 0'01"631
10. 5 FISICHELLA Benetton Mecachrome 1'27"836 + 0'01"984
11. 14 ALESI Sauber Petronas 1'27"839 + 0'01"987
12. 15 HERBERT Sauber Petronas 1'28"016 + 0'02"164
13. 21 TAKAGI Tyrrell Ford 1'28"811 + 0'02"959
14. 18 BARRICHELLO Stewart Ford 1'29"249 + 0'03"397
15. 11 PANIS Prost Peugeot 1'29"320 + 0'03"468
16. 12 TRULLI Prost Peugeot 1'29"352 + 0'03"500
17. 17 SALO Arrows TWR 1'29"617 + 0'03"765
18. 16 DINIZ Arrows TWR 1'30"022 + 0'04"170
19. 22 NAKANO Minardi Ford 1'30"054 + 0'04"202
20. 23 TUERO Minardi Ford 1'30"158 + 0'04"306
21. 20 ROSSET Tyrrell Ford 1'30"437 + 0'04"585
22. 19 MAGNUSSEN Stewart Ford 1'31"178 + 0'05"326
WARM-UP
Mokrá trať
P. No Driver Team - Car Time/Laps
1. 14 ALESI Sauber Petronas 1'47"594 142.502 km/h
2. 8 HAKKINEN McLaren Mercedes 1'48"025 + 0'00"431
3. 3 M.SCHUM' Ferrari 1'48"501 + 0'00"907
4. 5 FISICHELLA Benetton Mecachrome 1'49"030 + 0'01"436
5. 4 IRVINE Ferrari 1'49"046 + 0'01"452
6. 1 VILLENEUVE Williams Mecachrome 1'49"224 + 0'01"630
7. 17 SALO Arrows TWR 1'49"314 + 0'01"720
8. 7 COULTHARD McLaren Mercedes 1'49"435 + 0'01"841
9. 18 BARRICHELLO Stewart Ford 1'49"568 + 0'01"974
10. 11 PANIS Prost Peugeot 1'49"673 + 0'02"079
11. 6 WURZ Benetton Mecachrome 1'49"735 + 0'02"141
12. 12 TRULLI Prost Peugeot 1'50"607 + 0'03"013
13. 21 TAKAGI Tyrrell Ford 1'51"150 + 0'03"556
14. 2 FRENTZEN Williams Mecachrome 1'51"159 + 0'03"565
15. 9 HILL Jordan Mugen-Honda 1'51"240 + 0'03"646
16. 19 MAGNUSSEN Stewart Ford 1'51"257 + 0'03"663
17. 10 R.SCHUM' Jordan Mugen-Hond 1'52"048 + 0'04"454
18. 22 NAKANO Minardi Ford 1'52"483 + 0'04"889
19. 23 TUERO Minardi Ford 1'52"824 + 0'05"230
20. 20 ROSSET Tyrrell Ford 1'53"166 + 0'05"572
21. 16 DINIZ Arrows TWR 1'53"294 + 0'05"700
22. 15 HERBERT Sauber Petronas 9'19"807 + 7'32"21
Veľká cena Argentíny
Najlepšie kolo: A. WURZ 1'28"179 (173,878 Km/h) - 39 kolo -
P. No Driver Team - Car Time/Laps
1. 3 M.SCHUM' Ferrari 1h48'36" 175 169.415 km/h
2. 8 HAKKINEN McLaren Mercedes + 0'22"899 168.822 km/h
3. 4 IRVINE Ferrari + 0'57"745 167.927 km/h
4. 6 WURZ Benetton Mecachrome + 1'08"134 167.662 km/h
5. 14 ALESI Sauber Petronas + 1'18"286 167.404 km/h
6. 7 COULTHARD McLaren Mercedes + 1'19"751 167.367 km/h
7. 5 FISICHELLA Benetton Mecachrome + 1'28"438 167.147 km/h
8. 9 HILL Jordan Mugen-Honda 1 kolo
9. 2 FRENTZEN Williams Mecachrome 1 kolo
10. 18 BARRICHELLO Stewart Ford 2 kolá
11. 12 TRULLI Prost Peugeot 2 kolá
12. 21 TAKAGI Tyrrell Ford 2 kolá
13. 22 NAKANO Minardi Ford 3 kolá
14. 20 ROSSET Tyrrell Ford 4 kolá
15. 11 PANIS Prost Peugeot 7 kôl
16. 23 TUERO Minardi Ford 9 kôl
17. 1 VILLENEUVE Williams Mecachrome 20 kôl
18. 15 HERBERT Sauber Petronas 26 kôl
19. 10 R.SCHUM' Jordan Mugen-Honda 50 kôl
20. 17 SALO Arrows TWR 54 kôl
21. 19 MAGNUSSEN Stewart Ford 55 kôl
22. 16 DINIZ Arrows TWR 59 kôl