Picture by Clive Mason/Getty Pictures
This weekend the System 1 grid returns to Suzuka Worldwide Racing Course, the location of the Japanese Grand Prix. Suzuka holds an expensive place within the hearts and minds of many inside F1, from followers to the drivers themselves.
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The 2005 Japanese Grand Prix could also be a giant a part of that story. Why? Partially as a result of 4 legends of the game — Michael Schumacher, Fernando Alonso, Kimi Räikkönen, and Juan Pablo Montoya — began in the back of the sphere. Nevertheless, when the checkered flag flew two of these legends have been on the rostrum with one other within the factors, and a kind of three had taken the victory.
However there’s much more to this story.
20 seasons later, it’s price revisiting that wonderful Suzuka afternoon.
The Japanese Grand Prix was the penultimate race of the 2005 F1 season, and the circuit arrived in Suzuka with one of many two title races already determined. Along with his third-place end on the earlier race, the Brazilian Grand Prix, Alonso had secured the Drivers’ Championship forward of the three legends already talked about.
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However the combat for the Constructors’ Championship was nonetheless on and McLaren — with Räikkönen and Montoya — arrived in Suzuka with a slim two-point lead over Renault, with Alonso and Giancarlo Fisichella behind the wheels.
It was Schumacher who topped the timing sheets within the third follow session, greater than two seconds forward of Räikkönen, however within the fourth and remaining follow session, Fisichella led the best way. The massive story, nevertheless, was the climate, which performed a large function as follow gave option to qualifying. The climate that day was largely a washout, shaking up your entire area.
When the session drew to an in depth a Schumacher was certainly on pole, solely it was Raif Schumacher who put his Toyota into P1, with Jenson Button alongside him.
These 4 legends? They have been in the back of the grid. Michael Schumacher certified in P14, Alonso in P16, and Räikkönen was down in P17. Montoya was considered one of three drivers who didn’t even set a time in qualifying as a result of circumstances, and he began the race in P18.
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Whereas qualifying was a washout, race day in 2005 was a cloudy and dry afternoon with temperatures entering into the higher 70s (Fahrenheit).
When the 2005 Japanese Grand Prix lastly started, Alonso and Räikkönen acquired off to unimaginable begins, with Alonso rocketing up into P7 by the point the primary lap got here to an in depth, whereas Räikkönen was working up in P12.
Sadly for Montoya, he was knocked out of the race on account of an incident on the opening lap with Jacques Villeneuve, which not solely ended his afternoon however put an enormous dent into McLaren’s title hopes.
Because the race unfolded the three remaining legends, Räikkönen, Alonso, and Schumacher, continued their respective costs by way of the sphere. Lap 19 noticed one of the daring overtakes within the historical past of F1 as Alonso, chasing down Schumacher in entrance of him, saved his foot on the throttle as the 2 rocketed by way of the left-handed flip at 130R, passing Schumacher on the skin.
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You may see that overtake from Alonso’s vantage level right here:
Alonso’s velocity on the apex of that nook? 208 miles per hour.
The battle between Alonso and Schumacher continued till Lap 32, when Alonso made one other transfer on the skin of the Ferrari driver, easing previous him and into P5.
Finally, whereas Alonso would discover himself preventing for — and profitable — a combat with Mark Webber for the ultimate spot on the rostrum the combat on the entrance was between Räikkönen and Alonso’s teammate, Fisichella. Räikkönen’s cost by way of the sphere had him within the lead by Lap 38, however when he pulled into the pits for his remaining pit cease with eight laps remaining, he resumed the race behind Fisichella, with a spot of a number of seconds to make up on the monitor.
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However inside just a few laps, Räikkönen was all around the rear wing of Fisichella’s Renault, and was proper behind him as the ultimate lap started. As the 2 drivers rocketed by way of the beginning/end line Räikkönen formed his transfer, surging previous the Renault driver on the skin into the primary flip, finally making the overtake stick.
He completed two seconds forward of Fisichella, regardless of beginning down in P17.
Whereas Räikkönen received the race, the double podium from Fisichella and Alonso noticed Renault surge into the lead within the Constructors’ Championship chase. Renault led by two factors heading into the ultimate race weekend, and Alonso’s win on the season-ending Chinese language Grand Prix forward of Räikkönen — with Fisichella ending in fourth and Montoya once more ending out of the factors for McLaren — was sufficient to see Renault by way of to the title.
The victory in Suzuka marked Räikkönen’s final win till the 2007 Australian Grand Prix, his remaining win for McLaren, and McLaren’s final win till the 2007 Malaysian Grand Prix.
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His victory was additionally the final time {that a} driver would win from seventeenth on the grid or decrease till late final season. On the 2024 São Paulo Grand Prix Max Verstappen received in wet circumstances regardless of beginning down in P17 after qualifying twelfth and taking a five-place grid penalty when Crimson Bull put in the sixth Inner Combustion Engine (ICE) of the season on his RB20.
Forward of Räikkönen’s remaining race, the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, F1 shared this lengthy spotlight video of his cost by way of the sphere that afternoon in Japan.
Finally, nevertheless, the race may be greatest identified for Alonso’s daring overtake of Schumacher at 130R. Talking about that transfer just a few weeks after the 2005 Japanese Grand Prix with legendary F1 journalist Nigel Roebuck, Alonso had this to say:
“At instances like that, I at all times do not forget that Michael has two children.”
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Suzuka holds a particular place within the hearts of drivers and followers alike. Button, who began that afternoon in P2 and completed in P5, about how a lot he loves that circuit.
“It’s the fastest-flowing, greatest circuit on the planet. For me.
“There’s no room for error. It’s a slim monitor, most corners have grass after which gravel. There’s none of this tarmac runoff space, which I like. I’ve raced in Suzuka in F1 for a few years. I raced in Tremendous GT in Suzuka. It doesn’t matter what you drive round there,” added Button.
“There aren’t so many overtaking alternatives round Suzuka, however when it occurs, it’s superior.”
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With what Alonso and Räikkönen did on that afternoon in Suzuka 20 seasons in the past, it’s no marvel the 2005 Japanese Grand Prix has change into the stuff of F1 legend.
The stage is ready for extra legends to start this weekend at Suzuka.