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The 1976 German Grand Prix was a Formula One race held at the Nürburgring on 1 August 1976, and is notable as the location of Niki Lauda's near fatal accident. It was also the last Formula One race to be held on the Nordschleife section of the track.

Race report[]

The race weekend began with some changes to the drivers' lineup: Jacky Ickx was fired from the Walter Wolf Racing team and was replaced by Arturo Merzario, and there was a new team present, Scuderia Rondini, which bought an old Tyrrell 007 for Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi. RAM was going to run Rolf Stommelen in one of its ex-works Brabham BT44s, but in the middle of the practice session the local police impounded the cars (because of a legal action by former driver Loris Kessel), and as a result Stommelen transferred to the works Brabham team to drive a spare Alfa-Romeo-powered BT45. In 1975, Lauda had been the first and only driver to break the 7-Minute-mark. Fans were looking forward whether he or others could repeat this after the technical rules had been changed, with the disappearance of the high air boxes been the most visible difference. Due to wet conditions on Saturday, the grid was already determined in Friday qualifying, with 7:06-plus lap times similar to those of 1972.[1] James Hunt took the pole with Niki Lauda second, while Patrick Depailler lined up third in the six-wheeled Tyrrell P34. Hans-Joachim Stuck was fourth in his March ahead of Clay Regazzoni, Jacques Laffite, Carlos Pace, Jody Scheckter, Jochen Mass and Carlos Reutemann.

The weather turned to wet before the race and so most drivers started the race on wet tyres, except Jochen Mass, who, having lots of experience at the Nürburgring and expecting a change for better weather, decided to use dry weather tyres. At the start Regazzoni took the lead while both Hunt and Lauda fell back. Hunt took second, third was a fast-starting Mass, fourth was Laffite who took advantage from the fact that Stuck's car had been pushed off the grid with a clutch problem (although the German started at the back of the field). In the course of the first lap Regazzoni spun and dropped to fourth. At the end of the lap, the weather changed back to dry and most pilots pitted for dry tyres, leaving Mass with the second place behind Peterson, who decided to go on wet tyres for another lap. At the end of lap 2 Mass was in front, with Gunnar Nilsson (who had not stopped) in second place and Hunt third. To the dismay of the German fans, the race was soon red flagged.

Niki Lauda had also changed his tyres after lap 1 and was trying hard to make up for the lost time. Just after the fast left kink before the Bergwerk right hand curve, his Ferrari 312T2 snapped to the right and spun through the fencing into an earth bank. The car bounced back onto the circuit and on the track, enveloped in flames. Guy Edwards managed to avoid the Ferrari but Harald Ertl and Brett Lunger both hit it. All three drivers stopped and tried to get Lauda out of the flames and they were joined by Merzario who stopped his Wolf Williams after seeing the wreck. Lauda had suffered serious burns and was rushed by helicopter to the Bundeswehr hospital in Koblenz; from there he was flown to the Trauma Clinic in Ludwigshafen, home to Germany's most advanced burn ward at the time, where he fought for his life for the next few days.

Most cars had assembled at the crash site, being unable to pass by on the narrow track. The race had been stopped after the accident and at the restart there were only 20 cars (4 cars less than the first start), but Chris Amon decided not to start the race again. The rain had gone and Hunt took the lead from Regazzoni, Scheckter, Depailler and Pace. At the Flugplatz Peterson lost control of his March and crashed heavily while Regazzoni had another spin and Depailler went off avoiding the Ferrari. Pace overtook Scheckter and so ended the first lap in second place. On the second lap Scheckter passed Pace and the Brazilian fell behind Regazzoni on the third lap, during which sixth placed Vittorio Brambilla crashed at Adenau Bridge because of a brake failure on his March. Mass took advantage of it and overtook Gunnar Nilsson on the fifth lap and Pace on lap 10. On the 12th lap Regazzoni spun again and Mass moved to third with Pace fourth, Nilsson fifth and Stommelen sixth.

Chris Amon decided to end his career immediately after the Lauda accident.

Classification[]

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 11 25px UK James Hunt McLaren-Ford 14 1:41:42.7 1 9
2 3 25px South African flag after 1928 Jody Scheckter Tyrrell-Ford 14 + 27.7 8 6
3 12 25px Germany Jochen Mass McLaren-Ford 14 + 52.4 9 4
4 8 25px Brazil Carlos Pace Brabham-Alfa Romeo 14 + 54.2 7 3
5 6 25px Sweden Gunnar Nilsson Lotus-Ford 14 + 1:57.3 16 2
6 77 25px Germany Rolf Stommelen Brabham-Alfa Romeo 14 + 2:30.3 15 1
7 28 25px UK John Watson Penske-Ford 14 + 2:33.9 19
8 16 25px UK Tom Pryce Shadow-Ford 14 + 2:48.2 18
9 2 25px Switzerland Clay Regazzoni Ferrari 14 + 3:46.0 5
10 19 25px Australia Alan Jones Surtees-Ford 14 + 3:47.3[2] 14
11 17 25px France Jean-Pierre Jarier Shadow-Ford 14 + 4:51.7 23
12 5 25px USA Mario Andretti Lotus-Ford 14 + 4:58.1 12
13 30 25px Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Fittipaldi-Ford 14 + 5:25.2 20
14 40 25px Italy Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi Tyrrell-Ford 13 + 1 lap 26
15 25 25px UK Guy Edwards Hesketh-Ford 13 + 1 lap 25
Ret 20 25px Italy Arturo Merzario Wolf-Williams-Ford 3 Brakes 21
Ret 9 25px Italy Vittorio Brambilla March-Ford 1 Accident 13
Ret 4 25px France Patrick Depailler Tyrrell-Ford 0 Accident 3
Ret 7 25px Argentina Carlos Reutemann Brabham-Alfa Romeo 0 Fuel System 10
Ret 10 25px Sweden Ronnie Peterson March-Ford 0 Accident 11
Ret 34 25px Germany Hans Joachim Stuck March-Ford 0 Clutch 4
Ret 26 25px France Jacques Laffite Ligier-Matra 0 Gearbox 6
Ret 22 25px New Zealand Chris Amon Ensign-Ford (1) Withdrew after first race 17
Ret 1 25px Austria Niki Lauda Ferrari (1) Accident in first race 2
Ret 18 25px USA Brett Lunger Surtees-Ford (1) Accident in first race 24
Ret 24 25px Austria Harald Ertl Hesketh-Ford (1) Accident in first race 22
DNQ 33 25px Italy Lella Lombardi Brabham-Ford Car seized by Police
DNQ 38 25px France Henri Pescarolo Surtees-Ford

Standings after the race[]

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 25px Austria Niki Lauda 61
2 25px South Africa Jody Scheckter 36
3 25px UK James Hunt 35
4 25px France Patrick Depailler 26
5 25px Switzerland Clay Regazzoni 16
Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 25px Italy Ferrari 64
2 25px UK Tyrrell-Ford 49
3 25px UK McLaren-Ford 40 (41)
4 25px USA Penske-Ford 10
5 25px France Ligier-Matra 10
  • 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 7 results from the last 8 races counted towards the Championship. Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.

References[]

  1. Effenberger, Günther; Handke, Peter (1978). Niki Lauda, ein Leben für die Formel 1. Munich: Heyne Nr. 5427. ISBN 978-3-453-00826-7
  2. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named LangVol3P138

Unless otherwise indicated, all race results are taken from "The Official Formula 1 website". http://www.formula1.com/results/season/1976/451/. Retrieved 2007-06-16. 



Previous race:
1976 British Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1976 season
Next race:
1976 Austrian Grand Prix
Previous race:
1975 German Grand Prix
German Grand Prix Next race:
1977 German Grand Prix


Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at 1976 German Grand Prix. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Autopedia, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.


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