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The 1978 Italian Grand Prix was the 14th race of the 1978 Formula One season. It was held on 10 September 1978 at Monza. It was marred by the death of Ronnie Peterson following an accident at the start of the race.

With three races remaining, Mario Andretti (Lotus-Ford) led the World Drivers' Championship by 12 points from his team-mate Ronnie Peterson. Niki Lauda (Brabham-Alfa Romeo), in third place, was 28 points behind Andretti, and, with only 9 points for a win, could not overtake him.


Race recap and Death of Ronnie Peterson[]

Andretti took pole position alongside Gilles Villeneuve (Ferrari), with Jean-Pierre Jabouille (Renault) in third place, Lauda in fourth and Peterson in fifth.

The race starter was overenthusiastic, turning on the red lights before all the cars had lined up, and several cars in the middle of the field got a jump on those at the front. The result was a funneling effect of the cars approaching the chicane, and the cars were tightly bunched together with little room for maneuver. James Hunt was overtaken on the right hand side by Riccardo Patrese and Hunt instinctly veered left and hit the rear right wheel of Peterson's Lotus 78, with Vittorio Brambilla, Hans-Joachim Stuck, Patrick Depailler, Didier Pironi, Derek Daly, Clay Regazzoni and Brett Lunger all involved in the ensuing melee. Peterson's Lotus went into the barriers hard on the right hand side and caught fire. He was trapped, but Hunt, Regazzoni and Depailler managed to free him from the wreck before he received more than minor burns. He was dragged free and laid in the middle of the track fully conscious, but with severe leg injuries. It took 20 minutes before medical help was dispatched to the scene. Brambilla — who had been hit on the head by a flying wheel and rendered comatose — and Peterson were taken to the Niguardia hospital in nearby Milan.

The race was restarted nearly three hours later, during which time on the formation lap for the second race, Jody Scheckter's Wolf lost a wheel and crashed at the second Lesmo curve, bending the Armco barrier that was situated right next to the track. Andretti, Hunt, Lauda, Carlos Reutemann and Emerson Fittipaldi all went to the spot where Scheckter crashed and upon inspection of the state of the barrier, they refused to start until it was repaired; upon which it was, causing more delay. Because of the amount of time between the first and second races; the distance was shortened to 40 laps. At the second start at nearly 6:00 P.M., Villeneuve overtook Andretti at the restart, but both drivers were judged to have gone early and given a one-minute penalty. Andretti re-took the lead with only five laps remaining. With Jabouille having retired, Lauda finished third ahead of John Watson (Brabham), Carlos Reutemann (Ferrari), Jacques Laffite (Ligier-Matra) and Patrick Tambay (McLaren-Ford). Since all of those finished less than a minute behind, Andretti and Villeneuve were dropped to sixth and seventh place. Andretti had won the championship, but with Peterson in hospital, celebrations were muted.

Following surgery, Peterson developed complications and died the following day of an embolism.

Classification[]

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 1 25px Austria Niki Lauda Brabham-Alfa Romeo 40 1:07:04.54 4 9
2 2 25px UK John Watson Brabham-Alfa Romeo 40 +1.48 secs 7 6
3 11 25px Argentina Carlos Reutemann Ferrari 40 +20.47 secs 11 4
4 26 25px France Jacques Laffite Ligier-Matra 40 +37.53 secs 8 3
5 8 25px France Patrick Tambay McLaren-Ford 40 +40.39 secs 19 2
6 5 25px USA Mario Andretti Lotus-Ford 40 +46.33 secs 1 1
7 12 25px Canada Gilles Villeneuve Ferrari 40 +48.48 secs 2
8 14 25px Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Fittipaldi-Ford 40 +55.24 secs 13
9 29 25px Brazil Nelson Piquet McLaren-Ford 40 +1:06.83 24
10 22 IRL Derek Daly Ensign-Ford 40 +1:09.11 18
11 4 25px France Patrick Depailler Tyrrell-Ford 40 +1:16.57 16
12 20 25px South Africa Jody Scheckter Wolf-Ford 39 +1 Lap 9
13 27 25px Australia Alan Jones Williams-Ford 39 +1 Lap 6
14 33 25px Italy Bruno Giacomelli McLaren-Ford 39 +1 Lap 20
NC 17 25px Switzerland Clay Regazzoni Shadow-Ford 33 +7 Laps 15
Ret 35 25px Italy Riccardo Patrese Arrows-Ford 28 Engine 12
Ret 7 25px UK James Hunt McLaren-Ford 19 Distributor 10
Ret 37 25px Italy Arturo Merzario Merzario-Ford 14 Engine 22
Ret 15 25px France Jean-Pierre Jabouille Renault 6 Engine 3
Ret 6 25px Sweden Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford 0 Fatal Accident 5
Ret 3 25px France Didier Pironi Tyrrell-Ford 0 Accident 14
Ret 16 25px Germany Hans Joachim Stuck Shadow-Ford 0 Accident 17
Ret 30 25px USA Brett Lunger McLaren-Ford 0 Accident 21
Ret 19 25px Italy Vittorio Brambilla Surtees-Ford 0 Accident 23
DNQ 25 25px Mexico Hector Rebaque Lotus-Ford
DNQ 10 25px Austria Harald Ertl ATS-Ford
DNQ 9 25px Netherlands Michael Bleekemolen ATS-Ford
DNQ 18 25px Italy Gimax Surtees-Ford
DNPQ 23 25px Austria Harald Ertl Ensign-Ford
DNPQ 32 25px Finland Keke Rosberg Wolf-Ford
DNPQ 36 25px Germany Rolf Stommelen Arrows-Ford
DNPQ 38 25px Italy Alberto Colombo Merzario-Ford

Notes[]

  • Lap Leaders: Jean-Pierre Jabouille 5 laps (1-5); Niki Lauda 35 laps (6-40).
  • Mario Andretti and Gilles Villeneuve finished 1st and 2nd but were assessed a 1 minute penalty for a jump start.
  • Due to the long delay to clean up the debris from the opening lap accident, the race was shortened to 40 laps from the original 52, to avoid dusk.
  • Harald Ertl failed to pre-qualify his Ensign and got another chance with the German ATS of injured Jochen Mass.
  • Peterson's accident guaranteed Andretti the Driver's Championship with two races left.

Standings after the race[]

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 25px USA Mario Andretti 64
2 25px Sweden Ronnie Peterson 51
3 25px Austria Niki Lauda 44
4 25px Argentina Carlos Reutemann 35
5 25px France Patrick Depailler 32
Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 25px UK Lotus-Ford 86
2 25px UK Brabham-Alfa Romeo 53
3 25px Italy Ferrari 40
4 25px UK Tyrrell-Ford 36
5 25px France Ligier-Matra 19
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

External links[]


Previous race:
1978 Dutch Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1978 season
Next race:
1978 United States Grand Prix
Previous race:
1977 Italian Grand Prix
Italian Grand Prix Next race:
1979 Italian Grand Prix
Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at 1978 Italian 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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