2005–06 A1 Grand Prix of Nations, Germany

2005–06 A1GP of Germany
Race Details
Race 2 of 11 in the 2005–06 A1 Grand Prix season
DateOctober 9, 2005
LocationEuroSpeedway Lausitz
Klettwitz, Germany
WeatherFine
Qualifying
Pole France (Nicolas Lapierre)
Time3'05.332 (1'32.661, 1'32.671)
Sprint Race
1st France (Nicolas Lapierre)
2nd Switzerland (Neel Jani)
3rd Brazil (Nelson Piquet Jr.)
Main Race
1st France (Nicolas Lapierre)
2nd Great Britain (Robbie Kerr)
3rd Canada (Sean McIntosh)
Fast Lap
FL Brazil (Nelson Piquet Jr.)
Time1'34.736, (Lap 14 of Sprint Race)
Official Classifications
Prac1 ·Prac2 ·Prac3 ·Qual ·SRace ·MRace
Layout of the EuroSpeedway Lausitz GP circuit

The 2005–06 A1 Grand Prix of Nations, Germany was an A1 Grand Prix race, held on the weekend of October 9, 2005 at the EuroSpeedway Lausitz circuit.[1]

Report

Practice

Friday practice for the second A1 Grand Prix race showed how close the competition in the new series is set to be. In the first session, A1 Team Great Britain's Robbie Kerr topped the timesheets with a 1'34.675, followed by A1 Team France's Nicolas Lapierre just 0.023 seconds behind. Nelson Piquet Jr. continued his impressive form in the series to set the third fastest time, with the top 11 cars in the session covered by just one second. Impressive performers in the first round, Australia were relatively disappointing in 23rd position, with Christian Jones making his debut in the car. A1 Team Russia decided not to compete in the round, preferring to give themselves extra time to prepare for the next round in Portugal.

The second practice session was also closely contested, with once again the top 11 cars covered by less than one second. Lapierre set the fastest time, a 1'34.150, nearly four tenths of a second ahead of A1 Team Ireland's Ralph Firman in 2nd, and A1 Team Germany's Timo Scheider in 3rd. Jos Verstappen set the fourth-fastest time for A1 Team The Netherlands, while A1 Team Indonesia continued their impressive weekend form with a 5th-place. Jones struggled again, finishing dead last of the teams and setting A1 Team Australia a difficult task for qualifying. China's Tengyi Jiang improved over 1.3 seconds on his morning time to move into 19th, while A1 Team Lebanon had their times for the session cancelled after failing to notify A1 Grand Prix of a change to their nominated driver for the session.

Saturday's session saw the usual suspects move to the top of the leaderboard, with France (2nd), New Zealand (3rd), Brazil (4th), Switzerland (5th) and The Netherlands (6th) all setting quick times. The surprise of the session was Scheider, who took top spot after continuing improvement over the race weekend.

Qualifying

A1 Team France took their first pole position in A1GP with an impressive qualifying session by Nicolas Lapierre. He was one of only three drivers to set times under 1'33, setting his quickest times on his second and third runs to take an aggregate time of 3'05.332. A1 Team USA surprised the paddock to take the other front row spot, driver Scott Speed managing to set the session's overall best time of 1'32.622 to end up only 0.056 seconds behind Lapierre. A1 Team Brazil confirmed their position as one of the top teams to take third, while Robbie Kerr took fourth for Great Britain. Timo Scheider (Germany) continued his impressive form to take fifth, with Neel Jani (Switzerland) alongside him in sixth. Australia and South Africa continued with their dismal weekends, ending up in 22nd and 23rd respectively, while the inexperienced Khalil Beschir could do no better than 24th for Lebanon, nearly 2 seconds behind South Africa and 7 seconds behind the polesitter.

Sprint race

Before the start of the sprint race, all A1 Teams and drivers observed a minute's silence in respect to the victims of the 2005 Kashmir earthquake in Pakistan, India and Afghanistan. A1 Team France started at the front of the grid for the 30 minute race, which began with a rolling start. A first-corner incident between USA and Great Britain eliminated both teams on the spot, with Switzerland taking advantage of the chaos to slip into 2nd. The collision also allowed Piquet to make up for starting the race in the wrong gear, the Brazilian able to retain his 3rd-place grid position by the end of the first lap. Pakistan and Malaysia were also major beneficiaries of the confusion, gaining 9 and 13 positions respectively for both teams to move into the top 10. With no compulsory pitstops in the shorter race, the top four positions remained the same for the remainder of the race, the drivers choosing to continue the trend of "playing it safe" in order not to compromise their starting position for the main race. Lapierre took the 10 points and France's first A1GP race win to continue the team's perfect weekend. Switzerland's Jani took their first podium, with Piquet coming in third for Brazil to continue their championship lead. On lap 14, Piquet was also able to set the fastest lap, which could mean an additional point for Brazil, provided the time of 1'34.736 was not beaten in the main race.

The race was not so good for The Netherlands, who were forced to retire after just one lap due to damage. This also meant that Jos Verstappen would start from 22nd place in the main race, hindering the Dutch team's chances of taking A1GP points despite their obvious pace. Other retirees included Pakistan and Portugal, who collided in the first corner of lap 2, forcing both teams out of the race with damage. A1 Team Italy also had a disappointing race, being handed a 25-second penalty for overtaking under a yellow caution flag, and falling out of the points from 8th to 17th.

Main race

The main race began with A1 Team France on pole, due to its win in the sprint race, but the lead was short-lived, as Switzerland got a better start and moved into first place. A1 Team Malaysia also got a good start from 6th, and Alex Yoong was able to take 3rd by the end of lap 1, following by Brazil. Brazil was able to re-take the position on the following lap, and with Timo Scheider also taking advantage to move into 4th, Malaysia was down to 5th. On lap 3, A1 Team Czech Republic also got past Yoong, while Ireland dropped dramatically from 13th to 19th. Lap 4 saw France move into the lead, passing Jani after using the PowerBoost button. Scheider continued his move up the field, taking 3rd from Brazil on lap 7 when Piquet took his compulsory pitstop. The Brazilian team again had difficulties with their stop, costing Piquet precious time and dropping him to 18th. Further problems emerged from the pitstop when the team were penalised for having an extra man in the stop, and Brazil were given a drive-through penalty. Meanwhile, Great Britain had begun an impressive drive through the field, and were in 11th on lap 10 after having started the race from dead last. The only retirements for the race so far were USA (tyre puncture on lap 4) and Italy (lap 11).

The order at the front of the field remained the same until lap 16, when France pitted to give Switzerland the lead. This allowed A1 Team New Zealand into 2nd, and India into an incredible 3rd place, having started 16th on the grid. Great Britain's drive had continued up to 6th place, and by this stage a podium finish was a real possibility. Switzerland's troublesome long pitstop on lap 21 meant that Jani slipped down to 5th, allowing France to stretch its lead at the front. South Africa ended its poor weekend with retirement on lap 15 and zero points, while India's joy was relatively short-lived, an alternator failure soon after the team's pitstop forcing Karun Chandhok out of the race on lap 19. This retirement caused a safety car period to allow the car to be retrieved from the start-finish straight, with France leading, followed by Great Britain and Canada. Malaysia's race was effectively ended when it was adjudged that Yoong had overtaken another car during the safety car period, and he was handed a drive-through penalty.

At the restart of the race, Czech Republic, Japan and Brazil were battling for eighth spot when Japan's Hideki Noda turned in on Brazil, forcing Piquet to spin out and retire from the race immediately. The collision sent Piquet into Czech driver Tomáš Enge, who was also forced to retire with broken steering the following lap. The positions at the front remained largely the same for the remainder of the race, although Switzerland was able to take 5th from Ireland 6 laps from the finish. Lapierre's win gave France 20 points for the weekend, as Piquet's quick lap in the sprint race proved fast enough to secure Brazil an extra point. Great Britain and Canada filled the remaining podium positions, followed home by the consistent New Zealand, who picked up 14 points. Germany picked up the final point in 10th point, after a troublesome wheel nut forced a long pitstop which saw Scheider fall back to 18th. Lebanon's Khalil Beschir provided the team's best result in the series with 18th, although he finished 2 laps down and was last of the cars that finished. Brazil still remain ahead in the championship, but lie just a single point ahead of both New Zealand and France, tied on 29.

Results

Qualification

Qualification took place on Saturday, October 8, 2005.

Pos. Team Driver Sessions Agg. Gap
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
1 France France Nicolas Lapierre 1:33.834 1:32.661 1:32.671 1:32.704 3:05.332
2 United States United States Scott Speed 1:35.193 1:33.305 1:32.766 1:32.622 3:05.388 +0.056
3 Brazil Brazil Nelson Piquet, Jr. 1:33.207 1:33.398 1:32.760 1:32.826 3:05.586 +0.254
4 United Kingdom Great Britain Robbie Kerr 1:33.233 1:33.555 1:33.140 1:33.061 3:06.201 +0.869
5 Germany Germany Timo Scheider 1:34.785 1:33.212 1:33.205 1:33.004 3:06.209 +0.877
6 Switzerland Switzerland Neel Jani 1:34.658 1:33.761 1:33.554 1:32.901 3:06.455 +1.123
7 Italy Italy Enrico Toccacelo 1:34.868 1:33.629 1:33.769 1:33.380 3:07.009 +1.677
8 Republic of Ireland Ireland Ralph Firman 1:34.764 No time 1:33.626 1:33.409 3:07.035 +1.703
9 Portugal Portugal Álvaro Parente 1:36.019 1:33.795 1:33.659 1:33.714 3:07.373 +2.041
10 Netherlands Netherlands Jos Verstappen 1:34.405 1:33.854 1:34.477 1:33.537 3:07.391 +2.059
11 Mexico Mexico David Martínez 1:35.729 1:34.439 1:33.903 1:33.522 3:07.425 +2.093
12 Czech Republic Czech Republic Tomáš Enge 1:34.979 1:33.546 1:34.162 1:33.903 3:07.449 +2.117
13 Canada Canada Sean McIntosh 1:35.027 1:34.377 1:33.927 1:33.657 3:07.584 +2.252
14 New Zealand New Zealand Jonny Reid 1:34.115 1:34.530 1:33.898 1:33.781 3:07.679 +2.347
15 Indonesia Indonesia Ananda Mikola 1:36.242 1:34.143 1:33.638 1:34.091 3:07.729 +2.397
16 Pakistan Pakistan Adam Khan 1:35.801 1:34.768 1:34.132 1:34.427 3:08.559 +3.227
17 India India Karun Chandhok 1:36.655 No time 1:34.890 1:34.365 3:09.255 +3.923
18 Malaysia Malaysia Alex Yoong 1:36.080 1:35.334 No time 1:34.165 3:09.499 +4.167
19 Austria Austria Mathias Lauda 1:37.094 1:35.162 1:35.189 1:34.558 3:09.720 +4.388
20 China China Tengyi Jiang 1:37.109 1:35.099 1:35.578 1:35.062 3:10.161 +4.829
21 Japan Japan Hideki Noda 1:35.712 No time 1:35.179 1:35.166 3:10.345 +5.013
22 Australia Australia Christian Jones 1:35.846 1:37.006 1:35.442 1:34.929 3:10.371 +5.039
23 South Africa South Africa Tomas Scheckter 1:37.190 1:36.368 1:34.987 1:35.537 3:10.524 +5.192
24 Lebanon Lebanon Khalil Beschir 1:36.832 1:36.549 1:35.706 1:37.522 3:12.255 +6.923

Sprint Race Results

The Sprint Race took place on Sunday, October 9, 2005.

Pos. Team Driver Laps Time/Retired Grid Pts.
1 France France Nicolas Lapierre 18 30:10.4 1 10
2 Switzerland Switzerland Neel Jani 18 +2.013 6 9
3 Brazil Brazil Nelson Piquet, Jr. 18 +2.458 3 8
4 New Zealand New Zealand Jonny Reid 18 +8.046 14 7
5 Germany Germany Timo Scheider 18 +8.851 5 6
6 Malaysia Malaysia Alex Yoong 18 +23.419 18 5
7 Canada Canada Sean McIntosh 18 +24.009 13 4
8 Mexico Mexico David Martínez 18 +25.409 11 3
9 Republic of Ireland Ireland Ralph Firman 18 +26.581 8 2
10 Japan Japan Hideki Noda 18 +27.842 21 1
11 Czech Republic Czech Republic Tomáš Enge 18 +28.242 12
12 South Africa South Africa Tomas Scheckter 18 +40.261 23
13 Austria Austria Mathias Lauda 18 +41.007 19
14 Indonesia Indonesia Ananda Mikola 18 +42.635 15
15 Australia Australia Christian Jones 18 +43.456 22
16 India India Karun Chandhok 18 +43.879 17
17 Italy Italy Enrico Toccacelo 18 +49.525 7
18 China China Tengyi Jiang 16 +2 Laps 20
DNF Lebanon Lebanon Khalil Beschir 7 24
DNF Portugal Portugal Álvaro Parente 3 9
DNF Pakistan Pakistan Adam Khan 2 16
DNF Netherlands Netherlands Jos Verstappen 1 10
DNF United States United States Scott Speed 0 Crash 2
DNF United Kingdom Great Britain Robbie Kerr 0 4

Main Race Results

The Main Race also took place on Sunday, October 9, 2005.

Pos. Team Driver Laps Time/Retired Grid Pts.
1 France France Nicolas Lapierre 35 58:45.7 1 10
2 United Kingdom Great Britain Robbie Kerr 35 +3.706 24 9
3 Canada Canada Sean McIntosh 35 +5.458 7 8
4 New Zealand New Zealand Jonny Reid 35 +5.974 4 7
5 Switzerland Switzerland Neel Jani 35 +7.071 2 6
6 Republic of Ireland Ireland Ralph Firman 35 +8.081 9 5
7 Netherlands Netherlands Jos Verstappen 35 +9.622 22 4
8 Indonesia Indonesia Ananda Mikola 35 +16.706 14 3
9 Japan Japan Hideki Noda 35 +19.344 10 2
10 Germany Germany Timo Scheider 35 +21.860 5 1
11 Portugal Portugal Álvaro Parente 35 +24.740 20
12 Pakistan Pakistan Adam Khan 35 +25.266 21
13 Mexico Mexico David Martínez 35 +29.178 8
14 Australia Australia Christian Jones 35 +30.890 15
15 Austria Austria Mathias Lauda 35 +31.132 13
16 Malaysia Malaysia Alex Yoong 35 +45.381 6
17 China China Tengyi Jiang 35 +1:17.441 18
18 Lebanon Lebanon Khalil Beschir 33 +2 Laps 19
DNF Czech Republic Czech Republic Tomáš Enge 27 11
DNF Brazil Brazil Nelson Piquet, Jr. 26 3
DNF India India Karun Chandhok 19 Mechanical 16
DNF South Africa South Africa Tomas Scheckter 15 12
DNF Italy Italy Enrico Toccacelo 11 17
DNF United States United States Scott Speed 4 23

Standings

References

  1. ^ Gifford, Clive (18 October 2006). Racing: The Ultimate Motorsports Encyclopedia. Kingfisher. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-75-346040-5.


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