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Renault's Jarno
Trulli scored his maiden grand prix victory in Monaco on Sunday,
the Italian keeping his cool to beat the strong late challenge of
BAR's Jenson Button. Incredibly, Michael Schumacher crashed out
of the lead behind the safety car by clashing with the lapped Juan
Pablo Montoya.
Monaco
2004 will be remembered for many things: Trulli's maiden grand prix
victory, Renault's first in Monte Carlo; Button's brave chase in
the late stages; Giancarlo Fisichella's scary flip over the rear
of David Coulthard; Fernando Alonso's massive shunt in the tunnel
– the list goes on. But perhaps it will be remembered most
for being the race where Michael Schumacher crashed, while leading,
behind the safety car.
Following
an aborted start for Olivier Panis' stalled Toyota, you had the
feeling it was going to be one of those races when Takuma Sato (BAR)
made an amazing start from seventh on the grid, clipping Michael
Schumacher's front-right wheel as he zoomed past the Ferrari, and
then going three-wide with team-mate Jenson Button and McLaren's
Kimi Raikkonen at Sainte Devote. Pole sitter Trulli, meanwhile,
made a flying start, while Button's was no match for Fernando Alonso,
who made it a Renault 1-2.
Raikkonen
clipped Button, but Jenson escaped in third, ahead of Sato, Raikkonen,
Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello. Further back, the Jaguar of Christian
Klien lasted only until Loews, where he hit the wall after removing
his front wing against the back of another car.
Sato
was in trouble straight away, his Honda's engine smoking. The Japanese
tenaciously clung to fourth for two and a half laps, causing a bottleneck
of cars to form behind him, which made it all the more dangerous
when his engine blew at Tabac in such an opaque cloud that visibility
was reduced to zero.
Raikkonen
was the first to get a face-full of Honda remnants, the Finn admitting
to "not seeing a thing but I just drove through it". Barrichello,
meanwhile, was less gung-ho, leaping on the brakes and almost hitting
the barrier "despite doing about zero miles an hour".
Coulthard almost drove into the rear of the parked BAR, and maybe
wished he had when Fisichella's Sauber hurtled into the back of
his own car.
Poor
Giancarlo was launched into a sickening roll, halted in mid-flight
as he struck the guardrail at 90-degrees to the horizontal. Fortunately,
the roll bar took the impact, and he staggered away unharmed.
The
safety car was required, although a red flag was initially displayed
at the start/finish line, and Nick Heidfeld (Jordan) and Ralf Schumacher
(Williams) took the opportunity to pit.
At
the restart, Trulli led Alonso, Button, Raikkonen and M Schumacher.
Montoya grabbed sixth from Barrichello, who was already suffering
with a handling imbalance with his Ferrari.
Button
was the first of the leaders to pit on lap 18, but he rejoined right
behind Cristiano da Matta's Toyota, which lost him a whole heap
of time. Raikkonen was in a lap later, and Barrichello on the next
tour.
With
Raikkonen out of his way, Schuey got the hammer down, reeling off
a sensational sequence of 1m14s laps. His best, a 1m14.4s, bettered
his qualifying time! All this was enough to give him third when
he pitted on lap 26, two laps later than Trulli and a lap after
Alonso made their first of two stops.
Button
was now fourth, a whole 5.4secs behind Schumacher thanks to da Matta,
while Raikkonen was a further 9.9secs in arrears of the Briton.
The Finn's nightmare season would continue in that vein, however,
forced out on lap 27 with hydraulic failure. Further back, Montoya,
who pitted as early as lap 13, finally got past Heidfeld for eighth
after a battle that lasted over 10 laps.
Trulli
led Alonso by 3.2secs at this point, with Schumacher 4.4secs further
back. Alonso used backmarkers to get within less than a second of
the leader on lap 31, but was over 2secs behind when he crashed
out dramatically in the tunnel while lapping the Williams of Ralf
Schumacher.
"Ralf
moved to the right in the tunnel," explained Fernando. "When
we were side-by-side, he got in the throttle again and pushed me
towards the outside barrier. It was his fault, like most of the
accidents he is involved in, but I won't waste my time in speaking
with him about it."
Alonso
had already made his feelings perfectly clear, giving Schumacher
the bird before his shattered car had ceased its pinball like progress
down the hill towards the new chicane.
Trulli
and Button took the chance to pit, but as Schumacher was well laden
with fuel, he stayed out. That put him in the lead, with only the
lapped Montoya between himself and Trulli before the restart. He
didn't get that far, however.
Just
why he decided to warm his brakes in such violent fashion in the
darkness of the tunnel will probably remain a mystery. Montoya reported
Schumacher performed a 'burn-out' before slamming on the anchors,
causing Juan Pablo to take avoiding action. He swerved right, missing
the rear of the Ferrari initially, but Schumacher turned right too,
as the apex of the tunnel approached, pinching the Williams against
the barrier.
Contact
was made, pitching Schumacher into the barrier on the right before
flicking around into the wall on the opposite side, which all-but
wiped out the left-front suspension of his car. Schuey limped back
to the pits as the race restarted, obviously blaming Montoya, a
lap down remember, for driving into the back of him, his feelings
underlined as he hurled his helmet into the wall of the garage.
Like Ayrton Senna's dramatic exit from the 1988 race, it will be
a moment that is talked about for years to come.
As
the race resumed without the world champion, Trulli pulled out a
6.7secs lead over Button by lap 51, but Jenson was not about to
roll over and give up without a fight. The BAR began carving chunks
out of Trulli's lead as the Italian backed off to save his car,
and Jenson used the traffic to his advantage as the laps ticked
down.
By
lap 70, he was 1.7secs behind, and over the next few tours that
fell to 1.6s, 1.4s, 1.5 and then 0.7s, 0.6s and, as the chequered
flag flew, the gap between them was just 0.4s.
Barrichello
cruised in a distant, and highly fortuitous, third. Montoya was
fourth, with Felipe Massa (Sauber) just fending off da Matta for
fifth, although the latter would have taken the position but for
a late drive-through penalty for ignoring blue flags. Heidfeld took
Jordan's first points of the year with a gritty drive to seventh,
while Panis finished eighth despite starting from the pit lane.
Zsolt
Baumgartner was the only other finisher as Ralf Schumacher dropped
out with just a handful of laps remaining.
As
usual, it was his big brother Michael who was making the headlines.
This time, however, as he was bidding to break the record for consecutive
season-opening race wins, Big Schummi's luck finally ran out. |