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The 1981 French Grand Prix was the eighth round of the 1981 Formula One season. Alain Prost took his first Formula One victory in this race and the first win for Renault that season.

Background[]

Heading into France Carlos Reutemann continued to hold a strong lead in the world championship, leading on 37 points. Williams teammate and reigning champion was in second place thirteen points adrift on 24 points whilst Nelson Piquet was third, two points behind Jones. Gilles Villeneuve had brought himself and Ferrari back into the world championship. Villeneuve was now on 21 points whilst Ferrari now sat in third in the constructor's championship, one point behind Brabham yet still 36 points adrift of Williams. The dark horse in the championship fight was Jacques Laffite who had been driving consistently for Ligier in recent races with three podiums in a row. Laffite was fifth on 17 points heading into his home race.

Whilst Laffite had been performing well for Ligier, his teammate Jean-Pierre Jabouille had been significantly underperforming. Jabouille an experienced racer and previous race winner had broken his legs the previous year at the 1980 Canadian Grand Prix. After missing the opening races, Jabouille returned to F1 in 1981 yet remained hindered by his leg injuries and failed to recapture his previous form. With this in mind, Jabouille opted to retire from racing ahead of his home race. However no longer a driver, Jabouille did not walk out on Formula One, remaining at Ligier as one of the team managers. Replacing Jabouille at the team was fellow French driver, Patrick Tambay. Tambay had been competing the season to very little avail for the Theodore team. The opening at Ligier had allowed the somewhat underrated Tambay to return to a more competitive team. Replacing Tambay at Theodore was Marc Surer who had sat out the Spanish race due to his former team Ensign dropping him for the more heavily financed Eliseo Salazar.

Elsewhere at Osella, Giorgio Francia was dropped in the team after only one race. The team had attempted to get Francia, an inexperienced single seat racer a superlicense all season and when the FIA finally provided him with a license, the team dropped him due to his poor form. Osella favouring to only a run a single car that of their lead driver Beppe Gabbiani.

In other news, Goodyear had returned to the sport to re-enter the tyre war. Williams, Brabham and Lotus ran Goodyear rubber in France, the rest of the competitors using either Michelin, Avon or Pirelli tyres.

Practice Overview[]

Qualifying[]

As usual it was the turbo charged Renault's that reigned supreme on their home turf in France. René Arnoux took a convincing pole position with teammate Alain Prost in third place. Surprisingly splitting the two Renault's was the McLaren of John Watson. McLaren under the new management of Ron Dennis had seen a resurgence in form in recent races, this return to form was further emphasised by Watson's third and teammate Andrea de Cesaris's fifth place start.

Splitting the two McLaren's was Nelson Piquet's Brabham. Piquet appeared fastest of the main championship contenders with his main rivals struggling behind. Jacques Laffite performed well to line up sixth at his and his team's home race whilst Williams appeared to underperform in qualifying. Carlos Reutemann was seventh whilst Alan Jones was in ninth, splitting the Williams cars was Elio de Angelis who continued to perform consistently well for Lotus. Mario Andretti had clawed his way into the top ten in his ill-handling Alfa Romeo.

Ferrari were struggling, it would prove to be difficult for Villeneuve to repeat his previous success in Monaco and Spain from eleventh whilst teammate Didier Pironi was three places behind in fourteenth. Patrick Tambay saw little improvement from his predecessor Jabouille's performances and started from sixteenth for Ligier.

Failing to qualify was Siegfried Stohr's Arrows, Slim Borgudd, Beppe Gabbiani and the two Toleman's. Despite failing to qualify once again, Toleman had made progress. Brian Henton was faster than both Borgudd and Gabbiani, going faster than another competitor for the first time.

Qualifying Results[]

Pos. No. Driver Constructor Time Gap
16 France René Arnoux France Renault 1:05.95
2 7 United Kingdom John Watson United Kingdom McLaren-Ford 1:06.36 + 0.41
3 15 France Alain Prost France Renault 1:06.36 + 0.41
4 5 Brazil Nelson Piquet United Kingdom Brabham-Ford 1:06.91 + 0.96
5 8 Italy Andrea de Cesaris United Kingdom McLaren-Ford 1:07.03 + 1.08
6 26 France Jacques Laffite France Ligier-Matra 1:07.09 + 1.14
7 2 Argentina Carlos Reutemann United Kingdom Williams-Ford 1:07.42 + 1.47
8 11 Italy Elio de Angelis United Kingdom Lotus-Ford 1:07.52 + 1.57
9 1 Australia Alan Jones United Kingdom Williams-Ford 1:07.53 + 1.58
10 22 United States Mario Andretti Italy Alfa Romeo 1:07.56 + 1.61
11 27 Canada Gilles Villeneuve Italy Ferrari 1:07.60 + 1.65
12 23 Italy Bruno Giacomelli Italy Alfa Romeo 1:07.63 + 1.68
13 12 United Kingdom Nigel Mansell United Kingdom Lotus-Ford 1:07.72 + 1.77
14 28 France Didier Pironi Italy Ferrari 1:08.09 + 2.14
15 6 Mexico Héctor Rebaque United Kingdom Brabham-Ford 1:08.21 + 2.26
16 25 France Patrick Tambay France Ligier-Matra 1:08.47 + 2.52
17 20 Finland Keke Rosberg Brazil Fittipaldi-Ford 1:09.35 + 3.40
18 29 Italy Riccardo Patrese United Kingdom Arrows-Ford 1:09.37 + 3.42
19 3 United States Eddie Cheever United Kingdom Tyrrell-Ford 1:09.88 + 3.93
20 17 Ireland Derek Daly United Kingdom March-Ford 1:09.94 + 3.99
21 33 Switzerland Marc Surer Hong Kong Theodore-Ford 1:10.21 + 4.26
22 14 Chile Eliseo Salazar United Kingdom Ensign-Ford 1:10.50 + 4.65
23 4 Italy Michele Alboreto United Kingdom Tyrrell-Ford 1:10.64 + 4.79
24 21 Brazil Chico Serra Brazil Fittipaldi-Ford 1:10.86 + 4.91
DNQ 30 Italy Siegfried Stohr United Kingdom Arrows-Ford 1:11.24 + 5.29
DNQ 35 United Kingdom Brian Henton United Kingdom Toleman-Hart 1:11.28 + 5.33
DNQ 9 Sweden Slim Borgudd Germany ATS-Ford 1:12.20 + 6.25
DNQ 31 Italy Beppe Gabbiani Italy Osella-Ford 1:12.24 + 6.29
DNQ 36 United Kingdom Derek Warwick United Kingdom Toleman-Hart 1:13.65 + 7.90

Grid[]

Race[]

Report[]

Arnoux made a dreadful start from pole position and dropped down to ninth position at the start. Nelson Piquet took the lead, sweeping around the outside of turn one ahead of John Watson, Alain Prost, Andrea de Cesaris and Gilles Villeneuve. Villeneuve climbing all the way from eleventh on the grid. The second lap saw Villeneuve move ahead of De Cesaris's McLaren to take fourth. Prost meanwhile moved ahead of the other McLaren of Watson to take second place.

Alan Jones began to suffer mechanical trouble and pulled into the pits for repairs, his race well and truely ruined. Arnoux had meanwhile began to recover from his poor start and moved into seventh, sitting behind Reutemann's Williams. Reutemann soon overtook both De Cesaris and Villeneuve with Arnoux following him through. Arnoux soon caught up to Reutemann and overtook him before falling back behind the Williams when he began to suffer handling problems. Villeneuve went out on lap 41 with electrical problems ending his potential for another strong result. Likewise both Reutemann and De Cesaris dropped back with mechanical troubles.

Meanwhile at the front, Alain Prost in the leading Renault was suffering from a loose front wing and a lack of fourth gear. Yet despite these problems, the young Frenchman was closing on race leader Piquet. The Brabham and Renault were set for an interesting battle, however on lap 58 torrential rain hit the circuit and the race organisers were forced to stop the race. The cars retook the grid in the order of position on the last lap of the race. After awhile the rain subsided and the cars made ready for the restart.

The second start saw Prost take the lead of the race as Piquet struggled to get away. The Brabham driver dropped to fourth falling behind Watson and Arnoux as well. Despite his gearbox troubles, Prost maintained the lead, however Watson's McLaren was not far behind. Watson made a lunge down Prost's inside at one stage only to overshoot the corner, run wide and lose the lead again. Prost from thereon remained unhindered and took his first race victory in front of his home crowd. Watson was second, once again confirming McLaren's resurgence. Despite finishing fifth on the track, Piquet was third in the race due to his substantial lead before the race was stopped. Arnoux in the second Renault was fourth with Didier Pironi's Ferrari fifth and Elio de Angelis for Lotus in sixth.

Results[]

Pos. No. Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 15 France Alain Prost France Renault 80 1:35:48.13 3 9
2 7 United Kingdom John Watson United Kingdom McLaren-Ford 80 +2.29s 2 6
3 5 Brazil Nelson Piquet United Kingdom Brabham-Ford 80 +24.22s 4 4
4 16 France René Arnoux France Renault 80 +42.30s 1 3
5 28 France Didier Pironi Italy Ferrari 79 +1 lap 14 2
6 11 Italy Elio de Angelis United Kingdom Lotus-Ford 79 +1 lap 8 1
7 12 United Kingdom Nigel Mansell United Kingdom Lotus-Ford 79 +1 lap 13
8 22 United States Mario Andretti Italy Alfa Romeo 79 +1 lap 10
9 6 Mexico Héctor Rebaque United Kingdom Brabham-Ford 78 +2 lap 15
10 2 Argentina Carlos Reutemann United Kingdom Williams-Ford 78 +2 laps 7
11 8 Italy Andrea de Cesaris United Kingdom McLaren-Ford 78 +2 laps 5
12 33 Switzerland Marc Surer Hong Kong Theodore-Ford 78 +2 laps 21
13 3 United States Eddie Cheever United Kingdom Tyrrell-Ford 77 +3 laps 19
14 29 Italy Riccardo Patrese United Kingdom Arrows-Ford 77 +3 laps 18
15 23 Italy Bruno Giacomelli Italy Alfa Romeo 77 +3 laps 12
16 4 Italy Michele Alboreto United Kingdom Tyrrell-Ford 77 +3 laps 23
17 1 Australia Alan Jones United Kingdom Williams-Ford 76 Collision 9
Ret 26 France Jacques Laffite France Ligier-Matra 57 Front suspension 6
Ret 17 Ireland Derek Daly United Kingdom March-Ford 55 Engine 20
Ret 27 Canada Gilles Villeneuve Italy Ferrari 41 Electrics 11
Ret 25 France Patrick Tambay France Ligier-Matra 30 Wheel bearing 16
Ret 20 Finland Keke Rosberg Brazil Fittipaldi-Ford 11 Rear suspension 17
Ret 14 Chile Eliseo Salazar United Kingdom Ensign-Ford 6 Rear suspension 22
DNS 21 Brazil Chico Serra Brazil Fittipaldi-Ford 0 Accident 24
DNQ 30 Italy Siegfried Stohr United Kingdom Arrows-Ford
DNQ 35 United Kingdom Brian Henton United Kingdom Toleman-Hart
DNQ 10 Sweden Slim Borgudd Germany ATS-Ford
DNQ 31 Italy Beppe Gabbiani Italy Osella-Ford
DNQ 36 United Kingdom Derek Warwick United Kingdom Toleman-Hart

Milestones[]

Standings after race[]

Notes[]

V T E France French Grand Prix
Circuits Le Mans (1906, 1921, 1929)
Dieppe (1907-1908, 1912)
Amiens (1913)
Lyon (1914, 1924)
Strasbourg (1922)
Tours (1923)
Montlhéry (1925, 1927, 1931, 1933-1937)
Reims-Gueux (1932, 1938-1939, 1948–1951, 1953–1954, 1956, 1958–1961, 1963, 1966)
Lyon-Parilly (1947)
Rouen-Les-Essarts (1952, 1957, 1962, 1964, 1968)
Charade Circuit (1965, 1969–1970, 1972)
Bugatti Circuit (1967)
Circuit Paul Ricard (1971, 1973, 1975–1976, 1978, 1980, 1982–1983, 1985–1990, 2018–2019, 2021-2022)
Dijon-Prenois (1974, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1984)
Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours (1991–2008)
PR Screen Shot 2017-03-23 at 12.15.31 AM
Races 195019511952195319541955195619571958195919601961196219631964196519661967196819691970197119721973197419751976197719781979198019811982198319841985198619871988198919901991199219931994199519961997199819992000200120022003200420052006200720082009–201720182019202020212022
European Championship Races 193119321933–193719381939
Non-Championship Races 1906190719081909–19111912191319141915–192019211922192319241925192619271928192919301931–1932193319341935193619371938–1946194719481949
V T E 1981 Formula One Season
Teams Alfa Romeo • Arrows • ATS • Brabham • Ensign • Ferrari • Fittipaldi • Ligier • Lotus • March • McLaren • Osella • Renault • Theodore • Toleman • Tyrrell • Williams
Engines Alfa Romeo • Ferrari • Ford Cosworth • Hart • Matra • Renault
Drivers Alboreto • Andretti • de Angelis • Arnoux • Borgudd • de Cesaris • Cheever • Cogan • Daly • Francia • Gabbiani • Giacomelli • Ghinzani • Guerra • Henton • Jabouille • Jarier • Jones • Laffite • Lammers • Londoño • Mansell • Patrese • Piquet • Pironi • Prost • Rebaque • Reutemann • Rosberg • Salazar • Serra • Stohr • Surer • Tambay • G. Villeneuve • J. Villeneuve, Sr. • Warwick • Watson • Zunino
Cars Alfa Romeo 179B • Alfa Romeo 179C • Alfa Romeo 179D • Arrows A3 • ATS D4 • ATS HGS1 • Brabham BT49C • Ensign N180B • Ferrari 126CK • Fittipaldi F8C • Ligier JS17 • Lotus 81B • Lotus 87 • Lotus 88 • Lotus 88B • March 811 • McLaren M29F • McLaren MP4/1 • Osella FA1B • Osella FA1C • Renault RE20B • Renault RE30 • Theodore TY01 • Toleman TG181 • Tyrrell 010 • Tyrrell 011 • Williams FW07C
Tyres Avon • Goodyear • Michelin • Pirelli
Races United States West • Brazil • Argentina • San Marino • Belgium • Monaco • Spain • France • Britain • Germany • Austria • Netherlands • Italy • Canada • Caesars Palace
Non-championship Races South Africa
See also 1980 Formula One Season • 1982 Formula One Season • Category
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