2017 Brazilian Grand Prix




































2017 Brazilian Grand Prix

Race 19 of 20 in the 2017 Formula One World Championship

Layout of the Autódromo José Carlos Pace
Layout of the Autódromo José Carlos Pace

Race details[1]
Date
12 November 2017 (2017-11-12)
Official name
Formula 1 Grande Prêmio Heineken do Brasil 2017
Location
Autódromo José Carlos Pace, São Paulo, Brazil
Course
Permanent racing facility
Course length
4.309 km (2.677 mi)
Distance
71 laps, 305.909 km (190.083 mi)
Attendance
141,218[2]
Pole position
Driver

  • Finland Valtteri Bottas


Mercedes
Time
1:08.322
Fastest lap
Driver
Netherlands Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer
Time
1:11.044 on lap 64 (lap record)
Podium
First
  • Germany Sebastian Vettel


Ferrari
Second

  • Finland Valtteri Bottas


Mercedes
Third

  • Finland Kimi Räikkönen


Ferrari


The 2017 Brazilian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Grande Prêmio Heineken do Brasil 2017) was a Formula One motor race held on 12 November 2017 at the Autódromo José Carlos Pace in the Interlagos neighborhood of São Paulo, Brazil. The race was the penultimate round of the 2017 FIA Formula One World Championship and marked the forty-sixth running of the Brazilian Grand Prix, the forty-fifth time that the race had been run as a World Championship event since the inaugural season in 1950, and the thirty-fourth World Championship event to be held at Interlagos.


Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas started from pole position with Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Räikkönen behind, after World Champion Lewis Hamilton crashed out of qualifying early and started from the pit lane. Vettel overtook Bottas on the first corner, after which he set the pace through most of the race. Vettel won the Grand Prix, followed by Bottas and Räikkönen. Hamilton eventually climbed to fourth, closing to less than one second of a podium finish.[3]




Contents





  • 1 Report

    • 1.1 Free practice


    • 1.2 Qualifying


    • 1.3 Race



  • 2 Classification

    • 2.1 Qualifying


    • 2.2 Race


    • 2.3 Championship standings after the race



  • 3 References


  • 4 External links




Report



Free practice


The three free practice session demonstrated very tight competition between Ferrari and Mercedes.[4] In first and second free practice, Lewis Hamilton was quickest, with both Ferraris and both Red Bulls within one second. Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso were notably strong in these sessions. In the third session, the order was similar. However, Valtteri Bottas pipped Hamilton's best time by three thousands of a second; and neither Max Verstappen nor Massa put in a strong lap. In the final practice round, less than a tenth of a second separated the two Mercedes and two Ferraris.


The first practice session saw George Russell's Formula One debut appearance. There was also an unusual appearance of a test driver (Antonio Giovinazzi) in the second practice session (usually, any test drivers that participate in a racing weekend, do so in the first practice session).



Qualifying


Qualifying began in a dramatic fashion as World Champion Hamilton lost the back end of the car with over-steer, seemingly due to a driver error, crashing to retire from Q1 without setting a lap time. Räikkönen was fastest in Q1 and Vettel in Q2. In the final qualifying session, however, Bottas took pole position. Vettel qualified a close second, followed by Räikkönen, Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo. Ricciardo took a 10-place grid penalty for exceeding his quota of power unit components and started 14th on the grid. Hamilton elected to change his gearbox and power unit, so started the race from the pit lane.



Race


Vettel achieved a good start during the second phase of clutch control to overtake Bottas on the first corner. There were numerous retirements due to collisions on the first lap. Romain Grosjean lost the back end, clipping Esteban Ocon off the track. Ocon's resultant retirement ended his record streak of 27 races finished from his Formula One debut. Stoffel Vandoorne and Kevin Magnussen also retired due to a collision on the first lap.


Hamilton, starting from the pit lane, implemented an inverted tyre strategy running to lap 44 on one set of soft tyres. After overtaking the back-markers and mid-field, he fell into first place as the leading cars – predominantly on one-stop strategies – pitted. Hamilton's only pit-stop positioned him fifth, after which he overtook Verstappen and was briefly able to challenge Räikkönen for the podium,[5] but unable to overtake Raikkonen in third. Ricciardo also battled up to sixth after starting fifteenth on the grid and dropping to seventeenth as collateral of the Vandoorne-Magnussen collision.


Setting the pace through most of the race, Vettel won the Grand Prix, followed by Bottas and Räikkönen. Including Hamilton, the top four finished within the space of 5.5 seconds, with the two Red Bulls more than 30 seconds behind. The following three positions also carried a race-long battle to the finish line, finishing within 1 second of each other. Initially overtaking on lap 5 (as the safety car was pulling into pitlane), Massa held off Alonso who remained close throughout the race.[6]Sergio Pérez also caught up to these two racers to cross the finish line barely behind Alonso.



Classification



Qualifying












































































































































































Pos.

Car
no.

Driver
Constructor

Qualifying times

Final
grid

Q1
Q2
Q3
1
77

Finland Valtteri Bottas

Mercedes
1:09.452
1:08.638

1:08.322
1
2
5

Germany Sebastian Vettel

Ferrari
1:09.643

1:08.494
1:08.360
2
3
7

Finland Kimi Räikkönen

Ferrari

1:09.405
1:09.116
1:08.538
3
4
33

Netherlands Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer
1:09.820
1:09.050
1:08.925
4
5
3

Australia Daniel Ricciardo

Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer
1:09.828
1:09.533
1:09.330
141
6
11

Mexico Sergio Pérez

Force India-Mercedes
1:10.145
1:09.760
1:09.598
5
7
14

Spain Fernando Alonso

McLaren-Honda
1:10.172
1:09.593
1:09.617
6
8
27

Germany Nico Hülkenberg

Renault
1:10.078
1:09.726
1:09.703
7
9
55

Spain Carlos Sainz Jr.

Renault
1:10.227
1:09.768
1:09.805
8
10
19

Brazil Felipe Massa

Williams-Mercedes
1:09.789
1:09.612
1:09.841
9
11
31

France Esteban Ocon

Force India-Mercedes
1:10.168
1:09.830

10
12
8

France Romain Grosjean

Haas-Ferrari
1:10.148
1:09.879

11
13
2

Belgium Stoffel Vandoorne

McLaren-Honda
1:10.286
1:10.116

12
14
20

Denmark Kevin Magnussen

Haas-Ferrari
1:10.521
1:10.154

13
15
28

New Zealand Brendon Hartley

Toro Rosso
1:10.625
no time

182
16
94

Germany Pascal Wehrlein

Sauber-Ferrari
1:10.678


15
17
10

France Pierre Gasly

Toro Rosso
1:10.686


193
18
18

Canada Lance Stroll

Williams-Mercedes
1:10.776


164
19
9

Sweden Marcus Ericsson

Sauber-Ferrari
1:10.875


175

107% time: 1:14.263

44

United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes
no time


PL6
Source: [7][8]
Notes

  • ^1  – Daniel Ricciardo received a 10-place grid penalty for exceeding his quota of power unit components.


  • ^2  – Brendon Hartley received a 10-place grid penalty for exceeding his quota of power unit components.


  • ^3  – Pierre Gasly received a 25-place grid penalty for exceeding his quota of power unit components.


  • ^4  – Lance Stroll received a 5-place grid penalty for an unscheduled gearbox change.


  • ^5  – Marcus Ericsson received a 5-place grid penalty for an unscheduled gearbox change.


  • ^6  – Lewis Hamilton failed to set a time within the 107% requirement, but received permission from the stewards to start the race. He also started from the pit lane due to a gearbox and power unit changes.


Race











































































































































































Pos.

No.
Driver
Constructor
Laps
Time/Retired
Grid
Points
1
5

Germany Sebastian Vettel

Ferrari
71
1:31:26.262
2

25
2
77

Finland Valtteri Bottas

Mercedes
71
+2.762
1

18
3
7

Finland Kimi Räikkönen

Ferrari
71
+4.600
3

15
4
44

United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes
71
+5.468
PL

12
5
33

Netherlands Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer
71
+32.940
4

10
6
3

Australia Daniel Ricciardo

Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer
71
+48.691
14

8
7
19

Brazil Felipe Massa

Williams-Mercedes
71
+1:08.882
9

6
8
14

Spain Fernando Alonso

McLaren-Honda
71
+1:09.363
6

4
9
11

Mexico Sergio Pérez

Force India-Mercedes
71
+1:09.500
5

2
10
27

Germany Nico Hülkenberg

Renault
70
+1 Lap
7

1
11
55

Spain Carlos Sainz Jr.

Renault
70
+1 Lap
8

12
10

France Pierre Gasly

Toro Rosso
70
+1 Lap
19

13
9

Sweden Marcus Ericsson

Sauber-Ferrari
70
+1 Lap
17

14
94

Germany Pascal Wehrlein

Sauber-Ferrari
70
+1 Lap
15

15
8

France Romain Grosjean

Haas-Ferrari
69
+2 Laps
11

16
18

Canada Lance Stroll

Williams-Mercedes
69
+2 Laps
16

Ret
28

New Zealand Brendon Hartley

Toro Rosso
40
Engine
18

Ret
31

France Esteban Ocon

Force India-Mercedes
0
Collision
10

Ret
2

Belgium Stoffel Vandoorne

McLaren-Honda
0
Collision
12

Ret
20

Denmark Kevin Magnussen

Haas-Ferrari
0
Collision
13

Source: [9]


Championship standings after the race









References




  1. ^ "Brazil". formula1.com. Retrieved 19 September 2017. 


  2. ^ "F1 reveals overall rise in 2017 attendance". GPupdate.net. JHED Media BV. 8 December 2017. Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. 


  3. ^ "Sebastian Vettel wins Brazilian Grand Prix after Lewis Hamilton fightback". The Guardian. 13 November 2017. 


  4. ^ "FP3 – Mercedes and Ferrari all but inseparable at Interlagos". formula1.com. Retrieved 15 November 2017. 


  5. ^ "Sebastian Vettel wins Brazilian Grand Prix after Lewis Hamilton fightback". The Guardian. 13 November 2017. 


  6. ^ "2017 Brazilian Grand Prix – Race History Chart". FIA. 12 November 2017. Archived from the original on 18 November 2017. Retrieved 18 November 2017. 


  7. ^ "2017 Brazilian Grand Prix – Qualifying Session Official Classification". FIA. 11 November 2017. Archived from the original on 18 November 2017. Retrieved 18 November 2017. 


  8. ^ "2017 Brazilian Grand Prix – Official Starting Grid". FIA. 12 November 2017. Archived from the original on 18 November 2017. Retrieved 18 November 2017. 


  9. ^ "2017 Brazilian Grand Prix – Race Official Classification". FIA. 12 November 2017. Archived from the original on 18 November 2017. Retrieved 18 November 2017. 




External links








Previous race:
2017 Mexican Grand Prix

FIA Formula One World Championship
2017 season

Next race:
2017 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
Previous race:
2016 Brazilian Grand Prix

Brazilian Grand Prix
Next race:
2018 Brazilian Grand Prix





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