Formula One Hungarian Grand Prix - Hungaroring
The first Hungarian Grand Prix (Magyar Nagydij) was held on June 21, 1936 over a 3.1-mile track laid out in Nepliget, a park near the center of Budapest. The Mercedes-Benz, Auto Union, and Ferrari teams all sent three cars and the event... [more]
The first Hungarian Grand Prix (Magyar Nagydij) was held on June 21, 1936 over a 3.1-mile track laid out in Nepliget, a park near the center of Budapest. The Mercedes-Benz, Auto Union, and Ferrari teams all sent three cars and the event drew a very large crowd. However, politics and the ensuing war meant the end of Grand Prix motor racing in the country for fifty years.
A major coup by Bernie Ecclestone, the 1986 Hungarian Grand Prix was the first Formula One race to take place behind the Iron Curtain. Taking place at the twisty Hungaroring near Budapest, the race has been a mainstay of the racing calendar. Run in the heat of a central European summer, it also holds the distinction of being the only current Grand Prix venue that had never seen a wet race up until the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix. The first Grand Prix saw 200,000 people spectating, although tickets cost several time the average Hungarian's wage at the time. Today, the support is still very enthusiastic, particularly from Finns, mainly because the Finns and the Hungarians both speak Finno-Ugric languages, which are not part of the Indo-European family of languages.
Due to the nature of the track, narrow, twisty and often dusty from under-use, the Hungarian Grand Prix is associated with processional races, with crocodiles of sometimes as many as six cars following one another, unable to pass. Thierry Boutsen demonstrated this perfectly in 1990, keeping his slower Williams car in front of champion-elect Ayrton Senna, unable to find a way by. The secret to a winning performance at Hungaroring, as well as qualifying well, is pit strategy, best demonstrated best in 1998, where Michael Schumacher's Ferrari team changed his strategy mid-race before Schumacher put in one of his finest drives to build up a winning margin after all the stops had been made. Passing is a rarity here, although the 1989 race saw a famously bullish performance from Nigel Mansell in the Ferrari, who started from 12th on the grid and passed car after car, finally taking the lead in splendid opportunist style when Ayrton Senna was baulked by a slower runner. The circuit was modified slightly in 2003 in an attempt to allow more passing.
Other notable occasions in Budapest include first Grand Prix wins for Damon Hill in 1993, Fernando Alonso (in 2003), the first Grand Prix winner from Spain, who also became the youngest ever driver to win a GP and Jenson Button in an incident-packed race in 2006. Also noteworthy is Damon Hill's stunning near win in the unfancied Arrows-Yamaha in 1997, when his car lost drive on the last lap causing him to coast in second place. -- source www.wikipedia.org
HUNGARIAN GP RESULT
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Hungarian Grand Prix, 70 laps, result
1. HAMILTON McLaren 1h35m52.991s
2. RAIKKONEN Ferrari 0.7s
3. HEIDFELD BMW 43.1s
4. ALONSO Mclaren 44.8s
5. KUBICA BMW 47.6s
6. SCHUMACHER Toyota 50.6s
7. ROSBERG Williams 59.1s
8. KOVALAINEN Renault 1m08.1s
9. WEBBER Red Bull 1m16.3s
10. TRULLI Toyota 1 lap
11. COULTHARD Red Bull 1 lap
12. FISICHELLA Renault 1 lap
13. MASSA Ferrari 1 lap
14. WURZ Williams 1 lap
15. SATO Super Aguri 1 lap
16. VETTEL Toro Rosso 1 lap
17. SUTIL Spyker 2 laps
18. BARRICHELLO Honda 2 laps
R. LIUZZI Toro Rosso 28 laps
R. DAVIDSON Super Aguri 29 laps
R. BUTTON Honda 35 laps
R. YAMAMOTO Spyker 66 laps
Fastest lap: RAIKKONEN 1m20.047s (lap 70)
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