Italiens Grand Prix 1998
Italiens Grand Prix 1998 | |
Datum | 13 september 1998 |
---|---|
Bana | Autodromo Nazionale Monza |
Sträcka | 53 × 5,770 = 305,810 km |
Vinnare | Michael Schumacher, Ferrari |
Pole position | Michael Schumacher, Ferrari |
Snabbaste varv | Mika Häkkinen, McLaren-Mercedes, 1:25,139 |
Italiens Grand Prix 1998 var det fjortonde av 16 lopp ingående i formel 1-VM 1998.
Rapport
Ferrari tog en dubbelseger under hemmapublikens jubel då Michael Schumacher vann före Eddie Irvine. McLaren hade en motig helg, David Coulthards motor rasade och Mika Häkkinen slutade fyra. Mika Häkkinen och Michael Schumacher delade nu ledningen i VM-tabellen.
Resultat
- Michael Schumacher, Ferrari, 10 poäng
- Eddie Irvine, Ferrari, 6
- Ralf Schumacher, Jordan-Mugen Honda, 4
- Mika Häkkinen, McLaren-Mercedes, 3
- Jean Alesi, Sauber-Petronas, 2
- Damon Hill, Jordan-Mugen Honda, 1
- Heinz-Harald Frentzen, Williams-Mecachrome
- Giancarlo Fisichella, Benetton-Playlife
- Toranosuke Takagi, Tyrrell-Ford
- Rubens Barrichello, Stewart-Ford
- Esteban Tuero, Minardi-Ford
- Ricardo Rosset, Tyrrell-Ford
- Jarno Trulli, Prost-Peugeot
Förare som bröt loppet
- Jos Verstappen, Stewart-Ford (varv 39, växellåda)
- Jacques Villeneuve, Williams-Mecachrome (37, snurrade av)
- Mika Salo, Arrows (32, gasspjäll)
- Alexander Wurz, Benetton-Playlife (24, växellåda)
- David Coulthard, McLaren-Mercedes (16, motor)
- Olivier Panis, Prost-Peugeot (15, vibrationer)
- Shinji Nakano, Minardi-Ford (13, motor)
- Johnny Herbert, Sauber-Petronas (12, snurrade av)
- Pedro Diniz, Arrows (10, snurrade av)
VM-ställning
Förarmästerskapet
| Konstruktörsmästerskapet
|
Källor
- ”1998 Formula 1 Italian Grand Prix” (på engelska). Formula1.com. https://www.formula1.com/en/results.html/1998/races/684/italy/race-result.html. Läst 2 maj 2015.
|
|
Media som används på denna webbplats
The civil ensign and flag of Belgium. It is identical to Image:Flag of Belgium.svg except that it has a 2:3 ratio, instead of 13:15.
The Flag of Europe is the flag and emblem of the European Union (EU) and Council of Europe (CoE). It consists of a circle of 12 golden (yellow) stars on a blue background. It was created in 1955 by the CoE and adopted by the EU, then the European Communities, in the 1980s.
The CoE and EU are distinct in membership and nature. The CoE is a 47-member international organisation dealing with human rights and rule of law, while the EU is a quasi-federal union of 27 states focused on economic integration and political cooperation. Today, the flag is mostly associated with the latter.
It was the intention of the CoE that the flag should come to represent Europe as a whole, and since its adoption the membership of the CoE covers nearly the entire continent. This is why the EU adopted the same flag. The flag has been used to represent Europe in sporting events and as a pro-democracy banner outside the Union.