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The
1995 Italian Grand Prix
Johnny
claims his second win

This is the Autosport race report on Johnny's
second Grand Prix
victory at Monza in September 1995. Many thanks to the magazine, writer Nigel
Roebuck, photographer Martin Elford, and to fan Harry Lythgoe for sending us this from his
collection of old Autosports.
You
get proper tracks, you get proper racing. At Monza as at Spa, there was a huge
amount of drama, the Italian Grand Prix seeming to belong firstly to Coulthard
then to Berger, then to Alesi. Remarkably neither Schumacher or Hill led at any
stage, and shortly before half distance they were eliminated in yet another
controversial coming together.
For
a time the Tifosi looked set to celebrate a Ferrari 1-2, but by the time
the chequered flag fell, the red cars were gone, and the circuit exit roads were
busy. None of the pre-race favourites were around in the late laps, and thus it
was that Johnny Herbert scored his second unexpected win of the season, the
Benetton Renault followed over the line by Mika Häkkinen's McLaren Mercedes.
Jean
Alesi was not in the best of spirits after qualifying, vastly disappointed to be
only 5th on the grid, but his mood improved on Sunday morning, when he set
fastest time in the warm up, followed by poleman Coulthard and teammate Berger.
Both Ferrari drivers were optimistic about their race chances, but unsure about
which engines they would run, Alesi having set his time with the older evolution
2 version of the V12, Berger the evolution 3. Ultimately, it was decided to run
the latest version engine in both cars.
If
Gerhard and Jean were in positive frames of mind, so also were both Williams
drivers, but Schumacher, 4th fastest in practice, was less then happy with the
balance of his Benetton.
The
traditional start time at Monza is 3PM, an hour later then the norm these days,
and it seemed an eternity until the engines were fired up anew. At 2.30 they
came out for their warm up laps, however, and half an hour later, Coulthard lead
the field away on the parade lap. He was not to finish it. In some disbelief we
watched as the Williams went out of control at the exit of the Ascari chicane,
spinning to a halt on the grass, tail into the fence.
Eventually
Coulthard made his way back to the pits, but by now the race had started without
him. Almost at once the Williams was pushed into the garage, and David's day
appeared to be done. "I went off on oil or something like that," he
said, and perhaps this was a legacy of a Renault Clio race held between the warm
up and the race.
Coulthard's
absence from the grid essentially elevated Schumacher to pole position, but at
the green fight both Berger and Alesi got away superbly, and on the run down to
the first chicane, Gerhard got almost alongside the Benetton, before wisely
deciding he did not want to be edged off the road. Schumacher led into the
chicane, the two Ferraris slotting in behind, with Herbert fourth after a
sensational start. Hill ran fifth, with Hakkinen and Irvine next up.
Berger,
wanting to show the fans something on his last appearance in a Ferrari at Monza,
and perhaps displeased by Schumacher's moving over on him after the start, was
clearly intent on separating his favourite colleague from the lead as soon as
possible. Out of Parabolica, he was perfectly placed to tow past the Benetton
into the first chicane, and this he duly pulled off.
All
for nothing, however At the Ascari chicane - where Coulthard had earlier gone
off - there were cars all over the place, and the track was completely blocked.
Out
came the red flag.
The
accident had been started by Papis, who spun in front of Badoer. Although the
Minardi. got through unscathed, Montermini's Pacific then spun, and soon Moreno,
Diniz and Boullion were all involved. No one was hurt, but it took 35 minutes to
clear away all the mess, and only 22 cars reassembled on the grid, for
Montermini and Moreno were without
T-cars.
All
of this, of course, was manna for Coulthard, who now got a second bite of the
cherry, for this was now a brand new race, and he was entitled to begin it from
pole position. There was lot of pressure involved here, for David was now in the
spare Williams, which he had not driven at all in the practice days. It didn't
show. From the start Coulthard led, while Berger assertively got by Schumacher
before the first corner. At the end of the first lap it was the Williams, then
the Ferrari, then the Benetton, and for a while it was all nip-and-tuck, as
Coulthard inched away, extending his lead by a tenth here and there.
By
lap six, however, strange car or not, he was starting to look like the man he
had been in qualifying putting in a series of new fastest laps, and pulling a
couple seconds clear of Berger. No question about it, the combination of
Coulthard and a Williams-Renault was the fastest thing at Monza this year. If
his car kept going, there seemed no likelihood that anyone would challenge
David.
If.
On lap 14, he skated off the road at the entry to the second chicane, but it was
not the consequence of any driving error. The Williams proceeded through, and
out of, the gravel trap, then made its way to the pits, where David was quickly
given the signal to climb out.
"It
was a front wheel bearing," he said. "I'm terribly disappointed,
because I was able to pull away, even though I still had something in reserve.
Suddenly I noticed a vibration from the front of the car, and then the right
front wheel grabbed, and spun me off."
If
there was mortification in the Williams pit, predictably there was ecstasy in
the grandstands, for now Berger led, and there seemed little that those behind
him, led by Schumacher, could do about it indeed Michael's second place was
coming under increasing threat from Hill, with Alesi, after a quiet opening
phase, beginning to close on the pair of them. For Ferrari, the day was looking
better all the time.
It
was not so, though, for the unfortunate Brundle, whose Ligier picked up a slow
puncture, which graduated into a flailing left rear tyre. To bring a car back to
the pits on three wheels is not a relaxing thing at a place as quick as Monza,
but Martin struggled in, only to be handed an official reprimand from the
stewards for driving a car in a dangerous condition.
On
lap 17, the leaders encountered Katayama's Tyrrell, the Japanese driver
contriving to baulk first Berger, and then Hill, which must have maddened Damon,
because Schumacher had been granted a free passage through, just as the Williams
had closed up on him.
Berger
put the hammer down now, extending his lead by virtue of a string of new fastest
laps, which suggested that he had the measure of the two World Championship
protagonists behind him. And on lap 24, Schumacher and Hill ceased to be of
concern to him. At the second chicane the Benetton and the Williams tangled,
both cars spinning into retirement in the gravel trap.
This
latest controversial incident between the two occurred as they lapped Inoue's
Footwork, and when it came to apportioning blame there were, predictably
opinions at variance. What happened was that Hill's Williams hit the back of
Schumacher's Benetton. Did Damon brake late, or Michael early?
Schumacher
saw it this way: "I don't know what happened. I turned into the corner,
not expecting anything, and suddenly felt a big bang. It wasn't a small touch
- Damon really crashed into me. I'm very upset, because it's the second time
this has happened now, and he's taken away more points from me, which I could
have gained by finishing in front of him."
Michael
added that, what was more, he had been braking very late for the corner, but
this contention was not exactly borne out by study of the video evidence, for
not only did Hill close swiftly on the Benetton into the corner, but so also did
Inoue, and closing on another car under braking is not something for which the
Japanese rent-a-drive man is renowned.
Habitually,
Schumacher is brilliant through traffic, and one of his greatest skills the
ability to time the passing of a slower car so as to place it between him and
his pursuer through a corner. There were many at Monza who believed him to be
trying just this manoeuvre with Inoue, trying to slow up the pace into the
chicane, so as to prevent Hill from getting by the Footwork until after it.
Whatever,
Damon's anger was directed primarily at the driver he was trying to lap.
"It
was ridiculous. Twice Inoue changed lines in front of me. He let Schumacher
by, then he blocked me, and then he moved out of the way again. People like
this just don't know what they're doing. Obviously, Michael was very upset,
and so was I. I would never ever want to tangle with someone deliberately, and
it just ruined what would have been a great race for both of us. I was sure I
would be able to pull away if I could just get by him, and I was hoping we
could do that on the stops."
There
was no suggestion, from Hill or anyone else, that Inoue had acted out of
bloody-mindedness indeed that might have been less worrying, in some respects,
than his assertion afterwards that he had simply not seen Damon.
At
all events, following a protest from Benetton, it was Hill who was hauled before
the stewards after the race, and sentenced to a one race ban, suspended for one
race.
At
the time of the accident, Alesi was almost up with Schumacher and Hill, so that
he now found himself in second place, seven seconds behind team mate Berger.
Ferraris were running first and second, and the Italian Grand Prix appeared to
be on a plate for them, for all their major opposition had taken care of itself.
Joy among the tifosi was briefly unconfined.
The
pit stops, however, were coming up, all teams save Tyrrell going for one only at
Monza. On lap 28 Berger came in, but his stop was not a good one, a problem with
the clutch leading to a slow getaway. The loss of time was enough to allow
Alesi, who stopped on the following lap, to rejoin the race ahead of Gerhard,
but soon the two of them were running in close company again, at the head of the
field.
Prior
to the stops, Barrichello had been running third, ahead of Hakkinen, Herbert,
Irvine, Blundell and Frentzen, but excellent work by the McLaren mechanics
enabled Mika to get ahead of Rubens. When these two came in, Herbert went into
the lead for the first time, and he was the last of the significant runners to
stop, on lap 30.
"It
was the team's decision to stop late," Johnny said, "and I was happy
to go along with that, because the longer I stayed out, the less time the
refuelling would take when I eventually stopped. Knowing my position, relative
to Mika and Rubens, I knew that if I could push when they made their stops, I
ought to be able to make a short stop myself, and get in front of them. And
that's exactly what happened."
Herbert's
stop was only 12.5 seconds, two or three fewer than his rivals', and when he
rejoined, only the Ferraris were ahead of him. There seemed, however, little
possibility of his making any inroads into their lead, and what seemed to lie in
prospect for the crowds was a battle to the flag between Alesi and Berger. It
didn't get any better than that.
Sadly,
though, it didn't come to that, either, for on lap 33 a horrifying incident
removed Berger from the Italian Grand Prix. As he shadowed Alesi, an on-board
camera, mounted on the rear wing of Jean's car, became detached. Bouncing down
the road, it hit the left front suspension of Berger's car, breaking the
steering arm, after which a wishbone broke. Gerhard brought the crippled car to
a safe halt, but the incident had given him a severe fright.
"It
was terrifying," he said. "I just saw this thing coming towards me
at 180mph, and obviously at that speed I couldn't swerve. I'm just glad it hit
the car, and not me. It's very disappointing, though, because this was the
best car I've had all season - on the level of the Benetton, and close to the
Williams."
Italian
hopes now rested solely with Alesi, and it was quite obvious that no one was
going to catch jean, that only some sort of mechanical failure could prevent a
Ferrari victory. For lap after lap, he howled past in the lead, and they cheered
him on, willing the car to make it to the finish.
All
was well until lap 45, when suddenly Herbert cut Alesi's lead by more than a
second. On the radio, Jean was telling the team that he thought his car had a
puncture.
"The
car began to feel as though it was on three wheels," he said, "but
it wasn't a puncture. It was a wheel bearing failure."
On
lap 46, there was fire from the back of the car, and Alesi brought it into the
pits, and climbed out. Unlike last year, when he also retired from the lead at
Monza, there were no histrionics, instead, Jean walked slowly away, then sat
down near the pit wall, head in hands. Seven laps from the end, therefore, both
Ferraris were gone.
"In
all my long professional career," said Jean Todt, "I have never
known such bitter disappointment."
The
tifosi felt the same way.
All
Herbert had to do now, therefore, was to cruise home, for Hakkinen and Frentzen
were too far back to be a worry.
"I
was coming out of the Lesmos when I saw this piece of smoking debris on the
track," Johnny said. "Then Jean began to slow down, and it was a
pleasant surprise to be given the lead like that."
There
were no mistakes. For the second time this year, Herbert had saved the day for
Benetton, but probably he was no more delighted with his victory than Hakkinen
was with second place. Frentzen, a very fine third, was almost light-headed with
pleasure at making the podium for the first time, and Blundell took a good
fourth, ahead of Salo, scoring his, and Tyrrell's, first points of the season,
with Boullion taking the last one for Sauber.
Afterwards,
Herbert announced that he was wearing the same underpants he had worn at
Silverstone. There was no suggestion that this had contributed to his victory
either there or here, but he planned to go on wearing them on race days, he
said. You couldn't blame him.
Many thanks to Autosport and the writer for the above
report. All rights reserved.
The series of historic reports comes to you from the archives of fan Harry Lythgoe
This page prepared 6th August 2000.
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