2006 Malaysian Grand Prix

2006 Malaysian Grand Prix
Race 2 of 18 in the 2006 Formula One World Championship
Sepang International Circuit
Sepang International Circuit
Race details
Date 19 March 2006
Official name 2006 Formula 1 Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix
Location Sepang International Circuit
Sepang, Selangor, Malaysia
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 5.543 km (3.444 miles)
Distance 56 laps, 310.408 km (192.879 miles)
Weather Fine, Air Temp: 33°C, Wind Speed: 1.5 m/s, Humidity: 61%
Attendance 107,634 (Weekend)
Pole position
Driver Renault
Time 1:33.840
Fastest lap
Driver Spain Fernando Alonso Renault
Time 1:34.803 on lap 45
Podium
First Renault
Second Renault
Third Honda
Lap leaders

The 2006 Malaysian Grand Prix (officially the 2006 Formula 1 Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held at the Sepang International Circuit in Selangor, Malaysia on 19 March 2006. The 56-lap race was the second round of the 2006 Formula One season and the eighth running of the Malaysian Grand Prix as a World Championship race. It was won by Renault driver Giancarlo Fisichella, who took the final of his three victories in Formula One, and scored his first points of the season. He had also started on pole position. His team-mate, Fernando Alonso, finished second to extend his lead in the drivers' championship standings to 7 points. Jenson Button took the first podium in Honda's three year return to the sport by finishing in third place. Fisichella's victory was the last for an Italian driver as of 2023. This was the first 1-2 finish for Renault since their return to F1 as a constructor in 2002, and also their first 1-2 finish overall since the 1982 French Grand Prix.

Qualifying on Saturday saw the new rules being put to the test, as David Coulthard, Felipe Massa, Michael Schumacher, Rubens Barrichello and Ralf Schumacher were all forced to swap engines from the Bahrain GP and therefore lost 10 places on the starting grid after qualifying, despite many of them competing in later sessions (Massa actually changed his engine twice, causing him to lose 20 places). This meant some drivers, such as the Toro Rosso's of Scott Speed and Vitantonio Liuzzi were eliminated in the first session, but would have been spared elimination had those with engine penalties been eliminated at this point (although Ralf Schumacher's engine blew during the last session). Three cars with the Ferrari V8 suffered from engine problems during qualifying.

Report

Friday drivers

The bottom 6 teams in the 2005 Constructors' Championship and Super Aguri were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.

Constructor Nat Driver
Williams-Cosworth Austria Alexander Wurz
Honda United Kingdom Anthony Davidson
Red Bull-Ferrari Netherlands Robert Doornbos
BMW Sauber Poland Robert Kubica
MF1-Toyota Switzerland Giorgio Mondini
Toro Rosso-Cosworth Switzerland Neel Jani
Super Aguri-Honda -

Qualifying

Nico Rosberg qualified third in only his second race.

The first session gave no surprises, as the Super Aguri, Midland and Toro Rosso cars all went out, while the second session saw another set of poor performances from Rubens Barrichello and Jarno Trulli, while Massa and Coulthard also went out along with both the Sauber cars. In the final pole position session, Ralf Schumacher's engine blew, while Fernando Alonso could only manage 7th place after a problem with his fuel calculation meant he was carrying too much fuel during the session. Kimi Räikkönen was tipped as a favourite having qualified 6th, while Juan Pablo Montoya put himself on the third row alongside his teammate in 5th. The two big surprises of qualifying were Nico Rosberg and Mark Webber in their Williams. Rosberg posted the third fastest time, while Webber was moved up to 4th after Michael Schumacher's engine penalty dropped him to 14th. Jenson Button took provisional pole, but it was Giancarlo Fisichella who ended the session in 1st with his Renault, demoting Button to 2nd.

Race

Giancarlo Fisichella led at the start of the race.

It was a slightly cooler day than previously, a little overcast and with a possibility of rain later in the race. The track and air temperatures were in the mid thirties but the humidity was still very high for 56 laps of the Sepang circuit.

At the start, pole-sitter Fisichella made a clean getaway, as did second-placed Button. The Williams drivers were having a little battle of their own, Nico Rosberg pushing Mark Webber wide as he tried to defend his third spot, and a flying Alonso took advantage as they squabbled. The Spaniard went round the outside of turn one to take third.

Kimi Räikkönen was a first lap casualty when his McLaren rear ended into the barriers with a suspected suspension failure, thanks to a nerf from behind by Christian Klien's Red Bull. It was hard to see what happened but Klien was in the pits quickly afterwards with suspension damage to the front of his car. Red Bull's David Coulthard was up to 11th from 19th, the Toyota of Ralf Schumacher from 22nd to 13th, Ferrari's Felipe Massa from 21st to 14th and Rubens Barrichello moved his Honda up from 20th to 15th.

Michael Schumacher, who dropped 10 places in qualifying due to his engine change, started 14th and got his Ferrari up to 10th in the opening laps. At the front it was Fisichella leading Button and Alonso, then came Webber and the remaining McLaren of Juan Pablo Montoya.

BMW Sauber's Nick Heidfeld had a good start and had improved to sixth, followed by Rosberg, who had dropped down a little after the skirmish with Webber at the start. Rosberg got past Heidfeld but the move and his efforts in qualifying came to nothing when the Cosworth V8 let go in a cloud of smoke and flames a couple of laps later. Webber was closing on Alonso and Heidfeld was back to sixth, with Montoya still between him and Webber. Rosberg's exit had promoted the second BMW Sauber of Jacques Villeneuve into eighth, while Michael and Coulthard had moved up to complete the top 10.

Ralf and Massa were also still improving, 11th and 12th respectively, but for Red Bull it was game over. They had managed to get Klien back out on track after the incident with Räikkönen but he had problems. Meanwhile, Coulthard had gone into the pits stuck in sixth gear and their respective woes ended in a double retirement for the team. Back on track Michael had dispatched Villeneuve for seventh and Fisichella was belting out fastest laps at the front. Behind Ralf and Massa, 10th and 11th by then, was the Toro Rosso of Scott Speed and Barrichello, who was struggling to make up ground as quickly as his fellow back-of-the-grid starters had done.

Trulli, who was running sixth, hardly seemed to put up a fight as he was overtaken by Michael, Villeneuve and Massa all in successive laps at the same corner, turn one. Webber and Ralf were the ones who kicked off the first pit stops, around lap 15, but Webber then exited the race with a hydraulic problem. Fisichella went in for his first stop a couple of laps later, leaving Button in the lead until the Honda also dived in. That promoted Alonso to the front, but while the Spaniard went 10 laps further into the race than teammate Fisichella did before visiting the pits, he was still on a two-stopper.

Further down the field MF1's Christijan Albers was up to 13th, followed by the Super Aguri of Takuma Sato and Tonio Liuzzi's Toro Rosso. The second MF1 of Tiago Monteiro was next and the last of the remaining cars on track was Yuji Ide's Super Aguri. They were all having their own little fights but the attention was firmly on the front.

Alonso led Fisichella and Button rejoined behind third-placed Montoya after his stop. He was pressuring the McLaren, but not really too hard as Montoya was yet to pit. Heidfeld was doing a calm and controlled job in fifth, followed by Michael, Villeneuve and Massa up into the points in eighth.

However, due to the different strategies the pit stop shakeout was not yet complete. Next into the pits were Michael, Montoya and Villeneuve, which left Alonso, Massa and Barrichello the last to go in. Alonso finally ducked in on lap 26 but evidently would have to stop again. He rejoined third behind Fisichella and Button.

Massa was up to fourth when he went in and rejoined eighth, and the Ferrari youngster did not have to stop again. Barrichello was also on a one-stopper and was last to make his way into the pits but the strategy was wasted when a few laps later he got a 10-second stop and go penalty for speeding in the pit lane.

Ide was the next to retire, with an unspecified mechanical problem, and the Super Aguri pulled off on the grass. Barrichello, who had been held up by a scrap between Sato and Monteiro, went in for his penalty, and Button got similarly stuck behind Sato and one of the Toro Rosso cars who were then having a duel.

Fisichella took his second stop and Button dived in as well to escape the traffic. They retained formation and rejoined in second and fourth with Montoya in between them. Alonso was back in the lead until his second stop and had just enough time in his pocket to charge through for a quick splash-and-dash and get out ahead of Button.

Michael went in for his second stop and it was a close call with teammate Massa as he rejoined the track. The Brazilian didn't back off and led Michael through turn one, although the German was very close. Massa stayed there to the chequered flag, with Michael tagging behind for the remaining 10 laps or so, unable to get past.

With only eight laps to go Heidfeld, who had been doing a sterling, if quiet, job for BMW in fifth, suffered an engine failure. In the final laps Liuzzi got past Albers for 11th, which will probably make MF1 start complaining about Toro Rosso's V10 again, and somewhere along the line Speed retired with a suspected clutch problem. Positions held to the flag and Fisichella took the victory ahead of teammate Alonso and Button.

Classification

Qualifying

Jenson Button pouring champagne on Giancarlo Fisichella during the podium ceremony after the race.
Pos. No. Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Q3 Grid
1 2 Italy Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 1:35.488 1:33.623 1:33.840 1
2 12 United Kingdom Jenson Button Honda 1:35.023 1:33.527 1:33.986 2
3 10 Germany Nico Rosberg Williams-Cosworth 1:35.105 1:34.563 1:34.626 3
4 5 Germany Michael Schumacher Ferrari 1:35.810 1:34.574 1:34.668 141
5 9 Australia Mark Webber Williams-Cosworth 1:35.252 1:34.279 1:34.672 4
6 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya McLaren-Mercedes 1:34.536 1:34.568 1:34.916 5
7 3 Finland Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes 1:34.667 1:34.351 1:34.983 6
8 1 Spain Fernando Alonso Renault 1:35.514 1:33.997 1:35.747 7
9 15 Austria Christian Klien Red Bull-Ferrari 1:35.171 1:34.537 1:38.715 8
10 7 Germany Ralf Schumacher Toyota 1:35.214 1:34.586 no time 222
11 14 United Kingdom David Coulthard Red Bull-Ferrari 1:34.839 1:34.614 193
12 11 Brazil Rubens Barrichello Honda 1:35.526 1:34.683 203
13 8 Italy Jarno Trulli Toyota 1:35.517 1:34.702 9
14 17 Canada Jacques Villeneuve BMW Sauber 1:35.391 1:34.752 10
15 16 Germany Nick Heidfeld BMW Sauber 1:35.588 1:34.783 11
16 6 Brazil Felipe Massa Ferrari 1:35.091 no time4 214
17 21 United States Scott Speed Toro Rosso-Cosworth 1:36.297 12
18 20 Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi Toro Rosso-Cosworth 1:36.581 13
19 19 Netherlands Christijan Albers MF1-Toyota 1:37.426 15
20 18 Portugal Tiago Monteiro MF1-Toyota 1:37.819 16
21 22 Japan Takuma Sato Super Aguri-Honda 1:39.011 17
22 23 Japan Yuji Ide Super Aguri-Honda 1:40.720 18
Source:
Notes
  • ^1Michael Schumacher was handed a 10 place grid penalty following an engine change after the Saturday morning practice session.
  • ^2Ralf Schumacher was handed a 10 place grid penalty following an engine change after his engine blew during the second session. Resultantly he was unable to compete in the final part of qualifying - Q3.
  • ^3David Coulthard and Rubens Barrichello were also handed 10 place grid penalties following engine changes.
  • ^4Felipe Massa was handed a 10 place grid penalty following an engine change prior to the qualifying session. To conserve the engine he sat out the second qualifying session - Q2.

Race

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 2 Italy Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 56 1:30:40.529 1 10
2 1 Spain Fernando Alonso Renault 56 +4.585 7 8
3 12 United Kingdom Jenson Button Honda 56 +9.631 2 6
4 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya McLaren-Mercedes 56 +39.351 5 5
5 6 Brazil Felipe Massa Ferrari 56 +43.254 21 4
6 5 Germany Michael Schumacher Ferrari 56 +43.854 14 3
7 17 Canada Jacques Villeneuve BMW Sauber 56 +1:20.461 10 2
8 7 Germany Ralf Schumacher Toyota 56 +1:21.288 22 1
9 8 Italy Jarno Trulli Toyota 55 +1 Lap 9
10 11 Brazil Rubens Barrichello Honda 55 +1 Lap 20
11 20 Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi Toro Rosso-Cosworth 54 +2 Laps 13
12 19 Netherlands Christijan Albers MF1-Toyota 54 +2 Laps 15
13 18 Portugal Tiago Monteiro MF1-Toyota 54 +2 Laps 16
14 22 Japan Takuma Sato Super Aguri-Honda 53 +3 Laps 17
Ret 16 Germany Nick Heidfeld BMW Sauber 48 Engine 11
Ret 21 United States Scott Speed Toro Rosso-Cosworth 41 Clutch 12
Ret 23 Japan Yuji Ide Super Aguri-Honda 33 Throttle 18
Ret 15 Austria Christian Klien Red Bull-Ferrari 26 Hydraulics 8
Ret 9 Australia Mark Webber Williams-Cosworth 15 Hydraulics 4
Ret 14 United Kingdom David Coulthard Red Bull-Ferrari 10 Hydraulics 19
Ret 10 Germany Nico Rosberg Williams-Cosworth 6 Engine 3
Ret 3 Finland Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes 0 Collision 6
Source:

Championship standings after the race

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

2°45′39″N 101°44′18″E / 2.76083°N 101.73833°E / 2.76083; 101.73833


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