Wreckage and rain muddied the 2003 Brazilian Grand Prix results
In auto racing, rain is often a great equalizer. And it often rains at the Brazilian Grand Prix. Back in 2003, intense downpours on a Sunday in São Paulo led to five safety cars, a rain-shortened race, and an incorrectly crowned victor.
The evening after the 2003 Brazilian Grand Prix, Kimi Räikkönen was basking in the glory of his second consecutive Formula 1 win. The Finn, in just his third season, had driven a clever race in tricky conditions. While many other, far more experienced stars crashed on the wet track, Räikkönen kept the silver and black McLaren out of trouble and up front.
Or so we thought.
In 2003, the Formula 1 circus visited Brazil for the third race of the season (rather than visiting in November). Given that McLaren had won the opening two rounds, it would have been entirely predictable for the British team to take the third. But no one could have predicted how Brazil, the 700th grand prix of the Formula 1 world championship, would play out.
Initially, it looked like the race might not take place at all. Sheets of rain doused the 2.7-mile Interlagos Circuit. After a 15-minute delay the race started albeit behind a Mercedes CLK safety car. After eight laps, the coupe finally pulled off track. The race was truly on.
It didn’t take long for the Benz to reappear. Ralph Firman’s Jordan suffered suspension failure in the most dramatic fashion. On the pit straight, traveling 175 miles per hour, his right-front wheel folded back against the cockpit and Firman became a helpless passenger as the bright yellow racer skated towards the left-hand corner.
His Jordan teammate, Giancarlo Fisichella, narrowly avoided the out-of-control sister EJ13. Olivier Panis and his Toyota weren’t so lucky. The wayward Jordan used the unsuspecting Japanese car as a brake. With debris all over the track, the safety car paced the field for five laps.
Once the field was unleashed, it would take only four laps for the safety car to reprise its role as leader a third time. A surprise culprit caused the break in action. World champion Michael Schumacher—still winless in 2003—hydroplaned off the track and into the scenery.
On lap 33, three laps after racing restarted, it stopped once more when Jenson Button endured a heavy impact after hydroplaning over the water like Schumacher. At this point, it looked as though the safety car would lead more laps than anyone in the field.
After a four-lap clean up, the grand prix resumed on lap 37. This green flag stint surprisingly lasted 17 laps.
Caution, again. Entering the start-finish straight, Mark Webber crashed his Jaguar, scattering green bits of debris across the track. Giancarlo Fisichella, in another display of luck or quick wits, managed to jink around it. Fernando Alonso, in third place, wasn’t as fortunate. Distracted by radio chat about the optimal tires for the next stop, Alonso crested the hill at speed and slammed into one of the Jaguar’s wheels.
The impact launched the young Spanish driver into the wall. His first impact with a tire barrier measured 35g. His second with a concrete wall on the other side of the track measured 60. Neither Alonso nor Webber suffered serious injuries.
Seconds later, Fisichella slithered past Räikkönen, and into the lead, when the Finn ran wide. It was a move that would have lasting consequences.
Räikkönen quickly re-established himself at the front and the safety car was deployed for Webber’s wreck. Officials then decided to stop the race, as it had run the required 75 percent of its distance.
As Fisichella rolled to a halt in the pit lane, his overheating Jordan caught fire. But heck, he thought he’d given cash-strapped Jordan a win and celebrated wildly as his EJ13 went up in flames.
“We did something a bit different,” said Jordan director of race engineering Gary Anderson. “We had a gut feeling and then the race fell into our hands. We weren’t competitive in our own right but we bought a lottery ticket and it came up.”
That lottery ticket was pitting Fisichella for tires on lap seven, during the initial safety car period, and providing him with enough fuel to finish the race.
Official timing showed otherwise. It displayed that Fisichella had only completed 55 laps when the red flag was thrown. The results, determined from the running order two laps prior (lap 53), showed that the Italian was second to Räikkönen.
However, Jordan’s timing showed that he was on his 56th lap. This meant that the race would be declared over on lap 54—the only circuit he actually had been in front of Raikkonen.
On the podium in São Paulo, it was Räikkönen who sprayed the champagne and raise the winner’s trophy while Fisi looked slightly bemused. He was second for the sixth time in his career. Third-place Alonso was absent, in the hospital after his monster double impact.
It took four days for F1 to finalize a decision on the finishing order.
Deliberation concluded by the following Friday. The race stewards reconvened at a meeting in Paris and declared Fisichella the winner. It was the first of the Italian’s three grand prix wins and the final of Jordan’s four. It was also the team’s 200th grand prix and the 176th—and final—victory for a Ford Cosworth engine in F1.
Fisichella eventually received his winner’s trophy at the San Marino Grand Prix, 10 days after his victory. “I still feel annoyed that I was prevented from celebrating on the podium immediately after my success,” he said.
Still, it was only fitting that the topsy-turvy and slightly surreal 2003 Brazilian Grand Prix went to an underdog winner over a week after another driver celebrated on Interlagos’ top step.
Check out the Hagerty Media homepage so you don’t miss a single story, or better yet, bookmark it.
F1 wants us to believe they are the top pinnacle of racing but too often they have always stepped on their own feet.
I have seen them race in rain more than once where the race should have been stopped. Rain tires do have limits. They give us advanced cars but yet they put some drivers in just because they bring money but no talent.
Have strange rulings and really have taken the driver out of the equation as in some cases the car wins the championship not so much the driver.
Brazil has been the sight of many rain races and to be honest there was only a couple drivers that could cope with heavy rain. Senna by all means was the Master and Giles Villeneuve was the other. He could even drive a car with no front down force as the wing in one was up side down broken on the nose.
I would love to see a true racer take charge of the series and make it so it lacked the politics and only had the best of the best going heads up. Also put more of the drive in the drivers hands.