South African Grand Prix

The South African Grand Prix was first run as a Grand Prix motor racing handicap race in 1934 at the Prince George Circuit at East London, Eastern Cape Province. It drew top drivers from Europe including Bernd Rosemeyer, Richard "Dick" Seaman, Richard Ormonde Shuttleworth and the 1939 winner Luigi Villoresi.

South African Grand Prix
Prince George Circuit (1934–1966)
Kyalami (1967–1993)
Race information
Number of times held33
First held1934
Last held1993
Most wins (drivers) Jim Clark (4)
Most wins (constructors) Lotus (6)
Last race (1993)
Pole position
Podium
Fastest lap

World War II brought an end to the race, but it was revived in 1960 as part of the Formula One circuit, entering the World Championship calendar two years later. It was a popular F1 event, but the Grand Prix was suspended right after the controversial 1985 race, due to the nation's policy of apartheid.[1] Following the end of apartheid in 1991, two further races were held in 1992 and the last time, 1993.

History

Prince George Circuit (built in 1959)
Layout of all versions of the Prince George Circuit
Brown = 1934, Blue = 1936, Black = 1959
Kyalami (built in 1961)
Kyalami (built in early 1990s)

East London (1934–1966)

The first South African Grands Prix were held on a circuit of 23.4 km that ran through different populated areas of the coastal city of East London. This was shortened to 17.7 km in 1936. After World War II, when racing was halted, a permanent circuit was built in 1959. The first South African F1 race was held on 29 December 1962. In that race, Graham Hill took advantage of Jim Clark's mechanical problems with his Lotus and took race victory and the championship. The race was held at Prince George again in 1963 and 1965. In 1967, the race was moved to the Kyalami circuit near the high-altitude inland city of Johannesburg in the Transvaal, where it would remain as long as the South African Grand Prix was on the official Formula One calendar.

Kyalami (1967–1985)

The fast Kyalami circuit, which was built in the early 1960s, played host to its first South African Grand Prix in 1967, where privateer John Love nearly took victory but ran into fuel problems late in the race, and Mexican Pedro Rodriguez took victory. 1968 saw Clark take victory; he broke Juan Manuel Fangio's record for most career wins and it turned out to be his last F1 victory; he was killed at a Formula 2 race at Hockenheim later that year. 1969 saw Jackie Stewart win, and the following year 44-year-old veteran Jack Brabham won his last F1 race. 1971 saw American Mario Andretti won his first F1 race in a Ferrari. 1974 saw American Peter Revson crash horribly at Barbeque Bend during testing for the race and slam head-on to the barriers; he later died from his injuries. Argentine Carlos Reutemann won for the first time at that year's event. 1975 saw South African Jody Scheckter take victory. The 1977 event was the location of one of the most gruesome crashes in history, as Tom Pryce was killed when he hit and killed track marshal Jansen Van Vuuren at full speed in 1977. Niki Lauda won the race, but the accident sent shock waves throughout the sport. 1978 saw Ronnie Peterson take a late victory from Patrick Depailler and Riccardo Patrese; and the 1979 event was held in changeable weather conditions and was won by Canadian Gilles Villeneuve.

Going into the 1980s, turbo-charged cars began to dominate the Grand Prix. Because of the high altitude of the fast Kyalami circuit (approximately 6,000 feet above sea level) the forced induction turbo engines could regulate how much air went into the engine whereas the normally aspirated engines could not, the turbo-charged engines had a horsepower advantage in 1982 of 150 hp over the normally aspirated engines, and often qualified on the front row of the grid considerably faster than the normally aspirated engined cars; and the Renault team dominated both the 1980 and 1982 races; Frenchman Alain Prost won the 1982 race after he lost a wheel around mid-distance; he charged through the field and took victory from Carlos Reutemann.[2] The 1981 event was a victim of the FISA–FOCA war. As agreement could not be reached with FISA for the Grand Prix to be run as a round of the Formula One World Championship or as a non-championship Formula One race, it was officially staged as a Formula Libre event. Consequently, it was contested only by the FOCA-aligned teams, with cars which did not strictly comply with the 1981 Formula One regulations.[3] The 1983 event was the last race of that season, and it saw a three-way battle for the Drivers' Championship between Prost, Brazilian Nelson Piquet and Frenchman Rene Arnoux. Prost and Arnoux both went out with engine problems and Piquet took 3rd place and the Drivers' Championship; Prost made scathing comments about Renault's conservative approach to developing the car, and he was fired from the team. Piquet's Italian teammate Riccardo Patrese won the race. 1984 saw the event take place early in the season, and Prost (now driving for McLaren) started from the pit lane in the spare car after his race car didn't start. This was made legal when the first start was aborted after Briton Nigel Mansell stalled on the grid. Prost drove through the field to finish 2nd behind his teammate Niki Lauda. Briton Derek Warwick completed the podium in a Renault and Brazilian future world champion Ayrton Senna scored his first point in a Toleman, finishing 6th.

The 1985 race was mired in international controversy as nations began boycotting South African sporting events because of a state of emergency declared by the South African government in July of that year because of a surge of violence related to racial segregation in the country, called apartheid. Most people involved in Formula One were strongly against going to race in South Africa. Some governments tried to ban their drivers from going,[4] and the Ligier and Renault teams did boycott the race in line with the French Government's ban on sporting events in South Africa;[5] however French drivers Alain Prost, who had wrapped up the 1985 championship in the previous race,[6] and Philippe Steriff, both driving for British teams, did take part. British driver Nigel Mansell won his second consecutive Formula One race and his teammate Keke Rosberg stormed around the track after 2 pitstops to take 2nd, completing a 1–2 for the Williams team.[6] 1985 was the final South African Grand Prix until the end of apartheid, with FIA president Jean-Marie Balestre announcing days after the race that a Grand Prix would not return to the nation because of apartheid.[1]

Brief return (1992–1993)

After the end of apartheid in 1991, Formula One returned to Kyalami for two Grands Prix in 1992 and 1993. The 1992 event was dominated by Mansell and the 1993 running saw an intense battle between Prost, Ayrton Senna and Michael Schumacher, with Prost taking victory. In July 1993 Kyalami was sold to the South African Automobile Association, which managed to run the facility at a profit; however, running a Formula One event proved too costly and the Grand Prix did not return.

The only South African driver to win the South African Grand Prix was Jody Scheckter in 1975. British driver Jim Clark won it 4 times and Austrian driver Niki Lauda won 3 times.

Possibility of a return

In April 2018, The South African discussed the possibility of South Africa returning to the Formula One Grand Prix calendar with Adrian Scholtz, CEO of Motorsport South Africa. He said that the main obstacles are the high costs of hosting such an event and the fact that currently no South African racetrack fulfills the FIA requirements to host a Formula One race, although Kyalami comes close.[7]

Official names and sponsors

  • 1934: South Africa's First Grand Prix Motor Car Road Race
  • 1936–1937: S.A. Grand Prix
  • 1938–1939: South African Grand Prix
  • 1960: R.A.C. South African Grand Prix
  • 1960–1961: International R.A.C. South African Grand Prix
  • 1962–1963, 1965–1966: International R.A.C. Grand Prix of S.A.[8]
  • 1967–1973: A.A. Suid-Afrikaanse Grand Prix/Grand Prix of South Africa[9]
  • 1974–1975: Lucky Strike Suid-Afrikaanse Grand Prix/Grand Prix of South Africa[10]
  • 1976–1977: The Citizen Grand Prix of South Africa/Grand Prix van Suid-Afrika[11]
  • 1978: The Citizen and Asseng Grand Prix of South Africa[12]
  • 1979: Die Suid-Afrikaanse Simba Grand Prix/Simba Grand Prix of South Africa[13]
  • 1980: Die Suid-Afrikaanse Nashua Grand Prix/The South African Nashua Grand Prix[14]
  • 1981: Nashua Grand Prix
  • 1982: Quindrink/Pointerware S.A. Grand Prix
  • 1983, 1985: Southern Sun Hotels S.A. Grand Prix[15]
  • 1984: National Panasonic Grand Prix[16]
  • 1992: Yellow Pages South African Grand Prix[17]
  • 1993: Panasonic Grand Prix of South Africa[18]

Winners of the South African Grand Prix

Repeat winners (drivers)

A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship.

Wins Driver Years won
4 Jim Clark 1961, 1963, 1965, 1968
3 Niki Lauda 1976, 1977, 1984
2 Jackie Stewart 1969, 1973
Carlos Reutemann 1974, 1981
Nigel Mansell 1985, 1992
Alain Prost 1982, 1993

Repeat winners (constructors)

A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship.

Wins Constructor Years won[19]
6 Lotus 1961, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1978
4 Ferrari 1971, 1976, 1977, 1979
Williams 1981, 1985, 1992, 1993
2 Maserati 1934, 1939
Cooper 1960, 1967
Brabham 1970, 1983
Tyrrell 1973, 1975
Renault 1980, 1982
McLaren 1972, 1984

Repeat winners (engine manufacturers)

A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship.

Wins Manufacturer Years won[19]
8 Ford * 1968, 1969, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1981
5 Climax 1960, 1961, 1963, 1965, 1966
4 Ferrari 1971, 1976, 1977, 1979
Renault 1980, 1982, 1992, 1993
3 Maserati 1934, 1939, 1967

* Built by Cosworth

By year

A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship.

A map of both the locations of the South African Grand Prix
Year Driver Constructor Location Report
1934 Whitney Straight Maserati 8CM 3.0L East London Report
1935 Not held
1936 Mario Massacuratti Bugatti 35B East London Report
1937 Pat Fairfield ERA-B Report
1938 Buller Meyer Riley Report
1939 Luigi Villoresi Maserati 6CM Report
1940

1959
Not held
1960[20] Paul Frère Cooper-Climax East London Report
Stirling Moss Porsche Report
1961 Jim Clark Lotus-Climax Report
1962 Graham Hill BRM East London Report
1963 Jim Clark Lotus-Climax Report
1964 Not held
1965 Jim Clark Lotus-Climax East London Report
1966 Mike Spence Lotus-Climax East London Report
1967 Pedro Rodríguez Cooper-Maserati Kyalami Report
1968 Jim Clark Lotus-Ford Report
1969 Jackie Stewart Matra-Ford Report
1970 Jack Brabham Brabham-Ford Report
1971 Mario Andretti Ferrari Report
1972 Denny Hulme McLaren-Ford Report
1973 Jackie Stewart Tyrrell-Ford Report
1974 Carlos Reutemann Brabham-Ford Report
1975 Jody Scheckter Tyrrell-Ford Report
1976 Niki Lauda Ferrari Report
1977 Niki Lauda Ferrari Report
1978 Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford Report
1979 Gilles Villeneuve Ferrari Report
1980 René Arnoux Renault Report
1981 Carlos Reutemann Williams-Ford Report
1982 Alain Prost Renault Report
1983 Riccardo Patrese Brabham-BMW Report
1984 Niki Lauda McLaren-TAG Report
1985 Nigel Mansell Williams-Honda Report
1986

1991
Not held
1992 Nigel Mansell Williams-Renault Kyalami Report
1993 Alain Prost Williams-Renault Report

References

  1. AUTO RACING; [3 STAR Edition] Compiled from wire reports by Ken Paskman. Orlando Sentinel. Orlando, Fla.: 24 October 1985. pg. B.2
  2. The one that didn't count Retrieved from forix.autosport.com on 9 February 2010
  3. Martin, Gordon. "The Apartheid Controversy Reaches Formula 1 Racing". San Francisco Chronicle [FINAL Edition]. San Francisco, Calif.: 17 September 1985. pg. 63
  4. Walker, Rob. Road & Track. "Tiger, Tiger" New York: Feb 1986. Vol. 37, Iss. 6; pg. 122
  5. Newswire; [Home Edition 2] Los Angeles Times (pre-1997 Fulltext). Los Angeles, Calif.: 20 October 1985. pg. 20
  6. "Will South Africa ever host an F1 Grand Prix again?". The South African. 16 April 2018. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  7. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1963 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  8. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1967 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  9. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1975 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  10. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1976 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  11. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1978 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  12. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1979 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  13. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1980 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  14. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1985 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  15. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1984 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  16. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1992 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  17. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1993 Formula 1 Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project". www.progcovers.com.
  18. Official Formula One website. "1950 – present race results archives". Retrieved 23 August 2006.
  19. There were two South African Grands Prix in 1960. Reference
External video
South African Grand Prix, 1979. AP Archive – British Movietone News footage.
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