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The 1973 United States Grand Prix was a Formula One race held on October 7, 1973 at the Watkins Glen Grand Prix Race Course in Watkins Glen, New York.

Summary[]

Ronnie Peterson ended his first year with Lotus by taking his fourth win of the season, as a thrilling two-man battle ended with Peterson beating James Hunt to the flag by the smallest winning margin in USGP history at that time. The Englishman finished less than a second behind in his Hesketh March, but the normal celebrations were tempered by the death of François Cevert during qualifying and the premature end of the career of three-time World Champion Jackie Stewart.

Death of François Cevert[]

Stewart had already clinched his third World Driver's Championship when the teams came to Watkins Glen, and he intended the final Grand Prix of 1973 to be his swan song. "I had decided in April that I would retire at the end of the season, win or lose," Stewart recalled. "Watkins Glen was going to be my last race in a Formula One car. François Cevert was going to be number one in the team for 1974, although he never knew it. Ken Tyrrell and I had kept it a secret that I was going to retire after that race. In fact, not even my wife, Helen, who was with me that weekend, knew."

With just a few minutes left in the Saturday morning qualifying session, however, the track suddenly fell quiet. Cevert had crashed violently in the uphill Esses heading onto the back of the circuit, between Turns Three and Four. Fighting the car as he went up the hill, Cevert ran too high on the kerbs and slid into the right hand guardrail. The car then lashed sideways across the track and struck the Armco on the left side of the track at 150 mph at an almost 90 degree angle. The nose of the car submarined into the ground, causing the car to flip upwards on over the barrier, coming to rest upside down on top of the Armco. Jody Scheckter's McLaren was close behind, and he stopped and rushed over to help Cevert out of the car, but Cevert had died instantly. Ken Tyrrell had lost a great driver and Jackie Stewart an outstanding teammate at the circuit where Cevert had taken his only Grand Prix win. "It was a horrendous accident which took the life of a wonderfully charming, personable, handsome young man, who was a tremendous friend to both Helen and me," Stewart said.

When qualifying resumed, Peterson's time from the morning session stood up for his ninth pole of the year. The Tyrrells of Stewart and Chris Amon had earned the fifth and twelfth spots on the grid, but the team decided to withdraw in tribute to Cevert, and Stewart's driving career was over after 99 races and an all-time record 27 Grand Prix wins.

Race[]

On Sunday, a huge crowd turned out on a cool, overcast day for the race. On the grid in seventh spot, Peter Revson felt his car creeping forward as the flag was raised. Rather than hold it with the brakes, he took it out of gear just as the flag dropped. He waved his arms in the air and waited for the field to roar past, then set off in last place.

The front runners got away well, and at the end of the first lap, Peterson led Carlos Reutemann, Hunt, Emerson Fittipaldi, Mike Hailwood and Scheckter. On lap 4, Hunt passed Reutemann for second, and began his chase of Peterson's Lotus. To the surprise of everyone as the race progressed, Hunt was able to stay around one second behind Peterson. Occasionally the gap would widen slightly, but again and again, the extreme straightline speed of the Hesketh March would close it again.

Reutemann kept pace as well, two to three seconds behind Hunt, until he lost nine seconds attempting to lap Graham Hill. From then on, he ran a lonely race to a third-place finish.

Revson, meanwhile, was rocketing through the field from his last place start, and at the midway point, he had gone from twenty-third to seventh. He took sixth from Emerson on lap 40 when the Brazilian pitted to replace his front tires that were flat-spotted when he had to avoid a spinning Scheckter.

For the last 15 laps, Hunt continued to follow Peterson, between .7 and 1.4 seconds behind. He pulled alongside at one point, but could not finish the pass. "I looked over at Ronnie, and he looked fiercer than me," he explained after the race.

Hunt had decided to bide his time until the final 10 laps, then make a bid to pass Peterson, but his car developed oversteer with a lightening fuel load. This kept him from taking the final corner before the back straight flat out, and effectively took away his speed advantage. He maintained the challenge to the flag, however, and his next to last lap was the race's fastest. Peterson's winning margin of .688 seconds was the smallest in USGP history until 2002.

Reutemann had to weave to the line, virtually out of fuel, but held on to third; Denny Hulme ran a steady race to fourth; Revson made it up to fifth with his splendid drive from the dead last; and Emerson Fittipaldi took sixth after having to stop for tires. With both cars in the points, John Player Team Lotus captured the Constructor's Championship, despite Stewart's Driver's title for Tyrrell.

Classification[]

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 2 25px Sweden Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford 59 1:41:15.779 1 9
2 27 25px UK James Hunt March-Ford 59 + 0.668 4 6
3 10 25px Argentina Carlos Reutemann Brabham-Ford 59 + 22.930 2 4
4 7 25px New Zealand Denny Hulme McLaren-Ford 59 + 50.226 8 3
5 8 25px USA Peter Revson McLaren-Ford 59 + 1:20.367 7 2
6 1 25px Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Lotus-Ford 59 + 1:47.945 3 1
7 26 25px Belgium Jacky Ickx Iso Marlboro-Ford 58 + 1 Lap 23  
8 19 25px Switzerland Clay Regazzoni BRM 58 + 1 Lap 15  
9 20 25px France Jean-Pierre Beltoise BRM 58 + 1 Lap 14  
10 15 25px UK Mike Beuttler March-Ford 58 + 1 Lap 26  
11 18 25px France Jean-Pierre Jarier March-Ford 57 Accident 17  
12 25 25px New Zealand Howden Ganley Iso Marlboro-Ford 57 + 2 Laps 19  
13 12 25px UK Graham Hill Shadow-Ford 57 + 2 Laps 18  
14 16 25px USA George Follmer Shadow-Ford 57 + 2 laps 20  
15 17 25px UK Jackie Oliver Shadow-Ford 55 + 4 laps 22  
16 4 25px Italy Arturo Merzario Ferrari 55 + 4 Laps 11  
NC 11 25px Brazil Wilson Fittipaldi Brabham-Ford 52 Not Classified 25  
Ret 0 25px South Africa Jody Scheckter McLaren-Ford 39 Suspension 10  
Ret 30 25px Germany Jochen Mass Surtees-Ford 35 Engine 16  
Ret 21 25px Austria Niki Lauda BRM 35 Fuel Pump 21  
Ret 23 25px UK Mike Hailwood Surtees-Ford 34 Suspension 6  
Ret 24 25px Brazil Carlos Pace Surtees-Ford 32 suspension 9  
Ret 9 25px UK John Watson Brabham-Ford 7 Engine 24  
DSQ 31 25px UK Brian Redman Shadow-Ford 5 Received outside assistance 13  
Ret 28 LIE Rikky von Opel Ensign-Ford 0 Throttle 27  
WD 5 25px UK Jackie Stewart Tyrrell-Ford 0 Withdrew 5  
WD 29 25px New Zealand Chris Amon Tyrrell-Ford 0 Withdrew 12  
DNS 6 25px France François Cevert Tyrrell-Ford   Fatal Accident    

Notes[]

  • Tyrrell's withdrawal handed Lotus the Constructor's Championship.

Standings after the race[]

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 25px UK Jackie Stewart 71
2 25px Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi 55
3 25px Sweden Ronnie Peterson 52
4 25px France François Cevert 47
5 25px USA Peter Revson 38
Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 25px UK Lotus-Ford 92 (96)
2 25px UK Tyrrell-Ford 82 (86)
3 25px UK McLaren-Ford 58
4 25px UK Brabham-Ford 22
5 25px UK March-Ford 14
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings. Only the best 7 results from the first 8 races and the best 6 results from the last 7 races counted towards the Championship. Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.


References[]

  • Doug Nye (1978). The United States Grand Prix and Grand Prize Races, 1908-1977. B. T. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-1263-1
  • "15th U.S. Grand Prix: Easy One For Ronnie". (January, 1974). Road & Track, 64-67.



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1973 Canadian Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1973 season
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1974 Argentine Grand Prix
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1972 United States Grand Prix
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1974 United States Grand Prix
Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at 1973 United States Grand Prix. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Autopedia, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.


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