1994 F1RGP2C Monaco Grand Prix

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Flag of Monaco svg.png 1994 F1RGP2C Monaco Grand Prix
Race 4 of 16 in the 1994 F1RGP2C season
Montecarlo 1986.jpg
Date May 14, 1994
Official Name I F1RGP2C Monaco Grand Prix
Location Circuit de Monaco, Monaco
Course Street Circuit
3.328 km (2.068 mi)
Distance 78 laps, 259.584 km (161.298 mi)
Weather Sunny
Pole Position
Driver Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Jack Christopherson Williams-Renault
Time 1:16.776
Fastest Lap
Driver Flag of Canada.svg.png Daniel Moreno Williams-Renault
Time 1:19.079
Podium
First Flag of Australia svg.png John Zimmer Benetton-Ford
Second Flag of Japan svg.png Kazuhiko Takagi Benetton-Ford
Third Flag of Germany svg.png Leonhard von Gottorp Jordan-Hart


The 1994 F1RGP2C Monaco Grand Prix was the fourth round of the 1994 F1RGP2C season. The race was won by John Zimmer driving for Benetton, his first win in the series and the fourth different winner in four races.

Race Report

Qualifying

Jack Christopherson blasted into pole position by nearly seven tenths over John Zimmer's Benetton, setting the time early in the first qualifying session. Daniel Moreno qualified third in the second Williams and Tom Douglas qualified fourth in the McLaren. Pablo da Silva and James Davies qualified seventh and eighth for Sauber, ahead of Kazuhiko Takagi in the second Benetton.

Race

Christopherson blasted off the line into the lead as the field streamed into Sainte Devote. Zimmer and Moreno held station in second and third but Douglas Mann swapped places with his teammate and took fourth. Padraig O'Connell made up two positions in the Ferrari until he was trapped behind his teammate Rory McAllister. Christopherson pulled out a three second lead after four laps over Zimmer and Moreno. A train of cars formed behind Douglas Mann as Tom Douglas, McAllister, O'Connell, James Davies and Takagi all ran nose-to-tail. This being Monaco, however, no cars were able to pass. George Tramontani retired on Lap 7 with a water leak. Christopherson continued to dominate the race from the lead; by Lap 13, he had a six second lead over John Zimmer and by Lap 15, it had increased to nearly eight seconds. Unfortunately, fate cruelly intervened on the behalf of Zimmer and Benetton. Christopherson picked up a puncture on Lap 16, knocking him out of the race as the deflating tyre heavily damaged his suspension. Zimmer assumed the lead followed closely by Moreno with the Mann train a further 15 seconds back. A few laps later, Masta Valsattis' Ford engine let go, sending the Latvian out of the race.

On Lap 21, Tom Douglas became the fourth driver to go out of the race, pulling off with a terminal suspension failure. Kazuyoshi Hoshino followed him into retirement one lap later. Douglas Mann's wheel failed on Lap 29. Suddenly, both McLarens had fallen out of the points within the span of ten laps which elevated Davies and Takagi into the top six. Further back, Poppy Whitechapel held up Moreno, Davies and the Ferraris as her one-stop strategy played itself out. Between Laps 36 and 37, both Ferraris, Dennis Mignolet and Gio van Dycke all pulled off with mechanical problems. It was a tremendous disappointment for Ferrari as both of their cars were running in the points at the time. James Davies was the next major reitrement as his front suspension failed upon exiting the tunnel. Éadbhard Ó'Caoimhín's quest for points was halted after his transmission failed on Lap 46.

Meanwhile, the battle for the lead continued to rage. Moreno was stuck behind Zimmer until the first round of fuel stops, after which he got by the Benetton. After holding the lead for a while, Zimmer retook the lead after the second round of stops. However, this was all for naught as Moreno's suspension failed on Lap 55. Whitechapel's Tyrrell bit the dust with a suspension failure two laps after that while she was in the points. Then Pieter Kickert suffered the same fate three laps after Whitechapel. The rampant attrition left Zimmer to win the race. His teammate Kazuhiko Takagi finished in second place, his first podium and finish in the series, as Benetton completed the first 1-2 in the F1RGP2C's history. Leonhard von Gottorp and Pablo da Silva also survived the madness to take third ad fourth respectively. Max von Hegel finished in a surprising fifth place for Footwork. However, the even bigger surprise came from Pippa Mann who captured a point for the Simtek team by finishing in sixth place after starting twenty-fifth on the grid. Mann's sixth place would turn out to be Simtek's only points over their two years of competition.

Standings after the race

  • Bold text indicates who still has a theoretical chance of becoming World Champion.
Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Jack Christopherson 16
2 Flag of Australia svg.png John Zimmer 14
3 Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Tom Douglas 12
=4 Flag of Ireland svg.png Padraig O'Connell 10
=4 Flag of Germany svg.png Leonhard von Gottorp 10
Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Williams-Renault 25
2 Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Benetton-Ford 20
3 Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png McLaren-Peugeot 17
4 Flag of Ireland svg.png Jordan-Hart 14
5 Flag of Italy svg.png Ferrari 13
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.
Previous race:
1994 San Marino Grand Prix
Formula 1 Rejects Grand Prix 2 Championship
1994 Season
Next race:
1994 Spanish Grand Prix
Previous race:
None
Monaco Grand Prix Next race:
1995 Monaco Grand Prix