CIRCUIT PAUL RICARD

Circuit Paul Ricard

CIRCUIT PAGE
03/01/2022

CIRCUIT DIAGRAM

DETAILS

Circuit Paul Ricard

Circuit Paul Ricard
RDN8 2760
Route des Hauts du Camp
83 330 Le Castellet
France

Tel: +33 (0)494 983 666

Fax:

Official website:
www.circuitpaulricard.com

STATISTICS (PRIOR TO 2022)

Length:

5.842km (3.630miles)

Race laps:

60

2021 winner:

Max Verstappen (Red Bull)

Configuration:

Clockwise

First GP:

1971

Lap record:

1:32.740 (Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari, 2019)

Type:

Permanent Circuit

Total races:

17

BIOGRAPHY

Built by the pastis drink magnate, Paul Ricard, when this 3.610-mile circuit opened in 1970 it was state of the art so far as facilities were concerned. Unfortunately it was also flat and featureless, unlike the circuits at Rouen and Clermont-Ferrand which were real road circuits.

Its innovative facilities made it one of the safest motor racing circuits in the world at the time of its opening, the circuit comprising three layout permutations, a large industrial park and an airstrip. Indeed, the combination of modern facilities, mild winter weather and airstrip made it popular amongst racing teams for car testing during the annual winter off-season.

Located at Le Castellet in southern France it was chiefly notable for the mile-long Mistral Straight, the longest flat-out stretch in modern motor racing, and that was followed by the fast and demanding Signes corner before it became a bit Micky Mouse.
Still, it first hosted the French GP in 1971 and was the home of the race for 20 years.
The Mistral Straight and other fast sections made the track hard on engines as they ran at full revs for extended spells and failures were common, such as Ayrton Senna’s huge crash during the 1985 French Grand Prix after the Renault engine in his Lotus failed and he went off backwards at Signes on his own oil and crashed heavily, fortunately with only light bruising to the driver.
Nigel Mansell crashed at the same place on the same weekend during practice and suffered a concussion which kept him out of the race, though his crash was the result of a slow puncture in his left rear tyre causing it to explode at over 200 mph, which detached his Williams FW10’s rear wing.
The Honda powered FW10 holds the race lap record for the original circuit when Mansell’s teammate Keke Rosberg recorded a time of 1:39.914 during the 1985 French Grand Prix. During qualifying for the 1985 race, Swiss driver Marc Surer clocked what was at the time the highest speed recorded by a Formula One car on the Mistral when he pushed his turbocharged, 1,000 bhp Brabham-BMW to 210 mph (338 km/h). This compared to the slowest car in the race, the 550 bhp naturally aspirated Tyrrell-Ford V8 of Stefan Bellof which could only manage 172 mph (277 km/h). Not surprisingly, Bellof qualified 9 seconds slower than Surer and 12 seconds slower than pole winner Rosberg.
During the 1970s and the 1980s the track developed some of the best French drivers of the time including four time world champion Alain Prost who won the French Grand Prix at the circuit in 1983, 1988, 1989 and 1990.
Extensively used for testing, in 1986, Brabham driver Elio de Angelis was killed in a testing accident at the fast first turn after the rear wing of his BT55 broke off.
Although the circuit was not the cause of the crash, it was modified in order to make it safer. Amongst the modifications, the length of the Mistral Straight was reduced from 1.8 km in length to just over 1 km, and the fast sweeping Verierre curves where de Angelis had crashed were bypassed.
This meant that instead of heading into the left-hand Verierre, cars now braked hard and turned sharp right into a short run that connected the pit straight to the Mistral. This changed the circuit length for a Grand Prix from 3.61 miles (5.81 km) to just 2.369 miles (3.812 km). It also had the effect of cutting lap times from Keke Rosberg’s 1985 pole time of 1:32.462 to Nigel Mansell’s 1990 pole time of 1:04.402.
The last French Grand Prix held at the circuit was in 1990, at which point the event moved to Magny Cours, partly as a result of political pressure in France.
Paul Ricard hosted the French Grand Prix on 14 occasions between 1971 and 1990. The long circuit was used from 1971-1985, with the club circuit used from 1986-1990.
On six occasions (1971, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1980 and 1989) the winner at Paul Ricard went on to win the World Championship in the same year. Ronnie Peterson (1973 and 1974) and Rene Arnoux (1982) are the only Ricard winners who never won the championship.
In the 1990s the circuit’s use was limited to motorcycle racing and French national racing, most notably until 1999, the Bol d’or 24-hour motorcycle endurance race. The track was also the home of the Oreca F3000 team.
After Paul Ricard’s death, the track was sold to Excelis, a company owned by Bernie Ecclestone in 1999. The track was subsequently rebuilt into an advanced test track, and was for a time known as the Paul Ricard High Tech Test Track (Paul Ricard HTTT) before changing its name back to Circuit Paul Ricard.
Among the facilities is the aircraft landing strip suitable for private jets and a Karting Test Track (KTT) that features the same type of abrasive safety zones as the car track.
The track has also hosted some races, including the 2006 Paul Ricard 500km, a round of the FIA GT Championship. Other GT championships have run races here, most notably the Ferrari Challenge and races organized by Porsche clubs of France and Italy.
In December 2016, it was announced that the French Grand Prix would return to the calendar for the 2018 season and would be held at Paul Ricard. This would be the first French Grand Prix since 2008 (held at Magny-Cours) and the first at Paul Ricard since 1990.
On 19 June 2017, the FIA’s World Motor Sport Council published its 2018 provisional calendar with the French Grand Prix scheduled for 24 June with the race followed immediately by the Austrian and British Grands Prix, thereby giving the sport its first triple-header.
In preparation, Pirelli ran three tests at the track between May and September as Red Bull and Mercedes tried out the Italian manufacturer’s 2018 compounds.
The track offers 167 possible configurations from 826 to 5,861 metres, with elevation ranging from 408 to 441 metres above sea level.
Known for its distinctive black and blue run-off areas the surface consists of a mixture of asphalt and tungsten, used instead of gravel traps, as common at other circuits. There follows a second, deeper run-off area with a more abrasive surface designed to maximize tyre grip and hence minimize braking distance, although at the cost of extreme tyre wear and finally Tecpro barriers
Fast Facts – Provided by the FIA
2018 marked the 59th running of the Formula One World Championship French Grand Prix. The race is one of the orginal rounds of the World Championship and has been held from 1950 to 1954 and 1956 to 2008. The 1955 race was cancelled following the Le Mans disaster. The event returns this year after a 10-year hiatus, the previous French Grand Prix being the 2008 race contested at Magny-Cours.
This is the 15th French Grand Prix to be held at the Circuit Paul Ricard. The race first came here in 1971, returning in 1973, 1975-6, 1978, 1980, 1982-3, 1985-1990. The events between 1971 and 1985 were held on the original 5.810km course and the races 1986-1990 on a shortened 3.813km circuit.
The French Grand Prix has also been held at Reims (1950-51, 1953-54, 1956, 1958-61, 1963, 1966), Rouen (1952, 1957, 1962, 1964, 1968), Clermont-Ferrand (1965, 1969-70, 1972), Le Mans (1967), Dijon (1974, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1984) and Magny-Cours (1991-2008).
Michael Schumacher is the most successful French Grand Prix driver with eight wins. Ferrari are far ahead of the field as a constructor with 17 victories, including the last three races of the previous era. It only has two victories at Ricard, however, and trails McLaren and Williams who both have three victories at this circuit.
Both of Ferrari’s wins at the Circuit Paul Ricard were scored by drivers that are now senior management figures at rival teams: Niki Lauda in 1975 and Alain Prost in 1990.
Alain Prost is the most successful driver at Ricard. He took four of his six French Grand Prix victories at this circuit. His wins were split between three different manufacturers, victorious for Renault in 1983, McLaren in 1988 and 1989, and finally with Ferrari.
There are two French Grand Prix winners in the 2018 field: Fernando Alonso won the race in 2005 for Renault, and Kimi Raikkonen in 2007 for Ferrari – both of them on the way to winning the Drivers’ World Championship. Alonso and Raikkonen are also the only drivers in the current field to have started the French Grand Prix from pole position: Alonso in 2004 and 2005, Raikkonen in 2008.
Pole has conferred a small advantage at Ricard in the past, with eight of the 14 previous races won from P1 on the grid. The third row is the furthest back a winner has started: Ronnie Peterson (1973) and Nelson Piquet (1985) were both victorious from P5.
Victory for Fernando Alonso at the Le Mans 24 Hours round of the FIA World Endurance Championship last weekend makes him one of three Le Mans winners in the French Grand Prix field this year, the others being Nico Hulkenberg (2015), and Brendon Hartley (2017).
While F1 has not raced at Ricard for over a quarter of a century, most of the drivers on the grid are familiar with the venue – albeit not necessarily with the grand prix track configuration. Pirelli has made extensive use of the circuit in recent years for both wet and slick tyre tests with Ferrari, Mercedes, Red Bull and McLaren participating, and the circuit is also widely used for WEC testing. Carlos Sainz (twice) and Kevin Magnussen have both won here in Formula Renault 3.5, while Pierre GaslyEsteban Ocon and Stoffel Vandoorne have all won in the Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 series.
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