ESPNF1 Mobile
Switch Language
Popular: Jessica Michibata | F Alonso | Belgian GP home
  • 2010 Season
    • Calendar
    • Races
    • Circuits
    • Drivers
    • Teams
    • 2010 Standings
    • 2009 Season
    • Archive seasons
    • GP2
    • US Racing
  • Races
    • Bahrain (Mar 14)
    • Australia (Mar 28)
    • Malaysia (Apr 4)
    • China (Apr 18)
    • Spain (May 9)
    • Monaco (May 16)
    • Turkey (May 30)
    • Canada (Jun 13)
    • Europe (Jun 27)
    • Great Britain (Jul 11)
    • Germany (Jul 25)
    • Hungary (Aug 1)
    • Belgium (Aug 29)
    • Italy (Sep 12)
    • Singapore (Sep 26)
    • Japan (Oct 10)
    • Korea (Oct 24)
    • Brazil (Nov 7)
    • Abu Dhabi (Nov 14)
    • Search
  • Circuits
    • Albert Park (AUS)
    • Bahrain International (BAH)
    • Catalunya (ESP)
    • Gilles Villeneuve (CAN)
    • Hockenheim (GER)
    • Hungaroring (HUN)
    • Istanbul Park (TUR)
    • Interlagos (BRA)
    • Korean International (KOR)
    • Marina Bay (SIN)
    • Monaco (MON)
    • Monza (ITA)
    • Sepang International (MAS)
    • Shanghai International (CHN)
    • Silverstone (GBR)
    • Spa Francorchamps (BEL)
    • Suzuka (JPN)
    • Valencia (EUR)
    • Yas Marina (ABU)
    • Search
  • Teams
    • Ferrari
    • Force India
    • HRT
    • Lotus
    • McLaren
    • Mercedes
    • Red Bull
    • Renault
    • Sauber
    • Toro Rosso
    • Virgin
    • Williams
    • Search
  • Drivers
    • Jaime Alguersuari
    • Fernando Alonso
    • Rubens Barrichello
    • Sebastien Buemi
    • Jenson Button
    • Karun Chandhok
    • Pedro de la Rosa
    • Lucas di Grassi
    • Timo Glock
    • Lewis Hamilton
    • Nico Hulkenberg
    • Robert Kubica
    • Kamui Kobayashi
    • Heikki Kovalainen
    • Tonio Liuzzi
    • Vitaly Petrov
    • Nico Rosberg
    • Felipe Massa
    • Bruno Senna
    • Michael Schumacher
    • Adrian Sutil
    • Jarno Trulli
    • Sebastian Vettel
    • Mark Webber
    • Search
  • News
    • News index
    • RSS
  • Features
    • Features index
    • Stirling Moss
    • Top Ten
    • Laurence Edmondson
    • Martin Williamson
    • Ask Steven
    • GP Week
    • Rewind
    • On This Day
    • Quote Unquote
    • Paper Round
    • Editor's Blog
  • Photos
    • Photo index
    • Galleries
    • Pit Babes
    • Wallpapers
  • Statistics
    • Archive seasons
    • Drivers' Champions
    • Constructors' Champions
  • About F1
    • Rules & Regulations
    • History
    • Timeline
    • Glossary
  • Mobile

Japanese Grand Prix 2010

  • Japanese Grand Prix home
  • |
  • News
  • |
  • Features
  • |
  • Photos
  • |
  • Circuit
  • |
  • History

a history of the Japanese Grand Prix

The first Japanese Grand Prix was held in 1976 at the Fuji Speedway, 40 miles west of Yokohama. The race featured the title decider between James Hunt and Niki Lauda run in monsoon conditions. Lauda, who had not long returned after his near fatal accident at the German Grand Prix earlier in the year, withdrew from the race saying his life was more important than the championship. Hunt finished third to take the championship by one point.

Hunt won the race the following year, but the event was marked by tragedy. Gilles Villeneuve and Ronnie Peterson collided, sending Villeneuve's Ferrari somersaulting into a restricted area, killing two spectators. Following this the race was absent from the calendar for a decade.

F1 returned to Japan in 1987 at a new venue, the Suzuka circuit south west of Nagoya. Formerly used as a test track by Honda, Suzuka is the only figure-of-eight circuit on the calendar. The new venue saw yet another title decider, but Nigel Mansell was injured after crashing his Williams in practice, therefore ruling himself out of the race, allowing his team mate Nelson Piquet to win the title.

In 1989 Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna were battling for the championship; Senna tried to pass only to have Prost shut the door on him. The resulting crash saw Senna continue with help from the marshals, but Prost was beached. He was not upset though, believing he had clinched the championship anyway. Later, however, a stewards ruling disqualified him from the race for gaining an unfair advantage at the chicane. The following year the two clashed again on the first lap, sending them both spinning off and handing Senna his second championship.

Since its return to the calendar the Japanese Grand Prix has proved hugely popular with fans. A ballot was held for tickets for the 1990 race; three million spectators applied for the 120,000 available tickets.

In late 2006 it was announced that the event would return to the newly redesigned Fuji Speedway the following year - Fuji held the event in 2007 and 2008 but then it was decided that the race should alternate between the two tracks. However, in 2009 Fuji's owners Toyota decided they could no longer afford to host another grand prix due to the global economic crisis. The race enjoyed a much-celebrated return to Suzuka, a circuit that has always been popular with drivers, teams and spectators alike.

© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

Next Race

  • Japanese Grand Prix 2010
    October 10, 2010

Previous

  • Japanese Grand Prix 2009
    Winner S Vettel (GER) Red Bull
  • Japanese Grand Prix 2008
    Winner F Alonso (ESP) Renault
  • Japanese Grand Prix 2007
    Winner LC Hamilton (GBR) McLaren
Related Links
  • Race:
  • Japanese Grand Prix
  • Circuits:
  • Fuji Speedway
  • |
  • Suzuka Circuit
  • Facebook
  • GP Weekly

Sponsored Links

  • Get all the latest F1 news direct to your browser

    Install the ESPNF1 toolbar

  • The best online rugby union coverage

    On ESPNscrum

  • Live ball-by-ball cricket coverage

    ESPNcricinfo - the home of cricket

  • Follow the 2009/10 Premier League season

    On ESPNsoccernet

  • Site Map
  • RSS Feeds
  • Help and Feedback
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

CLOSE