1955 Monaco Grand Prix

Coordinates: 43°44′4.74″N 7°25′16.8″E / 43.7346500°N 7.421333°E / 43.7346500; 7.421333

Monaco  1955 Monaco Grand Prix
Race details
Date May 22, 1955
Official name XIII Grand Prix Automobile de Monaco
Location Circuit de Monaco
Course Street circuit
Course length 3.145 km (1.955 mi)
Distance 100 laps, 314.5 km (195.5 mi)
Pole position
Driver Mercedes
Time 1:41.1
Fastest lap
Driver Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio Mercedes
Time 1:42.4
Podium
First Ferrari
Second Lancia
Third Maserati

The 1955 Monaco Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Monaco on May 22, 1955. It was race 2 of 7 in the 1955 World Championship of Drivers and was given an honorary name, Grand Prix d'Europe.[1] The 100-lap race was won by Ferrari driver Maurice Trintignant after he started from ninth position. Eugenio Castellotti finished second for the Lancia team and Maserati drivers Jean Behra and Cesare Perdisa came in third.

Race report

Stirling Moss had been signed by Mercedes for the new season and Maserati had replaced him with Jean Behra. The Silver Arrows of Fangio and Moss dominated, running 1-2 until half distance, trailed by Ascari and Castellotti. At the halfway mark, Fangio retired with transmission trouble,[2] giving the lead to Moss. Almost a lap ahead, a seemingly sure win for Moss was ended on Lap 80 when his Benz's engine blew.[2] The new leader Ascari got it all wrong at the chicane coming out of the tunnel, his Lancia crashing through the barriers into the harbour so that he had to swim to safety. Maurice Trintignant, in a Ferrari 625 thought to be uncompetitive, inherited the lead and scored his first Formula One victory.[2]

Mercedes driver Hans Herrmann injured himself in practice and was replaced by André Simon.

This race marked the Grand Prix debut for Cesare Perdisa. It was the only Grand Prix appearance for Ted Whiteaway. This was the last Grand Prix appearance for Alberto Ascari; he was killed four days later testing a Ferrari sports car at Monza.

It was the first win for Maurice Trintignant and Englebert tyres. It was also the first podium and points for Eugenio Castellotti and Cesare Perdisa, and the first win for a French driver.[3][4]

Classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 44 France Maurice Trintignant Ferrari 100 2:58:09.8 9 8
2 30 Italy Eugenio Castellotti Lancia 100 +20.2 secs 4 6
3 34 France Jean Behra
Italy Cesare Perdisa
Maserati 99 +1 lap 5 2
2
4 42 Italy Nino Farina Ferrari 99 +1 lap 14 3
5 28 Italy Luigi Villoresi Lancia 99 +1 lap 7 2
6 32 Monaco Louis Chiron Lancia 95 +5 Laps 19
7 10 France Jacques Pollet Gordini 91 +9 laps 20
8 48 Italy Piero Taruffi
Belgium Paul Frère
Ferrari 86 +14 laps 15
9 6 United Kingdom Stirling Moss Mercedes 81 +19 laps 3
Ret 40 Italy Cesare Perdisa
France Jean Behra
Maserati 86 Spun off 11
Ret 26 Italy Alberto Ascari Lancia 80 Accident 2
Ret 46 United States Harry Schell Ferrari 68 Engine 18
Ret 36 Argentina Roberto Mieres Maserati 64 Transmission 6
Ret 12 France Élie Bayol Gordini 63 Transmission 16
Ret 2 Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio Mercedes 49 Transmission 1 1
Ret 8 France Robert Manzon Gordini 38 Gearbox 13
Ret 4 France André Simon Mercedes 24 Engine 10
Ret 18 United Kingdom Mike Hawthorn Vanwall 22 Throttle 12
Ret 14 France Louis Rosier Maserati 8 Fuel leak 17
Ret 38 Italy Luigi Musso Maserati 7 Transmission 8
DNQ 22 United Kingdom Lance Macklin Maserati
DNQ 24 United Kingdom Ted Whiteaway HWM-Alta
DNQ 4 Germany Hans Herrmann Mercedes Driver injured
Source:[5]

Lap leaders

Juan Manuel Fangio (49 laps), Stirling Moss (31 laps), and Maurice Trintignant (20 laps).

Shared drives

Summary

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 1 France Maurice Trintignant 11 13
1 2 Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio 10
1 3 Italy Nino Farina 6 13
10 4 Italy Eugenio Castellotti 6
1 5 Argentina José Froilán González 2

References

  1. Kettlewell, Mike. "Monaco: Road Racing on the Riviera", in Northey, Tom, editor. World of Automobiles (London: Orbis, 1974), Volume 12, p.1383.
  2. 1 2 3 Kettlewell, p.1383.
  3. Williamson, Martin. "Maurice Trintignant". EPSN F1. ESPN EMEA Ltd. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
  4. "Drivers: Maurice Trintignant". GrandPrix.com. Inside F1, Inc. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
  5. "1955 Monaco Grand Prix". formula1.com. Archived from the original on 4 November 2014. Retrieved 9 August 2015.
Previous race:
1955 Argentine Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1955 season
Next race:
1955 Indianapolis 500
Previous race:
1952 Monaco Grand Prix
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1956 Monaco Grand Prix
Previous race:
1954 German Grand Prix
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(Designated European Grand Prix)
Next race:
1956 Italian Grand Prix
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