1980 Formula One season








1980 FIA Formula One
World Championship


Drivers' Champion: Alan Jones
Constructors' Champion: Williams-Ford
Previous:1979Next:1981
  • Races by country

  • Races by season

The 1980 Formula One season was the 34th season of FIA Formula One motor racing. It featured the 1980 World Championship of Drivers and the 1980 International Cup for F1 Constructors,[1] which were contested concurrently from 13 January to 5 October over a fourteen-race series.[2] The season also included one non-championship race, the Spanish Grand Prix.[3]


Alan Jones, driving a Williams-Ford, became the first Australian to win the World Championship since Jack Brabham in 1966. The season saw a major change of guard in Formula One with the Williams team's first Drivers' and Constructors' titles, the emergence of Nelson Piquet as a championship contender and the debut of Alain Prost, while reigning champions Jody Scheckter and Ferrari suffered a terrible season that resulted in Scheckter retiring from the sport at the end of the year. In addition, Frenchman Patrick Depailler lost his life while testing at Hockenheim.




Contents





  • 1 Drivers and constructors


  • 2 Season summary

    • 2.1 Round 1: Argentina


    • 2.2 Round 2: Brazil


    • 2.3 Round 3: South Africa


    • 2.4 Round 4: United States West


    • 2.5 Round 5: Belgium


    • 2.6 Round 6: Monaco


    • 2.7 Non-championship race: Spain


    • 2.8 Round 7: France


    • 2.9 Round 8: Great Britain


    • 2.10 Round 9: West Germany


    • 2.11 Round 10: Austria


    • 2.12 Round 11: The Netherlands


    • 2.13 Round 12: Italy


    • 2.14 Round 13: Canada


    • 2.15 Round 14: United States East



  • 3 Results and standings

    • 3.1 Grands Prix

      • 3.1.1 Calendar changes



    • 3.2 World Drivers' Championship – final standings


    • 3.3 International Cup for F1 Constructors – final standings


    • 3.4 Non-championship race results



  • 4 Notes and references


  • 5 External links




Drivers and constructors




Australian driver Alan Jones won the Drivers' Championship, driving for the Williams team.




Brazilian Nelson Piquet, driving for the Brabham team, finished runner-up to Jones.




Jones's Williams teammate, Argentine Carlos Reutemann, placed third.


The following drivers and constructors contested the 1980 World Championship of Drivers and the 1980 International Cup for F1 Constructors.





























































































































































































































Entrant
Constructor
Chassis
Engine
Tyres
No
Driver
Rounds

Italy Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC

Ferrari

312T5

Ferrari 015 3.0 F12

M
1

South Africa Jody Scheckter
All
2

Canada Gilles Villeneuve
All

United Kingdom Candy Team Tyrrell

Tyrrell-Ford

009
010

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
3

France Jean-Pierre Jarier
All
4

Republic of Ireland Derek Daly
All
43

New Zealand Mike Thackwell
13–14

United Kingdom Parmalat Racing Team

Brabham-Ford

BT49

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
5

Brazil Nelson Piquet
All
6

Argentina Ricardo Zunino
1–7

Mexico Héctor Rebaque
8–14

United Kingdom Marlboro Team McLaren

McLaren-Ford

M29B
M29C
M30

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
7

United Kingdom John Watson
All
8

France Alain Prost
1–3, 5–14

United Kingdom Stephen South
4

West Germany Team ATS

ATS-Ford

D3
D4

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
9

Switzerland Marc Surer
1–3, 7–14

Netherlands Jan Lammers
4–6
10

Netherlands Jan Lammers
1–3

Austria Harald Ertl
9

United Kingdom Team Essex Lotus

Lotus-Ford

81
81B

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
11

United States Mario Andretti
All
12

Italy Elio de Angelis
All
43

United Kingdom Nigel Mansell
10–12

United Kingdom Unipart Racing Team

Ensign-Ford

N180

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
14

Switzerland Clay Regazzoni
1–4

United Kingdom Tiff Needell
5–6

Netherlands Jan Lammers
7–14
41

United Kingdom Geoff Lees
11–12

France Equipe Renault Elf

Renault

RE20

Renault-Gordini EF1 1.5 V6t

M
15

France Jean-Pierre Jabouille
1–13
16

France René Arnoux
All

United Kingdom Theodore Shadow
United Kingdom Shadow Cars

Shadow-Ford

DN11
DN12

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
17

Sweden Stefan Johansson
1–2

United Kingdom Geoff Lees
3–7
18

Republic of Ireland David Kennedy
1–7

Brazil Skol Fittipaldi Team

Fittipaldi-Ford

F7
F8

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
20

Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi
All
21

Finland Keke Rosberg
All

Italy Marlboro Team Alfa Romeo

Alfa Romeo

179

Alfa Romeo 1260 3.0 V12

G
22

France Patrick Depailler
1–8

Italy Vittorio Brambilla
11–12

Italy Andrea de Cesaris
13–14
23

Italy Bruno Giacomelli
All

France Equipe Ligier Gitanes

Ligier-Ford

JS11/15

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
25

France Didier Pironi
All
26

France Jacques Laffite
All

United Kingdom Albilad Williams Racing Team

Williams-Ford

FW07
FW07B

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
27

Australia Alan Jones
All
28

Argentina Carlos Reutemann
All

United Kingdom Warsteiner Arrows Racing Team

Arrows-Ford

A3

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
29

Italy Riccardo Patrese
All
30

West Germany Jochen Mass
1–10, 13–14

New Zealand Mike Thackwell
11

West Germany Manfred Winkelhock
12

Italy Osella Squadra Corse

Osella-Ford

FA1
FA1B

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
31

United States Eddie Cheever
All

United Kingdom Brands Hatch Racing

Williams-Ford

FW07

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
43

South Africa Desiré Wilson
8

United Kingdom RAM – Penthouse Rizla Racing
United Kingdom RAM – Rainbow Jeans Racing
United Kingdom RAM – Williams Grand Prix Engineering

Williams-Ford

FW07

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

G
50

United Kingdom Rupert Keegan
8–14
51

United States Kevin Cogan
13

United Kingdom Geoff Lees
14


Season summary



Round 1: Argentina


The 1980 Formula One season started in Argentina in January. This event, held at the Buenos Aires Municipal Autodrome located in the sprawling Argentine capital started off badly. After Friday's practice, due to the heat and the suction these ground-effect cars were creating, the track began to break up, and the drivers found conditions difficult and even dangerous. Led by Emerson Fittipaldi, the drivers staged a semi-unsuccessful protest – the organizers did actually fix the track, but not successfully – come race day, the track was still in a dreadful condition. The race went ahead anyway, and the Buenos Aires circuit, being one of the most varied and challenging circuits on the calendar, provided an ultra-exciting race, where many drivers were caught-out by the disintegration of the twisty arena infield section of the No.15 variant of the racing facility. After going off twice and dropping back to 4th after making a pit-stop to clean grass out of his car's radiators, Australian and title favorite Alan Jones took victory in his Williams-Ford/Cosworth. Brazilian Nelson Piquet, who also went off a few times finished 2nd, and Finn Keke Rosberg scored an excellent 3rd in his Fittipaldi. French rookie Alain Prost, in his first ever F1 race, finished 6th and scored his first ever World Championship point. Gilles Villeneuve, competitive throughout in his Ferrari, crashed heavily at the Toboggan left-right sequence of corners after his front suspension failed after possible damage caused to it after a number of off-track excursions the Canadian had during the race.



Round 2: Brazil


The other half of the South American January tour took place in Brazil. This meeting was also met with pre-race difficulties. The safety conditions of the very difficult, demanding and confined 5-mile Interlagos circuit located in the steel-making metropolis of São Paulo had been heavily protested by the drivers for some time, led by South African Ferrari driver Jody Scheckter. The original arrangement was that this Grand Prix was originally supposed to be held at the Jacarepaguá circuit in Rio de Janeiro, and then the drivers would return to Interlagos for 1981 after it would go through a complete resurfacing; but the Jacarepaguá circuit had problems with the tarmac sinking into the ground, so the only option was to return to São Paulo. The drivers protested that the Interlagos track's surface (already notorious for being very rough) was so bad that it was actually dangerous to race on. Also, the barriers and catch-fence arrangements were not adequate enough to protect the cars from the embankments and very rough and uneven-surface of the limited run-off areas there, even though the track was very wide in most places. But the race went ahead anyway, and the Renault of Frenchman Jean-Pierre Jabouille took pole and led for 25 of 40 laps. The Renaults proved to be dominant at Interlagos, which was 2,840 ft (850 m) above sea level, giving the turbocharged Renault engines a considerable horsepower advantage. But he retired with turbo failure and his teammate Rene Arnoux took the lead and won, followed by Italian new-boy Elio de Angelis in a Lotus and Jones in his Williams.



Round 3: South Africa


The GP circus arrived in South Africa in March, at the fast Kyalami circuit between Johannesburg and Pretoria in the midst of an African summer. Alain Prost crashed his McLaren at the Esses and broke his wrist; he would miss this and the next race in Long Beach; while Marc Surer had it worse – he crashed heavily at Crowthorne and broke his leg; he missed the next 3 races. Like Interlagos before, the even higher altitude of Kyalami helped the Renaults even more so than in Brazil, and this proved to be an invaluable advantage, and the yellow French cars dominated the race. And as in São Paulo, Jabouille led for a while and retired, and Arnoux took the lead from 2nd place and won the race. However, this race effectively brought the FISA–FOCA war into the spotlight. FISA, the governing body of international motorsports (and the organization that the 3 big constructors – Renault, Ferrari and Alfa Romeo – were aligned to) led by Jean-Marie Balestre, argued that the ground effect cars of the time were too fast through corners, and FOCA (Formula One Constructors' Association, representing the mostly British independent constructors) led by Bernie Ecclestone and Max Mosley, argued that the superior road-holding of the independent teams' cars equalized their cars to the power advantages that particularly the Renaults had.



Round 4: United States West


A stop-over in Long Beach, California right next to the Hollywood-dominated landscape of Los Angeles happened 4 weeks after the South African race. The typically pleasant and sunny weather there gave for a relaxed atmosphere at this tight, twisty and rough street circuit (1 of 2 on the calendar – the other being Monaco) which was in contrast to the previous 3 quick Southern Hemisphere circuits used thus far in the season. With its tight, slow layout being lined with totally unforgiving concrete walls, Long Beach was often known then to be the toughest and most punishing race of the season on the car and driver, and often produced tough, grueling and long but exciting races; however, this race was not to be as exciting as one would have hoped. Nelson Piquet effectively dominated this long, gruelling race in his Brabham-Ford/Cosworth – he took pole, set fastest lap and led from start to finish and took his first of 23 race victories. But the race itself was littered with accidents – there was a pile-up at the Le Gasomet hairpin and the 40-year-old Swiss Clay Regazzoni crashed appallingly at the end of the long, flat-out Shoreline Drive when the brakes on his Ensign failed and he crashed head on at 180 mph into Ricardo Zunino's parked Brabham, then through some tires and into a concrete wall. The Swiss was critically injured, but survived; he would be paralyzed from the waist down for the rest of his life.



Round 5: Belgium


The cancellation of the Mexican Grand Prix, supposed to have taken place 2 weeks after Long Beach created a 5-week gap between Long Beach and the Belgian Grand Prix. The F1 circus started its 4-month long European tour at Zolder, where Frenchman Didier Pironi took his first ever victory in his Ligier-Ford/Cosworth ahead of Alan Jones and his Argentinean teammate Carlos Reutemann.



Round 6: Monaco


The classic street race in Monaco provided some excitement: there was a big pile-up at the start, where Derek Daly went flying twice over a number of cars at the first corner. He took out Prost in a McLaren, his teammate Jean-Pierre Jarier and Bruno Giacomelli in an Alfa. Didier Pironi led and crashed, and Carlos Reutemann took the lead and won from Frenchman Jacques Laffite in a Ligier-Ford/Cosworth and Piquet in a Brabham.



Non-championship race: Spain


The Spanish Grand Prix at the tight and twisty Jarama circuit near Madrid ended up losing its championship status after Jean-Marie Balestre announced on morning of Friday's practice (in an attempt to put FOCA in their place after drivers driving for FOCA-aligned teams did not show up to drivers' meetings at the previous 2 Grands Prix) that the 1980 Spanish GP would not count as a championship round. Balestre also stripped the drivers of their racing licenses. The FISA-supported manufacturer teams – Renault, Ferrari, and Alfa – all pulled out, and the FOCA-supported independent constructors stayed to race. The race was won by Alan Jones, who had also taken pole. The race's loss of championship status hurt the event quite badly; as it was only to be hosted once more at Jarama during the following year, which saw reduced crowds and a date even further into the year in one of the hottest parts of Europe.



Round 7: France


The abrupt non-championship status of the Spanish Grand Prix and the cancellation of the Swedish Grand Prix at the Anderstorp circuit meant there was a 6-week gap between the Monaco and French Grands Prix. The French Grand Prix took place while the Spanish Grand Prix debacle was still raging on 4 weeks afterwards. With their racing licenses given back to them, the drivers got on with their jobs, and at the Paul Ricard circuit on the southern French riviera near Marseille, Williams driver Jones beat the Ligiers of Jacques Laffite and Didier Pironi on home soil.



Round 8: Great Britain


The British Grand Prix in 1980 was at Brands Hatch, just outside London. This race on the challenging and bumpy southern English circuit saw the Ligiers of Pironi and Laffite lead and fall out; Pironi retired after a puncture and Laffite crashed at Hawthorn's. Alan Jones took advantage of the Ligier's problems and Jones managed to hold off a quick Nelson Piquet to win yet again in a Williams, the very English team's second consecutive British GP win.



Round 9: West Germany


The German Grand Prix at the ultra-fast Hockenheimring was marred by the fatal pre-race testing accident of Patrick Depailler at the ultra-high speed, top gear, flat out Ost-Kurve 9 days before the race. Suspension failure on his Alfa caused him to crash massively after his car overturned and vaulted the barriers, causing fatal head injuries. Alan Jones took pole from Renault driver Jabouille by mere hundredths of a second, and he led the race until he had to come in with a puncture on the straight before the stadium. Laffite and Reutemann passed Jones, who finished 3rd. Laffite went on to win for Ligier, followed by the Williams duo of Reutemann and Jones.



Round 10: Austria


The European high-speed circuit tour kept coming, and the fastest circuit of the season – the spectacular Österreichring in the Styrian mountains enabled Jabouille to win by mere seconds from Alan Jones. Renault driver Jabouille, who had retired from every race he had participated in so far in the season, finally finished a race. His development work with Renault over the past 4 seasons gave him his 2nd and last F1 victory of his career.



Round 11: The Netherlands


The beach-side Zandvoort circuit near Amsterdam, modified from the previous year saw Brazilian Nelson Piquet win from Frenchmen Arnoux and Laffite. The Renaults dominated qualifying, although Jabouille retired and Jones went out after accident damage.



Round 12: Italy


The European tour concluded with the Italian Grand Prix being held at the Autodromo Dino Ferrari near the town of Imola, rather than Monza. The Dino Ferrari circuit, located near the Ferrari factory and just outside Bologna had signed a deal to alternate the Italian GP with Monza, on the condition Monza improve its track safety and facilities. Although the Monza track owners had already made safety upgrades a year before, the deal had been signed before Monza made changes; so for the first time since 1948 the Italian GP was not held at Monza. The Renaults dominated qualifying at this fast Italian circuit, although they fell out with mechanical problems; and Piquet won yet again and overtook Jones in the championship, who finished 2nd in front of his teammate Carlos Reutemann.



Round 13: Canada


The final leg of the 1980 Formula One season was a 2-part tour in North America, starting in Canada, at the Ile-Notre Dame circuit in Montreal. This race had to be restarted after a multiple pile-up involving Piquet and Jones at the start, when Jones shut the door at the very first corner after the start. Piquet jumped into the spare car, which had a short-lasting qualifying Ford/Cosworth engine in it – and although Piquet was clearly faster than anyone else, the engine in his Brabham blew up early on, and Jones won the race, which effectively gave the gritty Australian his only ever Formula One Drivers' Championship, and Williams's first ever Constructors' Championship. Unfortunately, Jabouille's weekend was much worse: he crashed head on into a tire-wall and broke both his legs.



Round 14: United States East


The other half of the North American visit and the last round of the 1980 Formula One season was the second round in the United States at the fast, dauntingly challenging Watkins Glen circuit in New York State, four hours from New York City and only 5 hours from Montreal. This race had been in doubt for almost the whole season, but on this quick, bumpy, demanding and elevated circuit located in the rolling vineyard hills above Seneca Lake, it did go ahead after a loan was given by FOCA to the organizers. French rising star Alain Prost crashed heavily on Saturday morning practice due to suspension failure at the very fast left-handed Turn 10, the second-to-last corner on the track. Prost received a concussion after hitting his head on his car's steering wheel; he had to miss the race but was at the circuit on race day; he felt he could not trust the car's mechanical strength after a season's worth of component failures on his car, which often led to accidents; this happened to Prost a week earlier in Montreal.[4] Bruno Giacomelli took pole in his Alfa, the first time an Alfa Romeo had been on pole since 1951. Giacomelli made a perfect start and led for most of this exciting race up until Lap 32, when the electrics in his Alfa failed in the Boot section of the course. Jones, however, produced a storming drive, when he went off at the first corner at the start and dropped to 16th; he stormed through and took 2nd from his Argentine teammate Carlos Reutemann, and then inherited the lead from Giacomelli after the Italian retired. The Australian Jones won his 5th race of the year (6 if Spain is counted) ahead of Reutemann and Didier Pironi in a Ligier. 1978 champion Mario Andretti scored his only point of the 1980 season at Watkins Glen, close to his hometown in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. Unfortunately, this was to be the last championship Formula One race at the rather isolated Watkins Glen circuit. The corporation running the circuit was heavily in debt and went bankrupt after it could not meet Bernie Ecclestone and FOCA's increased demands, and the circuit was struck from the 1981 season calendar in May of that year and although there were other Grands Prix that would be run in the United States during the 1980s aside from Long Beach, the United States Grand Prix would not be run again until 1989 on a street circuit in Phoenix, Arizona- and not one of those venues saw the success and longevity that this event had at Watkins Glen.


A third American race, the Caesars Palace Grand Prix in Las Vegas was supposed to the final event of the season 4 weeks after Watkins Glen but this event was cancelled.



Results and standings



Grands Prix









































































































































Rnd
Race
Date
Location
Pole Position
Fastest Lap
Race Winner
Constructor
Report
1

Argentina Argentine Grand Prix
13 January

Buenos Aires

Australia Alan Jones

Australia Alan Jones

Australia Alan Jones

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report
2

Brazil Brazilian Grand Prix
27 January

Interlagos

France Jean-Pierre Jabouille

France René Arnoux

France René Arnoux

France Renault

Report
3

South Africa South African Grand Prix
1 March

Kyalami

France Jean-Pierre Jabouille

France René Arnoux

France René Arnoux

France Renault

Report
4

United States United States Grand Prix West
30 March

Long Beach

Brazil Nelson Piquet

Brazil Nelson Piquet

Brazil Nelson Piquet

United Kingdom Brabham-Ford

Report
5

Belgium Belgian Grand Prix
4 May

Zolder

Australia Alan Jones

France Jacques Laffite

France Didier Pironi

France Ligier-Ford

Report
6

Monaco Monaco Grand Prix
18 May

Monaco

France Didier Pironi

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report
7

France French Grand Prix
29 June

Paul Ricard

France Jacques Laffite

Australia Alan Jones

Australia Alan Jones

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report
8

United Kingdom British Grand Prix
13 July

Brands Hatch

France Didier Pironi

France Didier Pironi

Australia Alan Jones

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report
9

West Germany German Grand Prix
10 August

Hockenheimring

Australia Alan Jones

Australia Alan Jones

France Jacques Laffite

France Ligier-Ford

Report
10

Austria Austrian Grand Prix
17 August

Österreichring

France René Arnoux

France René Arnoux

France Jean-Pierre Jabouille

France Renault

Report
11

Netherlands Dutch Grand Prix
31 August

Zandvoort

France René Arnoux

France René Arnoux

Brazil Nelson Piquet

United Kingdom Brabham-Ford

Report
12

Italy Italian Grand Prix
14 September

Imola

France René Arnoux

Australia Alan Jones

Brazil Nelson Piquet

United Kingdom Brabham-Ford

Report
13

Canada Canadian Grand Prix
28 September

Île Notre-Dame

Brazil Nelson Piquet

France Didier Pironi

Australia Alan Jones

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report
14

United States United States Grand Prix
5 October

Watkins Glen

Italy Bruno Giacomelli

Australia Alan Jones

Australia Alan Jones

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report


Calendar changes


  • Because of the FISA–FOCA dispute concerning ground-effect aerodynamics, it was announced on Friday's practice for the Spanish Grand Prix at Jarama held on June 1 was not going to be held under FISA regulations, therefore, it would not be counted as a Formula One championship race. The race was won by Alan Jones.


World Drivers' Championship – final standings



Points towards the 1980 World Championship of Drivers were awarded on a 9–6–4–3–2–1 basis for the first six positions in each race. Only the best five results from the first seven races and the best five results from the remaining seven races could be retained by each driver.
































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Pos
Driver

ARG
Argentina

BRA
Brazil

RSA
South Africa

USW
United States

BEL
Belgium

MON
Monaco

FRA
France

GBR
United Kingdom

GER
West Germany

AUT
Austria

NED
Netherlands

ITA
Italy

CAN
Canada

USA
United States
Pts[5]
1

Australia Alan Jones

1
3
Ret
Ret

2
Ret

1
1

(3)
2
11

2
1

1

67 (71)
2

Brazil Nelson Piquet
2
Ret
4

1
Ret
3
4
2
4
5
1
1

Ret
Ret

54
3

Argentina Carlos Reutemann
Ret
Ret
5
Ret
3

1
6
3
2
3
(4)
(3)
2
2

42 (49)
4

France Jacques Laffite
Ret
Ret
2
Ret

11
2

3
Ret
1
4
3
9
8
5

34
5

France Didier Pironi
Ret
4
3
6
1

Ret
2

Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
6

3
3

32
6

France René Arnoux
Ret

1

1
9
4
Ret
5
NC
Ret

9

2

10
Ret
7

29
7

Italy Elio de Angelis
Ret
2
Ret
Ret
10
9
Ret
Ret
16
6
Ret
4
10
4

13
8

France Jean-Pierre Jabouille
Ret

Ret

Ret
10
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
1
Ret
Ret
Ret


9
9

Italy Riccardo Patrese
Ret
6
Ret
2
Ret
8
9
9
9
14
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

7
10

Finland Keke Rosberg
3
9
Ret
Ret
7
DNQ
Ret
DNQ
Ret
16
DNQ
5
9
10

6
11

United Kingdom John Watson
Ret
11
11
4
NC
DNQ
7
8
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
4
NC

6
12

Republic of Ireland Derek Daly
4
14
Ret
8
9
Ret
11
4
10
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

6
13

France Jean-Pierre Jarier
Ret
12
7
Ret
5
Ret
Ret
5
15
Ret
5
13
7
NC

6
14

Canada Gilles Villeneuve
Ret
16
Ret
Ret
6
5
8
Ret
6
8
7
Ret
5
Ret

6
15

Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi
NC
15
8
3
Ret
6
Ret
12
Ret
11
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

5
16

France Alain Prost
6
5
DNS

Ret
Ret
Ret
6
11
7
6
7
Ret
DNS

5
17

West Germany Jochen Mass
Ret
10
6
7
Ret
4
10
13
8
DNQ


11
Ret

4
18

Italy Bruno Giacomelli
5
13
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
5
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

Ret

4
19

South Africa Jody Scheckter
Ret
Ret
Ret
5
8
Ret
12
10
13
13
9
8
DNQ
11

2
20

United States Mario Andretti
Ret
Ret
12
Ret
Ret
7
Ret
Ret
7
Ret
8
Ret
Ret
6

1
21

Mexico Héctor Rebaque







7
Ret
10
Ret
Ret
6
Ret

1


Switzerland Marc Surer
Ret
7
DNS



Ret
Ret
12
12
10
Ret
DNQ
8

0


Argentina Ricardo Zunino
7
8
10
Ret
Ret
DNQ
Ret








0


United Kingdom Rupert Keegan







11
DNQ
15
DNQ
11
DNQ
9

0


Switzerland Clay Regazzoni
NC
Ret
9
Ret











0


Netherlands Jan Lammers
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
12
NC
DNQ
DNQ
14
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
12
Ret

0


United States Eddie Cheever
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
Ret
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
12
Ret
Ret

0


United Kingdom Geoff Lees


13
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ



Ret
DNQ

DNQ

0


France Patrick Depailler
Ret
Ret
NC
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret







0


United Kingdom Nigel Mansell









Ret
Ret
DNQ



0


Italy Vittorio Brambilla










Ret
Ret



0


Italy Andrea de Cesaris












Ret
Ret

0


New Zealand Mike Thackwell










DNQ

Ret
DNQ

0


United Kingdom Tiff Needell




Ret
DNQ









0


Republic of Ireland David Kennedy
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ








0


Sweden Stefan Johansson
DNQ
DNQ













0


United Kingdom Stephen South



DNQ











0


South Africa Desiré Wilson







DNQ







0


Austria Harald Ertl








DNQ






0


Germany Manfred Winkelhock











DNQ



0


United States Kevin Cogan












DNQ


0
Pos
Driver

ARG
Argentina

BRA
Brazil

RSA
South Africa

USW
United States

BEL
Belgium

MON
Monaco

FRA
France

GBR
United Kingdom

GER
West Germany

AUT
Austria

NED
Netherlands

ITA
Italy

CAN
Canada

USA
United States
Pts























Key
ColourResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
GreenOther points position
Blue
Other classified position

Not classified, finished (NC)
PurpleNot classified, retired (Ret)
Red
Did not qualify (DNQ)

Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
White
Did not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank
Did not practice (DNP)
Excluded (EX)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Withdrawn (WD)

Bold – Pole position
Italics – Fastest lap




International Cup for F1 Constructors – final standings


Points for the 1980 International Cup for F1 Constructors were awarded on a 9–6–4–3–2–1 basis for the first six positions in each race. All points received by a constructor were retained towards the final total.[6]

















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Pos
Constructor
Car
no.

ARG
Argentina

BRA
Brazil

RSA
South Africa

USW
United States

BEL
Belgium

MON
Monaco

FRA
France

GBR
United Kingdom

GER
West Germany

AUT
Austria

NED
Netherlands

ITA
Italy

CAN
Canada

USA
United States
Pts
1

United Kingdom Williams-Ford
27

1
3
Ret
Ret

2
Ret

1
1

3
2
11

2
1

1

120
28
Ret
Ret
5
Ret
3

1
6
3
2
3
4
3
2
2
43







DNQ






50







11
DNQ
15
DNQ
11
DNQ
9
51












DNQ
DNQ
2

France Ligier-Ford
25
Ret
4
3
6
1

Ret
2

Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
6

3
3

66
26
Ret
Ret
2
Ret

11
2

3
Ret
1
4
3
9
8
5
3

United Kingdom Brabham-Ford
5
2
Ret
4

1
Ret
3
4
2
4
5
1
1

Ret
Ret

55
6
7
8
10
Ret
Ret
DNQ
Ret
7
Ret
10
Ret
Ret
6
Ret
4

France Renault
15
Ret

Ret

Ret
10
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
1
Ret
Ret
Ret


38
16
Ret

1

1
9
4
Ret
5
NC
Ret

9

2

10
Ret
7
5

United Kingdom Lotus-Ford
11
Ret
Ret
12
Ret
Ret
7
Ret
Ret
7
Ret
8
Ret
Ret
6

14
12
Ret
2
Ret
Ret
10
9
Ret
Ret
16
6
Ret
4
10
4
43









Ret
Ret
DNQ


6

United Kingdom Tyrrell-Ford
3
Ret
12
7
Ret
5
Ret
Ret
5
15
Ret
5
13
7
NC

12
4
4
14
Ret
8
9
Ret
11
4
10
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
43












Ret
DNQ
7

United Kingdom Arrows-Ford
29
Ret
6
Ret
2
Ret
8
9
9
9
14
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

11
30
Ret
10
6
7
Ret
4
10
13
8
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
11
Ret
8

Brazil Fittipaldi-Ford
20
NC
15
8
3
Ret
6
Ret
12
Ret
11
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

11
21
3
9
Ret
Ret
7
DNQ
Ret
DNQ
Ret
16
DNQ
5
9
10
9

United Kingdom McLaren-Ford
7
Ret
11
11
4
NC
DNQ
7
8
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
4
NC

11
8
6
5
DNS
DNQ
Ret
Ret
Ret
6
11
7
6
7
Ret
DNS
10

Italy Ferrari
1
Ret
Ret
Ret
5
8
Ret
12
10
13
13
9
8
DNQ
11

8
2
Ret
16
Ret
Ret
6
5
8
Ret
6
8
7
Ret
5
Ret
11

Italy Alfa Romeo
22
Ret
Ret
NC
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret


Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

4
23
5
13
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
5
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

Ret


West Germany ATS-Ford
9
Ret
7
DNS
Ret
12
NC
Ret
Ret
12
12
10
Ret
DNQ
8

0
10
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ





DNQ







United Kingdom Ensign-Ford
14
NC
Ret
9
Ret
Ret
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
14
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
12
Ret

0
41










Ret
DNQ




Italy Osella-Ford
31
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
Ret
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
12
Ret
Ret

0


United Kingdom Shadow-Ford
17
DNQ
DNQ
13
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ








0
18
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ







Pos
Constructor
Car
no.

ARG
Argentina

BRA
Brazil

RSA
South Africa

USW
United States

BEL
Belgium

MON
Monaco

FRA
France

GBR
United Kingdom

GER
West Germany

AUT
Austria

NED
Netherlands

ITA
Italy

CAN
Canada

USA
United States
Pts


Non-championship race results


The 1980 Formula One season also included one non-championship race.[3]














Race Name
Circuit
Date
Winning driver
Constructor
Report

Spain Spanish Grand Prix

Jarama
1 June

Australia Alan Jones

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report


Notes and references




  1. ^ 1980 FIA Yearbook, page 11


  2. ^ Motor Sport, January 1981, page 44


  3. ^ ab Motor Sport, January 1981, page 45


  4. ^ "The US Grand Prix". Motor Sport Magazine Archive. Retrieved 23 January 2016..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  5. ^ Only the best 5 results from the first 7 races and the best 5 results from the last 7 races counted towards the Drivers' Championship. If different from Championship points, total points scored are shown in parentheses.


  6. ^ Motor, February 1981, page 69




External links


  • 1980 Formula 1 review from www.4mula1.ro

  • 1980 Formula 1 Images and results from www.f1-facts.com








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