1981 Formula One World Championship








1981 FIA Formula One
World Championship


Drivers' Champion: Nelson Piquet
Constructors' Champion: Williams-Ford
Previous:1980Next:1982
  • Races by country

  • Races by season

The 1981 FIA Formula One World Championship was the 35th season of FIA Formula One motor racing. It featured the 1981 Formula One World Championship for Drivers and the 1981 Formula One World Championship for Constructors, which were contested concurrently over a fifteen-race series that commenced on 15 March and ended on 17 October. Formula One cars also contested the 1981 South African Grand Prix, although this was technically a Formula Libre race and was not part of the Formula One World Championship.[1]


The 1981 championship was the inaugural FIA Formula One World Championship, replacing both the original World Championship of Drivers and the International Cup for Constructors. Teams were now required to lodge entries for the entire championship, and a standardised set of rules would be in place at every championship race, while the FIA would also set the prize monies.[2]


Nelson Piquet won the Drivers' Championship, claiming the first of his three Drivers' titles, while Williams won the Constructors' Championship for the second consecutive year.




Contents





  • 1 Drivers and constructors


  • 2 Season summary

    • 2.1 Non-championship race: South Africa


    • 2.2 Race 1: United States West


    • 2.3 Race 2: Brazil


    • 2.4 Race 3: Argentina


    • 2.5 Race 4: San Marino (Imola, Italy)


    • 2.6 Race 5: Belgium


    • 2.7 Race 6: Monaco


    • 2.8 Race 7: Spain


    • 2.9 Race 8: France


    • 2.10 Race 9: Britain


    • 2.11 Race 10: Germany


    • 2.12 Race 11: Austria


    • 2.13 Race 12: Holland


    • 2.14 Race 13: Italy


    • 2.15 Race 14: Canada


    • 2.16 Race 15: Caesars Palace (United States)



  • 3 Results and standings

    • 3.1 Grands Prix

      • 3.1.1 Calendar changes



    • 3.2 World Drivers' Championship – final standings


    • 3.3 World Constructors' Championship – final standings


    • 3.4 Non-championship race results



  • 4 References


  • 5 External links




Drivers and constructors


The following teams and drivers contested the 1981 FIA Formula One World Championship:




The Drivers' Championship was won by Nelson Piquet, driving for the Brabham team





Carlos Reutemann, driving for Williams, placed second in the Drivers' Championship by just one point




Reutemann's teammate Alan Jones placed third in the Drivers' Championship

































































































































































































































Entrant
Constructor
Chassis
Engine
Tyres
No
Driver
Rounds

United Kingdom Albilad Williams Racing Team
United Kingdom TAG Williams Racing Team

Williams-Ford

FW07C

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
G
1

Australia Alan Jones
All
2

Argentina Carlos Reutemann
All

United Kingdom Tyrrell Racing Team

Tyrrell-Ford

010
011

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
A
3

United States Eddie Cheever
All
4

United States Kevin Cogan
1

Argentina Ricardo Zunino
2–3

Italy Michele Alboreto
4–15

United Kingdom Parmalat Racing Team

Brabham-Ford

BT49C

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
G
5

Brazil Nelson Piquet
All
6

Mexico Héctor Rebaque
All

United Kingdom Marlboro McLaren International

McLaren-Ford

M29F
MP4/1

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
7

United Kingdom John Watson
All
8

Italy Andrea de Cesaris
All

West Germany Team ATS

ATS-Ford

D4
HGS1

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
A
9

Netherlands Jan Lammers
1–4

Sweden Slim Borgudd
5–15
10

Sweden Slim Borgudd
4

United Kingdom Team Essex Lotus
United Kingdom John Player Team Lotus

Lotus-Ford

81B
87
88
88B

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
G
11

Italy Elio de Angelis
1–3, 5–15
12

United Kingdom Nigel Mansell
1–3, 5–15

United Kingdom Ensign Racing

Ensign-Ford

N180B

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
A
14

Switzerland Marc Surer
1–6

Colombia Ricardo Londoño
2

Chile Eliseo Salazar
7–15

France Equipe Renault Elf

Renault

RE20B
RE30

Renault-Gordini EF1 1.5 V6t

M
15

France Alain Prost
All
16

France René Arnoux
All

United Kingdom March Grand Prix Team

March-Ford

811

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
A
17

Republic of Ireland Derek Daly
1–3, 7–15

Chile Eliseo Salazar
4–6
18

Chile Eliseo Salazar
1–3

Republic of Ireland Derek Daly
4–6

Brazil Fittipaldi Automotive

Fittipaldi-Ford

F8C

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
A
P
20

Finland Keke Rosberg
1–10, 12–15
21

Brazil Chico Serra
1–10, 12–15

Italy Marlboro Team Alfa Romeo

Alfa Romeo

179B
179C
179D

Alfa Romeo 1260 3.0 V12

M
22

United States Mario Andretti
All
23

Italy Bruno Giacomelli
All

France Equipe Talbot Gitanes

Ligier-Matra

JS17

Matra MS81 3.0 V12

M
25

France Jean-Pierre Jarier
1–2

France Jean-Pierre Jabouille
3–7

France Patrick Tambay
8–15
26

France Jacques Laffite
All

Italy Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC

Ferrari

126CK

Ferrari 021 1.5 V6t

M
27

Canada Gilles Villeneuve
All
28

France Didier Pironi
All

United Kingdom Ragno Arrows Beta Racing Team

Arrows-Ford

A3

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
P
29

Italy Riccardo Patrese
All
30

Italy Siegfried Stohr
1–13

Canada Jacques Villeneuve, Sr.
14–15

Italy Osella Squadra Corse

Osella-Ford

FA1B
FA1C

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
31

Argentina Miguel Ángel Guerra
1–4

Italy Piercarlo Ghinzani
5

Italy Beppe Gabbiani
6–15
32

Italy Beppe Gabbiani
1–5

Italy Piercarlo Ghinzani
6

Italy Giorgio Francia
7

Argentina Miguel Ángel Guerra
8

France Jean-Pierre Jarier
9–15

United Kingdom Theodore Racing Team

Theodore-Ford

TY01

Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

M
A
33

France Patrick Tambay
1–7

Switzerland Marc Surer
8–15

United Kingdom Candy Toleman Motorsport

Toleman-Hart

TG181

Hart 415T 1.5 L4t

P
35

United Kingdom Brian Henton
4–15
36

United Kingdom Derek Warwick
4–15


Season summary




The 1981 Formula One season was an extraordinary season of Grand Prix racing for many reasons: it was effectively the first season that Briton and Brabham team owner Bernie Ecclestone and FOCA had the Concorde Agreement in place, which would set Formula One on a course to become a profitable business, thanks to the growing professional involvement of outside companies and professional sponsorship.



Non-championship race: South Africa


The South African Grand Prix, held on 7 February at the Kyalami Circuit near Johannesburg, was originally supposed to be the first round of the 1981 Formula One World Championship – but it was eventually stripped of its championship status. The ongoing FISA–FOCA war resulted in Fédération Internationale du Sport Automobile (FISA) insisting on a date change which was not acceptable to the race organisers. Approval was ultimately given for the race to go ahead on its original date but as a Formula Libre race rather than as a round of the Formula One World Championship. The downgraded race was supported by the Formula One Constructors Association (FOCA) aligned teams but not by the teams of the manufacturers, whose allegiances lay with FISA. This race was run with the cars running in 1980-specification trim, with the ground-effect wing cars of the time, equipped with sliding skirts that increased their downforce by ensuring the air under the car did not escape from under the car, where the most important airflow was. This race, run in wet conditions, was won by the Argentine driver Carlos Reutemann in a Williams-Ford.



Race 1: United States West


The first of two rounds in the United States of America started a trilogy of F1 races in the Americas on March 15 at the Long Beach street circuit in southern California, just outside the metropolis of Los Angeles. The cars were now running in new 1981-specification cars, with the sliding skirts now banned and cars required to have a 6 cm ground clearance, in order to reduce downforce. Australian Alan Jones won this race in a Williams-Ford after pole-sitter Riccardo Patrese in an Arrows-Ford fell out and Jones's teammate Carlos Reutemann made a costly error that Jones took advantage of.



Race 2: Brazil


The Formula One circus moved from North to South America to start a two-stop tour there. The first round was at the Jacarepagua Autodrome in Rio de Janeiro – only the second time F1 had been there. F1 had previously visited the 5-mile Interlagos circuit in São Paulo in 1972–1980; this circuit was effectively dropped after 1980 because of safety issues with the circuit and the growing slums around the circuit being at odds with Formula One's glamorous image. This rain-soaked race saw Reutemann disobey team orders to let Jones through, and a furious Jones did not appear on the podium afterwards.



Race 3: Argentina


The other half of the South American tour in Reutemann's home country of Argentina was usually held in January; this time it was in April. This race was a procession: at the varied circuit located in the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires, Brabham designer Gordon Murray had come up with a hydraulic suspension to get his BT49C closer to the ground, and therefore be faster. This proved effective – as Brabham driver Nelson Piquet took pole ahead of French up-and-comer Alain Prost and the two Williams drivers, he and Mexican teammate Héctor Rebaque dominated the race, driving a car that was embarrassingly superior to all the others. The Brazilian won handily from home favorite Reutemann and Renault driver Prost. Due to internal politics and the drivers' strike at the 1982 South African Grand Prix, the Argentine GP would not return to the calendar until 1995.



Race 4: San Marino (Imola, Italy)


Four weeks later, the GP circus returned to Europe to start the 4 month long tour there. The first race was a new race – a second Italian race called the San Marino Grand Prix at the Autodromo Dino Ferrari near Imola, just outside Bologna. Unlike the South American races, both of which had been uncommon disappointments; the inaugural San Marino GP was an exciting race all the way through. Brazilian Nelson Piquet won again for Brabham in changing conditions, with intermittent rain soaking the course throughout the race.



Race 5: Belgium


In stark contrast to San Marino, the Belgian Grand Prix at Zolder was a shambolic event filled with tragedies and frustration. Politics dominated this event – Gordon Murray's hydraulic suspension gave his Brabhams considerable performance advantages, and the teams had been heavily protesting the system's legality within the revised rules for the season. The tragedy, however, started with Carlos Reutemann accidentally running over an Osella mechanic, Giovanni Amadeo – who died of a fractured skull the Monday after the race. The race, however, was an appalling embarrassment by top motor racing standards – at the start, there was a drivers' strike concerning mechanic and team personnel safety – which delayed the start. And when the race started, an Arrows mechanic, Dave Luckett, jumped onto the grid just as the lights went green in an attempt to start Riccardo Patrese's stalled car. Luckett was run over by the other Arrows driver, Sigfried Stohr – and as Luckett laid sprawled unconscious on the track with broken legs, the marshals were able to get him off the track, and the disorganization continued: as the drivers started their second lap with both Arrows cars still on the narrow start–finish straight, a number of marshals jumped onto the track – mere feet from the cars going at full racing speeds – and attempted to stop the race by waving at the drivers to stop, without the approval of the clerk of the course (who is the ultimate authority on the race's direction). The drivers continued on – because they had not been shown the red flag by the clerk of the course. But by the time they completed another lap, they decided to stop themselves without the clerk's approval. In the meantime, Luckett was taken to hospital, and survived. So the second race started, and Alan Jones took the lead, crashed out, Nelson Piquet also crashed out and Carlos Reutemann took the chequered flag after it was decided to call the race early.



Race 6: Monaco


The historic Monaco Grand Prix was the scene of an ultra-exciting race – as Piquet led for most of the race distance, and crashed out at Tabac. Jones took the lead, but had fuel feed problems, and Gilles Villeneuve in a poor-handling Ferrari took the lead and won.



Race 7: Spain


The narrow and tight Jarama circuit just outside Madrid produced one of the best races of the year: after Jones crashed out, Reutemann took the lead, and then Villeneuve overtook Reutemann on the main straight at Jarama. Villeneuve, in a powerful but very ill-handling Ferrari, managed to keep 4 better-handling cars behind him in a car badly suited to the slow, narrow and twisty Jarama circuit. Villeneuve, Jacques Laffite, John Watson, Reutemann and Elio de Angelis were all separated by 1.2 seconds at the finish. The small crowd, the inappropriately very hot time of year this race was held in and the waning interest of the organizers caused this race to be the last Spanish Grand Prix until 1986, when it was moved south to the new Jerez circuit near Seville.



Race 8: France


The alternating French Grand Prix moved from the Paul Ricard circuit near Marseille to the fast, sweeping Prenois circuit near Dijon, located in the Burgundy countryside. This race was run as two races: it was interrupted by heavy rain, so the organizers decided to stop the race to wait for the rain to pass, which it did – and Alain Prost, who was to become one of the greatest drivers in Formula One history, won his first of 51 championship Grands Prix at home in a Renault.



Race 9: Britain


The British Grand Prix was held at the flat Silverstone circuit this year, which was the fastest Grand Prix circuit in the world at the time. The grid was dominated by four turbos, the two Renaults of Alain Prost and René Arnoux, and the two Ferraris of Gilles Villeneuve and Didier Pironi, and during the race (which was on a Saturday), Prost effectively walked away from the field and dominated most of the race. At the start of lap 5, near the Woodcote chicane, Villeneuve lost control, taking out Alan Jones (Williams) and Andrea de Cesaris (McLaren) who were both unable to avoid the Canadian, while Briton John Watson, in the other McLaren, narrowly missed the wreckage. On lap 12, Nelson Piquet, who was 3rd at that point, crashed his Brabham, and had to be carried by an ambulance due to leg injuries. Later in the race, Prost was forced to pit due to problems with an engine plug that could not be replaced without dismantling much of the car, forcing the Frenchman to retire and leaving his teammate, Arnoux, in the lead. Arnoux, however, also had problems in the last laps of the race, losing his turbo, which forced him to retire and allowed Watson to take the win from Reutemann and Laffite.



Race 10: Germany


The German Grand Prix at the fast Hockenheimring produced a long battle between Alain Prost and Alan Jones, until Jones passed Prost in the stadium section, after a mistake by Prost's teammate, René Arnoux, who was being lapped, and allowed the Australian to slip by both Renaults. Nelson Piquet also found his way past Alain Prost, and took the lead after Alan Jones was forced to pit. It started to rain in the last laps of the race, but Piquet won with a comfortable lead over Prost, in 2nd, and Jacques Laffite, in 3rd.



Race 11: Austria


The high-altitude and fast Österreichring enabled turbo-powered cars to take the first three places in qualifying, with René Arnoux on pole from Renault teammate Alain Prost, and Gilles Villeneuve third in the Ferrari. Villeneuve made a fast start to lead briefly, but went off on the second lap, leaving Prost and Arnoux to pull away while Didier Pironi in the second Ferrari held up the rest of the pack. Eventually, Jacques Laffite got past Pironi and closed up to the Renaults. Prost led until his suspension failed; Arnoux then led until Laffite overtook him with 15 laps remaining. Laffite thus took the win with Arnoux second and Piquet third; Reutemann was fifth, meaning that his lead in the Drivers' Championship was now down to six points.



Race 12: Holland


The Zandvoort circuit near Amsterdam provided Prost with his second win of the year, ahead of Piquet and Jones. Reutemann and Laffite took each other out on lap 18, meaning that Piquet now led the Drivers' Championship by virtue of having more wins than Reutemann. In a race of attrition, only ten cars were classified at the end, with Chilean rookie Eliseo Salazar finishing sixth in an Ensign and thus scoring his first point in Formula One.



Race 13: Italy


The second Italian and last European race of the year, the Italian Grand Prix, returned to the historic Monza circuit just outside Milan after a year's stay at Imola. Prost won again, with Jones and Reutemann finishing second and third respectively to effectively seal the Constructors' Championship for Williams. Piquet was running third on the last lap when his engine blew, dropping him to sixth and thus putting Reutemann back into the lead in the Drivers' Championship by three points.



Race 14: Canada


The season concluded with two races in North America, the first of these being in Montreal, Canada. In a wet, cold race, Jones and Prost both retired, while Reutemann collided with Jones early on and eventually finished tenth. Laffite took the win, with Watson second and Villeneuve third; fifth for Piquet put him just one point behind Reutemann in the Drivers' Championship going into the final race, with Laffite five points further back.



Race 15: Caesars Palace (United States)


New York State's Watkins Glen circuit was struck off the calendar in May due to bankruptcy of the company running the circuit, resulting in a three-week gap between the Canadian Grand Prix and a new American race that would require the teams to move across the country to a circuit located in a car park outside of the Caesar's Palace hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, effectively named the Caesar's Palace Grand Prix, only 350 miles from Long Beach/Los Angeles. Reutemann took pole position, but made a poor start in the race and eventually finished out of the points in eighth, while Laffite could only manage sixth and Piquet battled to fifth – which was enough for the Brazilian driver to win the championship by one point from Reutemann. Jones' final drive with Williams ended with the 12th and final win of his career in this difficult and demanding race, which caused Piquet to vomit over himself in the cockpit.



Results and standings



Grands Prix


















































































































































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

United States United States Grand Prix West
15 March

Long Beach

Italy Riccardo Patrese

Australia Alan Jones

Australia Alan Jones

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report
2

Brazil Brazilian Grand Prix
29 March

Jacarepaguá

Brazil Nelson Piquet

Switzerland Marc Surer

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report
3

Argentina Argentine Grand Prix
12 April

Buenos Aires

Brazil Nelson Piquet

Brazil Nelson Piquet

Brazil Nelson Piquet

United Kingdom Brabham-Ford

Report
4

Italy San Marino Grand Prix
3 May

Imola

Canada Gilles Villeneuve

Canada Gilles Villeneuve

Brazil Nelson Piquet

United Kingdom Brabham-Ford

Report
5

Belgium Belgian Grand Prix
17 May

Zolder

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report
6

Monaco Monaco Grand Prix
31 May

Monaco

Brazil Nelson Piquet

Australia Alan Jones

Canada Gilles Villeneuve

Italy Ferrari

Report
7

Spain Spanish Grand Prix
21 June

Jarama

France Jacques Laffite

Australia Alan Jones

Canada Gilles Villeneuve

Italy Ferrari

Report
8

France French Grand Prix
5 July

Dijon-Prenois

France René Arnoux

France Alain Prost

France Alain Prost

France Renault

Report
9

United Kingdom British Grand Prix
18 July

Silverstone

France René Arnoux

France René Arnoux

United Kingdom John Watson

United Kingdom McLaren-Ford

Report
10

West Germany German Grand Prix
2 August

Hockenheimring

France Alain Prost

Australia Alan Jones

Brazil Nelson Piquet

United Kingdom Brabham-Ford

Report
11

Austria Austrian Grand Prix
16 August

Österreichring

France René Arnoux

France Jacques Laffite

France Jacques Laffite

France Ligier-Matra

Report
12

Netherlands Dutch Grand Prix
30 August

Zandvoort

France Alain Prost

Australia Alan Jones

France Alain Prost

France Renault

Report
13

Italy Italian Grand Prix
13 September

Monza

France René Arnoux

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

France Alain Prost

France Renault

Report
14

Canada Canadian Grand Prix
27 September

Île Notre-Dame

Brazil Nelson Piquet

United Kingdom John Watson

France Jacques Laffite

France Ligier-Matra

Report
15

United States Caesars Palace Grand Prix
17 October

Caesars Palace

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

France Didier Pironi

Australia Alan Jones

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report


Calendar changes


  • The United States Grand Prix was originally supposed to be held at Watkins Glen, but this track was dropped from the calendar in May due to the circuit's financial difficulties.

  • The South African Grand Prix at Kyalami on 7 February was originally on the calendar, but difficulties from the ongoing FISA–FOCA war led to the event being run as a non-championship race; and it was contested only by the Ford-Cosworth powered teams all running cars that had aerodynamic devices which were banned for the 1981 championship season.


World Drivers' Championship – final standings








































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Pos
Driver

USW
United States

BRA
Brazil

ARG
Argentina

SMR
Italy

BEL
Belgium

MON
Monaco

ESP
Spain

FRA
France

GBR
United Kingdom

GER
West Germany

AUT
Austria

NED
Netherlands

ITA
Italy

CAN
Canada

CPL
United States
Points
1

Brazil Nelson Piquet
3

12

1
1
Ret

Ret
Ret
3
Ret
1
3
2
6

5
5

50
2

Argentina Carlos Reutemann
2
1
2
3

1
Ret
4
10
2
Ret
5
Ret

3
10

8

49
3

Australia Alan Jones

1
2
4
12
Ret

2

7
17
Ret

11
4

3
2
Ret
1

46
4

France Jacques Laffite
Ret
6
Ret
Ret
2
3

2
Ret
3
3

1
Ret
Ret
1
6

44
5

France Alain Prost
Ret
Ret
3
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

1
Ret

2
Ret

1
1
Ret
2

43
6

United Kingdom John Watson
Ret
8
Ret
10
7
Ret
3
2
1
6
6
Ret
Ret

2
7

27
7

Canada Gilles Villeneuve
Ret
Ret
Ret

7
4
1
1
Ret
Ret
10
Ret
Ret
Ret
3
DSQ

25
8

Italy Elio de Angelis
Ret
5
6
WD
5
Ret
5
6
DSQ
7
7
5
4
6
Ret

14
9

France René Arnoux
8
Ret
5
8
DNQ
Ret
9

4

9
13

2
Ret

Ret
Ret
Ret

11
10

Mexico Héctor Rebaque
Ret
Ret
Ret
4
Ret
DNQ
Ret
9
5
4
Ret
4
Ret
Ret
Ret

11
11

Italy Riccardo Patrese

Ret
3
7
2
Ret
Ret
Ret
14
10
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
11

10
12

United States Eddie Cheever
5
NC
Ret
Ret
6
5
NC
13
4
5
DNQ
Ret
Ret
12
Ret

10
13

France Didier Pironi
Ret
Ret
Ret
5
8
4
15
5
Ret
Ret
9
Ret
5
Ret

9

9
14

United Kingdom Nigel Mansell
Ret
11
Ret
WD
3
Ret
6
7
DNQ
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
4

8
15

Italy Bruno Giacomelli
Ret
NC
10
Ret
9
Ret
10
15
Ret
15
Ret
Ret
8
4
3

7
16

Switzerland Marc Surer
Ret

4
Ret
9
11
6

12
11
14
Ret
8
DNQ
9
Ret

4
17

United States Mario Andretti
4
Ret
8
Ret
10
Ret
8
8
Ret
9
Ret
Ret
Ret
7
Ret

3
18

Italy Andrea de Cesaris
Ret
Ret
11
6
Ret
Ret
Ret
11
Ret
Ret
8
DNS
7
Ret
12

1
19

France Patrick Tambay
6
10
Ret
11
DNQ
7
13
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

1
20

Sweden Slim Borgudd



13
DNQ
DNPQ
DNQ
DNQ
6
Ret
Ret
10
Ret
Ret
DNQ

1
21

Chile Eliseo Salazar
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
DNQ
DNPQ
14
Ret
DNQ
NC
Ret
6
Ret
Ret
NC

1


France Jean-Pierre Jarier
Ret
7






8
8
10
Ret
9
Ret
Ret

0


Italy Siegfried Stohr
DNQ
Ret
9
DNQ
Ret
Ret
Ret
DNQ
Ret
12
Ret
7
DNQ



0


Republic of Ireland Derek Daly
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNPQ
16
Ret
7
Ret
11
Ret
Ret
8
DNQ

0


Brazil Chico Serra
7
Ret
Ret
DNQ
Ret
DNQ
11
DNS
DNQ
DNQ

DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ

0


Finland Keke Rosberg
Ret
9
Ret
Ret
Ret
DNQ
12
Ret
Ret
DNQ

DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
10

0


Italy Michele Alboreto



Ret
12
Ret
DNQ
16
Ret
DNQ
Ret
9
Ret
11
13

0


United Kingdom Brian Henton



DNQ
DNQ
DNPQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
10
DNQ
DNQ

0


Netherlands Jan Lammers
Ret
DNQ
12
DNQ












0


Argentina Ricardo Zunino

13
13













0


Italy Piercarlo Ghinzani




13
DNQ










0


France Jean-Pierre Jabouille


DNQ
NC
Ret
DNQ
Ret









0


Italy Beppe Gabbiani
Ret
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
Ret
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ

0


United Kingdom Derek Warwick



DNQ
DNQ
DNPQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
Ret

0


Argentina Miguel Angel Guerra
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
Ret












0


Canada Jacques Villeneuve, Sr.













DNQ
DNQ

0


United States Kevin Cogan
DNQ















0


Italy Giorgio Francia






DNQ









0


Colombia Ricardo Londoño

DNP














0
Pos
Driver

USW
United States

BRA
Brazil

ARG
Argentina

SMR
Italy

BEL
Belgium

MON
Monaco

ESP
Spain

FRA
France

GBR
United Kingdom

GER
West Germany

AUT
Austria

NED
Netherlands

ITA
Italy

CAN
Canada

CPL
United States
Points























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



Championship points were awarded on a 9–6–4–3–2–1 basis to the top six finishers in each race.[3]



World Constructors' Championship – final standings




Williams won the 1981 Constructors' Championship with the FW07C




Brabham placed second in the Constructors' Championship with the BT49C




Renault placed third in the Constructors' Championship with the RE30



























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Pos
Constructor
Car
no.

USW
United States

BRA
Brazil

ARG
Argentina

SMR
Italy

BEL
Belgium

MON
Monaco

ESP
Spain

FRA
France

GBR
United Kingdom

GER
West Germany

AUT
Austria

NED
Netherlands

ITA
Italy

CAN
Canada

CPL
United States
Pts
1

United Kingdom Williams-Ford
1

1
2
4
12
Ret

2

7
17
Ret

11
4

3
2
Ret
1

95
2
2
1
2
3

1
Ret
4
10
2
Ret
5
Ret

3
10

8
2

United Kingdom Brabham-Ford
5
3

12

1
1
Ret

Ret
Ret
3
Ret
1
3
2
6

5
5

61
6
Ret
Ret
Ret
4
Ret
DNQ
Ret
9
5
4
Ret
4
Ret
Ret
Ret
3

France Renault
15
Ret
Ret
3
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

1
Ret

2
Ret

1
1
Ret
2

54
16
8
Ret
5
8
DNQ
Ret
9

4

9
13

2
Ret

Ret
Ret
Ret
4

France Ligier-Matra
25
Ret
7
DNQ
NC
Ret
DNQ
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret

44
26
Ret
6
Ret
Ret
2
3

2
Ret
3
3

1
Ret
Ret
1
6
5

Italy Ferrari
27
Ret
Ret
Ret

7
4
1
1
Ret
Ret
10
Ret
Ret
Ret
3
DSQ

34
28
Ret
Ret
Ret
5
8
4
15
5
Ret
Ret
9
Ret
5
Ret

9
6

United Kingdom McLaren-Ford
7
Ret
8
Ret
10
7
Ret
3
2
1
6
6
Ret
Ret

2
7

28
8
Ret
Ret
11
6
Ret
Ret
Ret
11
Ret
Ret
8
DNS
7
Ret
12
7

United Kingdom Lotus-Ford
11
Ret
5
6
WD
5
Ret
5
6
DSQ
7
7
5
4
6
Ret

22
12
Ret
11
Ret
WD
3
Ret
6
7
DNQ
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
4
8

United Kingdom Arrows-Ford
29

Ret
3
7
2
Ret
Ret
Ret
14
10
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
Ret
11

10
30
DNQ
Ret
9
DNQ
Ret
Ret
Ret
DNQ
Ret
12
Ret
7
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
9

Italy Alfa Romeo
22
4
Ret
8
Ret
10
Ret
8
8
Ret
9
Ret
Ret
Ret
7
Ret

10
23
Ret
NC
10
Ret
9
Ret
10
15
Ret
15
Ret
Ret
8
4
3
10

United Kingdom Tyrrell-Ford
3
5
NC
Ret
Ret
6
5
NC
13
4
5
DNQ
Ret
Ret
12
Ret

10
4
DNQ
13
13
Ret
12
Ret
DNQ
16
Ret
DNQ
Ret
9
Ret
11
13
11

United Kingdom Ensign-Ford
14
Ret

4
Ret
9
11
6
14
Ret
DNQ
NC
Ret
6
Ret
Ret
NC

5
12

Hong Kong Theodore-Ford
33
6
10
Ret
11
DNQ
7
13
12
11
14
Ret
8
DNQ
9
Ret

1
13

West Germany ATS-Ford
9
Ret
DNQ
12
DNQ
DNQ
DNPQ
DNQ
DNQ
6
Ret
Ret
10
Ret
Ret
DNQ

1
10



13













United Kingdom March-Ford
17
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
DNQ
DNPQ
16
Ret
7
Ret
11
Ret
Ret
8
DNQ

0
18
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNPQ











Brazil Fittipaldi-Ford
20
Ret
9
Ret
Ret
Ret
DNQ
12
Ret
Ret
DNQ

DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
10

0
21
7
Ret
Ret
DNQ
Ret
DNQ
11
DNS
DNQ
DNQ

DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ


Italy Osella-Ford
31
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
13
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ

0
32
Ret
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
Ret
DNQ
DNQ
WD
8
8
10
Ret
9
Ret
Ret


United Kingdom Toleman-Hart
35



DNQ
DNQ
DNPQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
10
DNQ
DNQ

0
36



DNQ
DNQ
DNPQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
Ret
Pos
Constructor
Car
no.

USW
United States

BRA
Brazil

ARG
Argentina

SMR
Italy

BEL
Belgium

MON
Monaco

ESP
Spain

FRA
France

GBR
United Kingdom

GER
West Germany

AUT
Austria

NED
Netherlands

ITA
Italy

CAN
Canada

CPL
United States
Pts

Championship points were awarded on a 9–6–4–3–2–1 basis to the top six finishers in each race.[3]



Non-championship race results


A non-Championship Formula One race was also held in 1981, which did not count towards the World Championship. It was technically a Formula Libre race, since the cars did not conform to the current Formula One regulations. Although not a part of the Championship, the 1981 South African Grand Prix attracted high-calibre drivers and cars and was won by Carlos Reutemann in a Williams.














Race Name
Circuit
Date
Winning driver
Constructor
Report

South Africa South African Grand Prix

Kyalami
7 February

Argentina Carlos Reutemann

United Kingdom Williams-Ford

Report


References




  1. ^ Diepraam, Mattijs; Muelas, Felix (Christmas 2000). "The one that didn't count". 8W. Autosport. Retrieved 24 February 2013..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


  2. ^ Diepraam, Mattijs (3 January 2008). "1981 – long live the FIA F1 World Championship". 8W. Autosport. Retrieved 24 February 2013.


  3. ^ ab Peter Higham, The Guinness Guide to International Motor Racing, 1995, page 6




External links


  • 1981 F1 review







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