Editor’s Note: A version of this article was first published by CNN on November 8, 2012.
If you were a Formula One fan who attended the US Grand Prix at Indianapolis in 2005, it could be argued you witnessed one of the strangest races in motorsport history.
A field of 20 cars should have lined up for the race, but on that Sunday of June 19 just six were on the starting grid.
It was the result of a bizarre sequence of events which left fans feeling so shortchanged it nearly drove F1 out of the US for good.
So frustrated was the Indianapolis crowd that fans hissed and hurled bottles when Michael Schumacher’s Ferrari led home the six drivers – as the other 14 brooded in their garages.
“It was sad not to have the GP that we wished to have,” Rubens Barrichello, who finished second behind his Ferrari teammate, told CNN.
“The weekend was long. It was sad because of something we weren’t prepared for and something the fans didn’t understand.
“It was a horrible feeling not to see the cars racing, but unfortunately it wasn’t safe for everyone to race.”
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Tire trouble
The controversy unfolded after a punctured tire during practice caused Ralf Schumacher’s Toyota to crash at the circuit’s banked final turn – the fastest part of the track.
Toyota used Michelin rubber and, after further investigation into the tire failure, Michelin advised the seven teams who used their tires – Renault, McLaren, Williams, Toyota, BAR, Sauber and Red Bull – not to race.
Faced with a dilemma over whether to risk racing on unsafe tires, nine of the teams – including Jordan and Minardi, who along with Ferrari ran on Bridgestone tires – agreed only to compete if a chicane was added to the final turn to lessen the tire load.
But Ferrari and motorsport’s governing body, the FIA, vetoed the plan. From there, the race descended into farce.
As all 20 cars circled the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on the formation lap, it was still unclear whether the Michelin teams intended to boycott the race.
Red Bull driver David Coulthard even argued on the team radio: “If it comes down to my choice, I want to race.”
But at the end of the parade lap, the seven Michelin teams peeled off into the pit lane – leaving only Ferrari, Jordan and Minardi on the grid.
“Without question it was the strangest race I commentated on in F1,” remembered commentator Maurice Hamilton, who was calling the race for BBC Radio.
“I can clearly recall my heart sinking when one car after another peeled into the pit lane.
“The full extent of the problem became apparent when the camera showed just six cars on the grid – and in their original positions, separated by huge gaps.
“I have no idea how my fellow commentator Ian Phillips and I got through the next hour and a half. I was praying the producer in London would switch to the US Open golf but she didn’t!”
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Bitter taste
For the six racers on track, the events of that day were no less bizarre as they raced strung out on the asphalt.
Barrichello was involved in the race’s only incident of note, when Schumacher squeezed the Brazilian’s car onto the grass as he emerged from the pit lane to retake the lead.
“Sometimes you do race alone so the US GP wasn’t strange for that,” said Barrichello with the pragmatism of a racer who has taken part in more grands prix than any other driver in F1 history.
“But it was bad because mentally you knew that there was only six cars out on the track. For me, I still had to fight for it but it was a horrible feeling.”
A weekend of petty squabbling and farcical racing undoubtedly left US fans with a bitter taste in their mouths.
“The fans were incensed – and rightly so,” said Hamilton. “While the mood in the paddock was a mix of bewilderment, silent anger and resignation.”
Many felt then FIA president Max Mosley had not done enough to find a compromise which would have allowed all 20 cars to race.
Michelin also faced criticism for failing to bring suitable tires to the race and the French company later agreed to refund disgruntled fans.
“I thought that would be the end of the US GP,” Hamilton recalled. “But reparation by Michelin and the passage of time brought a surprisingly large crowd back in 2006.
“F1 fans in the US may be a small percentage of that huge sporting audience but they are very loyal and knowledgeable.”
