Portuguese Grand Prix
| Laps | 70 |
|---|---|
| Circuit length | 4.36 km (2.71 miles) |
| Race length | 305.11 km (189.63 miles) |
| Most driver wins | Nigel Mansell/Alain Prost (3) |
| Most constructor wins | Williams (6) |
| Last race (1996): | |
| Winner | Jacques Villeneuve |
| Winning constructor | Williams-Renault |
| Winning time | 1:40'22.915 |
| Pole time | 1'20.330 |
| Pole driver | Damon Hill |
| Pole constructor | Williams-Renault |
| Fastest lap | 1'22.873 |
| Fastest lap driver | Jacques Villeneuve |
| Fastest lap constructor | Williams-Renault |
The first Portuguese Grand Prix (Grande Premio de Portugal) was held on the Boavista street course in Porto on 17
June 1951. The sports car racing event was moved
to Monsanto Park in 1954 as a one-off. The first Formula
One race was held in 14 August 1958 in Porto, followed in 1959 by a grand prix at Monsanto Park, Lisbon and a return to Porto in 1960, after which it was ended. The name was
resurrected for a sports car and Formula 3 race in the Cascais street circuit from 1964 to 1966.
The seeds for the return of the Portuguese Grand Prix were planted with the inauguration of the Autódromo do Estoril in 1972. The Estoril Grand Prix was held as a European Formula Two Championship event during the 1970s. In 21 October 1984, Portugal returned to the F1 calendar, ending the season, where Alain Prost won the race but failed to win the Championship by half a point. In 1985, the Grand Prix was moved to April 21 and held under heavy rain, the ideal conditions for Ayrton Senna to win his first race. From 1986, the race was held in what would become its traditional date, in the penultimate week of September.
After the deaths of Senna and Roland Ratzenberger in Imola in 1994, the Estoril track was changed, with a new chicane built in place of the tank curve, as a security measure. Estoril was then considered an unsafe and outdated track, and the last Portuguese Grand Prix was in Estoril on 22 September 1996, with Jacques Villeneuve as the winner. Estoril was planned to be the site of the 1997 European Grand Prix, but improvements to the circuit were not finished in time. With the expansion of Formula One outside Europe (and several European races under threat of cancellation), the chances for the return of the Portuguese Grand Prix are very slim.
Winners of the Portuguese Grand Prix
A pink background indicates an event that was not part of the Formula One World Championship.
| Races in the Formula One championship |
|---|
| 2007 championship Grand Prix events: Australian | Malaysian |
Bahrain | Spanish | Monaco | Canadian | U.S. | French | British |
| Past championship Grand Prix events: Argentine | Austrian |
Dutch | German | Indy 500 | Las Vegas | Luxembourg | Mexican | Morocco |
| Confirmed future Grand Prix events: |
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