1952 German Grand Prix


The 1952 German Grand Prix was a Formula Two race held on 3 August 1952 at the Nürburgring Nordschleife. It was race 6 of 8 in the 1952 World Championship of Drivers, in which each Grand Prix was run to Formula Two rules rather than the Formula One regulations normally used. The 18-lap race was won by Ferrari driver Alberto Ascari after he started from pole position. His teammates Giuseppe Farina and Rudi Fischer finished in second and third places.

Report

The Maserati factory team finally appeared with their new car, the A6GCM, which was driven by Felice Bonetto. Also racing A6GCMs were the Escuderia Bandeirantes drivers Bianco and Cantoni. Ferrari once again entered the successful trio of Alberto Ascari, Nino Farina and Piero Taruffi, while there were privateer Ferrari entries for Rudi Fischer and Rudolf Schoeller of Ecurie Espadon, Roger Laurent of Ecurie Francorchamps, and Piero Carini of Scuderia Marzotto. Jean Behra returned to action for the Gordini team, having recovered from his shoulder injury. He replaced Prince Bira, and was partnered by teammates Robert Manzon and Maurice Trintignant. HWM entered three cars, with regular Peter Collins joined by the Belgian pairing of Paul Frère and Johnny Claes, while Australian Tony Gaze drove a privateer HWM. Bill Aston drove an Aston Butterworth, and the field was completed by a plethora of privateer German cars.
Ferrari were once again fastest in qualifying, with Ascari and Farina being joined on the front row of the grid by the Gordinis of Trintignant and Manzon. The remaining works Ferrari driver, Taruffi, started from the second row, alongside the Ecurie Espadon-entered Ferrari of Fischer and Paul Pietsch in a Veritas. Bonetto's works Maserati made the third row, along with the Gordini of Jean Behra, and a pair of local entrants: Hans Klenk's Veritas, and Willi Heeks in an AFM.
The race turned out to be rather a processional event, with Ascari leading Farina all the way in the first 16 laps. Two laps from home, he had to dive into the pits for oil, emerging 10 seconds behind Farina-which he rattled off on the next lap, catching Farina just a mile from home to win by several seconds after an otherwise dull race. Piero Taruffi had been running in third behind his teammates, but he lost the position to Rudi Fischer towards the end of the race when he encountered problems due to his suspension breaking. Fischer's podium and Taruffi's fourth place-finish ensured that it was a Ferrari 1-2-3-4. Manzon, who had been running in fourth for much of the first half of the race, between Taruffi and Fischer, was forced to retire when a wheel fell off his car. This meant that his teammate Behra was left to take the final points in fifth position in his Gordini, ahead of Roger Laurent's Ferrari. Felice Bonetto, of the factory Maserati team, was disqualified for receiving a push start after his first lap spin.
Ascari, who had taken his fourth consecutive victory, along with a fourth consecutive fastest lap, had now scored the maximum of 36 points for the season, as only a driver's four best results counted. As a result, he clinched the world championship, making him the first driver to win the championship with two races left to go. The date was 3 August, the earliest anyone would claim the Championship until Jim Clark seized the crown on 1 August in 1965, also at the Nürburgring. Ascari's teammates, Taruffi and Farina, remained in second and third, respectively, in the Drivers' Championship, while Swiss driver Fischer's second podium of the season raised him up to fourth in the standings.

Entries

Classification

Qualifying

Only the lap times from the 7 best placed drivers are known.
PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGap
1101 Alberto AscariFerrari10:04.4
2102 Nino FarinaFerrari10:07.3+ 2.9
3109 Maurice TrintignantGordini10:19.1+ 14.7
4107 Robert ManzonGordini10:25.3+ 20.9
5103 Piero TaruffiFerrari10:26.3+ 21.9
6117 Rudi FischerFerrari10:41.9+ 37.5
7127 Paul PietschVeritas10:56.3+ 51.9
8128 Hans KlenkVeritas
9123 Willi HeeksAFM-BMW
10105 Felice BonettoMaserati
11108 Jean BehraGordini
12121 Fritz RiessVeritas-BMW
13112 Paul FrèreHWM-Alta
14120 Tony GazeHWM-Alta
15125 Toni UlmenVeritas-BMW
16115 Gino BiancoMaserati
17119 Roger LaurentFerrari
18122 Theo HelfrichVeritas-BMW
19126 Adolf BrudesVeritas-BMW
20129 Josef PetersVeritas-BMW
21114 Bill AstonAston Butterworth
22124 Helmut NiedermayrAFM-BMW
23136 Rudolf KrauseReif-BMW
24118 Rudolf SchoellerFerrari
25110 Marcel BalsaBalsa-BMW
26116 Eitel CantoniMaserati
27104 Piero CariniFerrari
28133 Willi KrakauAFM-BMW
29135 Ernst KlodwigHeck-BMW
30130 Günther BechemNacke-BMW
31131 Ludwig FischerAFM-BMW
32113 Johnny ClaesHWM-Alta
33111 Peter CollinsHWM-Alta
34134 Harry MerkelKrakau-BMW

Race

;Notes
;Drivers' Championship standings