1954 Formula One season

(Redirected from 1954 Formula One)

The 1954 Formula One season was the eighth season of FIA Formula One motor racing. It featured the fifth World Championship of Drivers, which was contested over nine races between 17 January and 24 October 1954. The season also included several non-championship races for Formula One cars.

Juan Manuel Fangio (pictured in 1952) won his second Drivers' Championship.

Juan Manuel Fangio won his second Drivers' Championship, after previously winning it in 1951.[1] After the first couple of races, he switched teams, going from Maserati to Mercedes-Benz, making him the only F1 driver in history to win a championship driving for more than one team in the same season.

After the championship had been run under Formula Two regulations for two seasons, the maximum engine displacement was increased to 2.5 litres for 1954. This increased average power outputs by 150%[2] and attracted several new constructors. At the same time, some F2 constructors withdrew, while others intended to compete but could not get an F1 chassis ready in time.

Argentinian Onofre Marimón suffered a fatal accident during practice for the German Grand Prix. Coming over one of the steep hills, he went straight through the corner at the bottom. His Maserati hit a ditch, somersaulted and landed on top of him. It was the first fatality during an F1 championship weekend.

In 1955, the movie The Racers came out, the story of which was based on the life of Rudolf Caracciola. Real-life racing footage from the 1954 F1 season was used, including in-race shots from a camera car that started behind the drivers in the Belgian Grand Prix. This approach would be recreated in the 1966 film Grand Prix.

Teams and drivers

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The following teams and drivers competed in the 1954 FIA World Championship of Drivers. The list does not include those who only contested the Indianapolis 500.

Entrant Constructor Chassis Engine Tyre Driver Rounds
  Officine Alfieri Maserati Maserati 250F
A6GCM
Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6
Maserati A6 2.0 L6
P   Juan Manuel Fangio 1, 3
  Onofre Marimón 1, 3–6
  Luigi Musso 1, 8–9
  Birabongse Bhanudej 1
  Sergio Mantovani 3–4, 6–9
  Alberto Ascari 4–5
  Luigi Villoresi 4–6, 8
  Roberto Mieres 7–9
  Stirling Moss 7–9
  Harry Schell 7
  Louis Rosier 8
  Paco Godia 9
  Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 625
553
500
Ferrari 625 2.5 L4
Ferrari 554 2.5 L4
Ferrari 500 2.0 L4
P   Giuseppe Farina 1, 3
  José Froilán González 1, 3–8
  Mike Hawthorn 1, 3–9
  Umberto Maglioli 1, 7–8
  Maurice Trintignant 3–9
  Piero Taruffi 6
  Robert Manzon 7
  Alberto Ascari 8
  Equipe Gordini Gordini T16 Gordini 23 2.5 L6 E   Jean Behra 1, 3–9
  Élie Bayol 1
  Roger Loyer 1
  Paul Frère 3–4, 6
  André Pilette 3, 5–6
  Jacques Pollet 4, 9
  Clemar Bucci 5–8
  Fred Wacker 7–8
  Ecurie Rosier Ferrari
Maserati
500
625
250F
Ferrari 500 2.0 L4
Ferrari 625 2.5 L4
Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6
D
P
  Louis Rosier 1, 4–6, 9
  Maurice Trintignant 1
  Robert Manzon 4–6, 8–9
  Harry Schell Maserati A6GCM
250F
Maserati A6 2.0 L6
Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6
P   Harry Schell 1, 4–6, 9
  Emmanuel de Graffenried Maserati A6GCM Maserati A6 2.0 L6 P   Toulo de Graffenried 1, 9
  Ottorino Volonterio 9
  Roberto Mieres Maserati A6GCM
250F
Maserati A6 2.0 L6
Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6
P   Roberto Mieres 1, 3–6
  Jorge Daponte Maserati A6GCM Maserati A6 2.0 L6 P   Jorge Daponte 1, 8
  Onofre Marimón Maserati A6GCM Maserati A6 2.0 L6 P   Carlos Menditeguy 1
  Ecurie Francorchamps Ferrari 500 Ferrari 500 2.0 L4 E   Jacques Swaters 3, 7, 9
  Birabongse Bhanudej Maserati 250F Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6 P   Birabongse Bhanudej 3–6, 9
  Ron Flockhart 5
  Equipe Moss
  A.E. Moss
Maserati 250F Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6 P   Stirling Moss 3, 5–6
  Daimler Benz AG Mercedes W196 Mercedes M196 2.5 L8 C   Juan Manuel Fangio 4–9
  Karl Kling 4–9
  Hans Herrmann 4, 6–9
  Hermann Lang 6
  Georges Berger Gordini T16 Gordini 23 2.5 L6 E   Georges Berger 4
  HW Motors HWM-Alta 53 Alta GP 2.5 L4 D   Lance Macklin 4
  Owen Racing Organisation Maserati 250F Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6 D   Ken Wharton 4–7, 9
  Guerino Bertocchi 9
  Gilby Engineering Maserati 250F Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6 D   Roy Salvadori 4–5
  Scuderia Ambrosiana Ferrari 500 Ferrari 500 2.0 L4 A   Reg Parnell 5
  G.A. Vandervell
  Vandervell Products
Vanwall Special Vanwall 254 2.5 L4 P   Peter Collins 5, 8–9
  Peter Whitehead Cooper-Alta T24 Alta GP 2.5 L4 D   Peter Whitehead 5
  Bill Whitehouse Connaught-Lea-Francis A Lea-Francis 2.0 L4 D   Bill Whitehouse 5
  Leslie Marr Connaught-Lea-Francis A Lea-Francis 2.0 L4 D   Leslie Marr 5
  R.R.C. Walker Racing Team Connaught-Lea-Francis A Lea-Francis 2.0 L4 D   John Riseley-Prichard 5
  Sir Jeremy Boles Connaught-Lea-Francis A Lea-Francis 2.0 L4 D   Don Beauman 5
  Ecurie Ecosse Connaught-Lea-Francis A Lea-Francis 2.0 L4 D   Leslie Thorne 5
  R.J. Chase Cooper-Bristol T23 Bristol BS1 2.0 L6 D   Alan Brown 5
  Gould's Garage (Bristol) Cooper-Bristol T23 Bristol BS1 2.0 L6 D   Horace Gould 5
  Bob Gerard Cooper-Bristol T23 Bristol BS1 2.0 L6 D   Bob Gerard 5
  Ecurie Richmond Cooper-Bristol T23 Bristol BS1 2.0 L6 D   Eric Brandon 5
  Rodney Nuckey 5
  Hans Klenk Klenk-BMW Meteor BMW 328 2.0 L6 P   Theo Helfrich 6
  Giovanni de Riu Maserati A6GCM Maserati A6 2.0 L6 P   Giovanni de Riu 8
  Scuderia Lancia Lancia D50 Lancia DS50 2.5 V8 P   Alberto Ascari 9
  Luigi Villoresi 9

Team and driver changes

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Lancia designed the D50, but it was only ready for the last race of the season.

Mid-season changes

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Mercedes competed with the W196, which sported closed-wheel streamlined bodywork, and was the fastest car on debut.

Calendar

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Round Grand Prix Circuit Date
1 Argentine Grand Prix   Autódromo Oscar Alfredo Gálvez, Buenos Aires 17 January
2 Indianapolis 500   Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Speedway 31 May[a]
3 Belgian Grand Prix   Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot 20 June
4 French Grand Prix   Reims-Gueux, Gueux 4 July
5 British Grand Prix   Silverstone Circuit, Silverstone 17 July
6 German Grand Prix   Nürburgring, Nürburg 1 August
7 Swiss Grand Prix   Circuit Bremgarten, Bern 22 August
8 Italian Grand Prix   Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, Monza 5 September
9 Spanish Grand Prix   Pedralbes Circuit, Barcelona 24 October

Calendar changes

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  • The Spanish Grand Prix at Pedrables returned to the calendar for the first time since 1951. It was cancelled in the past two years due to monetary reasons.
  • The Dutch Grand Prix was originally scheduled to be held on 6 June but was cancelled due to monetary reasons.[4]

Regulation changes

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The maximum allowed engine displacement was increased from 2.0 to 2.5 litres for naturally-aspirated engines.[3][5][6] Average power outputs increased by around 150%.[2] The limit for compressed engines was set at 750 cc,[7][8] as it had been since 1952, but no constructor would build one before they were outright banned in 1961.

Championship report

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Rounds 1 to 3

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1950 champion Nino Farina scored his only podium of the year in the Argentine Grand Prix.

The championship started off with the Argentine Grand Prix. Multiple constructors intended to compete, but none of their cars were ready yet. The grid consisted of Ferraris, Maseratis and Gordinis, all of them adapting their 1953 chassis for the new regulations. 1950's champion Nino Farina qualified on pole position - he is the oldest F1 driver in history to start on pole - ahead of teammate José Froilán González and local hero Juan Manuel Fangio in the Maserati. At the start, González fell back to fourth, but after a remarkable recovery drive, he took the lead on lap 15. A third of the way in, a rainstorm arrived and the leader spun off. Farina pitted for a new helmet visor and third Ferrari driver Mike Hawthorn spun off as well. This left Fangio in a comfortable lead, until the track dried and he fell back to third behind González and Farina. A second period of rain caused the order to switch back around, putting Fangio ahead of the two Ferraris, but when the Maserati driver pitted for new tyres, he was back in third. Ferrari's team manager Nello Ugolini protested his rivals' pit stop, claiming they had too many mechanics working on the car. Confident that the protest would be granted, he signalled the leading pair to bring the cars home and not fight the charging Fangio. So they did, and they finished second and third behind the home hero. But then the FIA rejected Ferrari's protest and upheld the results, granting Fangio his first home win.[9]

The Indianapolis 500 was included in the Formula One championship, but no F1 drivers attended. Bill Vukovich won the race for the second year in a row.

In qualifying for the Belgian Grand Prix, Fangio broke his 1951 lap record and started on pole position, ahead of González and Farina. The Argentine was contracted by Mercedes, but since their car was not ready yet, he was loaned to his former team. González was allowed into the lead when Fangio messed up the start, but when his engine cut out on the opening lap, Farina was in front. Roberto Mieres's car burst into flames, as his fuel filler cap had been left open and fuel had leaked onto the exhaust. The Maserati driver jumped out, escaping with burns on his back, and the drivers avoided his car. Fangio got up to second place by lap 2 and took the lead on lap 3. When his helmet visor broke on lap 10, he pitted to put on his goggles, but then recovered to pass Farina for the second time, just before the Ferrari engine cut out, sending the Italian out of the race. Hawthorn's exhaust pipe split, sending fumes into the cockpit and making him feel dizzy. He pitted and collapsed over the wheel, so the team dragged him out and González took over his car. The team only found out why the Brit was unwell when González pointed it out a lap later. Fangio took a comfortable win, ahead of Maurice Trintignant (Ferrari) and Stirling Moss (Maserati).[10]

In the Drivers' Championship, Juan Manuel Fangio (Maserati/Mercedes) was in the lead with 17 points, ahead of Maurice Trintignant (Ferrari) and Bill Vukovich (Kurtis Kraft) with 8. Vukovich would not compete in any other rounds.

Rounds 4 to 7

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Mercedes debuted in the French Grand Prix with the revolutionary designed W196.

The long-awaited Mercedes team arrived for the French Grand Prix and their drivers were quickest of all from the get-go. Championship leader Juan Manuel Fangio could finally say goodbye to Maserati and was joined by Germans Karl Kling and Hans Herrmann. Fangio's seat was taken up by 1952 and 1953 champion Alberto Ascari, whose new employer Lancia did not have their cars ready yet. Teammate and mentor Luigi Villoresi was loaned to Maserati likewise. Fangio and Kling set the fastest times in qualifying, putting their silver-coloured streamlined W196s at the front of the grid. In the opening laps, González was the only one to stay with the leading pair, but his Ferraris overheated, so his focus shifted to keeping the third Mercedes of Herrmann behind. On lap 13, the Ferrari engine gave up. Teammate Mike Hawthorn retired with similar issues, before Herrmann broke the lap record but then stopped in a cloud of smoke. Fangio and Kling did their laps at a comfortable pace, most straights running side-by-side, only upping their pace for the final sprint. Coming out of the last corner, Fangio managed to take the win by just a couple of yards. Robert Manzon in a private Ferrari finished third out of just six finishers.[11]

Fangio was again at pole position for the British Grand Prix, but the Mercedes' streamlined bodywork gave them less of an advantage at the Silverstone Circuit, compared to Reims two weeks ago. The Ferraris of González and Hawthorn, and the private Maserati of Stirling Moss completed the four-wide front row. González took the lead at the start and created a gap of some five seconds, while Moss and Hawthorn were in a fierce fight. Rain fell and there were several accidents. Fangio went off and damaged the nose of his car, but kept putting pressure on his countryman in front, until his pace was hindered by technical trouble and he fell back to fourth. González scored a win to be proud of, ahead of Ferrari teammate Hawthorn and Onofre Marimón for Maserati, as with 10 laps to go, Moss's back axle had failed. Fangio finished fourth on a lap down. Seven drivers set the fastest lap, as it was not measured any more precise than in whole seconds, so they all received an extra   championship point.[12]

 
Juan Manuel Fangio won the German Grand Prix for Mercedes.

The German Grand Prix was given the honorary title of Grand Prix of Europe. Four Mercedes cars arrived, with three of them carrying open-wheeled bodywork, the team seemingly having learned from their defeat in Britain. Practice was overshadowed by the fatal accident of Marimón, one of the more popular and younger drivers on the grid, and the Maserati works team withdrew from the race. Fangio scored his third pole position in a row, ahead of Hawthorn and Moss, but it was González who took the lead at the start. Hawthorn fell back behind the fast-starting Mercedes of Lang and Herrmann. Fangio passed his countryman going into lap 2 and Moss retired with dramatic technical failing. Hawthorn retired as well, giving way to the fourth Mercedes of Kling, who had started last. Herrmann retired with a fuel leak, but when González dropped off the pace, the other Mercedes were sitting in a dominant 1-2-3. Lang, however, spun off and Kling was putting unnecessary pressure on Fangio. Hawthorn took over González's car, before Kling pitted a broken rear suspension. Fangio upheld Mercedes's honour with a win, ahead of the two Ferraris of Hawthorn/González and Maurice Trintignant, with Kling in fourth.[13]

Fangio had the opportunity to clinch the championship in the Swiss Grand Prix. All he had to do was prevent González from winning and his lead in points would be large enough. González started on pole but immediately lost the lead to Fangio. Moss, who had been promoted to the Maserati works team, started third and was eager to put the Ferrari another place down. Hawthorn had started down in sixth but was lapping two seconds faster than the leader, and managed to overtake both González and Moss. In quick succession, Moss, Hawthorn, Trintignant and Kling retired, removing all excitement from the race. Fangio led González home by almost a minute, while Herrmann finished a lap down.[14]

In the Drivers' Championship, Juan Manuel Fangio (Maserati/Mercedes) stood on 42 points and he had done enough to secure his second title. José Froilán González (Ferrari) was currently in second with 23  points and Maurice Trintignant (Ferrari) third with 15.

Rounds 8 and 9

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Juan Manuel Fangio leading Alberto Ascari in the Italian Grand Prix

Even with the championship in the bag, Juan Manuel Fangio showed no signs of slowing down going into the Italian Grand Prix. He scored another pole position for Mercedes, ahead of Alberto Ascari, now with Ferrari, since Lancia were still not ready, and Stirling Moss for Maserati. At the start, Fangio lost the lead to fourth-starting teammate Karl Kling and the Silver Arrows with their streamlined bodywork looked set to repeat their feat in Reims. However, Kling made a slight mistake on lap 5, bringing him down to fifth, and José Froilán González, second in the championship, managed to get alongside Fangio, before Ascari went passed all of them. González retired, so the old rivals Fangio and Ascari were free to fight. And so they did for more than twenty laps, until Maserati drivers Moss and Luigi Villoresi joined the scrap. The latter had overworked his clutch and soon dropped back, but Moss took the lead. Ascari suddenly retired with engine failure, which gave Moss the opportunity to stretch his lead, until on lap 68, his oil pressure dropped and he needed to pit. The oil was topped off, but on the next lap, it was streaming from the bottom of the car and he needed to retire. His teammate Sergio Mantovani had been fighting for second place with Mike Hawthorn, but that Maserati ran into trouble as well. Fangio won the race, just like last year, ahead of Hawthorn and Umberto Maglioli, who had taken over the car from González.[15]

The season closed with the Spanish Grand Prix and Lancia joined the grid with their D50s. This meant that Ascari could finally try the car and he did so with success, scoring his first pole position of the year. The front row was completed by Fangio (Mercedes), Hawthorn (Ferrari) and Harry Schell (private Maserati). The latter took the lead at the start, ahead of Hawthorn and Ascari, while Fangio fell back to sixth. Ascari was in front on lap 3 and was drawing away, until on lap 9, his clutch gave out. Teammate Villoresi had already stopped on the first lap, so both Lancias had been quick but brittle. Maurice Trintignant joined the pack and took the lead. Moss joined as well, but before long retired with a failing oil pump. Schell spun off while leading on lap 29, and then retired with a broken gearbox, before Trintignant retired from the lead with similar issues. Hawthorn could relax and he brought his Ferrari home to win, ahead of Maserati's Luigi Musso, who had overtaken Fangio's Mercedes six laps from the end, to make it three different constructors on the podium.[16]

In the Drivers' Championship, Juan Manuel Fangio (Maserati/Mercedes) gathered 42 points and won his second title, ahead of José Froilán González (Ferrari) with 25  points and Mike Hawthorn (Ferrari) with 24 .

Results and standings

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Grands Prix

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Round Grand Prix Pole position Fastest lap Winning driver Winning constructor Tyre Report
1   Argentine Grand Prix   Giuseppe Farina   José Froilán González   Juan Manuel Fangio   Maserati P Report
2   Indianapolis 500   Jack McGrath   Jack McGrath   Bill Vukovich   Kurtis Kraft-Offenhauser F Report
3   Belgian Grand Prix   Juan Manuel Fangio   Juan Manuel Fangio   Juan Manuel Fangio   Maserati P Report
4   French Grand Prix   Juan Manuel Fangio   Hans Herrmann   Juan Manuel Fangio   Mercedes C Report
5   British Grand Prix   Juan Manuel Fangio   Alberto Ascari
  Jean Behra
  Juan Manuel Fangio
  José Froilán González
  Mike Hawthorn
  Onofre Marimón
  Stirling Moss
  José Froilán González   Ferrari P Report
6   German Grand Prix   Juan Manuel Fangio   Karl Kling   Juan Manuel Fangio   Mercedes C Report
7   Swiss Grand Prix   José Froilán González   Juan Manuel Fangio   Juan Manuel Fangio   Mercedes C Report
8   Italian Grand Prix   Juan Manuel Fangio   José Froilán González   Juan Manuel Fangio   Mercedes C Report
9   Spanish Grand Prix   Alberto Ascari   Alberto Ascari   Mike Hawthorn   Ferrari P Report

World Championship of Drivers standings

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Points were awarded to the top five classified finishers, with an additional point awarded for setting the fastest lap, regardless of finishing position or even classification. Only the best five results counted towards the championship. Shared drives result in half points for each driver if they finished in a points-scoring position. If more than one driver set the same fastest lap time, the fastest lap point would be divided equally between the drivers. Numbers without parentheses are championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored. Points were awarded in the following system:

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th  FL
Race 8 6 4 3 2 1
Source:[17]
Pos. Driver ARG
 
500
 
BEL
 
FRA
 
GBR
 
GER
 
SUI
 
ITA
 
ESP
 
Pts.
1   Juan Manuel Fangio 1 1PF 1P (4PF*) 1P 1F (1P) (3) 42 (57+17)
2   José Froilán González 3F (4)† Ret 1F* 2† 2P 3† / RetF 25+17 (26+914)
3   Mike Hawthorn DSQ 4† Ret 2F* 2† Ret 2 1 24+914
4   Maurice Trintignant 4 2 Ret 5 3 Ret 5 Ret 17
5   Karl Kling 2 7 4F Ret Ret 5 12
6   Bill Vukovich 1 8
7   Hans Herrmann RetF Ret 3 4 Ret 8
8   Luigi Musso DNS Ret 2 6
9   Nino Farina 2P Ret 6
10   Jimmy Bryan 2 6
11   Roberto Mieres Ret Ret Ret 6 Ret 4 Ret 4 6
12   Jack McGrath 3PF 5
13   Stirling Moss 3 RetF* Ret Ret 10 Ret 4+17
14   Onofre Marimón Ret Ret Ret 3F* DNS 4+17
15   Robert Manzon 3 Ret 9 DNS Ret Ret 4
16   Sergio Mantovani 7 5 5 9 Ret 4
17   Prince Bira 7 6 4 Ret† Ret 9 3
18   Umberto Maglioli 9 7 3† 2
19   André Pilette 5 9 Ret 2
20   Luigi Villoresi 5 Ret† DNS Ret Ret 2
21   Élie Bayol 5 2
22   Mike Nazaruk 5 2
23   Troy Ruttman 4† 1+12
24   Duane Carter 4† / 15† 1+12
25   Alberto Ascari Ret Ret / Ret†F* Ret RetPF 1+17
26   Jean Behra DSQ Ret 6 RetF* 10 Ret Ret Ret 17
  Harry Schell 6 Ret 12 7 Ret Ret 0
  Ken Wharton Ret 8 DNS 6 8 0
  Fred Wacker Ret 6 0
  Fred Agabashian 6 0
  Piero Taruffi 6 0
  Paco Godia 6 0
  Louis Rosier Ret Ret Ret 8 8 7 0
  Peter Collins Ret 7 DNS 0
  Don Freeland 7 0
  Jacques Swaters Ret 8 Ret 0
  Toulo de Graffenried 8 Ret† 0
  Paul Russo 8 0
  Larry Crockett 9 0
  Cal Niday 10 0
  Bob Gerard 10 0
  Jorge Daponte Ret 11 0
  Art Cross 11 0
  Don Beauman 11 0
  Chuck Stevenson 12 0
  Manny Ayulo 13 0
  Leslie Marr 13 0
  Bob Sweikert 14 0
  Leslie Thorne 14 0
  Horace Gould 15 0
  Jimmy Jackson 15† 0
  Ernie McCoy 16 0
  Jimmy Reece 17 0
  Ed Elisian 18 0
  Frank Armi 19 0
  Clemar Bucci Ret Ret Ret Ret 0
  Paul Frère Ret Ret Ret 0
  Roy Salvadori Ret Ret 0
  Jacques Pollet Ret Ret 0
  Roger Loyer Ret 0
  Sam Hanks Ret 0
  Pat O'Connor Ret 0
  Rodger Ward Ret 0
  Gene Hartley Ret 0
  Andy Linden Ret 0
  Johnny Thomson Ret 0
  Jerry Hoyt Ret 0
  Jimmy Daywalt Ret 0
  Tony Bettenhausen Ret 0
  Spider Webb Ret 0
  Bill Homeier Ret 0
  Johnnie Parsons Ret 0
  Len Duncan Ret 0
  Pat Flaherty Ret† 0
  Jim Rathmann Ret† 0
  Lance Macklin Ret 0
  Georges Berger Ret 0
  Bill Whitehouse Ret 0
  John Riseley-Prichard Ret 0
  Reg Parnell Ret 0
  Peter Whitehead Ret 0
  Eric Brandon Ret 0
  Ron Flockhart Ret† 0
  Hermann Lang Ret 0
  Theo Helfrich Ret 0
  Ottorino Volonterio Ret† 0
  Alan Brown DNS 0
  Rodney Nuckey DNS 0
  Giovanni de Riu DNQ 0
Pos. Driver ARG
 
500
 
BEL
 
FRA
 
GBR
 
GER
 
SUI
 
ITA
 
ESP
 
Pts.
Key
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Other points position
Blue Other classified position
Not classified, finished (NC)
Purple Not classified, retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Excluded (EX)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Withdrawn (WD)
Did not enter (empty cell)
Annotation Meaning
P Pole position
F Fastest lap


  • † Position shared between multiple drivers of the same car.
  • * Fastest lap shared between multiple drivers.
  • ‡ Several cars were shared in this race. See the race page for details.

Non-championship races

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The following is a summary of the races for Formula One cars staged during the 1954 season that did not count towards the 1954 World Championship of Drivers.

Race name Circuit Date Winning driver Constructor Report
  IV Gran Premio di Siracusa Syracuse 11 April   Nino Farina   Ferrari Report
  XV Pau Grand Prix Pau 19 April   Jean Behra   Gordini Report
  VI Lavant Cup Goodwood 19 April   Reg Parnell   Ferrari Report
  III Grand Prix de Bordeaux Bordeaux 9 May   José Froilán González   Ferrari Report
  VI BRDC International Trophy Silverstone 15 May   José Froilán González   Ferrari Report
  VII Gran Premio di Bari Bari 22 May   José Froilán González   Ferrari Report
  II Curtis Trophy Snetterton 5 June   Roy Salvadori   Maserati Report
  XIII Gran Premio di Roma Castelfusano 6 June   Onofre Marimón   Maserati Report
  XXIV Grand Prix des Frontières Chimay 6 June   Birabongse Bhanudej   Maserati Report
  I Cornwall MRC Formula 1 Race Davidstow 7 June   John Riseley-Prichard   Connaught-Lea Francis Report
  I BARC Formula 1 Race Goodwood 7 June   Reg Parnell   Ferrari Report
  II Crystal Palace Trophy Crystal Palace 19 June   Reg Parnell   Ferrari Report
  IV Grand Prix de Rouen-les-Essarts Rouen 11 July   Maurice Trintignant   Ferrari Report
  III Grand Prix de Caen Caen 25 July   Maurice Trintignant   Ferrari Report
  I August Cup Crystal Palace 2 August   Reg Parnell   Ferrari Report
  II Cornwall MRC Formula 1 Race Davidstow 2 August   John Coombs   Lotus-Lea Francis Report
  I International Gold Cup Oulton Park 7 August   Stirling Moss   Maserati Report
  II RedeX Trophy Snetterton 14 August   Reg Parnell   Ferrari Report
  XXIII Circuito di Pescara Pescara 15 August   Luigi Musso   Maserati Report
  III Joe Fry Memorial Trophy Castle Combe 28 August   Horace Gould   Cooper-Bristol Report
  V Circuit de Cadours Cadours 12 September   Jean Behra   Gordini Report
  I Grosser Preis von Berlin AVUS 19 September   Karl Kling   Mercedes Report
  VII Goodwood Trophy Goodwood 25 September   Stirling Moss   Maserati Report
  I Daily Telegraph Trophy Aintree 2 October   Stirling Moss   Maserati Report

Notes

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  1. ^ The Indianapolis 500 also counted towards the 1954 AAA Championship Car season, and was run for AAA Championship cars, but was not run to Formula One regulations.

References

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  1. ^ "1954 Driver Standings". Formula1.com. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  2. ^ a b Steven de Groote (1 January 2009). "F1 rules and stats 1950-1959". F1Technical. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d James Broomhead (9 March 2014). "F1 1954: Mercedes-Benz Rule In New Engine Era". The Checkered Flag. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  4. ^ "Grand Prix Cancelled". Autosport. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  5. ^ Kevin Turner (17 March 2022). "The truth about F1 rule changes". Autosport. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  6. ^ Martin Williamson. "A timeline of Formula One". ESPN. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  7. ^ "Formula One Changes The Rules". Ferrari. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  8. ^ TheJudge13 (14 September 2012). "Rules Damn Rules (Part 1: FIA Makes Historic Changes)". The Judge 13. Retrieved 7 June 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ "Argentine GP, 1954". GrandPrix. 17 January 1954. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  10. ^ Motor Sport (20 June 1954). "Fangio in Fine Form for Maserati". Motorsport Magazine. Archived from the original on 2 December 2022. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  11. ^ Motor Sport (4 July 1954). "1954 French Grand Prix Race Report: Fangio and Kling score close 1-2 on Mercedes debut". Motorsport Magazine. Archived from the original on 3 December 2022. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  12. ^ Motor Sport (17 July 1954). "1954 British Grand Prix race report - Ferrari Vanquishes Mercedes-Benz". Motorsport Magazine. Archived from the original on 31 May 2023. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  13. ^ Motor Sport (1 August 1954). "XVII Grosser Preis Von Deutschland". Motorsport Magazine. Archived from the original on 18 August 2023. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  14. ^ Motor Sport (22 August 1954). "Grosser Preis Der Schweiz". Motorsport Magazine. Archived from the original on 6 June 2019. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  15. ^ Motor Sport (5 September 1954). "25th Gran Premio d'Italia". Motorsport Magazine. Archived from the original on 3 September 2023. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  16. ^ Denis Jenkinson (24 October 1954). "1954 Spanish Grand Prix race report: Hawthorn class of the field". Motorsport Magazine. Archived from the original on 25 May 2022. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  17. ^ "World Championship points systems". 8W. Forix. 18 January 2019. Archived from the original on 24 September 2019. Retrieved 21 December 2020.