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Formula One 2005 Circuits - Details of the eight featured Formula One 2005 circuits with information about the corners, high speed sections and the predicted speeds.
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The European Grand Prix tickets page gives the dates for the 2005 race, track facts and points to some popular online sources for your European Grand Prix tickets.
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2005 Race Results for the European Grand Prix Tickets
1 Fernando Alonso Renault 59 1:31:46.648
2 Nick Heidfeld Williams-BMW 59 +16.5 secs
3 Rubens Barrichello Ferrari 59 +18.5 secs
4 David Coulthard Red Bull Racing 59 +31.5 secs
5 Michael Schumacher Ferrari 59 +50.4 secs
6 Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 59 +51.9 secs
7 Juan Pablo Montoya McLaren-Mercedes 59 +58.1 secs
8 Jarno Trulli Toyota 59 +71.0 secs
9 Vitantonio Liuzzi Red Bull Racing 59 +71.5 secs
10 Jenson Button BAR-Honda 59 +95.7 secs
11 Kimi Räikkönen McLaren-Mercedes 58 +1 Lap
12 Takuma Sato BAR-Honda 58 +1 Lap
13 Jacques Villeneuve Sauber-Petronas 58 +1 Lap
14 Felipe Massa Sauber-Petronas 58 +1 Lap
15 Tiago Monteiro Jordan-Toyota 58 +1 Lap
16 Narain Karthikeyan Jordan-Toyota 58 +1 Lap
17 Christijan Albers Minardi-Cosworth 57 +2 Laps
18 Patrick Friesacher Minardi-Cosworth 56 +3 Laps
Ret Ralf Schumacher Toyota 33 Spin
Ret Mark Webber Williams-BMW 0 Accident
track facts and European Grand Prix tickets sources
Date: May / June 2005
Date to be confirmed
Starting time: 14:00 CET
Local time: CET
Circuit: Nürburgring
First European Grand Prix tickets GP: 1951
Circuit length: 4,556 km
Race laps: 67 laps
Total distance: 305,252 km
some history and information about European Grand Prix tickets
The track was opened on 18 June 1927, after building work began in 1925, involving 3000 workers. The Nürburgring
hosted this same year the Motorbike Grand Prix and the German Grand Prix for Race Cars. The new track was soon
regarded as the German Race Cours that had no equal anywhere in the world, and in 1938 it hosts over 200,000
spectators. But the Second World War put a stop to all motor sporting activities. In 1950, the first year of the Formula 1
Grand Prix, the "Ring" became international again, and the 1st August 1954 the Nürburgring hosted more than 400,000
spectators for the European Grand Prix tickets course.
Built amid the remains of the old Ring in the wooded Eifel Mountains south of Cologne, the old track was regarded
as the most challenging, even dangerous track in the world until it was taken off the calendar in 1976 following
Austrian Niki Lauda's near-fatal crash.
In 1971 the European Grand Prix tickets track was rebuilt, safer but faster. After Niki Lauda´s accident in 1976, the Nürburgring was refused
authorisation for Formula 1 races. A new and shorter course with 4.542 m long was opened on 12 May 1984 hosting the
European Grand Prix, and in 1985 German Formula 1 was back on the "Ring".
The modern European Grand Prix tickets circuit has a mix of high and low-speed corners with limited overtaking
possibilities, putting a premium on qualifying and fast pit stops.
But the Nürburgring didn´t hold another Grand Prix until 1995, won by Michael Schumacher. Since this year there´s
been every reason to be glad, with the return of the Formula 1 and Motor Bike Championship, and the Nürburgring
has never been as much a part of the region as it today.
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The most relevant links we could find, placed here free
Just Tickets and Motoring
- Just Tickets and Motoring. www.justtickets.co.uk
Easy GP tickets
- Easy Grand Prix Tickets - Grand Prix tickets - F1 tickets - Formula tickets - F1 ticket. www.easygpt.co.uk
GrandPrix-Tickets
- for European Grand Prix tickets - 29/05 Europe. www.grandprix-tickets.com
f1-gpt
- Formula 1 Grand Prix Tickets. www.f1-gpt.com
F1 tickets
- more information about the circuit and ticket prices - European Grand Prix tickets. www.f1ticket.info
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