Rounds 1 to 3 The 1966 season started off with the
Monaco Grand Prix. The twisty track seemed for a large part to negate the difference in
power between the 3
litre Ferrari engines and the 2
litre BRM and
Climax engines (used by
Lotuses). and champion
Jim Clark qualified on
pole position in the Lotus-Climax, ahead of champion
John Surtees for Ferrari. On the second row started the two BRMs of
Jackie Stewart and champion
Graham Hill. At the start, Clark's car got jammed in first
gear and was passed by everyone. Surtees and Stewart created a gap to the rest of the field. Under normal circumstances, the Ferrari would soon leave the BRM behind, but Surtees'
rear axle failed and he retired on lap 16. Stewart was out on his own, followed by
Jochen Rindt in the
Cooper-
Maserati and Hill, before
Lorenzo Bandini rose up to second place in the Ferrari. Clark was charging back to the front of the field, but spent a lot of time behind Hill. Clark dove through into the first corner to take third place - Rindt had retired with engine failure - but the Lotus's left-rear suspension failed later in the lap and the reigning champion was out of the race. Stewart held on to take his second career win, ahead of Bandini and Hill.
Bob Bondurant finished in fourth place to get three BRMs in the points. Behind came three Coopers but none of them were classified and did not receive championship points. At first, Stewart was setting the pace during
practice for the
Belgian Grand Prix, but on the high-speed circuit, Surtees qualified on pole in his Ferrari, more than three seconds ahead of Rindt in the Cooper-Maserati. Stewart started third, while Clark could only manage tenth. As the flag was waved, rain was falling at the far end of the track. Stewart and Hill crashed in the
Masta Kink, already known as the most dangerous corner, and the
Scot got trapped under his car in a pool of leaking
fuel for 25 minutes. Both Hill and Bondurant, who had crashed as well, borrowed a spectator's toolkit to free him. Another five cars retired within the first lap of the race, including Clark. Surtees led the race, ahead of Rindt and Bandini, and that became the finishing order as well. Behind them finished and champion
Jack Brabham and Rindt's teammate
Richie Ginther. Two other drivers were still running but were not classified, making it two races in a row that championship points were held back under the new rule. Following his crash, Stewart became a strong advocate of improving driver safety in not only Grand Prix but motor racing in general. When Surtees was not granted a drive with Ferrari in the
24 Hours of Le Mans, he left the
Italian team and, with that, gave up his F1 drive as well. He found a seat at Cooper, where Ginther had left to return to his old team
Honda. Bandini qualified on pole for the
French Grand Prix, with old teammate Surtees and new teammate
Mike Parkes beside him on the first row. At the start, Surtees fell back with fuel pick-up issues, before he retired on lap 5. Brabham got up to second place, the only driver able to follow Bandini's pace. On lap 32, the
Australian inherited the lead as the Ferrari's throttle cable broke. The Italian took a piece of string from a
straw bale lining the track and tied it to his throttle, operating it by hand and actually nursing his car back to the pits, but finished out of the points. Brabham won the race, ahead of Parkes in his first race and Brabham's teammate
Denny Hulme. In the Drivers' Championship,
Jack Brabham (
Brabham-
Repco) took the lead with 12 points, ahead of
Lorenzo Bandini (
Ferrari, 10 points), followed by
Surtees,
Stewart and
Rindt (all 9 points). In the Manufacturers' Championship, Ferrari had the lead with 21 points, ahead of Brabham (12) and
BRM and
Cooper (both 9).
Rounds 4 to 6 The
British Grand Prix at
Brands Hatch saw the
Brabham duo of
Jack Brabham and
Denny Hulme qualify at the front, ahead of
Dan Gurney in the
Eagle,
Graham Hill for
BRM and
Jim Clark for
Lotus. Next came
John Surtees in the
Cooper, to make it five different constructors in the top six. At the start, it was Brabham and Hill who led away, until it started raining and
Jochen Rindt pitted for
rain tyres. Rindt got up to second place, pressing Brabham for the lead, while Surtees was third. As the rain dried, however, Rindt fell back and Surtees retired, leaving Brabham and Hulme to finish first and second. Behind them came Hill, Clark and Rindt. started on
pole position for the
Dutch Grand Prix. Brabham and Hulme again qualified first and second for the
Dutch Grand Prix, ahead of Clark, still driving a 2
litre Climax-powered Lotus. Hulme's engine went wrong on lap 17, eventually retiring on lap 37, and leaving Brabham vulnerable to Clark's offense. While lapping some backmarkers, the
Brit passed the
Australian and pulled out a substantial lead. At half-distance, Graham Hill was the only driver not lapped by Clark and Brabham, but then, a
shock absorber on the Lotus's
crankshaft broke and punched a hole in the
water pump, leading to his
engine coolant to leak away. This forced a
pit stop and brought him down to third place. Brabham won his third race in a row, ahead of Hill. (
Ferrari) during the
German Grand Prix The
German Grand Prix was run at the
Nürburgring Nordschleife. In fear of a dull race with not enough entries, the
FIA allowed
Formula Two entries to race simultaneously. They would not be eligible for F1 championship points. The lighter 2 litre cars topped the timings in qualifying, with Clark, Surtees and
Stewart occupying the front row. But at the start, the more powerful 3 litre cars got away better: Surtees held the lead, but Brabham and
Lorenzo Bandini were his nearest rivals.
John Taylor spun off in the rain that had started falling. He got trapped in a burning wreck but was rescued by F2 driver
Jacky Ickx. At the end of the first lap, Brabham had taken the lead, ahead of Surtees, Rindt and Clark. The latter crashed out of the race on lap 11, while the podium places remained unchanged. After winning four consecutive races,
Jack Brabham (
Brabham) had a sizeable lead in the Drivers' Championship with 39 points, ahead of
Graham Hill (
BRM, 17 points) and
John Surtees and
Jochen Rindt (teammates at
Cooper, both on 15 points). In the Manufacturers' Championship, Brabham led with 39 points, ahead of Ferrari (23) and BRM (22).
Rounds 7 to 9 won the
Italian Grand Prix for
Ferrari. The teams that had had to make due with limited power until now, could finally take delivery of new 3
litre engines for the
Italian Grand Prix:
BRM introduced
H16 engines for the works team and their customer
Team Lotus, the
Eagle was powered by the new
Weslake V12, and
Honda were on the grid for the first time this year with their own V12. Much to the joy of the
tifosi,
Ferrari teammates
Mike Parkes and
Ludovico Scarfiotti qualified at the front, ahead of
Jim Clark (
Lotus),
John Surtees (
Cooper) and
Lorenzo Bandini (Ferrari). Championship leader
Jack Brabham started in sixth but felt not much pressure, as Surtees had to win all three remaining races to stop the
Australian from claiming the title. Scarfiotti took the lead at the start but was down to seventh at the end of the first lap. His teammate Bandini replaced him at the front. Brabham went by on lap 4 but then retired with an
oil leak. Successively, Surtees, Bandini and Clark retired as well, giving the lead back to Scarfiotti, ahead of Parkes and
Denny Hulme (Brabham).
Jochen Rindt's front tyre deflated coming out of the last corner, the
Austrian crossing the finish line while spinning and eventually ending up in the
grass. With Surtees' retirement, Brabham had clinched the Drivers' Championship of 1966. As per usual, the championship ended overseas, firstly with the
United States Grand Prix. Freshly crowned champion Brabham qualified on
pole with last year's champion Clark next to him. Bandini started third but quickly took the lead, before Brabham went back through on lap 10. Bandini later repassed the Australian but then retired with an engine failure. Halfway through the race, Brabham retired as well. Clark had been left behind by the leading duo but inherited the race win. Rindt ran out of fuel and slowed down. He did finish the race, but his last lap took so long that it was forfeited, putting him a lap behind but still second in the classification, as Surtees in third was even further behind. The last round of the season, the
Mexican Grand Prix, saw Surtees back on pole, for the first time in a Cooper, ahead of Clark and Ginther. The Honda driver took the lead at the start, leading fifth-starting Rindt and fourth-starting Brabham. Surtees fell down to fifth but had charged back to first at the half-way point. He won the race, seven seconds ahead of Brabham and at least a lap ahead of Hulme and the rest of the field.
Jack Brabham had won the Drivers' Championship with 42 points, ahead of
John Surtees (28) and
Jochen Rindt (22). It was Brabham's third Drivers' Championship (following wins in and ), moving him into the second place in the record standings, behind five-time champion
Juan Manuel Fangio. He became the first and, so far, only driver to win the championship in a car carrying his own name. The
Brabham team also scored 42 points in the Manufacturers' Champions and won the title, ahead of
Ferrari (31 points) and
Cooper (30 points). ==Results and standings==