Rounds 1 to 4 (left) started on
pole position in his
debut race. When Formula One returned to
Argentina for the first time since , it was local driver
Carlos Reutemann who made his debut and immediately scored
pole position for
Brabham. Reigning champion
Jackie Stewart started second in his
Tyrrell and
Peter Revson lined up in third for his first race with
McLaren. At the start, Stewart took the lead off of Reutemann, but the Argentine driver kept on his tail. Behind them,
Emerson Fittipaldi overtook
Denny Hulme for third place, while Revson had fallen back. Reutemann started struggling on his super-soft
Goodyear tyres and, by lap 11, he was down to fourth place. Half-way through the race, he made a
pit stop and rejoined a lap down. Stewart dominated the pace and went on to win the race, almost half a minute ahead of Hulme and a full minute ahead of the
Ferraris of
Jacky Ickx and
Clay Regazzoni. Fittipaldi had retired with
suspension damage. Stewart secured pole position for the
South African Grand Prix at
Kyalami, ahead of Regazzoni and Fittipaldi. Hulme got off the line remarkably well: from his fifth position on the grid, he moved up to shortly take the lead, before Stewart relegated him back to second. Regazzoni fell back into the midfield. Veteran
Mike Hailwood, driving for
Surtees, started fourth but passed Fittipaldi and, later, the overheating McLaren of Hulme, before actually challenging Stewart for the lead. However, on lap 28, his rear suspension collapsed and he had to retire. Stewart then looked set to win, until he suffered a gearbox failure on lap 45 and Fittipaldi inherited the lead. The
Brazilian, however, ran into handling problems and saw Hulme go past. Finally, the
New Zealander took the chequered flag, ahead of Fittipaldi and Peter Revson. In
Spain, Emerson Fittipaldi was joined on the grid by his brother
Wilson, marking the first time two brothers raced simultaneously. Wilson had replaced Carlos Reutemann after the
Argentine driver injured his
ankle in a
Formula 2 race a week earlier. On the
Jarama circuit, the
Belgian Jacky Ickx took a dominant pole position, seven tenths ahead of Denny Hulme and Emerson Fittipaldi. Stewart started in fourth. On race day, Hulme had another mighty get-away and took the lead, before, like in South Africa, Stewart passed him. Hulme and Ickx were then both passed by Fittipaldi in a miscommunication with a backmarker. By lap 30, it had started raining slightly and Stewart fell back: Fittipaldi and Ickx both passed him. The
Brazilian held on to take the victory, while Stewart spun off the track and retired. Since Ickx had set a new lap record and actually lapped his teammate in third place, Fittipaldi's win showed that the
Lotus 72 was now truly ahead in the development race. This showed again during
qualifying for the
Monaco Grand Prix, where Fittipaldi took pole position ahead of the Ferraris of Ickx and Regazzoni.
Jean-Pierre Beltoise and
Peter Gethin started a surprising fourth and fifth for
BRM. Before the race, it had started raining and the cars took off in a cloud of spray. Fittipaldi got away slowly, so Ickx jumped ahead, but Beltoise surprised everyone, pulling off a dive to the inside of the first corner and coming out on top. The
Marlboro-sponsored BRM was now the only one with a clear view ahead. Just after half-distance, Gethin crashed in the new chicane before Tabac corner and Stewart spun off as well. The
Scot, however, regained his podium position when Regazzoni crashed off on a patch of oil. Beltoise held on to what would be his only victory and BRM's last. Ickx finished second ahead of Fittipaldi, who overtook Stewart in the end. In the drivers' championship,
Emerson Fittipaldi (
Lotus) led with 19 points, ahead of
Jacky Ickx (
Ferrari and
Denny Hulme (
McLaren). Reigning champion
Jackie Stewart (
Tyrrell) was in fourth. In the manufacturers' championship, Lotus, McLaren and Ferrari all shared the top spot with 19 points.
Rounds 5 to 7 Jackie Stewart was a notable absence in the
Belgian Grand Prix. His gruelling schedule of racing in F1,
Can-Am and
touring cars, as well as promotional events for sponsors
Elf and
Ford, and a side job as sports commentator on
United States television on top of that, resulted in a case of
gastritis. Under
doctor's orders, he rested for three weeks and severely restricted his activities after that. Championship leader
Emerson Fittipaldi qualified on
pole position in the
Lotus, ahead of
Clay Regazzoni in the
Ferrari and
Denny Hulme in the
McLaren. Regazzoni's teammate
Jacky Ickx, second in the championship, lined up in fourth, with
Francois Cevert, the primary
Tyrrell driver for this race, in fifth. At the start, Regazzoni took the lead, but saw Fittipaldi come back past on lap 9. Both Ferraris retired: Ickx with a problem to his
accelerator linkage and Regazzoni when he hit backmarker
Nanni Galli in the
Tecno. The order at the finish of a relatively unexciting race was Fittipaldi, Cevert, Hulme. (bottom) started on
pole position for the
French Grand Prix. The F1 circus moved down to
France, where the
French Grand Prix was held at the
Circuit de Charade, a twisty and undulating stretch of public roads. While Stewart was back in his car, but his teammate Cevert was comfortably fastest in practice. He drove a new-spec Tyrrell chassis, until he crashed into the guard rail, injured his hand, and was left with the old-spec spare car. He would not be the last driver to spin or crash out, trying to get to grips with the challenging circuit.
Matra had also brought an upgraded chassis and gave
Chris Amon everything he needed to snatch pole position. Hulme and Stewart started behind him. As the race got underway, not much changed in terms of position, but
Helmut Marko was hit in the eye by a stone flicked up by Jacky Ickx's Ferrari. He stopped by the side of the track and was rushed off to hospital. This would mean the end of his racing career. The rough dirt on the track resulted in more trouble: Amon got a flat left-front tyre and a 50-second pit stop left him in ninth position. But he put up a valiant fight and came home in third, behind winner Jackie Stewart and second-placed Emerson Fittipaldi. Coming to
Brands Hatch for the
British Grand Prix, Denny Hulme, third in the championship, was recovering from a high-speed crash in the
Can-Am race of the week before. He did drive but qualified down in eleventh. Stewart and Amon, heroes of the last race, both crashed in practice and qualified in their spare cars, fourth and seventeenth, respectively. Jacky Ickx got pole position ahead of Emerson Fittipaldi and
Peter Revson. At the start,
Jean-Pierre Beltoise jumped up to third but quickly started to hold up the pack, which meant that the front two created a big lead over the first few laps. But with Beltoise's retirement on lap 22 and the leaders having trouble getting past a backmarker, Jackie Stewart gradually closed up and, on lap 25, managed to overtake Fittipaldi. After the Brazilian got back past, the leading pack stayed in their respective order until Ickx's Ferrari started leaking oil and he had to retire on lap 49. Fittipaldi took the win ahead of Stewart and Revson, only the top three finishing on the lead lap.
Ronnie Peterson was fourth until his engine and gearbox gave up, he crashed off the road and hit two cars that had retired at the same spot earlier in the race. Chris Amon finished in a surprising fourth position ahead of Denny Hulme. In the drivers' championship,
Emerson Fittipaldi (
Lotus) led with 43 points, ahead of
Jackie Stewart (
Tyrrell) with 27 and
Denny Hulme (
McLaren) with 21. The manufacturers' championship saw Lotus in the lead with 43 points, ahead of Tyrrell with 33 and McLaren with 27.
Rounds 8 to 10 The
German Grand Prix was held at the most demanding circuit on the calendar: the infamous
Nürburgring Nordschleife. In practice,
Francois Cevert got air at Pflanzgarten corner and was one of four drivers to crash off the track. All escaped unhurt, but left their respective teams with a lot of repair work. The unofficial lap record was beaten by a full ten seconds on Friday and
Ferrari's
Jacky Ickx went another three seconds faster on Saturday to claim pole position, ahead of championship leaders
Jackie Stewart and
Emerson Fittipaldi.
Ronnie Peterson started in fourth in his
March but was second after the start.
Clay Regazzoni (Ferrari) got up to third, while Stewart fell back behind Fittipaldi. After two laps of the circuit, Ickx was out of sight of his nearest challengers and kept setting new lap records. Fittipaldi got up to second, but Stewart was stuck in fifth place. When Peterson locked up, Regazzoni and Stewart got by, and they even gained another place when Fittipaldi's
gearbox blew up and caused an engine fire. On lap 10,
Henri Pescarolo suffered an enormous crash at Adenau corner but was unhurt. Ickx's engine was losing a bit of power due to a split
exhaust manifold, but he won the race with almost a minute to spare. By leading every lap, he actually achieved a
grand chelem. On the second-to-last lap, Stewart saw a chance to finally get past Regazzoni, but their wheels touched and the
Scot crashed off. So the Ferraris finished 1-2 ahead of Peterson in the March. The
Austrian Grand Prix was held in really hot and sunny conditions. Fittipaldi scored pole position ahead of Regazzoni and Stewart. At the start of the race, they went three-wide into the first corner and it was Stewart who took the lead. Fittipaldi fell back to third but overtook Regazzoni when the Ferrari's engine sputtered. The
Brazilian gradually closed up to the leader. On lap 23, the lead changed hands and
Denny Hulme was challenging for second. Stewart's Tyrrell looked to have trouble with its rear
suspension and the Scot would eventually finish seventh, over a minute down. Fittipaldi and Hulme fought a close battle, the
Lotus crossing the line just over a second ahead of the
McLaren. Hulme's teammate
Peter Revson finished third. The
European leg of the season concluded with the
Italian Grand Prix at
Monza. The circuit had been slowed down by two chicanes, so for once this year, earlier lap records would not be challenged.
Jacky Ickx delighted the crowd with a pole position for Ferrari, just 0.04 seconds ahead of
Chris Amon in the
Matra. Stewart started third, Fittipaldi in sixth. However, seconds after the start, Stewart lost all drive from his
engine and had to retire. Ickx and Amon had a trouble-free getaway, while dust on the track left the rest of the field blind into the first corner. No accidents happened but
Niki Lauda retired, as the dust had clogged up his
March's
throttle system. Amon fell back to fifth place, promoting Regazzoni to second, and even to first when the
Swiss driver passed his teammate for the lead.
Francois Cevert retirement on lap 14 left Tyrrell's championships hopes seriously diminished. Regazzoni hit
Carlos Pace when the
Brazilian was recovering from a spin and both cars were out of the race. A lot of drivers retired, including Amon with overheating
brakes and, on lap 46, leader Jacky Ickx with a failure of all the electrics. Fittipaldi took the win ahead of
Hailwood in the
Surtees and Hulme in the McLaren. With an unsurmountable lead of 30 points over his nearest rival,
Emerson Fittipaldi clinched the 1972 Drivers' Championship. At the age of 25, he was the youngest-ever World Champion, a record that would stand until
2005.
Denny Hulme (
McLaren) had overtaken
Jackie Stewart (
Tyrrell) in the championship, standing on 31 points compared to 27.
Lotus secured the Manufacturers' Championship since
McLaren and
Tyrrell were now too far back.
Rounds 11 and 12 ,
Peter Revson crashed out of
qualifying for the
Canadian Grand Prix. The
McLaren drivers were already familiar with the
Mosport International Raceway, host of the
Canadian Grand Prix, thanks to their experience in
Can-Am. They managed to secure a 1–2 on the grid,
Peter Revson ahead of
Denny Hulme, with a surprising
Ronnie Peterson in third. And it was the
Swede that actually reached the first corner first, while Hulme fell back when dirt clogged up his
throttle. Coming to complete the first lap, Peterson almost crashed out, and after another mistake a few laps later, he lost the lead to
Jackie Stewart. Champion
Emerson Fittipaldi was challenging Revson for third. Peterson collided with
Graham Hill when trying to lap him. He stopped with a bent steering column and was pushed into the pits. When he rejoined, he found Hill and made clear that the
Brit knew how he felt. Peterson was later
disqualified for the push up the pits. Fittipaldi fell back with damage to the nose of his car, so on the podium stood Stewart, Revson and Hulme. Coming to the final race of the championship, the
United States Grand Prix, Stewart was determined to show that the loss of the title did not mean a loss of form, and it would be one of the most convincing wins of his career, achieving a hat-trick of pole position,
fastest lap and victory. Revson and Hulme started second and third for McLaren. At the start, Revson was caught up in a collision with
Regazzoni and
Reutemann, so Hulme was up to second and Fittipaldi up to third. Future champion
Jody Scheckter was running fourth in his debut race and actually went past the freshly crowned
Brazilian, but when a sudden
shower arrived, he spun off at the first corner. Stewart was now leading 40 seconds ahead of his teammate
Francois Cevert, and then the McLaren of Hulme.
Emerson Fittipaldi finished on top of the standings with 61 points, ahead of
Jackie Stewart with 45 and
Denny Hulme with 39. In the Manufacturers' Championship,
Lotus were first with 61 points.
Tyrrell were now second (51), having just overtaken
McLaren (47). ==Results and standings==