The car showed speed and reliability during the season, managing to outpace both the
Williams and
McLaren, as well as proving to be a consistent challenger to the equally fast
BAR Hondas of
Jenson Button and
Takuma Sato. However, it was bested by the
Ferrari F2004 of
Michael Schumacher and
Rubens Barrichello, with which the Ferrari duo won 15 of the 18 races in 2004. Going into the season, Renault announced that their driver line-up was
Jarno Trulli and
Fernando Alonso. driving the R24 at the
2004 United States Grand Prix. The team became real contenders for second place in the Constructors' Championship when Trulli and Alonso placed third and fourth respectively during the
Spanish Grand Prix. Trulli won the
Monaco Grand Prix. However, his relationship with Renault (particularly with team principal and Trulli's ex-manager Flavio Briatore) deteriorated after he was consistently off the pace in the latter half of the year, and made claims of favouritism in the team towards Alonso (though the two teammates themselves remained friendly). The
French Grand Prix is considered the final straw for Renault, where Trulli was overtaken by
Rubens Barrichello in the final stages of the last lap, costing Renault a double podium finish at their home Grand Prix. Trulli was later fired after failing to score points in 5 successive races. After that, he announced that he was joining
Toyota F1 for the following year and left Renault early, driving the Toyota in the last two races of the 2004 season. Hoping to secure second place in the Constructors' Championship, Renault replaced Trulli with World Champion
Jacques Villeneuve for the final three races. However, Villeneuve — away from F1 racing for almost an entire season — struggled to adjust quickly to racing at the premier level and did not impress, resulting in the team finishing third behind Villeneuve's former team -
BAR with 105 points. ==Sponsorship and livery==