GREATEST RACES #19: Herbert delivers a sensational shock victory for Stewart – 1999 European Grand Prix
In a truly dramatic Formula 1 season, the 1999 European Grand Prix at the Nurburgring had it all with a shock winner, changeable conditions and implications on the title race.


To mark F1's 75th anniversary celebrations, F1.com is counting down the sport's 25 greatest races with a new feature every week. While you may not agree with the order, we hope you enjoy the stories of these epic races that have helped make this sport what it is today. You can read the introduction to the series and see the list of races here.
At No. 19, Mike Seymour brings together voices that remember the dramatic 1999 European Grand Prix at the Nurburgring. That season had already proven to be one of the most memorable in F1 history, but round 14 provided another incredible spectacle as Johnny Herbert secured a shock win for Stewart Grand Prix.
Last year marked 25 years since one of the most incident-packed and gripping seasons in F1 history, which F1.com documented in a special anniversary mini-series.
Round 14 of 16 summed it up in a single race, with the 1999 European Grand Prix at the Nurburgring featuring mixed weather conditions, various incidents, championship implications, technical controversy and an underdog winner.
Below, we retell the events of that day through the eyes and ears of those sitting in the cockpit, perched on the pit wall and watching on from the media centre...

If fans thought the 1999 season up to this point had been intense, they were in for another dramatic weekend amid changeable conditions at the Nurburgring. While title rivals Mika Hakkinen and particularly Eddie Irvine faced problems (more on that later), the Stewart Grand Prix cars of Johnny Herbert and Rubens Barrichello charged their way through the field from mid-grid starting positions to contend for an unlikely win, making the most of a scary first-lap crash, several spins and technical-related retirements elsewhere.
At the end of it all, Herbert was the man who came out on top, having timed his move to wet tyres perfectly, while Barrichello – who lost some time sticking with slicks – backed him up in third position, just behind Jarno Trulli’s Prost. It marked a memorable and emotional moment for Herbert, who had overcome severe foot injuries sustained in his junior single-seater days to record a third and final F1 victory, as well as for the team led by former world champion Jackie Stewart and his son Paul, as they achieved a landmark triumph in what proved to be their third and final F1 season before selling up to Ford and Jaguar.
Johnny Herbert, Stewart Grand Prix driver: “The first thing [I noticed] was the wind when we got on the grid. I was 14th and Rubens was 15th, and all I remember is the wind was blowing directly up the straight. When you go down towards Turn 1, keep going for about 40 kilometres and you’re at Spa, and we know what happens at Spa with the weather. The race started, we got going, then I noticed this cloud in the distance, a bit wider than the track – it looked like a rain drop shape. Then it just got closer and closer. It kept coming dead straight over the middle of the circuit, never went left, never went right. I went, ‘When it comes, it’s going to throw it down’.
“Luckily, when I was about to come in [for a pit stop]… I was doing my in-lap, so I got called in, got to the far end of the circuit, and it just started to spit with rain. As I got back to the pits and stopped, I’d been on the radio and said, ‘Put wets on’. Rubens came in the next lap and put on slicks, so it was something that catapulted me to be in the mix. It [the rain] lasted longer than I thought and I was going 12 seconds faster than anyone else.
“It was very special [to win] because the Nordschleife itself, it was one of Sir Jackie’s last wins there, so there was a connection with my win, their [Stewart Grand Prix’s] first win and Jackie and his racing career at the same time. I was pleased for myself, but I think I was probably more pleased for my crew, who had put in a lot of hard work and stuck by me. It’s always pleasing to see the smiles on their faces when you get back to the garage, and it’s because of them that I was able to achieve my last win.”
Dave Redding, Race Operations and Reliability Engineer, Stewart Grand Prix: “I was looking at car data and health then and you could see everything unfolding, but as people kept stopping and changing tyres as the conditions changed, you just couldn’t believe what you were watching, because you were just thinking, ‘Why are you doing it?’ – it just didn‘t make any sense. Then we thought they were going to catch us and then they stopped again, so [we thought], ‘We’re going to win this’. Then it turns to, ‘Hopefully it doesn’t break down’.
“In those days we didn’t have radar, or not every team; we certainly didn’t have radar or all the things that we have today. As Johnny said, it was more a case of guesswork, really. Even now, at Spa it’s notoriously difficult to predict what the weather is doing, even with the radar and everything else, all the tools you have available. Was it luck? A little bit, because obviously we needed the weather to interrupt. But did we make the right decisions at the right time? Absolutely.
“Johnny I’ve known for years, because I was at Benetton when he was there, even when he was a young driver when he broke his feet. I’ve known him for a long, long time, so it was very emotional. The next day at the factory, Jackie organised champagne for everybody, so basically it was a half day. We got to lunch time, we’d had champagne and not a lot happened after that! It was a long celebration.”
Rubens Barrichello, Stewart Grand Prix driver: “As soon as we put the car on the track it was amazing. For me, one of the highlights was leading the Brazilian Grand Prix. [Claiming pole position and finishing third at] Magny-Cours was also a good time. The Nurburgring was fantastic for the team, but it was a disappointment [for me] because I [stayed] on slicks. Eventually I won in 2000 [at Hockenheim] with Ferrari because of that, but at the Nurburgring it didn’t work. If it wasn’t for that I was going to win. But still, to be part of the Stewart family, such a nice family, hard-working, with Paul, Mark, and with Jackie, obviously, was phenomenal. That ’99 season gave me a really good chance… It was when I opened the eyes of probably everyone, so I’m so thankful.”
We got to lunch time, we’d had champagne and not a lot happened after that!
David Tremayne, Hall of Fame F1 Journalist: “I had this thing with Jackie about clothes. I was wearing Tommy Hilfiger shirts and the like in those days. At Monza, I went to the Stewart team and he said, ‘Oh, ladies and gentleman look, a journalist!’ I said to him, ‘I tell you what, when you guys win a race, I will wear a Tommy Hilfiger shirt and a pair of your tartan trousers’. Anyway, Jackie’s on the podium at the Nurburgring, he’s holding up the plate, then he looks down at me and just points.
“When I was driving back from Heathrow after the race, he phoned and said, ‘David, it’s Jackie, I’d like you to go and see my tailor!’ It was Doug Hayward, this famous guy in Mount Street, and I got fitted for a pair of these tartan trousers, which still fit, funnily enough. Then I had a picture with Paul and Jackie, wearing our tartan trousers – it must have been in Malaysia. But I thought it was wonderful that Johnny won.”
While Herbert, Barrichello and Stewart all deservedly enjoyed the celebrations, several factors played a role in the result. Firstly, the conditions, which saw several drivers, including Hakkinen, get caught out by running the wrong tyres at the wrong time – leaving the McLaren a lowly fifth. Then, at Ferrari, a painfully slow pit stop, where mechanics haplessly searched for a missing tyre, sent Irvine – who had taken on the team leader role at Ferrari after Michael Schumacher's leg-breaking crash at Silverstone – tumbling down the order to an eventual P7 finish, outside the points.
There were also spins and slides out of the lead of the race for David Coulthard, Benetton’s Giancarlo Fisichella and Williams’ Ralf Schumacher (who picked up a puncture) in the mixed conditions, and arguably the most painful retirement of them all was suffered by Jordan and Heinz-Harald Frentzen, who had started on pole position but came unstuck when his engine shut down after a pit stop.
Sam Michael, Heinz-Harald Frentzen’s Race Engineer: “I remember the last practice session before Qualifying, we’d had a reliability issue, so we spent a lot of time parked in the garage. We got the car fixed in enough time that there was like a minute left, so as long as you get out of the pits, you can go around and do pretty much 99% of the timed lap, apart from the last corner. Heinz had had no practice at all on Saturday morning and he went out, started a timed lap – everyone had been running for 45 minutes to an hour – and all the sectors were purple, purple, purple… It was good enough for P1, easily, so straight away we knew the car was fast, and he qualified on pole.
“The race went really well until the first pit stop. Unlike Monza, where Mika was clearly quicker, we did look like we had enough to take it to them. Then we had the anti-stall cut the engine after the pit stop and that was the end of it. Frustratingly, I’m not sure we even gained much out of using a loophole, that was legal at the time, to try and improve the starts. It wasn’t intended to trigger during a pit stop, it was only for the race start. We were stretching the rules, but isn’t that what F1’s all about?
“The rules at the time did not say how much you had to activate the clutch. What we did was detect low engine revs at the start, put some throttle on but only a little clutch; the theory was to use lower revs and get better traction off the line. There was another part to the rule that said if you trigger an anti-stall and don’t cancel it within 10 seconds on the steering wheel then it turns the engine off, and that’s what happened that day.”
Mark Gallagher, Head of Marketing, Jordan: “There was a point in that race where I remember thinking, ‘Oh my Lord, this might come to us, and it could be epic’, but no sooner had you had that thought everything went pear-shaped and it was game over. When we got the car back, it was fine. Because of my role in marketing and communications, we had to decide what to tell the media. There was a little bit of a moment in the team, because… He wasn’t an extremely senior member of the team, but an important member of the team spoke to journalists and kind of said it was Heinz’s fault, and that was not the way we wanted to play it.
“I remember talking to Eddie [Jordan] about it and saying, ‘You win as a team and you lose as a team’, and if we’re going to deal with this we need to be protective of Heinz, because he’s just won two Grands Prix for us and he’s been doing a fantastic job. Do you throw him to the wolves or do you put out a press statement saying we had an electronic issue with the car that caused the stopping? So that’s what we did. But honestly speaking, the degree to which we were in with a shout of winning the championship that year only really became apparent, I think, to many of us, with the passage of time.”
Marco Fainello, Head of Vehicle Dynamics, Ferrari: “I read recently in a paper that Ferrari on purpose could not find the tyre for Eddie at the Nurburgring, that they didn’t want Eddie to win, or Michael on purpose could not allow Eddie to win the championship… I’m sure it’s not the case. Michael didn’t like that someone else was going to win, of course he wants to win it himself, but he would have never done anything bad for the team – he’s really a team man.”
Louise Goodman, ITV F1 reporter: “I remember the tyre incident with Eddie, but a championship is made up of a series of moments good and bad – you can never really pinpoint the ifs, buts and what ifs. Yes, they all contribute, but I think very often, for every driver, somewhere down the line there’s a mistake, an issue, a failure, whatever it might be, and it’s the sum of having less than anybody else that makes for a championship win.”
If you were going to wish that someone else won the race, I couldn’t have thought of a better person than Johnny...
Sam Michael: “You look at someone like Heinz and that was probably his best chance at a championship. He could look back and wonder what if, but you can also say that the entire year was a resurgence of Heinz, and there was a strong feeling of pride, throughout the whole team, to have played a part in that. A few things went the other way; it wasn’t just that Grand Prix, there were other things that happened during the year. But how many drivers get close to saying, ‘I could have won the World Championship?’ It’s a pretty small pool where you can make a mathematical argument that you could have won it. I know it’s not as good as winning it, but that’s the way it is.
“Heinz was really good afterwards with the team. He was annoyed at himself, but that was probably one of the most special things about that team at the time, that we were all in it together – we won together and lost together. We overachieved. We were in a place that we perhaps shouldn’t have been and I remember Damon [Hill] saying to me in the truck after the race that it’s natural to make mistakes when you’re in those positions, because the team isn’t used to it yet.”
Mark Gallagher: “Frankly, the disappointment had to be parked for a while. The weird thing is, if you were going to wish that someone else won the race, I couldn’t have thought of a better person than Johnny, who had won the British F3 championship for Jordan, and Jackie, who had also managed to start an independently owned F1 team. While we’d rather have won, it was quite nice to see another underdog achieve the victory.”

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