1951 Italian Grand Prix
Alberto Ascari won ahead of José Froilán González and Felice Bonetto.
Monza, Italy · 16 Sep 1951 · Round 7 of 8
Full classification
| Pos | Driver | Team | Grid | Laps | Time / Gap | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Alberto Ascari | Ferrari | P3 | 80 | 2:42:39.300 | 8 |
| P2 | José Froilán González | Ferrari | P4 | 80 | +44.600 | 6 |
| P3 | Felice Bonetto | Alfa Romeo | P7 | 79 | +1 lap | 2 |
| P4 | Luigi Villoresi | Ferrari | P5 | 79 | +1 lap | 3 |
| P5 | Piero Taruffi | Ferrari | P6 | 78 | +2 laps | 2 |
| P6 | André Simon | Simca-Gordini | P11 | 74 | +6 laps | — |
| P7 | Louis Rosier | Talbot-Lago | P15 | 73 | +7 laps | — |
| P8 | Yves Giraud-Cabantous | Talbot-Lago | P14 | 72 | +8 laps | — |
| P9 | Franco Rol | O.S.C.A. | P18 | 67 | +13 laps | — |
| DNF | Juan Manuel Fangio | Alfa Romeo | P1 | 39 | Engine | — |
| DNF | Maurice Trintignant | Simca-Gordini | P12 | 29 | Engine | — |
| DNF | Robert Manzon | Simca-Gordini | P13 | 29 | Engine | — |
| DNF | Louis Chiron | Talbot-Lago | P17 | 23 | Ignition | — |
| DNF | Pierre Levegh | Talbot-Lago | P20 | 9 | Engine | — |
| DNF | Jacques Swaters | Talbot-Lago | P22 | 7 | Overheating | — |
| DNF | Nino Farina | Alfa Romeo | P2 | 6 | Engine | — |
| DNF | Johnny Claes | Talbot-Lago | P21 | 4 | Oil pump | — |
| DNF | Chico Landi | Ferrari | P16 | 1 | Transmission | — |
| DNF | Emmanuel de Graffenried | Alfa Romeo | P9 | 1 | Compressor | — |
| DNF | Peter Whitehead | Ferrari | P19 | 1 | Magneto | — |
| DNS | Hans Stuck | BRM | — | — | Reserve driver | — |
| DNS | Ken Richardson | BRM | P10 | — | — | — |
| DNS | Reg Parnell | BRM | P8 | — | — | — |
| DNS | Rudi Fischer | Ferrari | — | — | — | — |
Frequently asked
Who won the 1951 Italian Grand Prix?
Alberto Ascari won the 1951 Italian Grand Prix driving for Ferrari, starting from 3rd on the grid.
Where was the 1951 Italian Grand Prix held?
The 1951 Italian Grand Prix was held at Monza, Italy on 16 Sep 1951.
Who finished on the podium at the 1951 Italian Grand Prix?
The podium was Alberto Ascari (1st), José Froilán González (2nd) and Felice Bonetto (3rd).
Winner: Alberto Ascari. Started first: Juan Manuel Fangio.