Race details | |||
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Race 1 of 11 in the 1958 Formula One season | |||
Date | 19 January 1958 | ||
Official name | VI Gran Premio de la Republica Argentina | ||
Location | Autódromo Municipal Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires | ||
Course | Permanent racing facility | ||
Course length | 3.912 km (2.431 mi) | ||
Distance | 80 laps, 312.96 km (194.48 mi) | ||
Pole position | |||
Driver | Maserati | ||
Time | 1:42.0 | ||
Fastest lap | |||
Driver | Juan Manuel Fangio | Maserati | |
Time | 1:41.8 | ||
Podium | |||
First | Cooper-Climax | ||
Second | Ferrari | ||
Third | Ferrari | ||
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The 1958 Argentine Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 19 January 1958 at Autodromo Municipal Ciudad de Buenos Aires Circuit. It was the opening round of the 1958 Formula One season. The race was the sixth Argentine Grand Prix. It was held on the #2 variation of the circuit. The race was held over 80 laps of the four kilometre circuit for a total race distance of 313 kilometres.
The race was won by British driver Stirling Moss in Rob Walker's privately entered Cooper T43. It was the first World Drivers Championship race win for a rear-engined car and also first win for a privateer team in Formula One and the first by a chassis built by the Cooper Car Company. Moss took his seventh Grand Prix victory by 2.7 seconds over Italian driver Luigi Musso (Ferrari Dino 246). Musso's British teammate Mike Hawthorn (Ferrari Dino 246) was third.
A change in fuel regulations meant that the British teams Vanwall and BRM would not be ready for the Argentine race held in mid-January, four months ahead of the second race of the season in Monaco. This meant that this race had the fewest entries (10) of any Grand Prix in the history of the F1 World Championship. Vanwall released Moss to compete with another team and he linked up with the Rob Walker Racing Team to drive their Cooper T43, a car about to be superseded at the factory Cooper team by the new T45.
With the race set to be held in very hot conditions the race was shortened from 400 kilometres to 313. The shorter race led the Walker team to consider running the race without stopping for tyres. The car's four stud wheels would take almost two laps to complete a tyre change, much slower than their Ferrari and Maserati rivals. Moss and his team began a deception, complaining about the tyre situation and how much time they would lose changing tyres.