TREMAYNE: The unlikely Austrian GP win that launched the career of an F1 World Champion
F1 Hall of Fame journalist David Tremayne looks back at the first Grand Prix victory for 1980 F1 champion Alan Jones, on a day in Austria when nobody expected him to win.


It had rained, hard, that morning at the Osterreichring. An Austrian crowd that had celebrated sunshine the previous day was now clad in more suitable wet weather attire, some nursing brutal hangovers on a weekend when groups of unruly spectators had run amok.
As local hero Niki Lauda, the 1975 champion and current points leader, sat on pole position in his Ferrari, fractions ahead of friend and rival 1976 champion James Hunt’s McLaren, a great race was in prospect, even if many of the local papers carried stories of fights, damage to cars and even, unbelievably, the stabbing of police dogs.
The dilemma for many was which tyres to choose: wets for the obvious patches of water that remained all round the super-fast circuit, with its daunting high-speed sweeps, or dries for when – if – conditions began to improve over the course of the scheduled 54 laps.
Next Up
Related Articles
Beyond The GridToto Wolff and Hywel Thomas on Mercedes’ 2026 prospects
Getting to know the real Esteban Ocon
Hulkenberg pleased to score points in Sauber’s final race
Piastri ‘should be proud’ of his season says Brown
JacquesHow did the rookies do in their first F1 season?
TremayneWhy ‘true racer’ Marko will be missed as he leaves Red Bull
