Ayrton
Senna’s dazzling legacy endures, 30 years on from F1 star’s tragic death
Wednesday
1 May marked 30 years since the Brazilian Formula 1 star died at the San Marino
Grand Prix in Imola, sending shockwaves around the world
For a
career as distinguished as three-time Formula One world champion Ayrton
Senna’s, his record at his home race in Brazil was peculiarly underwhelming.
Having made his debut in 1984 and tasted disqualification while leading in
1988, Sao Paulo’s favourite son only claimed his first victory at Interlagos in
1991. And, like much in Senna’s enthralling time in F1, it was no easy ride.
Starting
on pole, Senna’s path to victory seemed nailed on until a late gearbox issue
forced him to complete the final laps solely in sixth gear. With the heavens
having opened too, a stall or a spin seemed excruciatingly inevitable but
somehow, in a manner which would have been described as miraculous if it wasn’t
Ayrton Senna’s doing, he inched home by two seconds. Physically and mentally
exhausted, the hometown hero needed assistance exiting his McLaren cockpit.
Broken, but not beaten.
His
devastating death three years later, at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix, robbed
the sport of more glorious years of Senna’s influence, on and off the
racetrack. You need only look at the immediate aftermath of his fatal crash at
Imola to witness the emotional hold he had on his country and the world. Three
days of national mourning; 3 million people lined the streets of Sao Paulo on
the day of his funeral; Brazil’s triumphant 1994 World Cup team dedicated their
win to Senna.
More
significantly, safety provisions implemented in F1 since mean Senna remains the
last driver to have died on the day of an incident on track. The Ayrton Senna
Institute formed shortly after his death also aids young Brazilians in poverty.
It’s some legacy.
A legacy
that, 30 years on, still reverberates. Wednesday marks the passing of three
decades since Senna’s deadly accident at Tamburello corner at Imola. A day earlier,
Roland Ratzenberger had died in qualifying. Quickly, the two days were labelled
F1’s darkest weekend.
To the
present-day in Imola, where both Senna and Ratzenberger will be honoured with a
day of remembrance at the circuit. A moment of silence will be held at 2:17pm
today, the exact time of Senna’s crash, at Tamburello before the congregation -
set to include F1 chief executive Stefano Domenicali - moves on to the
Villeneuve section of racetrack to commemorate where Ratzenberger died
instantly.
It is a
free event for the public, who can visit exhibits of memorabilia of both
drivers at the Checco Costa Museum. The day will conclude with an “Ayrton and
I” event on the starting straight at 9pm, described as a “theatrical monologue
accompanied by music and images on the relationship between the driver and his
fans.”
Imola’s
mayor Marco Paniere has said of the day’s events: “The remembrance of Senna and
Ratzenberger will also be an opportunity for dialogue.
There is
an Ayrton Senna memorial in the Parco delle Acque Minerali, adjacent to the
Imola circuit
Other monument of Airton Senna
Senna
died on 1 May 1994 after a deadly crash at Tamburello corner at Imola (Getty
Images)
For
relations and listening between peoples, between cultures, and will unite
different continents, along these months and in particular on the day of May
1.”
In two
weeks, Imola will be readying itself to host this year’s Emilia Romagna Grand
Prix, one year after its cancellation due to severe flooding in the region.
Among those present in the current era of star drivers is none other than Lewis
Hamilton. That’s Lewis Hamilton, honorary Brazilian citizen.
The Brit,
on his way to Ferrari next year, a team Senna was set to join in 1995, has
labelled Senna as his childhood hero and has paid tribute to him during his trips
to Brazil, last year wearing a full-length yellow suit with Senna’s face on the
back.
RAZILIAN
DRIVERS IN FORMULA ONE SINCE AYRTON SENNA
– Rubens
Barrichello (1993-2011)
– Pedro
Paulo Diniz (1995-2000)
– Ricardo
Rosset (1996-1998)
– Tarso
Marques (1996-1997, 2001)
– Ricardo
Zonta (1999-2001, 2004-2005)
– Luciano
Burti (2000-2001)
– Enrique
Bernoldi (2001-2002)
– Felipe
Massa (2002, 2004-2017)
–
Cristiano da Matta (2003-2004)
– Antonio
Pizzonia (2003-2005)
– Nelson Piquet (2008-2009)
– Bruna Senna* (2010-2012)
– Lucas di Grassi (2010)
– Felipe Nasr (2015-2016)
*Ayrton’s
nephew
Previous
to this, there had been a Brazilian driver on the grid every year since 1969.
That’s
seven years since Massa’s retirement, with 2022 Formula Two champion and Aston
Martin reserve Felipe Drugovich - the No 1 Brazilian contender for a seat -
unable to find a route onto the 20-person grid. Drugovich was linked with Logan
Sargeant’s seat at Williams, but that route to the grid now looks a
non-starter.
For
Drugovich himself, his position on the ladder right now reflects a spot neither
here nor there, whereby he can’t land a spot at the top table but also cannot
compete in F2 having won the championship previously. It is a rule that is
particularly harsh and self-defeating; Drugovich’s impressive 2022 win quickly
feels sour when he fails to go racing for a second straight year. The previous
occupier of such a spot, Oscar Piastri, burnt some bridges in ditching Alpine
to replace Daniel Ricciardo at McLaren and has been fully justified in his
boldness with a string of impressive displays.
With
affection,
Ruben
“Ayrton’s
life was cut short and had he had the opportunity to continue and race in safe
conditions, he would have won more championships,” Hamilton has said previously
about Senna.
For those
of a younger generation, Asif Kapadia’s brilliant 2010 documentary film Senna
gave a unique insight into the man and the driver so beloved in his sport and
his country. Brazil have not had a Formula One world champion since, though of
course Felipe Massa came close in 2008 with that last-lap denial from Hamilton,
amid a controversial season he is actually in the process of formally
protesting in the courts.
Rubens
Barrichello came close the following year too, finishing runner-up to Jenson
Button in Brawn’s standout sole season.
Formula
One is still huge in Brazil. Interlagos has hosted the only race in South
America for 25 years now. So it makes it slightly strange – for a country where
sport plays a role almost biblical in significance – that since Massa’s
retirement in 2017, there has not been a Brazilian driver with a full-time race
seat in Formula One.
With affection,
Ruben
No comments:
Post a Comment