1989 Brazilian Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Grand Prix:Brazilian
Country:Brazil
Flag Suffix:1968
Official Name:XVIII Grande Prêmio do Brasil
Date:26 March
Year:1989
Race No:1
Season No:16
Location:Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet
Jacarepaguá, Rio de Janeiro
Course Mi:3.126
Course Km:5.031
Distance Laps:61
Distance Mi:190.693
Distance Km:306.891
Weather:Very hot, dry, sunny
Pole Driver: Ayrton Senna
Pole Team:McLaren-Honda
Pole Time:1:25.302
Fast Driver:Riccardo Patrese
Fast Country:Italy
Fast Team:Williams-Renault
Fast Time:1:32.507
Fast Lap:47
First Driver: Nigel Mansell
First Team:Ferrari
Second Driver:Alain Prost
Second Team:McLaren-Honda
Second Country:France
Third Driver: Maurício Gugelmin
Third Team:March-Judd

The 1989 Brazilian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Jacarepaguá, Rio de Janeiro on 26 March 1989. It was the first race of the 1989 Formula One World Championship.

The 61-lap race was won by Englishman Nigel Mansell, driving a Ferrari, with Frenchman Alain Prost second in a McLaren-Honda and local driver Maurício Gugelmin third in a March-Judd. It was the first time that a car with a semi-automatic gearbox won the race. Mansell had joked that he had booked an early flight home as he did not expect to win, and during the podium ceremony he cut his hand whilst lifting the trophy.[1]

Qualifying

Pre-qualifying report

Several teams were required to participate in the Friday morning pre-qualifying sessions during 1989, in order to reduce the field to thirty cars for the main qualifying sessions on Friday afternoon and Saturday. At the midway point of the season, the pre-qualifying group was to be reassessed, with the more successful, points-scoring teams being allowed to avoid pre-qualifying, and unsuccessful teams being required to pre-qualify from mid-season onwards.

At this first Grand Prix of 1989 in Brazil, five cars were allowed to progress. The AGS team had expanded from one car to two, and their first car, to be driven by Philippe Streiff, was not required to pre-qualify. However, the Frenchman had been paralysed in a midweek testing crash at the circuit, which ended his career. He was not replaced for the Grand Prix weekend, allowing an extra car to progress from the pre-qualifying session.

The FIRST team withdrew before the event, as the car had failed a mandatory FIA pre-season crash test. This left thirteen cars participating in the session. They included the two Brabhams, as the team had not participated in 1988, and the new Onyx team with their two-car entry. Also included were the two Zakspeeds and the two Osellas. This left five other cars: the sole single-car entry from EuroBrun, and the second cars of the four teams expanding from one car to two for 1989, namely AGS, Coloni, Dallara and Rial.

During the session, the two Brabhams of Martin Brundle and Stefano Modena were considerably faster than the other entrants, securing a comfortable 1–2. Third was the EuroBrun driven by debutant Swiss driver Gregor Foitek, and fourth was the Osella of Nicola Larini. The fortunate fifth fastest runner, who also went through to qualifying on this occasion, was Zakspeed's Bernd Schneider.[2]

Missing out in sixth was Alex Caffi in the Dallara, ahead of veteran Piercarlo Ghinzani in the other Osella. Another newcomer, German driver Volker Weidler was eighth in the Rial, with Pierre-Henri Raphanel's Coloni ninth, ahead of Joachim Winkelhock, also competing in Formula One for the first time, in the AGS. Eleventh was the second Zakspeed of Aguri Suzuki, with the Onyx drivers a little way adrift at the bottom of the time sheets, having had little time to test their new car. Stefan Johansson was faster than his Belgian team-mate Bertrand Gachot, the other driver in the session to make his Formula One debut, but was still over seven seconds slower than Brundle's time.

Pre-qualifying classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Time Gap
17 Martin BrundleBrabham-Judd1:27.764
28 Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd1:28.147+0.383
333 Gregor FoitekEuroBrun-Judd1:29.604+1.840
417 Nicola LariniOsella-Ford1:29.679+1.915
534 Bernd SchneiderZakspeed-Yamaha1:30.417+2.653
621 Alex CaffiDallara-Ford1:30.747+2.983
718 Piercarlo GhinzaniOsella-Ford1:31.150+3.386
839 Volker WeidlerRial-Ford1:31.964+4.200
932 Pierre-Henri RaphanelColoni-Ford1:32.019+4.255
1041 Joachim WinkelhockAGS-Ford1:32.982+5.218
1135 Aguri SuzukiZakspeed-Yamaha1:33.079+5.315
1236 Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford1:35.232+7.468
1337 Bertrand GachotOnyx-Ford1:37.932+10.168

Qualifying report

Ayrton Senna took pole position in qualifying ahead of Riccardo Patrese, making a record-breaking 177th appearance at a Grand Prix, and Gerhard Berger in the new Ferrari 640, which featured the first semi-automatic gearbox in Formula One. For Patrese it was actually his first front row start since he started second at the 1983 European Grand Prix at Brands Hatch, a gap of 81 races. On his debut for Ferrari, Berger's teammate Nigel Mansell qualified sixth. After the race Mansell joked that he was so convinced of his new car's unreliability that he had booked an early flight home.[3]

Johnny Herbert (Benetton) and Olivier Grouillard (Ligier) both qualified for their first Formula One races.

Qualifying classification

Pos No Driver Team Q1 Q2 Gap
11 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda1:26.2051:25.302
26 Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault1:26.1727:12.732+0.870
328 Gerhard BergerFerrari1:26.2711:26.394+0.969
45 Thierry BoutsenWilliams-Renault1:27.3671:26.459+1.157
52 Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda1:27.0951:26.620+1.318
627 Nigel MansellFerrari1:27.2491:26.772+1.470
716 Ivan CapelliMarch-Judd1:27.5251:27.035+1.733
89 Derek WarwickArrows-Ford1:27.9371:27.408+2.106
911 Nelson PiquetLotus-Judd1:28.4231:27.437+2.135
1020 Johnny HerbertBenetton-Ford1:27.6261:27.754+2.324
1119 Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford1:28.3941:27.865+2.563
1215 Maurício GugelminMarch-Judd1:27.9561:28.581+2.654
137 Martin BrundleBrabham-Judd1:29.1381:28.274+2.972
148 Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd1:28.6211:28.942+3.319
1522 Andrea de CesarisDallara-Ford1:29.0051:29.206+3.703
1623 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford1:30.0771:29.435+4.133
1738 Christian DannerRial-Ford1:30.4601:29.455+4.153
183 Jonathan PalmerTyrrell-Ford1:30.4431:29.573+4.271
1917 Nicola LariniOsella-Ford1:31.3411:30.146+4.844
204 Michele AlboretoTyrrell-Ford1:32.2601:30.255+4.953
2112 Satoru NakajimaLotus-Judd1:30.9421:30.375+5.073
2226 Olivier GrouillardLigier-Ford1:30.4101:30.666+5.108
2324 Luis Pérez-SalaMinardi-Ford1:30.7021:30.643+5.341
2410 Eddie CheeverArrows-Ford1:30.6571:31.068+5.355
2534 Bernd SchneiderZakspeed-Yamaha1:32.3461:30.861+5.559
2630 Philippe AlliotLola-Lamborghini1:31.8721:31.009+5.707
2729 Yannick DalmasLola-Lamborghini1:32.4111:31.260+5.958
2825 René ArnouxLigier-Ford1:34.2321:31.376+6.074
2933 Gregor FoitekEuroBrun-Judd1:31.7911:53.570+6.489
3031 Roberto MorenoColoni-Ford1:32.5611:34.894+7.259

Race

Race report

At the start, Nicola Larini was disqualified for an illegal start. Mansell became the first man since Mario Andretti in 1971 to win on his Formula One debut for Ferrari, a feat that was not matched until Kimi Räikkönen won for Ferrari at the 2007 Australian Grand Prix. It was also the first race ever to be won by a car with a semi-automatic gearbox. Mansell cut his hands on the trophy following the race.[4] He was joined on the podium by McLaren's Alain Prost and March's Maurício Gugelmin, making his first and only appearance on the podium. Johnny Herbert, still recovering from his horrifying Formula 3000 crash at Brands Hatch six months earlier, finished 4th on his Formula 1 debut for Benetton, 1.123 seconds behind Gugelmin and 7.748 seconds in front of teammate Alessandro Nannini who finished 6th.

The hard luck of the story of the race was Arrows driver Derek Warwick. There was a problem fitting a rear wheel during his second stop for tyres which lost him over 25 seconds. He eventually finished in fifth place, less than 18 seconds behind Mansell suggesting that the pit stop may have cost Warwick and Arrows their maiden Grand Prix victories.

Warwick's Arrows teammate Eddie Cheever collapsed after exiting his car following the collision involving the Zakspeed of Bernd Schneider that ended his race. Arrows actually had to modify Cheever's car after he failed the FIA safety check where a driver had five seconds to be able to exit their car. The new Ross Brawn designed Arrows A11 was a tight fit for the tall American and he had trouble fitting into the car before practice. Schneider, whose car carried the new Yamaha V8 engine, only got into the race after Philippe Streiff's crash and the FIA had allowed five pre-qualifiers to enter the main field instead of four. Schneider did not qualify for another race until the season's penultimate round in Japan some seven months later. His new teammate Aguri Suzuki ultimately failed to qualify for all 16 rounds of the 1989 season.

This was the last Formula One race at Jacarepaguá and in Rio de Janeiro. From 1990, the Brazilian Grand Prix would be held at a shortened Interlagos in São Paulo, the home town of Ayrton Senna, where it is today.

Race classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
127 Nigel MansellFerrari611:38:58.74469
22 Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda61+ 7.80956
315 Maurício GugelminMarch-Judd61+ 9.370124
420 Johnny HerbertBenetton-Ford61+ 10.493103
59 Derek WarwickArrows-Ford61+ 17.86682
619 Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford61+ 18.241111
73 Jonathan PalmerTyrrell-Ford60+ 1 lap18
812 Satoru NakajimaLotus-Judd60+ 1 lap21
926 Olivier GrouillardLigier-Ford60+ 1 lap22
104 Michele AlboretoTyrrell-Ford59+ 2 laps20
111 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda59+ 2 laps1
1230 Philippe AlliotLola-Lamborghini58+ 3 laps26
1322 Andrea de CesarisDallara-Ford57+ 4 laps15
1438 Christian DannerRial-Ford56Gearbox17
Ret6 Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault51Alternator2
Ret10 Eddie CheeverArrows-Ford37Collision24
Ret34 Bernd SchneiderZakspeed-Yamaha36Collision25
Ret7 Martin BrundleBrabham-Judd27Halfshaft13
Ret16 Ivan CapelliMarch-Judd22Suspension7
Ret11 Nelson PiquetLotus-Judd10Fuel system9
DSQ17 Nicola LariniOsella-Ford10Illegal start19
Ret8 Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd9Halfshaft14
Ret5 Thierry BoutsenWilliams-Renault3Engine4
Ret23 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford2Chassis16
Ret28 Gerhard BergerFerrari0Collision3
Ret24 Luis Pérez-SalaMinardi-Ford0Collision23
DNQ29 Yannick DalmasLola-Lamborghini
DNQ25 René ArnouxLigier-Ford
DNQ33 Gregor FoitekEuroBrun-Judd
DNQ31 Roberto MorenoColoni-Ford
DNPQ21 Alex CaffiDallara-Ford
DNPQ18 Piercarlo GhinzaniOsella-Ford
DNPQ39 Volker WeidlerRial-Ford
DNPQ32 Pierre-Henri RaphanelColoni-Ford
DNPQ41 Joachim WinkelhockAGS-Ford
DNPQ35 Aguri SuzukiZakspeed-Yamaha
DNPQ36 Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford
DNPQ37 Bertrand GachotOnyx-Ford

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Nigel Mansell9
2 Alain Prost6
3 Maurício Gugelmin4
4 Johnny Herbert3
5 Derek Warwick2
Source: [5]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 Ferrari9
2 McLaren-Honda6
3 March-Judd4
4 Benetton-Ford4
5 Arrows-Ford2
Source:

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Brazil 1989: 'Il Leone' roars to win on Ferrari debut . 8 November 2015 .
  2. Book: Walker, Murray . 1989 . Murray Walker's Grand Prix Year . First Formula Publishing . 13–20 . 1-870066-22-7.
  3. Web site: Pick your classic Brazilian Grand Prix . Andrew . Benson . bbc.co.uk . 7 October 2009 . 12 July 2012.
  4. News: December 2008 . Do you remember when Mansell cut his hands on the podium? . F1 Racing . Derwent Howard . 141 . 39.
  5. Web site: Brazil 1989 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 13 March 2019.