1989 San Marino Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Grand Prix:San Marino
Country:Italy
Official Name:IX Gran Premio Kronenbourg di San Marino
Date:23 April
Year:1989
Race No:2
Season No:16
Location:Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Imola, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Course Mi:3.132
Course Km:5.040
Distance Laps:58
Distance Mi:181.638
Distance Km:292.32
Scheduled Laps:61
Scheduled Mi:191.052
Scheduled Km:307.440
Weather:Warm, dry, sunny
Pole Driver:Ayrton Senna
Pole Country:Brazil
Pole Flag Suffix:1968
Pole Team:McLaren-Honda
Pole Time:1:26.010
Fast Driver:Alain Prost
Fast Country:France
Fast Team:McLaren-Honda
Fast Time:1:26.795
Fast Lap:45
First Driver:Ayrton Senna
First Country:Brazil
Fast Flag Suffix:1968
First Team:McLaren-Honda
Second Driver:Alain Prost
Second Team:McLaren-Honda
Second Country:France
Third Driver:Alessandro Nannini
Third Country:Italy
Third Team:Benetton-Ford

The 1989 San Marino Grand Prix (formally the IX Gran Premio Kronenbourg di San Marino) was a Formula One motor race held at the Imola circuit on 23 April 1989. It was the second race of the 1989 Formula One season. The race was overshadowed by Gerhard Berger's massive accident at Tamburello corner. The race was stopped for one hour and restarted. The race was won by Ayrton Senna who started from pole position. The Grand Prix had a total of 39 entrants, the largest amount in Formula One history. This record was equalled in the following 14 races of the season but, as of 2022, it has not been broken.

Qualifying

Pre-qualifying report

As at the previous race in Brazil, the Brabhams were easily the fastest cars in the Friday morning session. Stefano Modena was quickest on this occasion, with Martin Brundle in second. Alex Caffi pre-qualified his Dallara in third, with Nicola Larini's Osella in fourth. Only four cars went through from this session now that the injured Philippe Streiff had been replaced at AGS by Gabriele Tarquini, who had left the abortive FIRST team.

Onyx improved on their showing in Brazil, with Bertrand Gachot just missing out on pre-qualification in fifth place. The EuroBrun of Gregor Foitek was sixth, ahead of the second Osella of Piercarlo Ghinzani. The other Onyx of Stefan Johansson was eighth, followed by the second AGS of Joachim Winkelhock. Tenth was the Coloni of Pierre-Henri Raphanel, just ahead of the two Zakspeeds of Aguri Suzuki and Bernd Schneider, the Japanese driver outpacing his more experienced team-mate. Nearly four seconds adrift at the bottom of the time sheets was the Rial of Volker Weidler, despite the German trying all three of the team's cars.[1]

Pre-qualifying classification

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGap
18 Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd1:27.350
27 Martin BrundleBrabham-Judd1:28.197+0.747
321 Alex CaffiDallara-Ford1:29.346+1.996
417 Nicola LariniOsella-Ford1:29.787+2.437
537 Bertrand GachotOnyx-Ford1:30.384+3.034
633 Gregor FoitekEuroBrun-Judd1:30.620+3.270
718 Piercarlo GhinzaniOsella-Ford1:30.631+3.281
836 Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford1:30.647+3.297
941 Joachim WinkelhockAGS-Ford1:32.071+4.721
1032 Pierre-Henri RaphanelColoni-Ford1:32.267+4.917
1135 Aguri SuzukiZakspeed-Yamaha1:32.287+4.937
1234 Bernd SchneiderZakspeed-Yamaha1:32.855+5.485
1339 Volker WeidlerRial-Ford1:36.480+9.130

Qualifying report

The only change to the entry list for the San Marino Grand Prix was the arrival of Gabriele Tarquini in the second car of the small AGS team, which had only run one car in Brazil after Philippe Streiff had suffered career ending injuries in pre-season testing. A record 39 cars were entered for the Grand Prix, although only 26 were allowed to start the race.

After their defeat in Brazil, McLaren spent eight days testing at Imola prior to the San Marino Grand Prix. According to Ayrton Senna, they tested everything on the McLaren MP4/5, including aerodynamics, suspension, brakes and fuel consumption. It worked for Senna and Alain Prost, as they locked out the front row and were over 1.5 seconds faster than the Ferrari of Nigel Mansell. Riccardo Patrese showed his and Williams' revival with fourth on the grid followed by Gerhard Berger (Ferrari) with Thierry Boutsen rounding out the top six.

At Tyrrell, Michele Alboreto failed to qualify for a race for the first time since the 1981 German Grand Prix, in the new Tyrrell 018. Only one 018 was available, and although team mate Jonathan Palmer managed to sneak onto the grid in 25th in the older model 017, he raced the 018.

Qualifying classification

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap
11 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda1:42.9391:26.010
22 Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda1:44.5381:26.235+0.225
327 Nigel MansellFerrari1:49.6651:27.652+1.642
46 Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault1:47.4861:27.920+1.910
528 Gerhard BergerFerrari1:42.7811:28.089+2.079
65 Thierry BoutsenWilliams-Renault1:49.4511:28.308+2.298
719 Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford1:45.5361:28.854+2.844
811 Nelson PiquetLotus-Judd1:48.124 1:29.057+3.047
921 Alex CaffiDallara-Ford1:48.8681:29.069+3.059
1026 Olivier GrouillardLigier-Ford1:47.3711:29.104+3.094
1123 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford1:47.3211:29.152+3.142
129 Derek WarwickArrows-Ford1:47.8591:29.281+3.271
1316 Ivan CapelliMarch-Judd1:48.1781:29.385+3.375
1417 Nicola LariniOsella-Ford1:47.5771:29.485+3.475
1524 Luis Pérez-SalaMinardi-Ford1:46.8001:29.503+3.493
1622 Andrea de CesarisDallara-Ford1:53.6811:29.669+3.659
178 Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd1:48.4151:29.761+3.751
1840 Gabriele TarquiniAGS-Ford1:48.7951:29.913+3.903
1915 Maurício GugelminMarch-Judd1:52.1191:30.163+4.153
2030 Philippe AlliotLola-Lamborghini2:00.2931:30.168+4.158
2110 Eddie CheeverArrows-Ford1:45.3751:30.233+4.223
227 Martin BrundleBrabham-Judd1:46.2791:30.271+4.261
2320 Johnny HerbertBenetton-Ford2:05.1261:30.347+4.337
2412 Satoru NakajimaLotus-Judd1:46.4831:30.697+4.687
253 Jonathan PalmerTyrrell-Ford1:51.2291:30.928+4.918
2629 Yannick DalmasLola-Lamborghini1:58.0831:31.137+5.127
274 Michele AlboretoTyrrell-Ford1:51.3291:31.206+5.196
2825 René ArnouxLigier-Ford1:48.0911:31.268+5.258
2938 Christian DannerRial-Ford1:47.9671:31.341+5.331
3031 Roberto MorenoColoni-Ford1:50.9471:31.775+5.765

Race

Start and lap 4 accident (red flag)

At the start, Ayrton Senna got away well but behind him Alain Prost found himself just ahead of Nigel Mansell's Ferrari but the Englishman could not find his way around Prost's McLaren. Mansell fell off a little after that and found himself battling with Riccardo Patrese while on the second lap Ivan Capelli had a nasty accident in his March. On lap four, fifth-placed Gerhard Berger's Ferrari speared off the track at the fast Tamburello corner due to a mechanical failure. Berger hit the wall at an estimated 180 mph and when his car came to a rest it was covered in fuel and it immediately burst into flames. Three fire marshalls (Bruno Miniati, Paolo Verdi and Gabriele Violi) arrived on foot sixteen seconds after impact and the fire was put out ten seconds later; the fuel had also burned up in the inferno. The race was red-flagged and Berger escaped with broken ribs and second-degree burns.

Race restart and conclusion

The race was restarted after half an hour and run a further 55 laps on aggregate timing. This time Prost got away much better and got past Senna while behind them Mansell made a poor start and fell behind Patrese and Alessandro Nannini. On the run-down to the Tosa hairpin Senna got alongside Prost into Villeneuve and out-braked him into Tosa. The McLarens proceeded to pull away from the competition while behind them there was more drama as Stefano Modena put his Brabham into the wall rather violently, escaping unhurt. Olivier Grouillard was disqualified on Lap 5 for his car being illegally worked on by his team during the one-hour delay.

As the McLarens pulled away Mansell, Patrese, and Nannini were busy fighting over third place. It was settled in the space of three laps as Patrese retired with a timing belt failure and Mansell followed shortly afterwards with a gearbox problem. This left Nannini in third while up front Senna cruised home to victory from Prost who, in his pursuit of Senna, had suffered a spin on lap 42 at Variante Bassa. Nannini led home Thierry Boutsen, Derek Warwick in the Arrows and Jonathan Palmer in the Tyrrell. Olivier Grouillard was disqualified because Ligier illegally repaired his car on the grid before the second start. Thierry Boutsen and Alex Caffi were initially disqualified after a protest from Ligier because they had changed tyres in the pitlane before the second start, but were reinstated following an appeal.

The Prost/Senna war began to build up speed after the Frenchman said that McLaren had a pre-race agreement that whoever led into the first turn should stay there, which was ironically suggested by Senna.[2] In Prost's view, Senna had broken this agreement by passing him partway round the first lap after the restart.

Race classification

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
11 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda581:26:51.24519
22 Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda58+ 40.22526
319 Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford57+ 1 lap74
45 Thierry BoutsenWilliams-Renault57+ 1 lap63
59 Derek WarwickArrows-Ford57+ 1 lap122
63 Jonathan PalmerTyrrell-Ford57+ 1 lap251
721 Alex CaffiDallara-Ford57+ 1 lap9
840 Gabriele TarquiniAGS-Ford57+ 1 lap18
910 Eddie CheeverArrows-Ford56+ 2 laps21
1022 Andrea de CesarisDallara-Ford56+ 2 laps16
1120 Johnny HerbertBenetton-Ford56+ 2 laps23
1217 Nicola LariniOsella-Ford52Spun off14
Ret7 Martin BrundleBrabham-Judd51Fuel system22
NC12 Satoru NakajimaLotus-Judd46Not classified24
Ret24 Luis Pérez-SalaMinardi-Ford43Spun off15
Ret15 Maurício GugelminMarch-Judd39Transmission19
Ret11 Nelson PiquetLotus-Judd29Engine8
Ret27 Nigel MansellFerrari23Gearbox3
Ret6 Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault21Engine4
Ret8 Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd19Spun off17
Ret23 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford6Gearbox11
DSQ26 Olivier GrouillardLigier-Ford4Illegal car repairs10
Ret28 Gerhard BergerFerrari3Accident5
Ret16 Ivan CapelliMarch-Judd1Spun off13
Ret30 Philippe AlliotLola-Lamborghini0Electrical20
Ret29 Yannick DalmasLola-Lamborghini0Electrical26
DNQ4 Michele AlboretoTyrrell-Ford
DNQ25 René ArnouxLigier-Ford
DNQ38 Christian DannerRial-Ford
DNQ31 Roberto MorenoColoni-Ford
DNPQ37 Bertrand GachotOnyx-Ford
DNPQ33 Gregor FoitekEuroBrun-Judd
DNPQ18 Piercarlo GhinzaniOsella-Ford
DNPQ36 Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford
DNPQ41 Joachim WinkelhockAGS-Ford
DNPQ32 Pierre-Henri RaphanelColoni-Ford
DNPQ35 Aguri SuzukiZakspeed-Yamaha
DNPQ34 Bernd SchneiderZakspeed-Yamaha
DNPQ39 Volker WeidlerRial-Ford

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Alain Prost12
2 Ayrton Senna9
3 Nigel Mansell9
4 Alessandro Nannini5
5 Maurício Gugelmin4
Source:[3]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 McLaren-Honda21
2 Ferrari9
3 Benetton-Ford8
4 March-Judd4
5 Arrows-Ford4
Source:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Walker, Murray . 1989 . Murray Walker's Grand Prix Year . First Formula Publishing . 21–28 . 1-870066-22-7.
  2. Rubython, Tom: The Life of Senna
  3. Web site: San Marino 1989 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 20 March 2019.