1991 Spanish Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Grand Prix:Spanish
Country:Spain
Official Name:XXXIII Gran Premio Tío Pepe de España
Date:29 September
Year:1991
Race No:14
Season No:16
Location:Circuit de Catalunya
Montmeló, Catalonia. Spain[1]
Course:Permanent racing facility
Course Mi:2.950
Course Km:4.747
Distance Laps:65
Distance Mi:191.727
Distance Km:308.555
Weather:Warm and overcast, drying
Attendance:60,000
Pole Driver:Gerhard Berger
Pole Country:Austria
Pole Team:McLaren-Honda
Pole Time:1:18.751
Fast Driver:Riccardo Patrese
Fast Country:Italy
Fast Team:Williams-Renault
Fast Time:1:22.837
Fast Lap:63
First Driver:Nigel Mansell
First Country:UK
First Team:Williams-Renault
Second Driver:Alain Prost
Second Country:France
Second Team:Ferrari
Third Driver:Riccardo Patrese
Third Country:Italy
Third Team:Williams-Renault

The 1991 Spanish Grand Prix (formally the XXXIII Gran Premio Tío Pepe de España) was a Formula One motor race held on 29 September 1991 at the Circuit de Catalunya. It was the fourteenth race of the 1991 Formula One World Championship, and the first Spanish Grand Prix to be held at Circuit de Catalunya.

The 65-lap race was won by British driver Nigel Mansell, driving a Williams-Renault, after he started from second position. Frenchman Alain Prost finished second in a Ferrari, with Mansell's Italian teammate Riccardo Patrese third. Mansell's Drivers' Championship rival, Brazilian Ayrton Senna, finished fifth in his McLaren-Honda, meaning that he led Mansell by 16 points with two races remaining.

Pre-race

There was a lot of action in the backrooms in the week separating the Portuguese and Spanish Grands Prix with the big news being that Max Mosley was elected president of the FISA, replacing Jean-Marie Balestre. There were also changes in the driver line-ups as Michael Bartels returned to Lotus replacing Johnny Herbert who had obligations in the Japanese Formula 3000. Jordan had replaced Roberto Moreno with young Italian rookie Alessandro Zanardi, and Fondmetal had sacked Olivier Grouillard and replaced him with Gabriele Tarquini of AGS, Grouillard promptly taking Tarquini's old seat. Championship challenger Nigel Mansell was limping all weekend, the Williams driver having injured his ankle in a football match.

Qualifying

Pre-qualifying report

The pre-qualifying pool in Spain was reduced to seven entrants when Coloni driver Pedro Chaves refused to drive the car, frustrated at the lack of testing and the non-payment of his retainer. The team were unable to find another driver to attempt to pre-qualify the C4, so it stayed in the garage.[2] Chaves had failed to pre-qualify on all 13 of his attempts this season, and did not drive for the team again.

Brabham secured their fifth consecutive 1–2 in the pre-qualifying session, with Martin Brundle a couple of tenths of a second faster than Mark Blundell. The third placed pre-qualifier, Michele Alboreto in the Footwork, was over two seconds behind Blundell. On his first outing for Fondmetal after the sacking of Olivier Grouillard, Gabriele Tarquini took the last pre-qualifying spot in the Fomet-1, 0.25 seconds behind Alboreto.

Alex Caffi missed out again in fifth place in the other Footwork, just 0.062 seconds slower than Tarquini. It was his fifth failure to pre-qualify in six attempts. Sixth was Fabrizio Barbazza in the AGS, just over half a second faster than his new team-mate Grouillard. It was to be their last appearances for the team as AGS withdrew from Formula One before the next event, having spent six seasons at the top level.

Pre-qualifying classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Time Gap
17 Martin BrundleBrabham-Yamaha1:21.504 -
28 Mark BlundellBrabham-Yamaha1:21.727+0.223
39 Michele AlboretoFootwork-Ford1:23.744+2.240
414 Gabriele TarquiniFondmetal-Ford1:23.994+2.490
510 Alex Caffi1:24.056+2.552
618 Fabrizio BarbazzaAGS-Ford1:24.744+3.240
717 Olivier GrouillardAGS-Ford1:25.305+3.801

Qualifying report

In qualifying Gerhard Berger did a favour to teammate Ayrton Senna by taking pole position from Mansell, Senna, Riccardo Patrese, Michael Schumacher, Alain Prost, Jean Alesi, Ivan Capelli, Emanuele Pirro and Nelson Piquet.

Qualifying classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Gap
12 Gerhard BergerMcLaren-Honda1:18.7511:21.208 -
25 Nigel Mansell1:18.9701:19.971+0.219
31 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda1:19.4741:19.064+0.313
46 Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault1:19.6431:20.392+0.892
519 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford1:19.7331:20.779+0.982
627 Alain Prost1:20.2451:19.936+1.185
728 Jean AlesiFerrari1:20.1971:20.690+1.446
816 Ivan CapelliLeyton House-Ilmor1:21.6821:20.584+1.833
921 Emanuele Pirro1:21.2501:20.651+1.900
1020 Nelson Piquet1:20.8531:20.676+1.925
117 Martin BrundleBrabham-Yamaha1:21.4151:20.677+1.926
128 Mark BlundellBrabham-Yamaha1:21.0211:20.724+1.973
1315 Maurício GugelminLeyton House-Ilmor1:21.3191:20.743+1.992
144 Stefano ModenaTyrrell-Honda1:20.7881:21.576+2.037
1522 JJ LehtoDallara-Judd1:22.2491:20.967+2.216
1624 Gianni MorbidelliMinardi-Ferrari1:21.8011:22.523+3.050
1733 Andrea de CesarisJordan-Ford1:21.8651:22.992+3.114
183 Satoru Nakajima1:22.4801:22.114+3.363
1923 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ferrari1:22.5751:22.510+3.759
2032 Alessandro ZanardiJordan-Ford1:22.5801:23.448+3.829
2111 Mika HäkkinenLotus-Judd1:22.6461:23.407+3.895
2214 Gabriele TarquiniFondmetal-Ford1:22.8371:26.214+4.086
2329 Éric BernardLola-Ford1:22.9441:23.883+4.193
249 Michele AlboretoFootwork-Ford1:23.1451:23.868+4.394
2526 Érik Comas1:23.3591:23.755+4.608
2625 Thierry BoutsenLigier-Lamborghini1:23.5531:23.623+4.802
2730 Aguri SuzukiLola-Ford1:24.2111:26.346+5.460
2834 Nicola LariniLambo-Lamborghini1:25.3301:26.109+6.579
2912 Michael BartelsLotus-Judd1:25.6401:25.392+6.641
3035 Eric van de PoeleLambo-Lamborghini1:27.5011:27.566+8.750

Race

Race report

On race morning it was raining, but by start time it had stopped, although the track was still wet. At the start Senna got away well and challenged Berger, while Mansell was right on his tail. Toward the end of lap one Schumacher surprised Mansell to take third place. At the back Éric Bernard and Érik Comas collided, both men being out on the spot. The track was incredibly slippery and there was a lot of action at the front with Senna, Schumacher, Mansell, and Alesi all fighting over third place, while Berger started to scamper away in the lead. Mansell tried to chase the leader and forced his way past Schumacher before setting off after Senna. Eventually he pounced on the main straight, the two great rivals going wheel to wheel, just millimetres apart, with Mansell taking the position and setting off after Berger. Prost was the first front-runner to stop for dry tyres, followed shortly by leader Berger, who had a very bad stop. Mansell and Senna both stopped on the same lap and it was the McLaren team who won the confrontation, getting Senna out ahead and into the lead from Berger, Mansell, and Schumacher.

On the following lap Senna let Berger through as Mansell was closing in. The rain returned and Senna had a dramatic spin at the last corner, dropping from second to fifth while Schumacher passed Prost for third. Mansell closed on Berger, and on lap 20 he made his way up the inside to take the lead and proceeded to pull away, while Berger came under pressure from the charging Schumacher. A close battle ended when Schumacher spun while trying to pass, he would stay in the race, but down in sixth place, which would become fifth when Berger retired with yet another electronic failure. The action continued for the major placings as Patrese passed Senna for third then Alesi blew past Senna for fourth after Schumacher pitted. Mansell duly took victory from Prost, Patrese, Alesi, Senna, and Schumacher, while the Minardi drivers ended the race red faced due to a last lap collision between Gianni Morbidelli and Pierluigi Martini. Mansell's win with Senna fifth meant that the title race was back on, but Senna still led by sixteen points as the teams headed on to Japan.

Race classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
15 Nigel MansellWilliams-Renault651:38:41.541210
227 Alain ProstFerrari65+ 11.33166
36 Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault65+ 15.90944
428 Jean AlesiFerrari65+ 22.77273
51 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda65+ 1:02.40232
619 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford65+ 1:19.46851
715 Maurício GugelminLeyton House-Ilmor64+ 1 lap13
822 JJ LehtoDallara-Judd64+ 1 lap15
932 Alessandro ZanardiJordan-Ford64+ 1 lap20
107 Martin BrundleBrabham-Yamaha63+ 2 laps11
1120 Nelson PiquetBenetton-Ford63+ 2 laps10
1214 Gabriele TarquiniFondmetal-Ford63+ 2 laps22
1323 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ferrari63+ 2 laps19
1424 Gianni MorbidelliMinardi-Ferrari62Collision16
1521 Emanuele PirroDallara-Judd62+ 3 laps9
164 Stefano ModenaTyrrell-Honda62+ 3 laps14
173 Satoru NakajimaTyrrell-Honda62+ 3 laps18
Ret8 Mark BlundellBrabham-Yamaha49Engine12
Ret26 Érik ComasLigier-Lamborghini36Electrical25
Ret2 Gerhard BergerMcLaren-Honda33Electrical1
Ret9 Michele AlboretoFootwork-Ford23Engine24
Ret33 Andrea de CesarisJordan-Ford22Electrical17
Ret11 Mika HäkkinenLotus-Judd5Spun off21
Ret16 Ivan CapelliLeyton House-Ilmor1Collision8
Ret29 Éric BernardLola-Ford0Collision23
Ret25 Thierry BoutsenLigier-Lamborghini0Collision26
DNQ30 Aguri SuzukiLola-Ford
DNQ34 Nicola LariniLambo-Lamborghini
DNQ12 Michael BartelsLotus-Judd
DNQ35 Eric van de PoeleLambo-Lamborghini
DNPQ10 Alex CaffiFootwork-Ford
DNPQ18 Fabrizio BarbazzaAGS-Ford
DNPQ17 Olivier GrouillardAGS-Ford

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Ayrton Senna85
2 Nigel Mansell69
3 Riccardo Patrese48
4 Alain Prost31
5 Gerhard Berger31
Source: [3]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 Williams-Renault117
2 McLaren-Honda116
3 Ferrari52
4 Benetton-Ford37
5 Jordan-Ford13
Source:

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1991 Spanish Grand Prix. Motor Sport. 31 May 2022.
  2. Book: Walker, Murray . 1991 . Murray Walker's Grand Prix Year . Hazleton Publishing . 117–124 . 0-905138-90-2.
  3. Web site: Spain 1991 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 20 March 2019.