1993 Australian Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Grand Prix:Australian
Country:Australia
Date:7 November
Year:1993
Race No:16
Season No:16
Course:Temporary street circuit
Location:Adelaide Street Circuit
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Course Mi:2.362
Course Km:3.780
Distance Laps:79
Distance Mi:186.598
Distance Km:298.620
Scheduled Laps:81
Scheduled Mi:191.322
Scheduled Km:306.180
Weather:Sunny
Pole Driver:Ayrton Senna
Pole Team:McLaren-Ford
Pole Country:BRA
Pole Time:1:13.371
Fast Driver:Damon Hill
Fast Country:GBR
Fast Team:Williams-Renault
Fast Time:1:15.381
Fast Lap:64
First Driver:Ayrton Senna
First Country:BRA
First Team:McLaren-Ford
Second Driver:Alain Prost
Second Team:Williams-Renault
Second Country:FRA
Third Driver:Damon Hill
Third Team:Williams-Renault
Third Country:GBR

The 1993 Australian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Adelaide on 7 November 1993. It was the sixteenth and final race of the 1993 Formula One World Championship.

The 79-lap race was won by Brazilian Ayrton Senna, driving a McLaren-Ford. In his last race with McLaren before joining Williams for, Senna took pole position and led from start to finish, except during the pit stops. Frenchman Alain Prost, in his final Grand Prix before retirement, finished second in his Williams-Renault, with his British teammate Damon Hill third.

Riccardo Patrese and Derek Warwick also retired from F1 after this race, Patrese having competed in a then-record 256 Grands Prix. Senna's victory would turn out to be the 41st and last victory in his Formula One career, and the last time he would finish on the podium, score points, or even finish a race, since the following season he retired in Interlagos and Aida and died at Imola. It was also the last win for a Brazilian driver until Rubens Barrichello at the 2000 German Grand Prix.

This event was also the last race without refuelling during races (until the 2010 Bahrain Grand Prix) as well as the last race for cars with active suspension and cars using electronic driver aids; the FIA banned their use for the next seven seasons, starting in, until the use of three electronic driver aid systems (namely fully-automatic gearboxes, launch control, and traction control) was eventually reintroduced and permitted at the 2001 Spanish Grand Prix, due to the FIA being unable to police the ban, and whether or not teams were secretly cheating by using these systems illegally to gain a competitive advantage, which is what led to their eventual reintroduction until the next six seasons.

By winning this race McLaren surpassed Ferrari as the most successful F1 constructor in number of wins (until the 1995 Canadian Grand Prix). McLaren achieved the final pole position and win for their car entered in the livery of Marlboro as their title sponsor, which also would be the last pole position and win for the team until the 1997 Australian Grand Prix. This race was also the last time the Williams team was sponsored by Canon and the Benetton team was sponsored by Camel before switching to sponsorship by Rothmans and Mild Seven respectively in the 1994 season.

Report

Qualifying

Senna took his first pole position since the 1992 Canadian Grand Prix, in the process breaking a run of 24 straight poles for Williams and preventing that team from achieving a clean sweep for the season. Prost was alongside on the front row, with Damon Hill in the second Williams and Michael Schumacher in the Benetton on the second row, and Mika Häkkinen in the second McLaren and Gerhard Berger in the Ferrari on the third. Berger had his Saturday qualifying times removed after doing 18 laps, above the limit of 12. The top ten was completed by Jean Alesi in the second Ferrari, Martin Brundle in the Ligier, Patrese in the second Benetton, and Aguri Suzuki in the Footwork.

Despite being the fastest qualifier in his Ford V8-powered McLaren, Senna was some 150NaN0 slower on the 890m-long Brabham Straight than the Renault V10-powered Williams of Hill.

Race

It took three attempts to get the race underway. On the first attempt, Brundle's Ligier was left on the grid at the start of the formation lap, before Ukyo Katayama stalled his Tyrrell and the start was aborted. On the second attempt, Eddie Irvine missed his grid slot and stalled his Jordan. Again, the start was aborted. Katayama and Irvine were sent to the back of the grid for the third, successful, attempt.

The top four retained their positions into the first corner, while Häkkinen made a bad start and fell behind Berger.

While Senna pulled out a small lead, the two Williams cars and Schumacher stayed together. Schumacher pitted early on lap 15 and rejoined in fourth but his engine failed on lap 20. Senna pitted on lap 24, allowing Prost to lead until his own stop five laps later, while Häkkinen's race went from bad to worse as he had a slow stop, allowing Alesi and Brundle to get ahead of him, before his brakes failed on lap 29.

Senna pitted for the second time on lap 55, by which time the Williamses had already made their second stops, and this enabled the Brazilian to retain a healthy lead. Meanwhile, Alesi got ahead of team-mate Berger while Patrese got ahead of Brundle. On lap 61, Hill tried to catch Prost by surprise for second place. Prost, however, moved over to block, causing Hill to back off and spin, losing time but no places.

Senna duly won from Prost by nine seconds, with Hill a further 24 seconds back. Alesi and Berger were fourth and fifth, one lap down, while Patrese was set to finish sixth in his 256th and last race, only for his fuel pressure to drop on the last lap and thus hand Brundle the last point.

Prost thus signed off on his F1 career with his fourth Drivers' Championship and 99 points. Senna's win enabled him to secure second place in the standings with 73 points, just ahead of Hill on 69. Schumacher was fourth with 52, with a big gap to team-mate Patrese in fifth with 20, followed by Alesi (16), Brundle (13), Berger (12), Johnny Herbert (11) and Mark Blundell (10). In the Constructors' Championship, Williams finished with 168 points - four more than their tally from 1992, and double the tally of McLaren (84). Benetton were a close third with 72, while Ferrari (28) edged out Ligier (23) for fourth.

With Prost not defending his title, the Williams cars would once again bear the numbers 0 and 2 for 1994.

Post-race

During the podium celebrations, Senna invited Prost up to the top step, much to the surprise of the Frenchman. The move marked the first easing of tensions in the rivalry between the two men. Senna himself would later call the race 'the end of an era'. As was tradition in Adelaide, a rock concert was held inside the circuit following the race. The concert was performed by Tina Turner as part of her What's Love? Tour (the concert was free for anyone with a ticket to the race). At one point during the concert, Ayrton Senna appeared on the stage, much to Turner's surprise. As a tribute to the Brazilian driver (and although she had already performed the song), Turner sang again her hit "The Best".[1]

Classification

Qualifying

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Gap
18 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Ford1:13.3711:14.779
22 Alain ProstWilliams-Renault1:13.8071:14.595+0.436
30 Damon HillWilliams-Renault1:14.7211:13.826+0.455
45 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford1:14.0981:14.494+0.727
57 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Ford1:14.1061:14.596+0.735
628 Gerhard BergerFerrari1:14.194+0.823
727 Jean AlesiFerrari1:15.3321:15.619+1.961
825 Martin BrundleLigier-Renault1:16.0221:16.710+2.651
96 Riccardo PatreseBenetton-Ford1:16.0771:21.076+2.706
1010 Aguri SuzukiFootwork-Mugen-Honda1:16.0791:16.567+2.708
1129 Karl WendlingerSauber1:16.1061:17.132+2.735
1230 JJ LehtoSauber1:16.2861:17.118+2.915
1314 Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Hart1:16.4591:16.723+3.088
1426 Mark BlundellLigier-Renault1:16.8621:16.469+3.098
154 Andrea de CesarisTyrrell-Yamaha1:17.3501:16.892+3.521
1624 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford1:16.9051:17.816+3.534
179 Derek WarwickFootwork-Mugen-Honda1:16.919+3.548
183 Ukyo KatayamaTyrrell-Yamaha1:17.0181:18.406+3.647
1915 Eddie IrvineJordan-Hart1:19.7331:17.341+3.970
2012 Johnny HerbertLotus-Ford1:17.6121:17.450+4.079
2120 Érik ComasLarrousse-Lamborghini1:17.7501:17.815+4.379
2223 Jean-Marc GounonMinardi-Ford1:17.7541:18.035+4.383
2311 Pedro LamyLotus-Ford1:19.6281:19.369+5.998
2419 Toshio SuzukiLarrousse-Lamborghini1:21.7931:23.167+8.422
Sources:[2] [3] [4]

Race

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
18 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Ford791:43:27.476110
22 Alain ProstWilliams-Renault79+ 9.25926
30 Damon HillWilliams-Renault79+ 33.90234
427 Jean AlesiFerrari78+ 1 Lap73
528 Gerhard BergerFerrari78+ 1 Lap62
625 Martin BrundleLigier-Renault78+ 1 Lap81
710 Aguri SuzukiFootwork-Mugen-Honda78+ 1 Lap10 
86 Riccardo PatreseBenetton-Ford77Fuel system9 
926 Mark BlundellLigier-Renault77+ 2 Laps14 
109 Derek WarwickFootwork-Mugen-Honda77+ 2 Laps17 
1114 Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Hart76+ 3 Laps13 
1220 Érik ComasLarrousse-Lamborghini76+ 3 Laps21 
134 Andrea de CesarisTyrrell-Yamaha75+ 4 Laps15 
1419 Toshio SuzukiLarrousse-Lamborghini74+ 5 Laps24 
1529 Karl WendlingerSauber73Brakes11 
Ret30 JJ LehtoSauber56Accident 12 
Ret23 Jean-Marc GounonMinardi-Ford34Spun off22 
Ret7 Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Ford28Brakes5 
Ret5 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford19Engine4 
Ret3 Ukyo KatayamaTyrrell-Yamaha11Spun Off18 
Ret15 Eddie IrvineJordan-Hart10Accident19 
Ret12 Johnny HerbertLotus-Ford9Suspension20 
Ret24 Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford5Gearbox16 
Ret11 Pedro LamyLotus-Ford0Accident23 

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Alain Prost99
2 Ayrton Senna73
3 Damon Hill69
4 Michael Schumacher52
5 Riccardo Patrese20
Source:[5]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 Williams-Renault168
2 McLaren-Ford84
3 Benetton-Ford72
4 Ferrari28
5 Ligier-Renault23
Source:

Notes and References

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJzll39HljA Ayrton Senna with Tina Turner, 1993
  2. Web site: Foster's Australian Grand Prix – Qualifying 1. Formula1.com. 5 January 2024.
  3. Web site: Foster's Australian Grand Prix – Qualifying 2. Formula1.com. 5 January 2024.
  4. Web site: 1993 Australian Grand Prix Classification Qualifying. Motorsport Stats. 5 January 2024.
  5. Web site: Australia 1993 - Championship • STATS F1. statsf1.com. 6 March 2019.