1989 Brazilian Grand Prix

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Template:Infobox Grand Prix race report 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 for Scuderia Ferrari, with Frenchman Alain Prost second for 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 claimed that he had booked an early flight home as he did not expect the new Ferrari 640 (which had severe reliability problems in testing and practice sessions before the race) to complete the distance, and during the podium ceremony he cut his hand whilst lifting the trophy.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="BBC pick your classic" />

Background

Template:Further The event, officially called the Grande Prêmio do Brasil was held at the Autodromo Nelson Piquet in Baixada de Jacarepaguá in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro and was the first round of the 1989 Formula One World Championship.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Free and qualifying practice sessions were held on Friday 24 March and Saturday 25 March, with a warm-up session and the Grand Prix race itself taking place on Sunday 26 March 1989.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> 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 Autódromo José Carlos Pace in Interlagos, São Paulo, the home town of Ayrton Senna, where it is today.Template:Citation needed

Thirty-nine cars were entered for the event by twenty constructors, although Automobiles Gonfaronnaises Sportives (AGS) withdrew one of their entries before the event.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Thirteen constructors used Goodyear tyres whilst seven teams used Pirelli tyres.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Several teams, including AGS with the JH23B, Benetton Formula with the B188, Scuderia Coloni with the FC 188, EuroBrun with the ER 188B, Larrousse with the Lola LC88B, March Engineering with the 881, Minardi with the M188B, Rial Racing with the ARC2, the Tyrrell Racing Organisation with the 017B, and Williams with the FW12C used versions of their cars from the previous season at this event, featuring varying degrees of modification, some only making minor changes whilst others, such as Eurobrun, Larrousse, and Williams had gone so far as to change engine manufacturer.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Williams had one newly-constructed chassis at this race, alongside two 1988 chassis modified to 1989 specifications.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Other teams introduced new cars, with Arrows debuting the A11, the returning Brabham debuting the BT58, Scuderia Italia debuting the Dallara F189, Ligier debuting the JS33, Team Lotus debuting the 101, McLaren debuting the MP4/5, debutante Onyx Grand Prix fielding their ORE-1, Osella debuting the FA1-M89, and Zakspeed debuting the 891.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Scuderia Ferrari introduced the Ferrari 640 at this race, the first Formula One car with a semi-automatic gearbox.<ref name="BBC pick your classic" />

Williams driver Riccardo Patrese made a then record-breaking 177th appearance at a Grand Prix.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> This race saw the grand prix debuts of British driver Johnny Herbert (in a Benetton) and French driver Olivier Grouillard (in a Ligier).<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Herbert competed with a sore ankle that caused him to limp due to injuries sustained in a Formula 3000 crash in August 1988.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" />

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 only time during the pre-qualifying sessions from 1988 to 1992 that five cars would be allowed to partake in the main qualifying session instead of the standard four.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" />Template:Additional citation needed

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.<ref name="Walker">Template:Cite book</ref>

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.<ref name="Walker" />

Pre-qualifying classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Time Gap
1 7 Template:Flagicon Martin Brundle Brabham-Judd 1:27.764
2 8 Template:Flagicon Stefano Modena Brabham-Judd 1:28.147 +0.383
3 33 Template:Flagicon Gregor Foitek EuroBrun-Judd 1:29.604 +1.840
4 17 Template:Flagicon Nicola Larini Osella-Ford 1:29.679 +1.915
5 34 Template:Flagicon Bernd Schneider Zakspeed-Yamaha 1:30.417 +2.653
6 21 Template:Flagicon Alex Caffi Dallara-Ford 1:30.747 +2.983
7 18 Template:Flagicon Piercarlo Ghinzani Osella-Ford 1:31.150 +3.386
8 39 Template:Flagicon Volker Weidler Rial-Ford 1:31.964 +4.200
9 32 Template:Flagicon Pierre-Henri Raphanel Coloni-Ford 1:32.019 +4.255
10 41 Template:Flagicon Joachim Winkelhock AGS-Ford 1:32.982 +5.218
11 35 Template:Flagicon Aguri Suzuki Zakspeed-Yamaha 1:33.079 +5.315
12 36 Template:Flagicon Stefan Johansson Onyx-Ford 1:35.232 +7.468
13 37 Template:Flagicon Bertrand Gachot Onyx-Ford 1:37.932 +10.168

Qualifying report

Ayrton Senna took pole position in qualifying ahead of Patrese and Ferrari's Gerhard Berger. 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.<ref name="BBC pick your classic">Template:Cite web</ref> Temperatures during Saturday's qualifying practice session were around Template:Convert.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Benetton driver Herbert and Ligier driver Grouillard both qualified for their first Formula One races.

Qualifying classification

Pos No Driver Team Q1 Q2 Gap
1 1 Template:Flagicon Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda 1:26.205 1:25.302
2 6 Template:Flagicon Riccardo Patrese Williams-Renault 1:26.172 7:12.732 +0.870
3 28 Template:Flagicon Gerhard Berger Ferrari 1:26.271 1:26.394 +0.969
4 5 Template:Flagicon Thierry Boutsen Williams-Renault 1:27.367 1:26.459 +1.157
5 2 Template:Flagicon Alain Prost McLaren-Honda 1:27.095 1:26.620 +1.318
6 27 Template:Flagicon Nigel Mansell Ferrari 1:27.249 1:26.772 +1.470
7 16 Template:Flagicon Ivan Capelli March-Judd 1:27.525 1:27.035 +1.733
8 9 Template:Flagicon Derek Warwick Arrows-Ford 1:27.937 1:27.408 +2.106
9 11 Template:Flagicon Nelson Piquet Lotus-Judd 1:28.423 1:27.437 +2.135
10 20 Template:Flagicon Johnny Herbert Benetton-Ford 1:27.626 1:27.754 +2.324
11 19 Template:Flagicon Alessandro Nannini Benetton-Ford 1:28.394 1:27.865 +2.563
12 15 Template:Flagicon Maurício Gugelmin March-Judd 1:27.956 1:28.581 +2.654
13 7 Template:Flagicon Martin Brundle Brabham-Judd 1:29.138 1:28.274 +2.972
14 8 Template:Flagicon Stefano Modena Brabham-Judd 1:28.621 1:28.942 +3.319
15 22 Template:Flagicon Andrea de Cesaris Dallara-Ford 1:29.005 1:29.206 +3.703
16 23 Template:Flagicon Pierluigi Martini Minardi-Ford 1:30.077 1:29.435 +4.133
17 38 Template:Flagicon Christian Danner Rial-Ford 1:30.460 1:29.455 +4.153
18 3 Template:Flagicon Jonathan Palmer Tyrrell-Ford 1:30.443 1:29.573 +4.271
19 17 Template:Flagicon Nicola Larini Osella-Ford 1:31.341 1:30.146 +4.844
20 4 Template:Flagicon Michele Alboreto Tyrrell-Ford 1:32.260 1:30.255 +4.953
21 12 Template:Flagicon Satoru Nakajima Lotus-Judd 1:30.942 1:30.375 +5.073
22 26 Template:Flagicon Olivier Grouillard Ligier-Ford 1:30.410 1:30.666 +5.108
23 24 Template:Flagicon Luis Pérez-Sala Minardi-Ford 1:30.702 1:30.643 +5.341
24 10 Template:Flagicon Eddie Cheever Arrows-Ford 1:30.657 1:31.068 +5.355
25 34 Template:Flagicon Bernd Schneider Zakspeed-Yamaha 1:32.346 1:30.861 +5.559
26 30 Template:Flagicon Philippe Alliot Lola-Lamborghini 1:31.872 1:31.009 +5.707
27 29 Template:Flagicon Yannick Dalmas Lola-Lamborghini 1:32.411 1:31.260 +5.958
28 25 Template:Flagicon René Arnoux Ligier-Ford 1:34.232 1:31.376 +6.074
29 33 Template:Flagicon Gregor Foitek EuroBrun-Judd 1:31.791 1:53.570 +6.489
30 31 Template:Flagicon Roberto Moreno Coloni-Ford 1:32.561 1:34.894 +7.259

Race

Race report

The race was due to begin at 13:00 local time.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> Before the race the temperature was measured at Template:Convert.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> 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.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Mansell had lacked confidence in the new V12-powered Ferrari's reliability, and as such had booked a flight home which was due to depart at 16:30.<ref name="Autocourse 1989-90 Brazilian GP" /> 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 undoubtedly Arrows driver Derek Warwick. After his first tyre stop which lasted 18 seconds (a normal stop for the time was around 6–8 seconds) and dropped him from 3rd to 8th, there was another problem fitting a rear wheel during his second stop for tyres, a problem which Warwick himself compounded by actually stalling the Arrows-Ford as he tried to leave his pit, all of which resulted in a stop of around 25 seconds. He eventually finished in fifth place, less than 18 seconds behind Mansell suggesting that the two long pit stops where he was stationary for almost 30 seconds longer than had the stops been trouble free, may have cost Warwick and Arrows their maiden Grand Prix victory.

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. It was also a tight fit for Warwick who pointed out during practice that it was really his and Cheever's own fault as Brawn had continually asked the pair if they were comfortable in the car, to which they both said yes, but as Warwick pointed out sitting in a stationary car in the workshop or pit lane is vastly different to being out on the track with all the bumps and g-forces. 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.

Race classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 27 Template:Flagicon Nigel Mansell Ferrari 61 1:38:58.744 6 9
2 2 Template:Flagicon Alain Prost McLaren-Honda 61 + 7.809 5 6
3 15 Template:Flagicon Maurício Gugelmin March-Judd 61 + 9.370 12 4
4 20 Template:Flagicon Johnny Herbert Benetton-Ford 61 + 10.493 10 3
5 9 Template:Flagicon Derek Warwick Arrows-Ford 61 + 17.866 8 2
6 19 Template:Flagicon Alessandro Nannini Benetton-Ford 61 + 18.241 11 1
7 3 Template:Flagicon Jonathan Palmer Tyrrell-Ford 60 + 1 lap 18
8 12 Template:Flagicon Satoru Nakajima Lotus-Judd 60 + 1 lap 21
9 26 Template:Flagicon Olivier Grouillard Ligier-Ford 60 + 1 lap 22
10 4 Template:Flagicon Michele Alboreto Tyrrell-Ford 59 + 2 laps 20
11 1 Template:Flagicon Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda 59 + 2 laps 1
12 30 Template:Flagicon Philippe Alliot Lola-Lamborghini 58 + 3 laps 26
13 22 Template:Flagicon Andrea de Cesaris Dallara-Ford 57 + 4 laps 15
14 38 Template:Flagicon Christian Danner Rial-Ford 56 Gearbox 17
Ret 6 Template:Flagicon Riccardo Patrese Williams-Renault 51 Alternator 2
Ret 10 Template:Flagicon Eddie Cheever Arrows-Ford 37 Collision 24
Ret 34 Template:Flagicon Bernd Schneider Zakspeed-Yamaha 36 Collision 25
Ret 7 Template:Flagicon Martin Brundle Brabham-Judd 27 Halfshaft 13
Ret 16 Template:Flagicon Ivan Capelli March-Judd 22 Suspension 7
Ret 11 Template:Flagicon Nelson Piquet Lotus-Judd 10 Fuel system 9
DSQ 17 Template:Flagicon Nicola Larini Osella-Ford 10 Illegal start 19
Ret 8 Template:Flagicon Stefano Modena Brabham-Judd 9 Halfshaft 14
Ret 5 Template:Flagicon Thierry Boutsen Williams-Renault 3 Engine 4
Ret 23 Template:Flagicon Pierluigi Martini Minardi-Ford 2 Chassis 16
Ret 28 Template:Flagicon Gerhard Berger Ferrari 0 Collision 3
Ret 24 Template:Flagicon Luis Pérez-Sala Minardi-Ford 0 Collision 23
DNQ 29 Template:Flagicon Yannick Dalmas Lola-Lamborghini
DNQ 25 Template:Flagicon René Arnoux Ligier-Ford
DNQ 33 Template:Flagicon Gregor Foitek EuroBrun-Judd
DNQ 31 Template:Flagicon Roberto Moreno Coloni-Ford
DNPQ 21 Template:Flagicon Alex Caffi Dallara-Ford
DNPQ 18 Template:Flagicon Piercarlo Ghinzani Osella-Ford
DNPQ 39 Template:Flagicon Volker Weidler Rial-Ford
DNPQ 32 Template:Flagicon Pierre-Henri Raphanel Coloni-Ford
DNPQ 41 Template:Flagicon Joachim Winkelhock AGS-Ford
DNPQ 35 Template:Flagicon Aguri Suzuki Zakspeed-Yamaha
DNPQ 36 Template:Flagicon Stefan Johansson Onyx-Ford
DNPQ 37 Template:Flagicon Bertrand Gachot Onyx-Ford
Source:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
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Championship standings after the race

Template:Col-start Template:Col-2

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 Template:Flagicon Nigel Mansell 9
2 Template:Flagicon Alain Prost 6
3 Template:Flagicon Maurício Gugelmin 4
4 Template:Flagicon Johnny Herbert 3
5 Template:Flagicon Derek Warwick 2
Source: <ref name="champ">Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:Col-2

Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 Template:Flagicon Ferrari 9
2 Template:Flagicon McLaren-Honda 6
3 Template:Flagicon March-Judd 4
4 Template:Flagicon Benetton-Ford 4
5 Template:Flagicon Arrows-Ford 2
Source: <ref name="champ"/>

Template:Col-end

References

Template:Reflist

  • Pre-qualifying results from FIA Yearbook 1989

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