1990 Japanese Grand Prix

Japan  1990 Japanese Grand Prix
Race details
Race 15 of 16 in the 1990 Formula One season
Date October 21, 1990
Official name XVI Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix
Location Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka, Mie, Japan
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 5.859 km (3.64 mi)
Distance 53 laps, 310.548 km (192.966 mi)
Weather Sunny
Pole position
Driver McLaren-Honda
Time 1:36.996
Fastest lap
Driver Italy Riccardo Patrese Williams-Renault
Time 1:44.233 on lap 40
Podium
First Benetton-Ford
Second Benetton-Ford
Third Lola-Lamborghini

The 1990 Japanese Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 21 October 1990 at Suzuka. It was the fifteenth and penultimate round of the 1990 Formula One season. It was the 17th Japanese Grand Prix and the fourth to be held at Suzuka. The race was held over 53 laps of the six kilometre circuit for a race distance of 310 kilometres.

The race is best remembered for the first corner collision between World Championship rivals Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna and French driver Alain Prost, the second consecutive year the two had collided at this race with heavy championship repercussions. It immediately put both cars out of the race and secured for Senna his second World Championship. The race saw a best result to that point for the Benetton Formula team with their drivers, Brazilian veteran Nelson Piquet and his protégé Roberto Moreno finishing first and second in their Benetton B190s. It was back to back wins for Benetton in Japan after the team's win the previous year. Japanese driver Aguri Suzuki scored a career best result for himself and the Larrousse team, finishing third in his Lola LC90 in the only podium driver and team would achieve.

With Ferrari scoring no points after Nigel Mansell's retirement, the McLaren team secured their sixth and third consecutive constructor's championship.

As of 2016, this race marks the only time a Lamborghini powered car finished on the podium in Formula One.

Prior to the race

There were many announcements prior to the race, Brabham announced they would use Yamaha engines for 1991, Footwork also announced a Porsche engine deal for 1991 and they also retained both drivers in Alex Caffi and Michele Alboreto. Prior to the race, the Life Racing Engines and EuroBrun teams withdrew from the sport. EuroBrun's Roberto Moreno joined the Benetton team replacing Alessandro Nannini, whose F1 career ended in a helicopter crash after the Spanish Grand Prix.

Alesi did not start due to a neck injury during Friday's practice. As his grid position was left empty, this was the third race in the running to have only 25 starters instead of the usual 26.

Nigel Mansell also announced a u-turn on his decision to retire by making public his agreement to join Williams-Renault for two years from 1991 after being given assurances from Frank Williams, Patrick Head and Renault that they could deliver him a car in which he could win a world championship. On Saturday Soichiro Honda, the founder of Honda, met Ayrton Senna in the McLaren pit.[1]

Race summary

This race is best known for its first corner incident involving world championship contenders Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna. Senna secured the pole, but was unhappy with the side of the track it was situated on, claiming that pole should always be on the racing line. He and Gerhard Berger then went to the Japanese stewards, to request a change of position of pole to the cleaner left side of the track. The stewards initially agreed but an injunction by FISA president Jean Marie Balestre later that night rejected the decision and the original pole position remained on the dirtier, less grippy right side of the track. In addition, as revealed by F1 journalist, Maurice Hamilton,[2] the FIA had warned that crossing the yellow line of the pit exit on the right to better position oneself at the first corner would have not been appropriate, further infuriating Senna.

Some in the F1 paddock found Senna's complaints as strange given that the pole was actually on the same side of the track as it had been since the first Japanese Grand Prix held there in 1987. Many also noted that Senna had not complained about the position of the pole in either 1988 or 1989, both races he had started on pole and both races he was fighting Prost for the World Championship.

After this, Senna vowed that if Prost (starting second) got the advantage into the first corner, which most were sure he would, Senna would attempt to take the lead into the first corner, regardless of the consequences. The two drivers made contact in the first corner, sending both drivers off the track. The crash meant that Senna had clinched the drivers' championship for a second time, as with one race left in the season, Prost could not overtake his points tally. Benetton-Ford's dominance of the podium prevented Ferrari from scoring enough points to stop McLaren clinching its sixth constructors' title.

The two discussed the event afterwards[3] with Senna claiming it was not how he wanted it but how it had to be, with many others accepting his actions as a solution (or revenge, to an extent) to the incident the year before.[4] Prost was infuriated by this and publicly slammed the move as "disgusting" and Senna as "a man without value". He later admitted that he almost retired from the sport instantly after the incident.

The pair went on to win one more championship each and eventually reconciled their differences in their final grand prix together.[5]

After the collision, the race proceeded with Gerhard Berger's McLaren MP4/5B leading and Nigel Mansell's Ferrari 641 second. Berger spun off at the first corner on lap 2, on sand thrown onto the track by the Senna/Prost collision, leaving Mansell to lead the race from the two Benettons of Piquet and Moreno. Anticipating that Benetton would follow their usual strategy of not making a pit stop, Mansell built up a gap until he pitted for tyres at the end of lap 26. After a quick stop, he left his box with heavy wheelspin, and a driveshaft failed. The Ferrari pulled over at the end of the pit lane and retired. Piquet inherited the lead and retained it all the way to the chequered flag, with his team mate Moreno following closely. Aguri Suzuki also drove a non-stop race, finishing third, the first Japanese driver to do so. The two Williams FW13B-Renaults of Riccardo Patrese and Thierry Boutsen finished fourth and fifth, while Satoru Nakajima finished sixth in a Tyrrell 019, the second Japanese driver in the points.

As of March 2016, this was the last race where no European driver finished the race on the podium; two South American drivers and an Asian driver filled the three podium places for this race. It was also the only race where the Larrousse team scored a podium finish, during their eight seasons of competing in Formula One. It was also the first and only podium finish for the Lamborghini V12 engine in Formula One. Moreover, it was also the last of Brazil's eleven one-twos in Formula One, the only one featuring Piquet and Moreno - of the other ten, eight featured Piquet and Senna and the other two, Emerson Fittipaldi and José Carlos Pace.[6]

Classification

Qualifying

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Gap
1 27 Brazil Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda 1:38.828 1:36.996
2 1 France Alain Prost Ferrari 1:38.684 1:37.228 +0.232
3 2 United Kingdom Nigel Mansell Ferrari 1:38.969 1:37.719 +0.723
4 28 Austria Gerhard Berger McLaren-Honda 1:38.374 1:38.118 +1.122
5 5 Belgium Thierry Boutsen Williams-Renault 1:39.577 1:39.324 +2.328
6 20 Brazil Nelson Piquet Benetton-Ford 1:41.041 1:40.049 +3.053
7 4 France Jean Alesi Tyrrell-Ford 1:40.052 +3.056
8 6 Italy Riccardo Patrese Williams-Renault 1:40.355 1:40.664 +3.359
9 19 Brazil Roberto Moreno Benetton-Ford 1:41.719 1:40.579 +3.583
10 30 Japan Aguri Suzuki Lola-Lamborghini 1:41.442 1:40.888 +3.892
11 23 Italy Pierluigi Martini Minardi-Ford 1:40.899 1:41.964 +3.903
12 11 United Kingdom Derek Warwick Lotus-Lamborghini 1:41.482 1:41.024 +4.028
13 16 Italy Ivan Capelli Leyton House-Judd 1:41.657 1:41.033 +4.037
14 3 Japan Satoru Nakajima Tyrrell-Ford 1:41.208 1:41.078 +4.082
15 12 United Kingdom Johnny Herbert Lotus-Lamborghini 1:43.111 1:41.558 +4.562
16 15 Brazil Maurício Gugelmin Leyton House-Judd 1:42.049 1:41.698 +4.702
17 29 France Éric Bernard Lola-Lamborghini 1:42.141 1:41.709 +4.713
18 25 Italy Nicola Larini Ligier-Ford 1:43.396 1:42.339 +5.343
19 21 Italy Emanuele Pirro Dallara-Ford 1:40.230 1:42.361 +5.365
20 24 Italy Gianni Morbidelli Minardi-Ford 1:42.858 1:42.364 +5.368
21 26 France Philippe Alliot Ligier-Ford 1:44.106 1:42.593 +5.597
22 8 Italy Stefano Modena Brabham-Judd 1:42.617 +5.621
23 7 Australia David Brabham Brabham-Judd 1:43.156 +6.160
24 10 Italy Alex Caffi Arrows-Ford 1:43.270 1:43.887 +6.274
25 9 Italy Michele Alboreto Arrows-Ford 1:43.304 1:43.610 +6.308
26 22 Italy Andrea de Cesaris Dallara-Ford 1:43.601 1:43.647 +6.605
27 14 France Olivier Grouillard Osella-Ford 1:43.993 1:43.782 +6.786
28 17 Italy Gabriele Tarquini AGS-Ford 1:44.281 29:56.038 +7.285
29 18 France Yannick Dalmas AGS-Ford 1:44.410 1:46.326 +7.414
30 31 Belgium Bertrand Gachot Coloni-Ford 20:22.535 1:45.393 +8.397

Race

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 20 Brazil Nelson Piquet Benetton-Ford 53 1:34:36.824 6 9
2 19 Brazil Roberto Moreno Benetton-Ford 53 +7.223 8 6
3 30 Japan Aguri Suzuki Lola-Lamborghini 53 +22.469 9 4
4 6 Italy Riccardo Patrese Williams-Renault 53 +36.258 7 3
5 5 Belgium Thierry Boutsen Williams-Renault 53 +46.884 5 2
6 3 Japan Satoru Nakajima Tyrrell-Ford 53 +1:12.350 14 1
7 25 Italy Nicola Larini Ligier-Ford 52 +1 Lap 17
8 23 Italy Pierluigi Martini Minardi-Ford 52 +1 Lap 10
9 10 Italy Alex Caffi Arrows-Ford 52 +1 Lap 23
10 26 France Philippe Alliot Ligier-Ford 52 +1 Lap 25
Ret 11 United Kingdom Derek Warwick Lotus-Lamborghini 38 Gearbox 11
Ret 12 United Kingdom Johnny Herbert Lotus-Lamborghini 31 Engine 12
Ret 9 Italy Michele Alboreto Arrows-Ford 28 Engine 24
Ret 2 United Kingdom Nigel Mansell Ferrari 26 Transmission 3
Ret 21 Italy Emanuele Pirro Dallara-Ford 24 Alternator 19
Ret 29 France Éric Bernard Lola-Lamborghini 24 Engine 18
Ret 24 Italy Gianni Morbidelli Minardi-Ford 18 Spun Off 20
Ret 16 Italy Ivan Capelli Leyton House-Judd 16 Ignition 13
Ret 22 Italy Andrea de Cesaris Dallara-Ford 13 Spun Off 26
Ret 15 Brazil Maurício Gugelmin Leyton House-Judd 5 Engine 16
Ret 7 Australia David Brabham Brabham-Judd 5 Clutch 21
Ret 28 Austria Gerhard Berger McLaren-Honda 1 Spun Off 4
Ret 27 Brazil Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda 0 Collision 1
Ret 1 France Alain Prost Ferrari 0 Collision 2
Ret 8 Italy Stefano Modena Brabham-Judd 0 Collision 22
DNS 4 France Jean Alesi Tyrrell-Ford Driver Unwell 7
DNQ 14 France Olivier Grouillard Osella-Ford
DNQ 17 Italy Gabriele Tarquini AGS-Ford
DNQ 18 France Yannick Dalmas AGS-Ford
DNQ 31 Belgium Bertrand Gachot Coloni-Ford
Source:[7]

Lap leaders

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 Brazil Ayrton Senna 78
2 France Alain Prost 69
3 Austria Gerhard Berger 40
4 Brazil Nelson Piquet 35
5 Belgium Thierry Boutsen 32

Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 United Kingdom McLaren-Honda 118
2 Italy Ferrari 100
3 United Kingdom Benetton-Ford 62
4 United Kingdom Williams-Renault 54
5 United Kingdom Tyrrell-Ford 16

References

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WuO9F-OUzf8 – Video: Soichiro Honda meet Ayrton Senna.
  2. "Senna Journalists Special". SpySportsF1. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
  3. http://www.prostfan.com/hk/specials/suzuka3-4.htm – Prost-biased review and discussion of the incident.
  4. http://www.prostfan.com/hk/specials/suzuka.htm – Prost-biased exploration of the events.
  5. http://www.farzadsf1gallery.com/features/adel93.html – Adelaide Grand Prix review featuring images of Senna and Prost on the podium.
  6. http://www.statsf1.com/pt/statistiques/nation/podium/double-detail.aspx?idNation=7 - Estatísticas Nações - Podiums - Por dobradinha - Brasil STATS F1
  7. "1990 Japanese Grand Prix". formula1.com. Archived from the original on 22 December 2014. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
Previous race:
1990 Spanish Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1990 season
Next race:
1990 Australian Grand Prix
Previous race:
1989 Japanese Grand Prix
Japanese Grand Prix Next race:
1991 Japanese Grand Prix
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.