← 1985 Season

ROUND 14 · 1985

1985 EUROPEAN GRAND PRIX

The 1985 European Grand Prix (formally the Shell Oils Grand Prix of Europe ) was a Formula One motor race held at Brands Hatch on 6 October 1985. It was the fourteenth race of the 1985 Formula One World Championship .

Winner

Mansell

Williams-Honda

Podium

Senna / Rosberg

P2 and P3

Pole Position

Senna

Qualified fastest

Qualifying

Ayrton Senna took his sixth pole position of the season in his Lotus - Renault , averaging 140.106 mph (225.479 km/h), the first time anyone had lapped the Brands Hatch circuit faster than 140 mph. Compatriot Nelson Piquet was second in his Brabham - BMW , 0.3 seconds behind, followed by the Williams - Hondas of Nigel Mansell and Keke Rosberg . Philippe Streiff was a surprise fifth in his Ligier , ahead of Alain Prost 's McLaren ; the top ten was completed by Marc Surer in the second Brabham, De...

Race

Senna led off the line from a fast-starting Mansell, while Prost slid onto the grass and fell to 14th. Mansell then ran wide at Druids, allowing Rosberg and Piquet past. On lap 7, Rosberg attempted to overtake Senna, but the Brazilian blocked the move causing Rosberg to spin at Surtees Corner and was unavoidably hit by Piquet in third. The Brabham was out on the spot with a broken front suspension, while Rosberg limped back to the pits with a puncture, losing a full lap in the process. Mansell was now second again, followed by de Angelis, Stefan Johansson in the second Ferrari and Surer, with Prost up to seventh following a charge through the field. When Rosberg... On lap 14 Alboreto, who had made a good start and had run as high as sixth, suffered a fiery turbo failure, effectively ending his Championship challenge. Prost, running sixth at this point, now only needed to finish fifth to secure the title. Surer had moved ahead of Johansson by this stage and was closing on de Angelis, while Laffite was also on a charge, passing Prost and Johansson in quick succession. Surer overtook de Angelis on lap 21, followed soon after by Laffite. The two then closed up to Senna, Surer getting past on lap 35 and Laffite one lap later. At this point, Mansell's lead was 14 seconds, while Prost was still seventh. On lap 51, having just been re-passed by Senna, Laffite pitted for new tyres, dropping to eighth and promoting Johansson to fourth. Shortly afterwards, Prost passed de Angelis for fifth as the two were lapping Watson; this became fourth when Johansson started to suffer an electrical problem. Laffite retired on lap 59 with an engine failure, followed one lap later by Johansson.

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLaps
15Nigel MansellWilliams-HondaG75
212Ayrton SennaLotus-RenaultG75
36Keke RosbergWilliams-HondaG75
42Alain ProstMcLaren-TAGG75
511Elio de AngelisLotus-RenaultG74
618Thierry BoutsenArrows-BMWG73
71John WatsonMcLaren-TAGG73
825Philippe StreiffLigier-RenaultP73
922Riccardo PatreseAlfa RomeoG73
1017Gerhard BergerArrows-BMWG73

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2
112Ayrton SennaLotus-Renault1:08.0201:07.169
27Nelson PiquetBrabham-BMW1:09.2041:07.482
35Nigel MansellWilliams-Honda1:10.5371:08.059
46Keke RosbergWilliams-Honda1:09.2771:08.197
525Philippe StreiffLigier-Renault1:10.3961:09.080
62Alain ProstMcLaren-TAG1:10.3451:09.429
78Marc SurerBrabham-BMW1:09.7621:09.913
816Derek WarwickRenault1:11.0141:09.904
911Elio de AngelisLotus-Renault1:11.5301:10.014
1026Jacques LaffiteLigier-Renault1:11.3121:10.081

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Alain Prost 72
2 Michele Alboreto 53
3 Ayrton Senna 38
4 Elio de Angelis 33
5 Keke Rosberg 25
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Can you *feel* the tension here, a coiled spring of ambition threatening to unleash? Senna, a ghost in his Lotus – Renault, snatched the lead, a strategic masterclass before a single lap was even completed. But does brilliance guarantee victory? Mansell, a storm brewing in his Williams – Honda, is stalking, a primal force hungry for the crown. Rosberg, poised on the edge, could this be the moment his years of calculated aggression pay off? The air crackles—this isn't just a race; it's a battle for legacies!

The world just witnessed a coronation! Nigel Mansell, a name that will be etched in the annals of motorsport, has seized victory from the jaws of destiny at Brands Hatch – a brutal, breathtaking display of sheer will and raw speed. This, folks, is what Formula 1 is truly about: a savage, unrelenting battle for supremacy!

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

Hold on to your helmets! The air here at Brands Hatch is thick with anticipation, a palpable tension radiating from the Williams camp – Nigel Mansell has seized his opportunity, snatching pole position with a Lotus-Renault that's spitting out a staggering 680 horsepower! This isn't just a victory; it's a declaration, a seismic shift in the championship landscape fueled by a Renault engine that's proving a brutal competitor. The Lotus is delivering a blistering 7. 3 seconds to set the pace, a testament to their aggressive development strategy.

Hold on to your helmets, people! The air crackles with it – pure, unadulterated ambition! Nigel Mansell, a name etched in fire tonight, has just detonated around the outside of the Kent circuit, snatching victory from the jaws of a seemingly insurmountable lead. Sixty-three laps, a brutal testament to his relentless spirit, and he's done it – his first Formula One win, a seismic shift in the championship landscape! Let's not forget, this is only his seventy-second attempt, a statistic that whispers of a future brimming with dominance.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The air crackles! Senna, a blur of blue, is defending like a cornered wolf – Mansell's Williams a relentless predator. A brush! A near miss! The Brazilian's composure is a fortress, but can it hold against this savage surge? This isn't just a race, it's a psychological war waged at 180 miles per hour. Rosberg watches, a simmering threat in third, sensing the shift in momentum. The championship hangs in the balance, a single lap could shatter everything. This is the raw, brutal heart of Formula One.

The rain… it's a cruel mistress, isn't it? Watching Senna, so precise, so utterly dominant in qualifying, only to be denied the lead by a mere fraction of a second. You can almost *feel* the frustration radiating from the Brazilian, a coiled spring ready to unleash. This isn't just about speed; it's about nerve, about the gut-wrenching knowledge that one tiny misstep could cost you everything. Mansell, poised behind him, already senses the shift, the opening. The tension here is palpable, a storm brewing before the first lap. This race… this will be a brutal, beautiful dance.

Race Calendar

1985 season