← 1992 Season

IMOLA CHICANE · 1992

1992 FRENCH GRAND PRIX

Again the Williams - Renaults filled the front row of the grid, Nigel Mansell taking pole position by nearly half a second from Riccardo Patrese . On the second row were the McLaren - Hondas of Ayrton Senna and Gerhard Berger , Senna's time over 1.3 seconds slower than Mansell's.

Winner

Mansell

Williams-Renault

Podium

Patrese / Brundle

P2 and P3

Pole Position

Mansell

Qualified fastest

Circuit

Imola chicane

Qualifying

Again the Williams - Renaults filled the front row of the grid, Nigel Mansell taking pole position by nearly half a second from Riccardo Patrese . On the second row were the McLaren - Hondas of Ayrton Senna and Gerhard Berger , Senna's time over 1.3 seconds slower than Mansell's. On the third row were Michael Schumacher in the Benetton and Jean Alesi in the Ferrari , and on the fourth row were their respective teammates, Martin Brundle and Ivan Capelli . In the Ligier team's home race, Thierry B... Christian Fittipaldi failed to qualify after he crashed his Minardi heavily at the Imola chicane, fracturing his fifth vertebra. He was joined in non-qualification by Paul Belmondo in the March and the two Brabhams of Eric van de Poele and Damon Hill .

Race

At the start, Patrese got by Mansell while Berger got ahead of Senna and Martin Brundle was able to sneak by Alesi. At the Adelaide hairpin, Schumacher tried to pass Senna but instead hit him, taking Senna out and forcing himself to pit. Meanwhile, Patrese and Mansell were side by side but Patrese kept the lead. Patrese led Mansell, Berger, Brundle, Alesi and Häkkinen. Nothing changed until lap 11 when Berger's engine failed. Soon afterwards it began to rain so heavily that the race was stopped. After some time the rain decreased and the grid formed up again. The race would be decided on the aggregate times of both parts of the race. Patrese took the lead again with Alesi getting ahead of Mika Häkkinen 's Lotus as well. Mansell tried to pass his teammate again but Patrese defended and once again kept the lead. Further back, Schumacher again tried too hard, hit... It began to rain again and everyone pitted for wets with Alesi leaving the change too late and dropping down to sixth. His engine failed on lap 61. Mansell won with Patrese making it a Williams 1-2 ahead of Brundle, Häkkinen, Comas and Herbert. This was Brundle's first podium; he had been disqualified from his podium finish at the 1984 Detroit Grand Prix . Thus, at the halfway stage of the season, Mansell led the championship with 66 points compared to Patrese's 34. Schumacher was third with 26, Senna was fourth with 18, Berger was fifth with 18, Alesi was sixth with 11, Brundle was seventh with nine and Alboreto was eighth with five. In the constructors championship, Williams had 100 points and were well ahead of the field: McLaren were second with 36, Benetton were third with 35 and Ferrari were fourth with 13.

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/Retired
15Nigel MansellWilliams-Renault691:38:08.459
26Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault69+ 46.447
320Martin BrundleBenetton-Ford69+ 1:12.579
411Mika HäkkinenLotus-Ford68+ 1 lap
526Érik ComasLigier-Renault68+ 1 lap
612Johnny HerbertLotus-Ford68+ 1 lap
79Michele AlboretoFootwork-Mugen-Honda68+ 1 lap
824Gianni MorbidelliMinardi-Lamborghini68+ 1 lap
921JJ LehtoDallara-Ferrari67+ 2 laps
1022Pierluigi MartiniDallara-Ferrari67+ 2 laps

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2
15Nigel MansellWilliams-Renault1:15.0471:13.864
26Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault1:15.5511:14.332
31Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda1:16.8921:15.199
42Gerhard BergerMcLaren-Honda1:16.9441:15.316
519Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford1:16.9691:15.569
627Jean AlesiFerrari1:17.6861:16.118
720Martin BrundleBenetton-Ford1:17.6381:16.151
828Ivan CapelliFerrari1:18.1521:16.443
925Thierry BoutsenLigier-Renault1:18.1791:16.806
1026Érik ComasLigier-Renault1:17.6371:16.938

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Nigel Mansell 66
2 Riccardo Patrese 34
3 Michael Schumacher 26
4 Ayrton Senna 18
5 Gerhard Berger 18
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

A curious absence, wouldn't you agree? The pre-qualifying session, scrubbed by Andrea Moda's tardiness, echoes, perhaps, the fragility of ambition within this sport. The Italian team's failure—a disruption—mirrors the volatile nature of competition itself, a constant reminder that even the most meticulously planned strategies can unravel. Consider the echoes of Fangio's disastrous 1954 German Grand Prix, a mechanical failure that shattered a championship lead. This morning's delay, a small inconvenience, possesses a lineage of disruption, a recurring motif in Formula One's grand narrative. The question remains: does this momentary setback alter the trajectory of a season, or merely add another chapter to its storied, unpredictable course?

The echoes of Monza, 1971, resonate today – a stark reminder that mechanical failure, however improbable, can still dictate a world championship's trajectory. Mansell's triumph, secured by a sudden transmission issue, mirrors the capricious nature of motorsport's grandest battles, a theme as old as Fangio himself. The Williams-Renault now stands as a testament to resilience, just as Ferrari did before it.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The transporter from Andrea Moda, a team struggling for recognition, remained marooned outside Magny-Cours. A frustrating delay, compounded by a reported issue with the engine's magneto ignition system – a common vulnerability in Ford-powered machinery at the time – effectively sidelined any potential assessment of their 7. 9-liter V1 Formula 1 engine. Such a setback, particularly so close to race commencement, speaks volumes about the precarious position of smaller teams battling for a foothold in this fiercely competitive landscape.

The morning's curtain rose abruptly, shrouded as always by the absence of Andrea Moda. Transport woes, a persistent shadow across the sport, once again disrupted proceedings. A curious pattern emerges – the number of times a team's failure to appear has impacted a race weekend now exceeds four, a disheartening statistic considering the series' longevity. Nigel Mansell, seizing the opportunity, secured his sixth victory this season, a testament to Williams' dominance, though the Italian teammate, Patrese, demonstrated a commendable lead for the initial eighteen laps.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The air crackles with a palpable tension here at Magny-Cours. Patrese, leading by a slender margin, wrestled with the Williams – Renault, a brief wobble threatening to relinquish the early advantage. The absence of Andrea Moda, their transporter stranded, adds a layer of unsettling uncertainty to the weekend. A shadow, perhaps, of the geopolitical anxieties gripping Europe at the time – a disruption, a blockage, a refusal to engage. Mansell, ever the pragmatist, presses on, a testament to the enduring spirit of competition, even when the supporting infrastructure falters. The question now, of course, is how this delay will impact the strategic considerations of the teams.

A persistent drizzle clung to Magny-Cours this morning, mirroring perhaps, the frustration simmering amongst the Andrea Moda personnel. The transporter, a hulking presence just hours before, remained stubbornly immobile, a tableau of logistical failure. Young Alessandro Neri, the team's chief mechanic, paced the pit lane, his brow furrowed, a quiet intensity radiating from him. Such absences, you see, are a recurring theme in this sport – a reminder that even the most meticulously planned endeavors can unravel with a simple, unforeseen delay. The repercussions, of course, reverberate throughout the entire schedule.

Race Calendar

1992 season