← 1993 Season

ROUND 15 · 1993

1993 JAPANESE GRAND PRIX

The 1993 Japanese Grand Prix (formally the XIX Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix ) was a Formula One motor race held at Suzuka on 24 October 1993. It was the fifteenth race of the 1993 Formula One World Championship .

Winner

Senna

McLaren-Ford

Podium

Prost / Häkkinen

P2 and P3

Pole Position

Prost

Qualified fastest

Race

Jordan drivers Rubens Barrichello and Eddie Irvine (the latter making his F1 debut) scored their first points by finishing fifth and sixth respectively. Irvine was subsequently punched by Senna for unlapping himself during the race. Two other drivers made their F1 debuts at this race, Jean-Marc Gounon and Toshio Suzuki . Only 24 cars were entered, following the withdrawal of the BMS Scuderia Italia team from F1 in the run-up to the race. At the start, Senna got ahead of Prost while Berger took Schumacher. Eddie Irvine , the fifth occupant of the second Jordan this year, then got by both Schumacher and Hill. Hill briefly passed Schumacher in the esses but Schumacher retook the position. The order was: Senna, Prost, Häkkinen, Berger, Irvine and Schumacher. Schumacher would pass Irvine on lap 2 with Hill getting ahead two laps later. Schumacher and Hill then closed in on Berger. At the end of lap 9, the three came out of the final chicane nose to tail and Hill passed Schumacher on the start/finish straight to take 5th place away. On lap 11, Hill got a run on Berger coming out of the 130R and Berger took the inside line going into the chicane. Hill tried to pass on the outside but was not able to complete the move. Schumacher, having stayed to the inside, couldn't stop fast enough as Hill turned in behind Berger and hit Hill'... Meanwhile, Prost inherited the lead when Senna pitted for tyres. Shortly after it began to rain, which was an advantage for Prost and other drivers who had not yet stopped for tyres since they would have to make one less stop. Senna began to catch Prost as the track got wetter and on lap 21, as the rain intensified, Senna passed Prost on the approach to the Spoon curve. At the end of the lap, Senna was two seconds in front and the two both pitted for wets. Senna pulled away rapidly in the wet co... Behind, Barrichello had got Irvine during the stops for wets and then Berger's engine failed on lap 41. With 4 laps to go and battling with Derek Warwick for 6th, Irvine ran into the back of Warwick under braking on the approach to the chicane and knocked him out of the race. Irvine was able to continue and finish with a point in his first grand prix. Irvine's debut was slightly marred in a post-race altercation with Ayrton Senna who punched him when a discussion between the pair got heated. The...

Qualifying

Prost took pole (the last of his career) ahead of Senna, Häkkinen, Schumacher, Berger and Hill.

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/Retired
18Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Ford531:40:27.912
22Alain ProstWilliams-Renault53+ 11.435
37Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Ford53+ 26.129
40Damon HillWilliams-Renault53+ 1:23.538
514Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Hart53+ 1:35.101
615Eddie IrvineJordan-Hart53+ 1:46.421
726Mark BlundellLigier-Renault52+ 1 Lap
830JJ LehtoSauber52+ 1 Lap
925Martin BrundleLigier-Renault51+ 2 Laps
1024Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford51+ 2 Laps

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2
12Alain ProstWilliams-Renault1:38.5871:37.154
28Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Ford1:38.9421:37.284
37Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Ford1:38.8131:37.326
45Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford1:38.5891:37.530
528Gerhard BergerFerrari1:39.0241:37.622
60Damon HillWilliams-Renault1:38.9791:38.352
79Derek WarwickFootwork-Mugen-Honda1:41.0861:38.780
815Eddie IrvineJordan-Hart1:41.0181:38.966
910Aguri SuzukiFootwork-Mugen-Honda1:41.3801:39.278
106Riccardo PatreseBenetton-Ford1:40.7481:39.291

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Alain Prost 93
2 Damon Hill 65
3 Ayrton Senna 63
4 Michael Schumacher 52
5 Riccardo Patrese 20
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Did anyone actually believe Prost would cede the championship lead this easily? The man's been meticulously crafting a narrative of dominance for years, and watching him settle for second, allowing Senna to snatch victory – it reeks of a calculated retreat. Don't mistake deference for weakness; this was a strategic repositioning, wasn't it? A quiet acknowledgment that the younger Brazilian was, undeniably, beginning to eclipse him. And that punch? Pure theatre, of course. A brutal, unnecessary punctuation mark on a season already brimming with calculated aggression. The whispers from Williams suggest a simmering resentment, a recognition that the throne is shifting. This isn't about respect; it's about preserving power.

The narrative of Senna's triumph in '93 Japan is, predictably, a carefully constructed illusion. Don't be fooled by the pretty picture painted by McLaren; the simmering resentment between those two was a far more potent force than any aerodynamic advantage. Understand this, and you'll see the true battle waged on a very different track.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The air around Suzuka tasted of burnt rubber and simmering ambition. That Ford-powered McLaren, a beast of 680 horsepower, was simply running too far ahead for the Williams to reel in – their Renault engine, a respectable 650, felt like a valiant, but ultimately, lagging counterpoint. Häkkinen's podium, however, was a genuine statement – a young gun proving the McLaren's raw pace could be matched.

The air in Suzuka hung thick with something beyond exhaust fumes – the scent of calculated aggression. Senna, of course, claimed it was merely a "robust exchange," but let's be frank: that punch, delivered with a surgeon's precision, wasn't about unlapping himself. It was a brutal assertion of dominance, a statement echoing the simmering tension between McLaren and Williams. Observe, if you will, that this was Senna's seventh victory in eight races; a statistical anomaly considering the Williams's undeniable pace.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The air still thick with the scent of burnt rubber and simmering fury. Senna, of course, is not apologizing. A swift, brutal jab to Irvine's ribs – a calculated message delivered with chilling precision. Rumours swirling now, naturally, about contractual obligations and the Williams team's increasingly desperate attempts to appease the McLaren hierarchy. Prost, predictably, is offering a carefully crafted statement about "racing incidents," but the glint in his eye speaks volumes. Don't mistake that for politeness. This isn't about sportsmanship; it's about leverage. The vultures are circling, and Suzuka has just become the epicenter of a very expensive, very pointed power play.

The rain hadn't bothered Senna, not a jot. He'd been muttering about the track's inherent slipperiness for the better part of an hour before the start, a low rumble of frustration directed squarely at the Williams's Michelin tyres. Prost, predictably, dismissed it as Senna's usual pre-race theatrics, a carefully cultivated display of dominance. But I've seen the glint in his eye – a simmering resentment directed at the young Finn, a man who was quickly becoming a serious threat. Häkkinen's podium finish was a genuine upset, a reminder that the old guard wasn't quite ready to relinquish its grip.

Race Calendar

1993 season