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SAN MARINO GRAND PRIX · 1994

1994 MONACO GRAND PRIX

After the deaths of Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger at the San Marino Grand Prix , sweeping changes were announced by the FIA to the rules and regulations of Formula One in a bid to improve safety. The majority were scheduled to come into force after the Monaco Grand Prix, but an 80 km/h pit-lane speed limit was brought into force in time for this race.

Winner

Schumacher

Benetton-Ford

Podium

Brundle / Berger

P2 and P3

Circuit

San Marino Grand Prix

Background

After the deaths of Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger at the San Marino Grand Prix , sweeping changes were announced by the FIA to the rules and regulations of Formula One in a bid to improve safety. The majority were scheduled to come into force after the Monaco Grand Prix, but an 80 km/h pit-lane speed limit was brought into force in time for this race. Both Williams and Simtek , the teams for whom Senna and Ratzenberger drove, ran only one car each during the race weekend.

Race

Olivier Beretta became the first Monégasque to compete in the Monaco Grand Prix since André Testut in 1959 . This was the last time a driver from Monaco competed in his home race, until Charles Leclerc took part in the 2018 race . As a mark of respect for Senna and Ratzenberger, the FIA decided to leave the first two grid positions empty for the race and painted them with the colours of the Brazilian and Austrian flags. For the first time since the 1959 United States Grand Prix , there was no previous World Champion competing in the race and also no former Monaco Grand Prix winner. There were also only four previous race winners: Schumacher, Hill, Berger and Alboreto. Katayama retired his Tyrrell from 6th position on lap 39 when his gearbox failed, as of which by lap 41, the engine on Mark Blundell 's Tyrrell failed, leaving oil on the track at Sainte Dévote retiring 2 laps after Katayama which Schumacher, leading the race, had to avoid. The second placed Ferrari of Gerhard Berger did slip on the oil, however, and required a three-point turn to escape from the run off area beside the stricken Tyrrell. Berger returned to the track still in his second place, bu... This is more or less where I live now so this victory means a lot. I am very pleased that we came here with the car sorted out after a few small problems and we were very competitive. I am very happy that Formula One set such an example. — Michael Schumacher commenting about victory, Transcript of recording from Grand Prix Racing . This is a great day for me and I am so glad to achieve this for my loyal and patient fans. Today was one of the best days in my racing career. I made a perfect start and had a faultless race. It has been a very difficult time. When your five-year-old daughter asks you if it's true [Ayrton] Senna is dead it is difficult to reconcile things. — Martin Brundle on his second place and Ayrton Senna , Transcript of recording from Grand Prix Racing .

Practice and qualifying

During the first free practice session on Thursday morning, Austrian driver Karl Wendlinger had a major accident at the Nouvelle Chicane. Travelling at almost 280 km/h (170 mph) he appeared to brake too late, and the car slid sideways into the water-filled barriers. Wendlinger was knocked unconscious and was taken initially to the Princess Grace Hospital, and later to Saint Roch Hospital in Nice. He suffered a serious head injury and remained in a coma for several weeks. The Sauber -Merced... Michael Schumacher claimed the first pole position of his Grand Prix career. Mika Häkkinen qualified second, which was also the highest starting position thus far in his career. Martin Brundle qualified 2nd in the first qualifying session on the Thursday, three tenths of a second in front of team mate Mika Häkkinen, but could not repeat this on the Saturday and dropped to 8th.

References

43°44′4.74″N 7°25′16.8″E / 43.7346500°N 7.421333°E / 43.7346500; 7.421333

Race Result

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1 TimeQ2 Time
15Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford1:20.2301:18.560
27Mika HäkkinenMcLaren-Peugeot1:21.8811:19.488
328Gerhard BergerFerrari1:22.0381:19.958
40Damon HillWilliams-Renault1:22.6051:20.079
527Jean AlesiFerrari1:22.5211:20.452
69Christian FittipaldiFootwork-Ford1:23.5881:21.053
710Gianni MorbidelliFootwork-Ford1:23.5801:21.189
88Martin BrundleMcLaren-Peugeot1:21.5801:21.222
923Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford1:23.1621:21.288
104Mark BlundellTyrrell-Yamaha1:23.5221:21.614

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Michael Schumacher 40
2 Gerhard Berger 10
3 Damon Hill 7
4 Rubens Barrichello 7
5 Martin Brundle 6
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Schumacher, a young lion emerging from the shadows, navigated the treacherous streets with a precision born of desperate resolve. Fourth races, a brutal baptism. Brundle's steadfast pursuit, a testament to the unwavering spirit of the McLaren team. Berger, a seasoned veteran, offered a quiet dignity amidst the turmoil. The scent of wet asphalt and high-octane fuel—a strangely poignant perfume for a sport wrestling with its own mortality.

Observe, if you will, the young Schumacher, a nascent titan forged in the crucible of tragedy, claiming victory on a track stained with the ghosts of giants. This wasn't simply a race; it was a defiant heartbeat echoing through the tunnels and along the harbor, a testament to the unyielding spirit of motorsport.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The air hung thick with a grief heavier than the Monaco mist. Fifteen days. Fifteen days since Imola, a wound still raw across the paddock. Michael Schumacher, a young lion unleashed, navigated the hairpin turns with a precision born not just of talent, but of a desperate need to *prove* something – to silence the ghosts, perhaps, and to reaffirm the very spirit of this magnificent, brutal ballet. The Benetton's 1100 horsepower Ford V8, a beast of displacement and raw fury, wrestled with the track's confines, a testament to the engineering prowess attempting to tame the chaos.

The rain, a bruised grey weeping over Monte Carlo, felt like a lament. It clung to the asphalt, a slick, insistent reminder of the ghosts that haunted this circuit. Four wins, four races, a brazen declaration of dominance amidst a world still grappling with the profound sorrow of Imola.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The rain, a bruised purple against the asphalt, tasted of metal and despair. Schumacher wrestled the Benetton, a predator in the slick, its engine a guttural growl against the relentless drumming. A fraction of a second separated him from the cliff edge – the Monaco wall. Brundle, a shadow in the spray, stalked close, a McLaren's fury mirroring the driver's own. This wasn't merely a race; it was a reckoning.

The rain fell, a mournful curtain drawn across the principality. I recall Brundle's face, etched with a weariness that went beyond the track. He'd spoken of Senna, of Ratzenberger, a quiet acknowledgement of the weight now pressing upon every corner, every braking point. Schumacher, a young lion, navigated the treacherous streets with a precision born of calculation, yet I sensed a tremor beneath the surface – a youthful urgency to not just win, but to *prove* something. Berger, stoic as ever, wrestled his Ferrari through the spray, a veteran acutely aware of the fragility of this pursuit. This wasn't merely a race; it was a reckoning. The scent of damp asphalt and high-octane fuel mingled with a palpable grief, a testament to a sport forever altered.

Race Calendar

1994 season