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Home San Marino

How Ayrton Senna’s fatal crash at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix changed the course of Formula 1

November 29, 2024
in San Marino
How Ayrton Senna’s fatal crash at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix changed the course of Formula 1
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Ayrton Senna in the pits before the start of the San Marino Grand Prix in 1994.JEAN-LOUP GAUTREAU/AFP via Getty Images

On Friday, Jordan driver Rubens Barrichello crashed and suffered non-fatal injuries. Then, during the qualifying session on Saturday, Simtek driver Roland Ratzenberger experienced an even more severe crash and died from injuries that took place on the circuit.

Ratzenberger’s death shook up Senna. Still, he decided to participate in the race on Sunday.

“Ayrton got very, very upset and cried a bit,” F1 doctor Sid Watkins said in the 2010 documentary. “And that’s when I said to him, ‘You know, Ayrton, you’ve been three times world champion. You’re the fastest man in the world.’ And he liked fishing, so I said, ‘Why don’t you quit? And I’ll quit and we’ll just go fishing?'”

In Watkins’ book “Life at the Limit,” the doctor said that Senna’s final words to him during that conversation were: “Sid, there are certain things over which we have no control. I cannot quit, I have to go on.”

While on lap seven of 58, Senna’s FW16 crashed at the Tamburello corner. The reason for the incident remains unknown, but Senna’s car crashed at an angle where the suspension shaft hit his helmet.

Senna was airlifted to Bologna’s Maggiore Hospital and an official announcement about his death was made by the hospital.

However, Watkins believed that Senna died on the Imola circuit, due to the impact of the crash.

“We got him out of the cockpit, got his helmet off, and got an airway into him,” Watkins recalled in the documentary. “And I saw from his neurological signs that it was going to be a fatal head injury. And then he sighed, and his body relaxed, and that was the moment — I’m not religious — that I thought his spirit had departed.”

Better F1 safety protocols were enacted following Senna’s deathAyrton Senna sitting in his car during practice at the 1989 Hungarian Grand Prix.

Ayrton Senna during a practice session at the 1989 Hungarian Grand Prix.Pascal Rondeau/Getty Images

Senna’s body was transported back to São Paulo. Three days of national mourning took place and thousands of people lined the streets of Brazil to honor the F1 driver.

Senna’s funeral was attended by his parents, Milton da Silva and Neyde Senna; his sister, Viviane Senna; his ex-girlfriend and Brazilian TV host, Xuxa; his then-girlfriend and model, Adriane Galisteu; and his F1 rival, Alain Prost, who was a pallbearer.

Before his crash, Senna had spoken to Prost about reviving the Grand Prix Drivers’ Association (GPDA) out of concern for the drivers’ safety. After Senna’s death, the GPDA was reestablished. The Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) also appointed Watson to improve safety standards and cars received new features designed with driver safety in mind.

There were no fatalities at F1 races for 21 years, until French driver Jules Bianchi’s death in 2015.

Senna is considered to be one of the greatest F1 drivers of all time, and his legacy extends beyond motorsport.

The Ayrton Senna Institute was founded by his family in 1994. It strives to change the lives of children through education. According to a postscript at the end of “Senna,” the organization has helped more than 36 million youths in Brazil.

This year, in honor of the 30th anniversary of Senna’s death, seven-time F1 world champion Lewis Hamilton, who became an honorary citizen of Brazil in 2022, drove Senna’s 1990 championship-winning McLaren MP4/5B prior to the Brazilian Grand Prix on November 3. Hamilton called the moment “the greatest honor of my career.”

All episodes of “Senna” are streaming on Netflix.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Publish date : 2024-11-29 02:29:00

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