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1985 South African Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountrySouth Africa
Flag_suffix1928
Grand PrixSouth African
ImageKyalami 1961 - 1988 Layout.png
Date19 October
Year1985
Race_No15
Season_No16
LocationKyalami
Transvaal Province, South Africa
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi2.550
Course_km4.104
Distance_laps75
Distance_mi191.258
Distance_km307.800
WeatherSunny, hot and dry
Pole_DriverNigel Mansell
Pole_TeamWilliams-Honda
Pole_Time1:02.366
Pole_CountryGBR
Fast_DriverKeke Rosberg
Fast_TeamWilliams-Honda
Fast_Time1:08.149
Fast_Lap74
Fast_CountryFinland
First_DriverNigel Mansell
First_TeamWilliams-Honda
First_CountryGBR
Second_DriverKeke Rosberg
Second_TeamWilliams-Honda
Second_CountryFinland
Third_DriverAlain Prost
Third_TeamMcLaren-TAG
Third_CountryFrance
Lapchart

Transvaal Province, South Africa

The 1985 South African Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 19 October 1985 at the Kyalami Circuit in South Africa. It was the fifteenth and penultimate round of the 1985 FIA Formula One World Championship.

The race was marked with some teams boycotting the event due to apartheid – the segregation of blacks and whites – and was the last South African Formula One race until apartheid ended in 1992. The race was won by Nigel Mansell in a Williams-Honda, who also took pole position.

Report

Until the 2023 Las Vegas Grand Prix, this was the last World Championship Grand Prix to be held on a Saturday,; it also was the last World Championship Grand Prix where laurel wreaths were given to the drivers at the podium. The event was boycotted by two teams, Ligier and Renault, owing to mounting international pressures against tolerating the country's system of apartheid. A state of emergency had been declared by the South African government in July due to growing civil unrest nationwide, and French teams Ligier and Renault's boycotts were in lockstep with the French government's boycott and sanctioning of South Africa, apparently doing so under pressure. Most of the Formula One drivers, including Alain Prost, Niki Lauda and Nigel Mansell were personally very much against racing in South Africa, but the drivers held the mentality that because they were contracted to drive at every Grand Prix, they would race at Kyalami.

Some governments tried to keep their drivers from entering the race. Brazil's sanctions on South Africa nearly prevented Nelson Piquet or Ayrton Senna from racing.

Finland and Sweden held similar reservations regarding Finn Keke Rosberg and Swede Stefan Johansson competing. Sweden's National Automobile Federation had announced Johansson could not race in South Africa before the event, but he did race.

Ayrton Senna initially said he would race if Lotus raced. However, he later said he would boycott the race.

Multiple sponsors also ordered teams to remove their branding from cars they backed, most notably Marlboro and Beatrice Foods.

The latter held an equity interest in the single car Haas Lola team. While Alan Jones qualified 18th for that team, his car was not on the starting grid. Officially Jones cited illness as to why he did not race, but it was widely rumored at the time that Beatrice ordered the team to boycott. In 2017, Jones described a meeting with Bernie Ecclestone the night before the race, who suggested that Jones feign illness the next morning and not show up. Ecclestone described how Beatrice were under pressure in the US from activists such as Jesse Jackson not to race, under threats including strike action by African Americans working in their businesses. Only Jones and team management Teddy Mayer and Carl Haas were aware of this plan. Jones said "And so, on the Saturday morning I was gone. I just didn’t turn up. They had the car out ready to go, when they were told, "AJ’s been struck down by a virus and we are not racing"."

It was the final South African Grand Prix until apartheid ended, with FISA president Jean-Marie Balestre announcing days after the race that the Grand Prix would not return to the nation for 1986 because of apartheid. Even without the political pressures, this might well have been the final Formula One race held at Kyalami in its then form: FISA had long since deemed that circuits where lap times were under 60 seconds were considered too small for Grand Prix racing and with car speeds increasing all the time, it was reasonable to conclude that lap times from would be under 60 seconds. Kyalami's pole position time had actually fallen by over 10 seconds since the 1981 race, and Mansell's 1985 pole time of 1:02.366, at an average speed of 237 km/h, was over two and a half seconds faster than Nelson Piquet's 1984 pole time of 1:04.871.

During qualifying, the Brabham BMWs reached 332 km/h on the 1.65 km (1.0 mi) long front straight, just 3 km/h shy of their season's best at Paul Ricard in France some 3 months earlier.

The South African Grand Prix would only return in 1992, after apartheid ended, in a new configuration of the Kyalami circuit. Mansell would also win the 1992 race driving a Williams, albeit with a naturally-aspirated Renault engine.

Classification

Qualifying

Pole position went to Nigel Mansell, averaging 236.898 km/h (147.201 mph).

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap123456789101112131415161718192021
5GBR Nigel MansellWilliams-Honda1:03.188**1:02.366**
7BRA Nelson PiquetBrabham-BMW1:03.844**1:02.490**+0.124
6FIN Keke RosbergWilliams-Honda1:03.073**1:02.504**+0.138
12BRA Ayrton SennaLotus-Renault1:04.517**1:02.825**+0.459
8SWI Marc SurerBrabham-BMW1:05.411**1:04.088**+1.722
11ITA Elio de AngelisLotus-Renault1:04.611**1:04.129**+1.763
19ITA Teo FabiToleman-Hart1:06.083**1:04.215**+1.849
1AUT Niki LaudaMcLaren-TAG1:05.357**1:04.283**+1.917
2FRA Alain ProstMcLaren-TAG1:05.757**1:04.376**+2.010
18BEL Thierry BoutsenArrows-BMW1:05.079**1:04.518**+2.152
17AUT Gerhard BergerArrows-BMW1:06.546**1:04.780**+2.414
22ITA Riccardo PatreseAlfa Romeo1:06.386**1:04.948**+2.582
20ITA Piercarlo GhinzaniToleman-Hart1:07.800**1:05.114**+2.748
23USA Eddie CheeverAlfa Romeo1:07.159**1:05.260**+2.894
27ITA Michele AlboretoFerrari**1:05.268**1:05.757+2.902
28SWE Stefan JohanssonFerrari1:05.406**1:05.388**+3.022
3GBR Martin BrundleTyrrell-Renault1:06.709**1:05.649**+3.283
33AUS Alan JonesLola-Hart1:07.144**1:05.731**+3.365
4FRA Philippe StreiffTyrrell-Renault1:07.935**1:06.205**+3.839
29ITA Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Motori Moderni1:10.025**1:08.658**+6.292
24NED Huub RothengatterOsella-Alfa Romeo1:09.904**1:09.873**+7.507

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints1234567RetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetDNS
5GBR **Nigel Mansell****Williams-Honda**751:28:22.8661**9**
6FIN **Keke Rosberg****Williams-Honda**75+ 7.5723**6**
2FRA **Alain Prost****McLaren-TAG**74+ 1 Lap9**4**
28SWE **Stefan Johansson****Ferrari**74+ 1 Lap16**3**
17AUT **Gerhard Berger****Arrows-BMW**74+ 1 Lap11**2**
18BEL **Thierry Boutsen****Arrows-BMW**74+ 1 Lap10**1**
3GBR Martin BrundleTyrrell-Renault73+ 2 Laps17
11ITA Elio de AngelisLotus-Renault52Engine6
29ITA Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Motori Moderni45Radiator20
1AUT Niki LaudaMcLaren-TAG37Turbo8
4FRA Philippe StreiffTyrrell-Renault16Accident19
12BRA Ayrton SennaLotus-Renault8Engine4
27ITA Michele AlboretoFerrari8Turbo15
7BRA Nelson PiquetBrabham-BMW6Engine2
20ITA Piercarlo GhinzaniToleman-Hart4Engine13
19ITA Teo FabiToleman-Hart3Engine7
8SWI Marc SurerBrabham-BMW3Engine5
24NED Huub RothengatterOsella-Alfa Romeo1Electrical21
22ITA Riccardo PatreseAlfa Romeo0Collision12
23USA Eddie CheeverAlfa Romeo0Collision14
33AUS Alan JonesLola-HartWithdrew18

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
1FRA Alain Prost73 (76)
2ITA Michele Alboreto53
3BRA Ayrton Senna38
4ITA Elio de Angelis33
5GBR Nigel Mansell31

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
1GBR McLaren-TAG90
2ITA Ferrari80
3GBR Lotus-Renault71
4GBR Williams-Honda62
5GBR Brabham-BMW26
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings. Only the best 11 results counted towards the Drivers' Championship. Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.

References

| Previous_year's_race = 1984 South African Grand Prix | Next_year's_race = 1992 South African Grand Prix

References

  1. "F1 to return to Las Vegas with Saturday night race in 2023".
  2. "The best Formula 1 schedule ever? Las Vegas Grand Prix schedule".
  3. "FORMULA 1 brings back history: The first three SPRINT RACES win the WREATH".
  4. Walker, Rob. (February 1986). "Tiger, Tiger". [[Hachette Filipacchi Médias]].
  5. Paskman, Ken. (24 October 1985). "Auto Racing". The Orlando Sentinel.
  6. (5 February 2008). "1985 South African Grand Prix flashback".
  7. Martin, Gordon. (1985-09-17). "The Apartheid Controversy Reaches Formula 1 Racing". [[Hearst Corporation.
  8. (27 September 1985). "Injury shelves Lauda". The Gazette.
  9. "AJ: How Alan Jones Climbed to the Top of Formula One". Penguin Random House Australia.
  10. "Australian F1 legend Alan Jones reveals untold story about his unusual absence from a grand prix".
  11. "Grand Prix Results: South African GP, 1992". Grandprix.com.
  12. "1985 South African Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  13. "South Africa 1985 - Championship • STATS F1".
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