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1990 Brazilian Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
Grand PrixBrazilian
CountryBrazil
flag_suffix1968
Official nameXIX Grande Prêmio do Brasil
ImageCircuit Interlagos.svg
Date25 March
Year1990
Race_No2
Season_No16
LocationAutódromo José Carlos Pace
São Paulo, Brazil
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi2.687
Course_km4.325
Distance_laps71
Distance_mi190.808
Distance_km307.075
WeatherHot, dry, sunny
Pole_DriverAyrton Senna
Pole_CountryBrazil
pole_flag_suffix1968
Pole_TeamMcLaren-Honda
Pole_Time1:17.277
Fast_DriverGerhard Berger
Fast_CountryAustria
Fast_TeamMcLaren-Honda
Fast_Time1:19.899
Fast_Lap55
First_DriverAlain Prost
First_CountryFrance
First_TeamFerrari
Second_DriverGerhard Berger
Second_CountryAustria
Second_TeamMcLaren-Honda
Third_DriverAyrton Senna
Third_CountryBrazil
third_flag_suffix1968
Third_TeamMcLaren-Honda
Lapchart

São Paulo, Brazil The 1990 Brazilian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Interlagos, São Paulo on 25 March 1990. It was the second race of the 1990 Formula One World Championship. It was also the first Brazilian Grand Prix to be held at Interlagos since 1980, following the renovation and shortening of the circuit and the ascendancy of São Paulo driver Ayrton Senna.

The 71-lap race was won by Alain Prost, driving a Ferrari. Senna took pole position in his McLaren-Honda and led until he collided with Satoru Nakajima in the Tyrrell-Ford, allowing Prost through. Prost took his 40th Grand Prix victory, and his sixth and final Brazilian win, with Senna's teammate Gerhard Berger second and Senna himself recovering to third.

Background

The rebuilt Interlagos circuit, which hosted the race for the first time since 1980, had been dramatically altered. The track had been shortened by 3.5 km and lost many fast sweepers and the Retao straight, which had allowed Formula One drivers to use full throttle for 20 seconds.

Qualifying

Pre-qualifying report

In the Friday morning pre-qualifying session, the Larrousse-Lola cars secured a 1–2, with Éric Bernard a couple of tenths of a second faster than his team-mate Aguri Suzuki. Five thousandths of a second behind Suzuki in third was Olivier Grouillard in the Osella. The other pre-qualifier was Yannick Dalmas in his AGS, the first time the Frenchman had progressed to the main qualifying sessions this season. Dalmas edged out his team-mate Gabriele Tarquini, who was fifth, the fastest runner to drop out at this stage.

Roberto Moreno also missed out in sixth in an eventful session. His EuroBrun suffered an ignition problem just 200 metres after leaving the pitlane and the team decided to let Moreno use the car of his team-mate Claudio Langes, who at that stage had the sixth best time. Moreno promised Langes he would return the car for the last 10 minutes of the session. Moreno managed a fast lap that placed him at the top of the pre-qualifying table at that point, with a time of 1:25.763. But as he attempted a second fast lap straight afterwards, the car stopped on the track, because the team had miscalculated the fuel quantity needed for two fast laps and the EuroBrun ran out of fuel. Moreno's hope of progressing to qualifying proper ended as the track dried up, and in the final minutes of the session he was bumped down to sixth place. Langes never got back in the car, and was ultimately thirteen seconds adrift of Moreno's time in eighth place.

Bertrand Gachot struggled badly again in the Coloni, faster than Langes but still ten seconds off Bernard's pace in seventh. The Coloni's Subaru 1235 engine, built by Motori Moderni, was proving to be overweight, underpowered and fragile. Bottom of the time sheets was Gary Brabham in the Life, failing to post a time at all. The car's engine broke a connecting rod after a quarter of a lap, leaving Brabham and his manager to question the Australian's future at the team. Brabham later stated that he had been uncertain his team would even be present at Interlagos, until he saw the car in the pit garage.

Pre-qualifying classification

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGap123456789
29France Éric BernardLola-Lamborghini1:23.763
30Japan Aguri SuzukiLola-Lamborghini1:23.982+0.219
14France Olivier GrouillardOsella-Ford1:23.987+0.224
18France Yannick DalmasAGS-Ford1:24.015+0.252
17Italy Gabriele TarquiniAGS-Ford1:24.265+0.502
33Brazil Roberto MorenoEuroBrun-Judd1:25.763+2.000
31Belgium Bertrand GachotColoni-Subaru1:34.046+10.283
34Italy Claudio LangesEuroBrun-Judd1:39.188+15.425
39Australia Gary BrabhamLifeno time

Qualifying report

Local hero Ayrton Senna took his 43rd career pole position and led from the start. Gianni Morbidelli made it through qualifying for the first time in his Formula One career.

Qualifying classification

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930
27Brazil Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda1:17.769**1:17.277**
28Austria Gerhard BergerMcLaren-Honda**1:17.888**1:18.504+0.611
5Belgium Thierry BoutsenWilliams-Renault1:18.375**1:18.150**+0.873
6Italy Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault1:18.465**1:18.288**+1.011
2UK Nigel MansellFerrari**1:18.509**1:19.475+1.232
1France Alain ProstFerrari**1:18.631**1:18.884+1.354
4France Jean AlesiTyrrell-Ford1:19.230**1:18.923**+1.646
23Italy Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford**1:19.039**1:19.688+1.762
22Italy Andrea de CesarisDallara-Ford**1:19.125**1:19.964+1.848
26France Philippe AlliotLigier-Ford**1:19.309**+2.032
29France Éric BernardLola-Lamborghini**1:19.406**1:21.024+2.129
8Italy Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd**1:19.425**1:20.126+2.148
20Brazil Nelson PiquetBenetton-Ford**1:19.629**1:20.317+2.352
12UK Martin DonnellyLotus-Lamborghini**1:20.032**+2.755
19Italy Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford**1:20.055**1:20.317+2.778
21Italy Gianni MorbidelliDallara-Ford**1:20.164**1:20.229+2.887
24Italy Paolo BarillaMinardi-Ford**1:20.282**1:21.121+3.005
30Japan Aguri SuzukiLola-Lamborghini**1:20.557**1:21.086+3.280
3Japan Satoru NakajimaTyrrell-Ford**1:20.568**1:21.086+3.291
25Italy Nicola LariniLigier-Ford**1:20.650**1:20.794+3.373
14France Olivier GrouillardOsella-Ford1:21.292**1:20.884**+3.607
7Switzerland Gregor FoitekBrabham-Judd1:20.965**1:20.902**+3.625
9Italy Michele AlboretoArrows-Ford**1:20.920**1:21.002+3.643
11UK Derek WarwickLotus-Lamborghini1:21.244**1:20.998**+3.721
10Italy Alex CaffiArrows-Ford**1:21.065**1:22.057+3.788
18France Yannick DalmasAGS-Ford1:22.426**1:21.087**+3.810
35Sweden Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford**1:21.241**1:22.184+3.964
36Finland JJ LehtoOnyx-Ford**1:21.323**1:21.417+4.046
16Italy Ivan CapelliLeyton House-Judd**1:21.383**1:21.422+4.106
15Brazil Maurício GugelminLeyton House-Judd**1:21.616**1:22.862+4.339

Race

Race report

After qualifying, Williams driver Thierry Boutsen, himself third on the grid, predicted that the Ferraris on the third row of the grid would be the cars to beat, citing their semi-automatic transmission and its paddle shift which allowed both Alain Prost and Nigel Mansell to keep their hands on the wheel around the bumpy turns at the back of the circuit

At the first corner, Jean Alesi, Riccardo Patrese and Andrea de Cesaris tangled, eliminating de Cesaris. Also in the first corner Alessandro Nannini tangled with Philippe Alliot and requiring the Benetton driver to stop for a new nosecone. On lap eight Boutsen passed Berger for second place, and Prost took the V12 Ferrari past the McLaren driver on lap 17. Mansell pitted on lap 27 for new tyres and also to inspect a broken rollbar, rejoining in 9th place. Boutsen's pit stop on lap 30 went disastrously wrong. With failing brakes, and a tricky bump in the pitlane, the Williams was unable to stop and crashed into some of his mechanics and the wheel and tyre equipment stacked outside the garage. This required a new nosecone and when he rejoined, he was down in 11th position.

Prost was piling on the pressure, and by lap 35 he had climbed to second within 10 seconds of Senna, and was now ahead of Riccardo Patrese, Berger and Nelson Piquet. When Senna came up to lap former Lotus teammate Satoru Nakajima, there was contact and the McLaren had to pit for a new nosecone. He rejoined and challenged hard, but the reduced downforce levels made the car difficult to drive. On lap 66, Patrese retired with a broken oil cooler.

Prost took his 40th victory, and his first for Ferrari, from Berger and the recovering Senna. Mansell finished an excellent fourth, having driven through the field with a broken rollbar. Boutsen finished a creditable fifth and Piquet claimed the final point in front of his home crowd after passing Alesi – who was suffering severe tyre wear after attempting to run non-stop on his Pirellis – on the last lap.

Race classification

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints1234567891011121314RetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetDNQDNQDNQDNQDNPQDNPQDNPQDNPQDNPQ
1France **Alain Prost****Ferrari**711:37:21.2586**9**
28Austria **Gerhard Berger****McLaren-Honda**71+13.5642**6**
27Brazil **Ayrton Senna****McLaren-Honda**71+37.7221**4**
2UK **Nigel Mansell****Ferrari**71+47.2665**3**
5Belgium **Thierry Boutsen****Williams-Renault**70+1 lap3**2**
20Brazil **Nelson Piquet****Benetton-Ford**70+1 lap13**1**
4France Jean AlesiTyrrell-Ford70+1 lap7
3Japan Satoru NakajimaTyrrell-Ford70+1 lap19
23Italy Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford69+2 laps8
19Italy Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford68Puncture15
25Italy Nicola LariniLigier-Ford68+3 laps20
26France Philippe AlliotLigier-Ford68+3 laps10
6Italy Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault65Oil pressure4
21Italy Gianni MorbidelliDallara-Ford64+7 laps16
10Italy Alex CaffiArrows-Ford49Clutch25
12UK Martin DonnellyLotus-Lamborghini43Spun off14
8Italy Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd39Spun off12
24Italy Paolo BarillaMinardi-Ford38Engine17
18France Yannick DalmasAGS-Ford28Suspension26
11UK Derek WarwickLotus-Lamborghini25Electrical24
30Japan Aguri SuzukiLola-Lamborghini24Suspension18
9Italy Michele AlboretoArrows-Ford24Suspension23
7Switzerland Gregor FoitekBrabham-Judd14Transmission22
29France Éric BernardLola-Lamborghini13Gearbox11
14France Olivier GrouillardOsella-Ford8Collision21
22Italy Andrea de CesarisDallara-Ford0Collision9
35Sweden Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford
36Finland JJ LehtoOnyx-Ford
16Italy Ivan CapelliLeyton House-Judd
15Brazil Maurício GugelminLeyton House-Judd
17Italy Gabriele TarquiniAGS-Ford
33Brazil Roberto MorenoEuroBrun-Judd
31Belgium Bertrand GachotColoni-Subaru
34Italy Claudio LangesEuroBrun-Judd
39Australia Gary BrabhamLife

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
1BRA Ayrton Senna13
2FRA Alain Prost9
3FRA Jean Alesi6
4AUT Gerhard Berger6
5BEL Thierry Boutsen6

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
1GBR McLaren-Honda19
2ITA Ferrari12
3GBR Tyrrell-Ford7
4GBR Williams-Renault6
5GBR Benetton-Ford4
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

|Previous_year's_race = 1989 Brazilian Grand Prix Previous race at Interlagos: 1980 Brazilian Grand Prix |Next_year's_race = 1991 Brazilian Grand Prix}}

References

  1. (24 March 1990). "Jornal do Brasil".
  2. Walker, Murray. (1990). "Murray Walker's Grand Prix Year". Hazleton Publishing.
  3. (26 March 1990). "[[Motorsport News".
  4. (11 April 1990). "[[Motorsport News".
  5. "1990 Brazilian Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  6. "Brazil 1990 - Championship • STATS F1".
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