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1992 Brazilian Grand Prix


FieldValue
TypeF1
CountryBrazil
Flag_suffix1968
Grand PrixBrazilian
ImageInterlagos_1990.jpg
Date5 April
Year1992
Official nameXXI Grande Prêmio do Brasil
Race_No3
Season_No16
CoursePermanent racing facility
LocationAutódromo José Carlos Pace
Interlagos, São Paulo, Brazil
Course_mi2.687
Course_km4.325
Distance_laps71
Distance_mi190.808
Distance_km307.075
WeatherDry
Pole_DriverNigel Mansell
Pole_TeamWilliams-Renault
Pole_CountryUK
Pole_Time1:15.703
Fast_DriverRiccardo Patrese
Fast_CountryItaly
Fast_TeamWilliams-Renault
Fast_Time1:19.490
Fast_Lap34
First_DriverNigel Mansell
First_TeamWilliams-Renault
First_CountryUK
Second_DriverRiccardo Patrese
Second_TeamWilliams-Renault
Second_CountryItaly
Third_DriverMichael Schumacher
Third_TeamBenetton-Ford
Third_CountryGermany
Lapchart

Interlagos, São Paulo, Brazil The 1992 Brazilian Grand Prix (formally the XXI Grande Prêmio do Brasil) was a Formula One motor race held at Interlagos on 5 April 1992. It was the third race of the 1992 Formula One World Championship.

The 71-lap race was won by Englishman Nigel Mansell, driving a Williams-Renault, after he started from pole position. Mansell's Italian teammate, Riccardo Patrese, finished second after leading the first 31 laps, with German Michael Schumacher third in a Benetton-Ford.

Background

Going into the race, the two major talking points were Williams' utter domination of the previous two races, as well as McLaren's response to that domination: the new MP4/7A would debut at Interlagos, despite having originally been scheduled to debut at Barcelona. However, the car was still experiencing teething issues, despite an intensive testing programme at Silverstone following the Mexican Grand Prix. The team brought a total of six complete cars to the race, including three MP4/6Bs to be tested alongside the MP4/7A.

Qualifying

Pre-qualifying report

For the first time in 1992, there was a need for a pre-qualifying hour on Friday morning. The pool consisted of six cars, which needed to be reduced to four to ensure the maximum of thirty cars in the main qualifying sessions. The entrants were the two Lamborghini-powered Venturi LC92 cars entered by the Larrousse team, and driven by Bertrand Gachot and Ukyo Katayama; the Footwork FA13-Mugen-Honda of Michele Alboreto; the Fondmetal GR01 of Andrea Chiesa, and the two Andrea Moda S921s of Roberto Moreno and Perry McCarthy. Moreno and McCarthy had been recruited by Andrea Moda after team boss Andrea Sassetti had fired both his drivers (Alex Caffi and Enrico Bertaggia) after they had criticised the amateurish way the team had been run thus far.

With very little time to prepare, McCarthy had hastily acquired a FISA Super Licence which enabled him to compete in Formula One. However, when he arrived at Interlagos, his licence was rescinded by race director Roland Bruynseraede, who told him there had been an error in the issuing of the licence, so McCarthy was withdrawn from the event. In any case, the team had not finished building his car in time, so he would not have driven in the session anyway.

This left five cars in the session, and it became clear which four were to progress when the remaining Andrea Moda of Roberto Moreno managed just two laps before it broke down, having posted a very slow time. The other four cars were over fifteen seconds faster, with Gachot's Venturi topping the time sheets. Alboreto was just under two tenths of a second slower, with Chiesa third in the Fondmetal. Fourth was Katayama, just over a second slower than his team-mate Gachot. Thus Moreno failed to pre-qualify.

Pre-qualifying classification

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGap12345
29France Bertrand GachotVenturi-Lamborghini1:22.161
9Italy Michele AlboretoFootwork-Mugen-Honda1:22.346+0.185
14Switzerland Andrea ChiesaFondmetal-Ford1:22.860+0.699
30Japan Ukyo KatayamaVenturi-Lamborghini1:23.272+1.111
34Brazil Roberto MorenoAndrea Moda-Judd1:38.569+16.408

Qualifying report

The Williams cars were ahead of the McLarens with Mansell on pole ahead of Patrese, with Senna third in front of his home crowd ahead of Berger, Schumacher, and Alesi. There was controversy in the second qualifying session, as Senna slowed in front of an over-enthusiastic Mansell, forcing him wide on the entry to turn 11 and into a spin. Having been collected by the outside wall, Mansell limped out of his damaged Williams. Berger's time was set in one of the MP4/6B's, as he suffered an engine failure in his primary car, an MP4/7A; however, he raced an MP4/7A on raceday. , this was the last time a woman, Giovanna Amati, took part in the World Championship (Amati would be sacked by Brabham after this race and replaced by Englishman Damon Hill, son of late and two-time World Champion Graham Hill).

Qualifying classification

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930Sources:
5UK Nigel MansellWilliams-Renault**1:15.703**1:16.091
6Italy Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault1:17.591**1:16.894**+1.191
1Brazil Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda1:19.358**1:17.902**+2.199
2Austria Gerhard BergerMcLaren-Honda1:19.277**1:18.416**+2.713
19Germany Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford**1:18.541**1:18.582+2.838
27France Jean AlesiFerrari1:19.340**1:18.647**+2.944
20UK Martin BrundleBenetton-Ford1:19.488**1:18.711**+3.008
22Italy Pierluigi MartiniDallara-Ferrari**1:18.953**1:20.018+3.250
16Austria Karl WendlingerMarch-Ilmor1:19.897**1:19.007**+3.304
25Belgium Thierry BoutsenLigier-Renault1:20.823**1:19.038**+3.335
28Italy Ivan CapelliFerrari1:19.895**1:19.300**+3.597
32Italy Stefano ModenaJordan-Yamaha1:19.344**1:19.314**+3.611
4Italy Andrea de CesarisTyrrell-Ilmor**1:19.343**1:19.497+3.640
9Italy Michele AlboretoFootwork-Mugen-Honda**1:19.533**1:20.159+3.830
26France Érik ComasLigier-Renault1:19.541**1:19.537**+3.834
21Finland JJ LehtoDallara-Ferrari1:20.502**1:19.834**+4.131
3France Olivier GrouillardTyrrell-Ilmor1:21.930**1:19.849**+4.146
29France Bertrand GachotVenturi-Lamborghini1:20.413**1:19.927**+4.224
15Italy Gabriele TarquiniFondmetal-Ford1:20.533**1:19.993**+4.290
23Brazil Christian FittipaldiMinardi-Lamborghini1:21.019**1:20.133**+4.430
33Brazil Maurício GugelminJordan-Yamaha1:20.817**1:20.266**+4.563
10Japan Aguri SuzukiFootwork-Mugen-Honda1:20.891**1:20.435**+4.732
24Italy Gianni MorbidelliMinardi-Lamborghini**1:20.445**1:20.862+4.742
11Finland Mika HäkkinenLotus-Ford**1:20.577**1:20.734+4.874
30Japan Ukyo KatayamaVenturi-Lamborghini1:21.568**1:20.648**+4.945
12UK Johnny HerbertLotus-Ford1:21.161**1:20.650**+4.947
14Switzerland Andrea ChiesaFondmetal-Fordno time**1:20.809**+5.066
17France Paul BelmondoMarch-Ilmor**1:20.886**1:22.875+5.183
7Belgium Eric van de PoeleBrabham-Judd1:22.742**1:21.770**+6.067
8Italy Giovanna AmatiBrabham-Judd1:30.420**1:26.645**+10.942

Race

Race report

On the parade lap, Gerhard Berger stalled and had to start at the back. Mansell’s start was poor and Patrese blasted ahead of him with Brundle getting ahead of Alesi. The order from there was Patrese, Mansell, Senna, Schumacher, Brundle and Alesi. Berger had to retire after only four laps in the pits with electrical failure. Both Williams cars pulled away while Senna was holding the rest at bay; Schumacher was thirty seconds behind by the time he had passed Senna for third on lap 13. Martin Brundle and Jean Alesi passed him soon afterwards and Senna retired with engine problems on lap 17.

The stops brought Alesi closer to Brundle and Alesi made his move on lap 31. The two collided, with Brundle spinning out into retirement as a result. This promoted Karl Wendlinger in the March up to fifth and he was there until his clutch failed on lap 56. Thierry Boutsen collided with teammate Érik Comas in the leading Ligier and forced the Lotus of Johnny Herbert off into the gravel at the Senna S, forcing Boutsen and Herbert to retire but Comas managed to continue, this incident happened just six laps after Brundle's retirement, Comas would soon retire with gearbox failure on lap 42 which meant a double retirement for Ligier. Meanwhile, Mansell pitted while passing back markers and took advantage of subsequent clear laps, taking over first place when Patrese pitted after slower laps passing more of the back markers. Mansell then built a lead and won with a 29-second lead over Patrese in second, another Williams 1–2 and lapping the rest of the field ahead of Michael Schumacher, Jean Alesi, Ivan Capelli who was able to score his first points for Ferrari in fifth (which was Ferrari's only double points finish of the season) and Michele Alboreto scoring his first point for Footwork.

Race classification

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints12345678910RetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetRetDNQDNQDNQDNQDNPQ
5UK **Nigel Mansell****Williams-Renault**711:36:51.8561**10**
6Italy **Riccardo Patrese****Williams-Renault**71+ 29.3302**6**
19Germany **Michael Schumacher****Benetton-Ford**70+ 1 lap5**4**
27France **Jean Alesi****Ferrari**70+ 1 lap6**3**
28Italy **Ivan Capelli****Ferrari**70+ 1 lap11**2**
9Italy **Michele Alboreto****Footwork-Mugen-Honda**70+ 1 lap14**1**
24Italy Gianni MorbidelliMinardi-Lamborghini69+ 2 laps23
21Finland JJ LehtoDallara-Ferrari69+ 2 laps16
30Japan Ukyo KatayamaVenturi-Lamborghini68+ 3 laps25
11Finland Mika HäkkinenLotus-Ford67+ 4 laps24
15Italy Gabriele TarquiniFondmetal-Ford62Engine19
16Austria Karl WendlingerMarch-Ilmor55Clutch9
23Brazil Christian FittipaldiMinardi-Lamborghini54Gearbox20
3France Olivier GrouillardTyrrell-Ilmor52Engine17
26France Érik ComasLigier-Renault42Gearbox15
12UK Johnny HerbertLotus-Ford36Collision26
25Belgium Thierry BoutsenLigier-Renault36Collision10
33Brazil Maurício GugelminJordan-Yamaha36Gearbox21
20UK Martin BrundleBenetton-Ford30Collision7
22Italy Pierluigi MartiniDallara-Ferrari24Clutch8
29France Bertrand GachotVenturi-Lamborghini23Suspension18
4Italy Andrea de CesarisTyrrell-Ilmor21Engine13
1Brazil Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda17Engine3
2Austria Gerhard BergerMcLaren-Honda4Electrical4
10Japan Aguri SuzukiFootwork-Mugen-Honda2Engine22
32Italy Stefano ModenaJordan-Yamaha1Gearbox12
14Switzerland Andrea ChiesaFondmetal-Ford
17France Paul BelmondoMarch-Ilmor
7Belgium Eric van de PoeleBrabham-Judd
8Italy Giovanna AmatiBrabham-Judd
34Brazil Roberto MorenoAndrea Moda-Judd

Championship standings after the race

;Drivers' Championship standings

PosDriverPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1GBR Nigel Mansell30
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]2ITA Riccardo Patrese18
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]3GER Michael Schumacher11
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]4AUT Gerhard Berger5
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]5BRA Ayrton Senna4

;Constructors' Championship standings

PosConstructorPointsSource:
[[File:1rightarrow_blue.svg10px]]1GBR Williams-Renault48
[[File:1uparrow_green.svg10px]] 12GBR Benetton-Ford11
[[File:1downarrow_red.svg10px]] 13GBR McLaren-Honda9
[[File:1uparrow_green.svg10px]] 104ITA Ferrari5
[[File:1downarrow_red.svg10px]] 15GBR Tyrrell-Ilmor2
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

| Previous_year's_race = 1991 Brazilian Grand Prix | Next_year's_race = 1993 Brazilian Grand Prix

References

  1. (July 2002). "The Domination Game: How Mansell and Williams made 1992 their own".
  2. Walker, Murray. (1992). "Murray Walker's 1992 Grand Prix Year". Hazleton Publishing.
  3. McCarthy, Perry. (2003). "Flat Out, Flat Broke". Haynes.
  4. "Brazilian Grand Prix – Qualifying 1". Formula1.com.
  5. "Brazilian Grand Prix – Qualifying 2". Formula1.com.
  6. "1992 Brazilian Grand Prix Classification Qualifying". Motorsport Stats.
  7. "1992 Brazilian Grand Prix". formula1.com.
  8. "Brazil 1992 - Championship • STATS F1".
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