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25px Brazil  1988 Brazilian Grand Prix
Race details
Race 1 of 16 in the 1988 Formula One season
Jacarepaguá.svg
Date April 3, 1988
Official name 17o Grande Premio do Brasil
Location Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Course Permanent racing facility
5.031 km (3.126 mi)
Distance 60 laps, 301.860 km (186.417 mi)
Weather Cloudy and hot
Pole position
Driver 25px Brazil Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda
Time 1:28.096
Fastest lap
Driver 25px Austria Gerhard Berger Ferrari
Time 1:32.943 on lap 45
Podium
First 25px France Alain Prost McLaren-Honda
Second 25px Austria Gerhard Berger Ferrari
Third 25px Brazil Nelson Piquet Lotus-Honda

The 1988 Brazilian Grand Prix was a Formula One race held on April 3, 1988 at the renamed Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet in Rio de Janeiro. Following his 3rd World Drivers Championship in 1987 the Jacarepaguá Circuit was named after local hero Nelson Piquet. It was the first race of the 1988 Formula One season.

Background[]

Winter testing had indicated Ferrari would be maintaining the edge that they had gained at the end of the 1987 season despite only having an updated version of their 1987 car, with McLaren-Honda and Williams-Judd also producing cars that looked like potential race winners. During the qualifying session there was controversy when Nelson Piquet made comments in the local media publicly insulting Ayrton Senna, Nigel Mansell, Mansell's wife Roxanne, and both drivers' families. BMS Dallara's Alex Caffi had to use a modified Formula 3000 chassis because the Formula One chassis was not ready.

Drivers making their debut in Rio were: Mauricio Gugelmin (March-Judd), Luis Pérez-Sala (Minardi-Ford), Oscar Larrauri (EuroBrun-Ford), Julian Bailey (Tyrrell-Ford) and Bernd Schneider (Zakspeed), with Bailey and Schneider failing to qualify.

EuroBrun (with Larrauri and Stefano Modena) and Rial Racing (with Andrea de Cesaris as its sole driver) were making their F1 debuts as constructors. It was something of a return for both teams, the "Euro Racing" part of the Eurobrun team had run the factory backed Alfa Romeo team from 1982-1985, while Rial was run by German Günther Schmid, ex-owner of the ATS team who were in Grand Prix racing from 1977-1984. Both teams would use the 3.5L Ford DFZ V8 engine.

Qualifying[]

Just five months after his crash at the 1987 Japanese Grand Prix, Mansell produced a sensational performance to qualify his naturally aspirated Williams second, 1.5 seconds faster than the next 'atmo' car, the Benetton-Ford of Thierry Boutsen in 7th. On the pole was Senna in his first drive for McLaren with a time almost two seconds slower than Mansell's 1987 pole time. The second row was occupied by Gerhard Berger's Ferrari (Berger's time was reportedly much slower than he managed in the annual Rio pre-season tests just two weeks prior to the race which led to speculation that the Ferraris had not been using the FIA mandated pop off valves in testing), and Alain Prost's McLaren, the Frenchman not being happy with his new car in qualifying.

The four non-qualifiers were the Tyrrell-Ford of Julian Bailey, the turbo Zakspeeds of Piercarlo Ghinzani and Schneider, and the turbo Osella of Nicola Larini. Alex Caffi failed to pre-qualify his Dallara.

Race summary[]

On the parade lap, Senna's gear selector mechanism broke and he had to complete the lap jammed in first gear. The first start was aborted and Senna started from the spare car in the pits. At the second start, Alain Prost led from the first lap, with Mansell in 2nd place. On lap 19, the temperature gauge showed that his Williams was overheating. He entered the pits to investigate, handing second to Gerhard Berger; during the process, his engine stalled. Senna was making a remarkable drive from the rear of the grid, climbing to 21st on lap 1, 15th on lap 4, 8th on lap 10, into the points on lap 13 and by lap 20 was in second place.

Prost pitted on lap 26 without losing the lead, and Senna pitted a lap later. He stalled the engine and dropped to sixth place. Shortly afterwards he was shown the black flag and disqualified for changing cars after the green flag had been shown following the parade lap, a move that was not allowed (McLaren should have known this as Prost suffered the same fate at the Italian Grand Prix in 1986). Over the last 10 laps of the race Berger closed to within 10 seconds of leader Prost, but the Frenchman was merely pacing himself and Berger was unable to catch him.

Piquet, the reigning World Champion, came home third in his first drive for Lotus-Honda ahead of Derek Warwick in the Arrows-Megatron. Michele Alboreto in the second Ferrari and Satoru Nakajima in the second Lotus rounded out the points with 5th and 6th places. The first atmospheric car to finish was the Benetton-Ford of Thierry Boutsen who finished in 7th place.

Classification[]

Qualifying[]

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Gap
1 12 25px Brazil Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda 1:30.218 1:28.096
2 5 25px Great Britain Nigel Mansell Williams-Judd 1:30.928 1:28.632 +0.536
3 11 25px France Alain Prost McLaren-Honda 1:31.975 1:28.782 +0.686
4 28 25px Austria Gerhard Berger Ferrari 1:32.123 1:29.026 +0.930
5 1 25px Brazil Nelson Piquet Lotus-Honda 1:32.888 1:30.087 +1.991
6 27 25px Italy Michele Alboreto Ferrari 1:32.523 1:30.114 +2.018
7 20 25px Belgium Thierry Boutsen Benetton-Ford 1:32.060 1:30.140 +2.044
8 6 25px Italy Riccardo Patrese Williams-Judd 1:34.070 1:30.439 +2.343
9 16 25px Italy Ivan Capelli March-Judd 1:33.546 1:30.929 +2.833
10 2 25px Japan Satoru Nakajima Lotus-Honda 1:33.293 1:31.280 +3.184
11 17 25px Great Britain Derek Warwick Arrows-Megatron 1:34.323 1:31.713 +3.617
12 19 25px Italy Alessandro Nannini Benetton-Ford 1:31.722 1:32.748 +4.626
13 15 25px Brazil Mauricio Gugelmin March-Judd 1:34.037 1:31.833 +3.737
14 22 25px Italy Andrea de Cesaris Rial-Ford 1:34.988 1:32.275 +4.179
15 18 25px USA Eddie Cheever Arrows-Megatron 1:33.787 1:32.843 +4.747
16 30 25px France Philippe Alliot Lola-Ford 1:35.930 1:32.933 +4.837
17 29 25px France Yannick Dalmas Lola-Ford 1:36.832 1:33.408 +5.312
18 25 25px France René Arnoux Ligier-Judd 1:37.214 1:34.474 +6.378
19 14 25px France Philippe Streiff AGS-Ford 1:37.601 1:34.481 +6.385
20 24 25px Spain Luis Pérez-Sala Minardi-Ford 1:36.593 1:34.532 +6.436
21 26 25px Sweden Stefan Johansson Ligier-Judd 1:37.454 1:34.579 +6.483
22 3 25px Great Britain Jonathan Palmer Tyrrell-Ford 1:38.628 1:34.686 +6.590
23 23 25px Spain Adrian Campos Minardi-Ford 1:36.593 1:34.886 +6.790
24 33 25px Italy Stefano Modena EuroBrun-Ford 1:37.506 1:34.910 +6.814
25 31 25px Italy Gabriele Tarquini Coloni-Ford 1:41.149 1:35.407 +7.311
26 32 25px Argentina Oscar Larrauri EuroBrun-Ford 1:38.927 1:35.711 +7.615
DNQ 4 25px Great Britain Julian Bailey Tyrrell-Ford 1:39.711 1:36.137 +8.041
DNQ 9 25px Italy Piercarlo Ghinzani Zakspeed 1:40.431 1:37.621 +9.525
DNQ 21 25px Italy Nicola Larini Osella 1:38.927 1:38.371 +10.275
DNQ 10 25px West Germany Bernd Schneider Zakspeed 1:45.540 1:38.614 +10.518
DNPQ 36 25px Italy Alex Caffi Dallara-Ford

Race[]

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 11 25px France Alain Prost McLaren-Honda 60 1:36:06.857 3 9
2 28 25px Austria Gerhard Berger Ferrari 60 +9.873 4 6
3 1 25px Brazil Nelson Piquet Lotus-Honda 60 +1:08.591 5 4
4 17 25px Great Britain Derek Warwick Arrows-Megatron 60 +1:13.348 11 3
5 27 25px Italy Michele Alboreto Ferrari 60 +1:14.556 6 2
6 2 25px Japan Satoru Nakajima Lotus-Honda 59 +1 Lap 10 1
7 20 25px Belgium Thierry Boutsen Benetton-Ford 59 +1 Lap 7
8 18 25px USA Eddie Cheever Arrows-Megatron 59 +1 Lap 15
9 26 25px Sweden Stefan Johansson Ligier-Judd 57 +3 Laps 21
Ret 22 25px Italy Andrea de Cesaris Rial-Ford 53 Engine 14
Ret 3 25px Great Britain Jonathan Palmer Tyrrell-Ford 47 Transmission 22
Ret 24 25px Spain Luis Pérez-Sala Minardi-Ford 46 Chassis 20
Ret 30 25px France Philippe Alliot Lola-Ford 40 Suspension 16
Ret 31 25px Italy Gabriele Tarquini Coloni-Ford 35 Suspension 25
Ret 14 25px France Philippe Streiff AGS-Ford 35 Brakes 19
Ret 29 25px France Yannick Dalmas Lola-Ford 32 Engine 17
DSQ 12 25px Brazil Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda 31 Disqualified 1
Ret 25 25px France René Arnoux Ligier-Judd 23 Clutch 18
Ret 33 25px Italy Stefano Modena EuroBrun-Ford 20 Engine 24
Ret 5 25px Great Britain Nigel Mansell Williams-Judd 18 Engine 2
Ret 19 25px Italy Alessandro Nannini Benetton-Ford 7 Engine 12
Ret 6 25px Italy Riccardo Patrese Williams-Judd 6 Engine 8
Ret 16 25px Italy Ivan Capelli March-Judd 6 Engine 9
Ret 23 25px Spain Adrián Campos Minardi-Ford 5 Chassis 23
Ret 15 25px Brazil Maurício Gugelmin March-Judd 0 Gearbox 13
Ret 32 25px Argentina Oscar Larrauri EuroBrun-Ford 0 Electrical 26
DNQ 4 25px Great Britain Julian Bailey Tyrrell-Ford
DNQ 9 25px Italy Piercarlo Ghinzani Zakspeed
DNQ 21 25px Italy Nicola Larini Osella
DNQ 10 25px West Germany Bernd Schneider Zakspeed
DNPQ 36 25px Italy Alex Caffi Dallara-Ford

Standings after the race[]

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 25px France Alain Prost 9
2 25px Austria Gerhard Berger 6
3 25px Brazil Nelson Piquet 4
4 25px Great Britain Derek Warwick 3
5 25px Italy Michele Alboreto 2
Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 25px Great Britain McLaren-Honda 9
2 25px Italy Ferrari 8
3 25px Great Britain Lotus-Honda 5
4 25px Great Britain Arrows-Megatron 3
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References[]


Previous race:
1987 Australian Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1988 season
Next race:
1988 San Marino Grand Prix
Previous race:
1987 Brazilian Grand Prix
Brazilian Grand Prix Next race:
1989 Brazilian Grand Prix
Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at 1988 Brazilian Grand Prix. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Autopedia, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.


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