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The Nostalgia Column | |
Looking back at the history of the Brazilian GP | by Marcel Schot, The Netherlands |
The following year the race counted towards the championship and Fittipaldi won in his Lotus, pleasing the Brazilian crowd. Interlagos appeared just that: a crowd pleaser. With it's bowl-like structure, almost all visitors were able to see most of the track. Back in the 70s, the track was much longer than it is today, having a tight, twisty series of corners in the inner area. Tricky because of its bumpy surface, Interlagos was only mastered by the very best.
After Reutemann winning again in 1977, the race moved from Interlagos to Jacarepagua. Reutemann made it there three in a row for Ferrari, striking a 49 second gap over number two Fittipaldi. After just one year, the race was moved back to Interlagos for a two year period of French domination. First Jacques Lafitte and Patrick Depailler scored a one-two for Ligier and in the next year Rene Arnoux took the victory for Renault.
In 1989 Alain Prost just didn't make it and Nigel Mansell won with his Ferrari five seconds before the Frenchman's McLaren. The year after that Ferrari also won from McLaren, this time Prost over Gerhard Berger. 1991 saw the country's biggest hero finally winning his home Grand Prix. After seven unsuccessful tries, Ayrton Senna headed his McLaren home first, 2 seconds before Williams driver Riccardo Patrese and five second before his teammate Gerhard Berger.
Two interesting fact about the Brazilian Grand Prix: firstly, the race is a champion-maker. The last winner not to be World Champion at least once in his career was Carlos Reutemann in 1981. The second fact is that qualifying seemed not as important in Brazil as in some other places until recent times. Ayrton Senna only won his home Grand Prix twice, yet qualified on pole six times. Ronnie Peterson and James Hunt each qualified on pole two times and didn't win a single race in Brazil. However, if we take a look at the last five years, the winner has always been on the front row. This obviously has something to do with the rule changes, which make overtaking more difficult, especially on such bumpy and twisty circuits as Interlagos.
Top 10 points scored in the Brazilian Grand Prix: 1. Alain Prost 65 2. Michael Schumacher 38 3. Emerson Fittipaldi 33 4. Carlos Reutemann 31 5. Nelson Piquet 31 6. Ayrton Senna 30 7. Gerhard Berger 30 8. Nigel Mansell 27 9. Niki Lauda 23 10. Damon Hill 22 The Winners of Brazil: 1. Alain Prost 6 2. Carlos Reutemann 3 3. Emerson Fittipaldi 2 4. Nelson Piquet 2 5. Nigel Mansell 2 6. Ayrton Senna 2 7. Michael Schumacher 2 8. Niki Lauda 1 9. Carlos Pace 1 10. Jacques Lafitte 1 11. Rene Arnoux 1 12. Damon Hill 1 13. Jacques Villeneuve 1 14. Mika Hakkinen 1 What happened last year:
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1998 Race Results | ![]() | |||
![]() | Mika Hakkinen | McLaren-Mercedes | 1h 37:11.747s | |
![]() | David Coulthard | McLaren-Mercedes | + 1.102s | |
![]() | Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | + 1:00.550s | |
![]() | Alexander Wurz | Benetton-Playlife | + 1:07.453s | |
![]() | H.H. Frentzen | Williams-Mecachrome | + 1 lap | |
![]() | Giancarlo Fisichella | Benetton-Playlife | + 1 lap | |
![]() | Mika Hakkinen | McLaren-Mercedes | 1:17.092s | |
![]() | Mika Hakkinen | McLaren-Mercedes | 1:19.337s | |
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Marcel Schot | © 1999 Atlas Formula One Journal. |
Send comments to: schot@atlasf1.com | Terms & Conditions |