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Thursday 9 November 2017

Lewis Hamilton won the 2017 F1 Championship soon

Although the F1 race has not ended, but the British driver soon won the championship due to too many points difference with the other racers.

In the GP race, Mercedes rider ranked 9, giving him 2 points in total points. However, it was enough to get Hamilton to the throne soon.
With his fourth career title, Lewis Hamilton has been able to match the likes of Michael Schumacher (7 times), Juan Manuel Fangio (5), Alain Prost (5) 4 times champion), Sebastian Vettel (4 times champion). Hamilton also became the most successful British racer in F1 history, beating Jackie Stewart, legendary to have three world championships.

This is the 11th F1 in the life of 32-year-old Lewis Hamilton. During that time, the British rider won 62 races (ranked second after Schumacher with 91 laps), won 72 starts at pole, finished 116 podium finish, had 38 fastest laps and achieved 2,580 points.



Sunday 9 April 2017

Ayrton Senna by Alain Prost

"Honestly, it's very difficult for me to talk about Ayrton, and not only because he's not here any more. He was so different, you know, so completely different from any other racing driver any other person I've ever known..."
Speaking now, more than four years after the death of Ayrton Senna, Alain Prost is in an invidious position, for while the two are linked for ever, indisputably the best drivers of their generation, so also each was very much the other's nemesis. That being the case, in discussing Senna, Prost cannot win, and Prost knows it. Come out with only kind words, and some will say that he sang a very different tune when Ayrton was alive; go the other way, and they will vilify him for daring to criticise a defenceless icon.
"That's why I have always refused to speak about him," says Prost "When he died, I said that I felt a part of me had died also, because our careers had been so bound together. And I really meant it, but I know some people thought I was not sincere. Well, all I can do is try to be as honest as possible."
From the very beginning of Ayrton Senna's Formula One career, back in 1984, his sights were set squarely on Prost In a way it was inevitable, for Ayrton was a man of extraordinary intensity, one who needed to prove himself the best in all things, and at that time Alain was very much the king of the hill. It was their very first meeting that was to set the tone of their relationship down the years.
"I remember it very well. In the spring of 1984, the new Nürburgring was opened, and there was a celebrity race for Grand Prix drivers of the past and present, in Mercedes road cars. I was coming from Geneva to Frankfurt on a scheduled flight, and Ayrton was due to land half an hour before, so Gerd Kremer of Mercedes asked me if I would bring him to the track. On the way we chatted, and he was very pleasant. Then we got to the track, and practised the cars. I was on pole, with Ayrton second – after that he didn't talk to me any more! It seemed funny at the time. Then, in the race, I took the lead – and he pushed me off the track after half a lap. So that was a good start..."
That year, 1984, was Senna's first in F1, and his Toleman-Hart was not on par with the front runners. At Monaco, though, there was rain, and when the race was abandoned, shortly before half-distance, the rookie was right on the point of passing Proses McLaren for the lead.
"From the beginning, he looked good, although you can't always tell for sure when a guy is with a small team. He drove a great race at Monaco, but in those days – when monocoques were far less stiff than now – it was quite possible to have a poor car in the dry turn out to be very good in the wet. Of course we all rated him, but with the reservation that sometimes a young driver looks quite good, but then joins a top team, and looks ordinary. There's always some doubt until the guy gets into a quick car. With Ayrton, though, it was pretty dear he had a special talent
"Something else people should remember is that, 15 years ago, there were a lot more very good drivers in F1 than there are now. For sure Ayrton did well from the beginning, but he showed nothing that was truly exceptional before Monaco. Monaco was the thing: after that everyone discovered him, and talked about him. Without that, it might have taken a little longer, but the impressive thing, as I say, was that he looked so good at a time when there were so many top drivers..."
Senna was also, from the start, no respecter of reputations, and that upset many an established star. After a single season with Toleman, he joined Lotus-Renault for 1985, brilliantly won the Portuguese Grand Prix (again in the rain), and was a front runner everywhere. But at Hockenheim, for example, he made a mistake at the Ostkurve, and when Michele Alboreto went to pass, Ayrton swerved left and right to keep him back. Back then such tactics were not embraced by the F1 community.
"Hmmm, yes, Senna was very tough in that way, from the start. Actually, one thing I really believe now is that it wasn't so much a matter of being that tough as having his own rules. He had them, he believed in them, and that was it.
"He was extremely religious, and he used to go on about that, about speaking the truth, about his education, his upbringing, and everything else. At the time, I used to think that some of the things he did on the track didn't fit with all that, but now it seems to me he really didn't know he was sometimes in the wrong. As I said, he had these rules, he played by them, and he wasn't interested in anything else. Looking back, I really think he believed he was always in the right, always telling the truth – and on the track he was the exactly same way."
It was not, however, until Senna became Proses team-mate, in 1988, that there were any problems between them. The year before, Lotus had used Honda engines, and Ayrton had established a deep relationship with the Japanese engineers. As he came to McLaren, so also did Honda. And one team insider puts it this way: "I tended to think of Prost as a McLaren driver with a Honda engine, and Senna as a Honda driver with a McLaren chassis."
"Yes, I think that was a good way of putting it. My biggest problem was that I really loved McLaren, and wanted to do everything I could for the team. For my team-mate in '88, it was a choice between Senna and Nelson Piquet. When I went with Ron (Dennis) to japan, to meet the Honda people, I said that Ron should take Ayrton, because he was the more talented driver, and for me the team came first. If I was going back to the start of my racing career now, I would do it rather differently – I would concentrate on me and my job...
"In fact, I could have said no to Ayrton coming to McLaren. One strength I have is that normally when I make a decision, I don't regret it, but, from my own point of view, on that occasion I definitely made a mistake!"
In the very first pre-season test they did together, in Rio, Prost saw that Senna was emphatically not doing this for the fun of it. "We were tyre-testing, just using one car. I did the first run, and he was then due to take it over. I came into the pits, and the mechanics began to change the wheels. I could see Ayrton there, helmet on, pacing around, waiting for me to get out, so I decided to stay in the car just a little longer. And he got furious, telling everyone, 'It's not fair, it's not fair!' Then I got out, and I was laughing. He was not...
"Actually, though, our working relationship through that first season was pretty good. The only problem was at Estoril, at the end of the first lap."
It was a moment which will never be forgotten by anyone there to witness it. Down the pit straight Prost slipstreamed Senna, then ducked right to go by, whereupon Ayrton swerved towards him, putting him maybe six inches from the pit wall. Main didn't lift, and emerged into a lead which he would keep to the end, but afterwards he made his feelings plain.
"That move in Estoril was very dangerous, and, yes, I was angry afterwards. I was right against the pit wall, and I really thought we were going to touch, and have a big crash — with the whole pack right behind us. I didn't like it at all, and told him so, but, in a way, I can't blame him for doing it, because he did always get away with it. How many times in his Formula One career was Ayrton sanctioned for that kind of thing? Never.
"Still, apart from that, the first year wasn't too bad. On a few occasions he was quite tough and uncompromising with me, but we didn't really have any other problems. And, in fact, he did apologise to me for what happened in Portugal."
The pair had a staggering season in 1988, Prost scoring more points (105, from seven wins, and seven seconds) than Senna (94, from eight wins, and three seconds), but Ayrton claiming the driver's championship, 90 points to 87, by virtue of the '11 best scores' rule which applied at the time.
"At the end of '88 I was very pleased for the team – we were first and second in the championship, and I really wasn't too upset that he won the title; I'd won it twice already by then, it wasn't a problem.
"For '89, though, I was worried about Honda. And I think my biggest problem was that I never had the relationship with them that Ayrton did. From the beginning, it was something I never kit I had under control. I wouldn't have cared very much if they'd simply preferred one driver in the team but the way they handled the situation was very difficult for me, because Senna and I had very different driving styles.
"I never understood why Honda took his side so much. It wasn't that I thought it was a question of the Brazilian sales market or the French market, or anything like that. It was more a human thing. I worked with Honda again last year now as a team owner and it struck me again: I think the Japanese just work differently. In a team, they always favour someone over the rest. I've heard it said about their motorcycle teams, as well.
"Let me give you an example. At one point in '88, the last year we were allowed to run turbos, I asked for some specific changes to the engine to suit my driving style and we worked on it for two days at Paul Ricard. At the end of that test I was very happy – but at the next race, one week later, they never put that strategy on my engine.
"Then we went to the French Grand Prix – at Ricard – and suddenly the engine was just as I had wanted! You understand what I'm saying? Ayrton and I raced for two seasons together in the McLaren Hondas, and at both the French Grands Prix I was on pole position and won the race. Everyone said, 'Oh look, it's Prost in front of his home crowd,' and that sort of thing. It was nothing like that; it was just that at those races I had something which enabled me to fight...
"Understand me, this is nothing against Ayrton, OK? Ayrton was very quick, and in qualifying he was much better than me – much more committed, just as I think I was when I was the younger driver in the team, against Niki [Lauda].
"Anyway, before the 1989 season I had dinner at the golf club in Geneva with Honda's then chairman, Mr Kawamoto and four other people. And he admitted that I was right in believing that Honda was more for Ayrton than for me.
"He said, 'You want to know why we push Senna so much? Well, I can't be 100 per cent sure.' But one thing he did let me know was that the new generation of engineers working on the engines were in favour of Ayrton, because he was more the samurai, and I was more the computer.
"So that was an explanation, and I was very happy afterwards, because then at least I knew very well that something was not correct. Part of my problem had been that Ayrton was so bloody quick, it wasn't easy to know how much was that, and how much was Honda helping him. So after this dinner with Mr Kawamoto, I thought, 'Well, at least I'm not stupid – something really was going on, and now I know the situation.'"
Whatever, the situation was not to improve. Quite the opposite, in fact. In 1989, the fragile relationship between Prost and Senna broke apart utterly, and that existing between Alain and McLaren was not a lot better.
"Until then, I never had a problem with anyone at McLaren, but '89 was different My contract was due to expire at the end of the year, but Ayrton's was not. Ron knew the future of his team was with Honda and therefore with Senna. He tried hard to persuade me to stay, but in reality he couldn't keep both of us, and I told him in July that I would be leaving at the end of the season. In my opinion, he was not fair with me in '89. We're still very good friends, and, despite everything, I still even now think of McLaren as my team. But Ron knows my feelings about that period.
"At the time, I was completely disillusioned. After everything I'd done with the team, and for the team, I didn't think I should have been treated like that. But at the end of the day, you know, Ron was trying to push his company to the front, and of course I can understand that a little."
It was at Imola that the most bitter feud in motor-racing history took seed. Senna and Prost, as usual, qualified 1-2, a second and a half clear of the rest, and Ayrton suggested that they not jeopardise their prospects by fighting at the first corner, Tosa, on the opening lap: whomsoever got there first would keep the lead. Alain agreed. At the start, Senna led away, and at Tosa Prost duly fell in behind him.
Then, however, the race was stopped, when Gerhard Berger had a serious accident. On the restart, it was Prost who got ahead – but at Tosa Senna snicked by into the lead.
"Afterwards, he argued that it wasn't the start it was the restart, so the agreement didn't apply. As I said, he had his own rules, and sometimes they were very… well let's say strange. It had been Ayrton's idea, in the first place, and I didn't have a problem with it. Afterwards, though, I said it was finished; I'd continue to work with him, in technical matters, but as far as our personal relationship was concerned, that was it. And the atmosphere in the team became very bad, of course.
"By the time we got to Monza, I was ahead of him in the championship, by about 10 points. But that race was the real low point between McLaren and me. Senna had two cars, with 20 people around him, and I had just one car, with maybe four or five mechanics working for me. I was absolutely alone, in one part of the garage, and that was perhaps the toughest weekend of my racing career. Honda was really hard against me by then, and it was difficult trying to fight for the championship in that situation. In practice, Ayrton was nearly two seconds quicker than me – OK, as I said, he was certainly a better qualifier than I was, but two secands? That was a joke."
In the race, though, Senna retired, and Prost won; by the time they headed off to Suzuka and Adelaide, the last two races of the 1989 season, Alain led by 16 points. By, now McLaren-Honda essentially worked as two different teams, which happened to operate out of the same pit. Once again, the two red and white cars were on the front row, both its drivers in defiant mood, Senna knowing he had to win, Prost making it clear he'd be no pushover.
"I told both the team and the press, 'There's no way I'm going to open the door to him any more.' We talked very often, you should know, about the first corner, the first lap, and Ron always said the important thing was that we shouldn't hit each other, we should think of the team. Well, as far as I was concerned, Senna thought about himself; and that was it. For example, at the start of the British Grand Prix that year, going into Copse, if I hadn't moved three or four metres out of the way we'd have hit each other, and both McLarens would have been out immediately. That sort of thing had happened too often; I had had enough.
"As for the accident between us at the chicane, yes, I know everybody thinks I did it on purpose. What I say is that I did not open the door, and that's it. I didn't want to finish the race like that I'd led from the start, and I wanted to win it.
"I had a good car; I'd been very bad in qualifying, compared with Ayrton, and I concentrated entirely on the race. In the warm-up I was nearly a second quicker than him, and for the race itself I was quite confident, even when he started catching me.
"I didn't want him too close, obviously, but I wanted him close enough that he would hurt his tyres; my plan was then to push hard over the last ten laps. As it was, he tried to pass – and for me the way he did it was impossible, because he was going so much quicker than usual into the braking area.
"I couldn't believe he tried it on that lap, because, as we came up to the chicane, he was so far back. When you look in your mirrors, and a guy is 20 metres behind you, it's impossible to judge, and I didn't even realise he was trying to overtake me. But at the same time I thought, 'There's no way I'm going to leave him even a one-metre gap. No way.' I came off the throttle, braked – and turned in."
A year later the two were back at Suzuka, once again to settle the World Championship, and this time it was Alain who had to win. Although no longer in the same team, he and Ayrton had not in any way diluted the intensity of their strife. Prost, said Senna, had better not try to turn into the first comer ahead of him: ‘If he does, he's not going to make it...' In the event, at 150mph, the McLaren ran into the back of the Ferrari.
"Well, what can you say about that? After I'd retired we talked about it, and he admitted to me as he did to the press that he'd done it on purpose. He explained to me why he did it. He was furious with [FIA President] Balestre for not agreeing to change the grid, so that he could start on the left, and he told me he had decided that if I got to the first corner ahead of him, he'd push me off.
"What happened in Japan in '90 is something I will never forget, because it wasn't only Ayrton who was involved. Some of the people at McLaren, a lot of officials and a lot of media agreed with what he'd done, and that I couldn't accept. Honestly, I almost retired after that race.
"As I always said, you know, he didn't want to beat me, metaphorically he wanted to destroy me that was his motivation from the first day. Even in that Mercedes touring car race, back in '84, I realised that he wasn't interested in beating Alan Jones or Keke Rosberg or anyone else it was me, just me, for some reason."
Right to the end of Prost's career as a driver, that situation never changed. But on the podium in Adelaide in 1993, his last race, the two embraced, and it was as if, now that Alain was no longer a rival, Ayrton saw no reason for any more hostility. Prost was surprised by the gesture.
"Yes, I was – and also a little bit disappointed, to be honest. This will tell you something about Ayrton. In Japan, the race before, he won, and I was second. As we walked from the podium to the press conference, I said to him, 'This may be the last race where we are at a press conference together, and I think we should show the people something nice maybe shake hands, or something.' He didn't answer me, but he didn't say no, either, so I thought maybe he agreed. We went to the press conference and he wouldn't even look at me.
"In fact, I'd even thought maybe in Australia we could exchange helmets – the last helmets we'd worn in a race against each other – but after Japan, I forgot about it, because he hadn't seemed interested in any sort of reconciliation.
"Then we went to Adelaide, and finished first and second again. On our way to the podium afterwards, already he was starting to talk a little bit, and he said to me, 'What are you going to do now?' I was very surprised! 'I don't know yet,' I said. 'You're going to be fat,' he said, and he smiled. Then on the podium he put his arm round me, shook hands, and everything. Why? Because now it was his idea, and it was on his terms. OK, in any case, that was nice. But that was Ayrton – if it was his idea, fine; if not, forget it."
Later Senna would admit to a close friend that only after Prost’s retirement had he come fully to realise how much of his motivation had come from fighting with this one rival. Only a couple of days before his death, filming an in-car lap of Imola for Elf, he amazed everyone with a spontaneous greeting: 'I'd like to welcome back my friend Alain – we all miss you...' Prost was touched by that.
"In fact, after I'd retired we spoke quite often on the telephone. He called me several times, usually to talk about safety; he wanted me to keep involved with that, and we had agreed to talk about it at Imola. That weekend he was talking, talking, talking, about safety, and he was much softer than before for me, he changed completely in '94. He seemed to me very down somehow, without the same power as before.
"We had this conversation on the Friday, and I saw him again on the Sunday morning after Roland Ratzenberger's fatal accident, of course. I was with a lot of people at the Renault motorhome at the time. You know how Ayrton usually was he'd go from the garage straight to the motorhome, but that morning I was very surprised, because he came into the middle of all these people, which he would never normally do, just to get to me. We had a chat, and he was trying really hard to be nice, to be friendly.
"Then I saw him in the garage briefly. I didn't want to disturb him, but I knew he wanted help, that he needed somebody. That was obvious. We were going to speak again the following week..."
Senna's funeral took place in Sao Paulo, four days later, and Prost was one of many drivers in attendance. It was not a particularly difficult decision to take, he said, except in one respect.
"I knew I wanted to go, but Ayrton and I had such a history for so long that I didn't really know how the Brazilian people would perceive it: would they be upset if I went, upset if I didn't go, or what? The day after the accident, I was in Paris, and a good friend of Jean-Luc Lagadere (the chairman of Matra) called me. His wife was Brazilian, and I asked his advice. 'I have my ticket ready,' I said, 'but what do you think I should do?' He told me I should definitely go, that the Brazilian people would like that I didn't have to be pushed – I already wanted to go – but he convinced me. And I know now that if I hadn't gone, I would have regretted it for the rest of my life.
"There was no hostility towards me in Sao Paulo at all the very opposite, in fact. I'm still in contact with Ayrton's family all the time; the day after the funeral, his father invited me to his farm, and we talked for a long time. And I see his sister very often, do what I can to help with the foundation.
"Ayrton was certainly the best driver I ever raced against, by a long, long way. He was, by far the most committed driver I ever saw. To be honest. I think the best race driver – in terms of really applying intelligence – was Niki, but overall was the best, by far. He very successful in every thing that mattered to him, everything that he set out to achieve for himself
"Actually, I think it's not impossible that in time we might have become friends. We shared an awful lot, after all, and one thing that never changed – even when our relationship was at its worst – was our great respect for each other as drivers. I don't think either of us worried too much about anyone else. And there were those times we did have fun together, you know. Not very often, but...
"He was just strange, you know. In 1988, I remember, we had to go to the Geneva Motor Show for Honda; it's only 40kms from my house, so I asked him to come over for lunch first, and then we'd drive there together. He came to my house – and slept for two hours! Hardly spoke at all.
"Then, after lunch, we went for a walk, and I still remember our conversation clearly. I liked to talk to him: sometimes it could be boring if he was going on about something, but usually it was fascinating. Yes, I think maybe we could have become friends eventually. Once we were not rivals any more, everything changed.
"I look back on those days now, and think, to myself, ‘Jesus, what was that all about? Why did we put ourselves through all of that?' Sometimes it seemed like a bad dream. Maybe because usually we were so much in front, it was inevitable that there would be problems between us, but why did it have to get so venomous – why did we have to live like that? I used to say to people, 'You're a fan of Ayrton Senna? Good, that's fine – but please don't hate me! It was the same with the press.
"The pressure was so high, so high... If we had to do it all again, I think I'd say to Ayrton, 'Listen, we're the best, we can screw all the others!' With a lot of intelligence, it could have been such good dream. Still, even as it turned out, it was a fantastic story, don't you think? And I think, in a way, we're missing a little of that today."

Saturday 4 June 2016

Chandhok's racing idol: Alain Prost

One of the most common questions that journalists ask me is: “Who was your racing idol when you were growing up?” The long answer to that question is Mario Andretti for his sheer diversity in the sport; Frank Williams for his incredible success and drive to win world championships despite being a quadriplegic; Ron Dennis because when I started watching F1 in the late 1980s McLaren was the ‘superteam’ and he was the boss; Bernie Ecclestone because without him the sport would be a pale shadow of what it is today, and finally Alain Prost.



The short answer would always be Alain Prost. The follow up questions from most people are “Really? Not Senna?” The funny thing is, despite my dad and grandfather being racing drivers, I probably have my mother to blame for this influence because she was a Prost fan. That perhaps got me started but the more I read about Alain in the pre-TV broadcast days, the more I grew to admire him. It amazes me how few people are actually Alain Prost fans, but what I’ve found in my travels is that the people who truly watched Grand Prix after Grand Prix in the early to mid 1980s – Prost’s glory years – would agree with me.

Now before all the Senna fans stop reading here, let me get a few things straight. There is no question in my mind that ultimately Ayrton was the faster driver over a single lap. For sheer commitment and ability to extract every last ounce of speed from a car over a qualifying lap, there has been no driver faster than Ayrton Senna and there may never be. Secondly, the Senna movie opened up a whole new era of ‘Senna mania’ and fans came crawling out of the woodwork. But, lest we forget, this was a movie and there has to be a hero and villain, so of course Alain came off second best (well, probably second worst after Jean-Marie Balestre!) The film didn’t show any of Alain’s greatness or Ayrton’s failings and despite the film-makers being good friends of mine, I believe that this was wrong.




Thirdly, I believe there have been very few people to ever walk this planet who had the charisma of Ayrton Senna da Silva. The man had such presence and when he spoke, the world stopped to listen. Even today, I can’t help but spend the odd half an hour on YouTube listening to Ayrton in that odd mix of a soft spoken voice combined with a firm belief and conviction in what he was saying. He was a man that the fans could easily relate to and carried all those Latin emotions, which meant that he won them over more than the reserved and less flamboyant Prost.

I think when you talk about Alain, it’s easy to solely talk about the Senna years but I think we have to keep some perspective here – by the late ‘80s Alain had been a championship contender for many years. He nearly won the championship in 1983 and was denied only due to poor reliability at the final round. He nearly won in 1984 but lost out by half a point to Niki Lauda, because the Monaco GP was red flagged before 75 per cent distance and therefore he only got half the points for the win.

A fact often glossed over is that even in 1988, Alain actually scored more points than Ayrton and it was only due to the unusual system of dropped scores that year that Ayrton was awarded the title. So all of a sudden, Alain’s four World Championships could pretty easily have been seven. The man won 51 Grands Prix for four different teams, in an era with less races per season and much worse reliability than we have now against incredible competition through various different regulation eras.



So why am I a Prost fan? Well, in a nutshell, I thought his philosophy of spending hours to set the car up and make it as driveable and comfortable as possible to go fast in the race was brilliant. Yes, it’s easy to get excited by qualifying and I must admit I love nothing better than a low fuel, new tyre qualifying run, but the reality is you only get points on a Sunday. Alain’s ability to put aside qualifying glory and consciously work on the long-term game seems so logical to me. Races like Mexico in 1990, where the Ferrari wasn’t very quick over one lap were just fantastic. Alain spent all of practice and qualifying working on race setup and despite starting 13th on the grid, came through to pass Ayrton and win.

I also thought Prost had a lot of conviction to stick by his beliefs. When he felt that Ayrton was getting preferential treatment, he quit McLaren. When he thought the Ferrari wasn’t good enough, he called it a “truck” and got the sack for saying so. Rather than drive around in a midfield car, he took a year out and made sure he got himself into the best seat available for his return to F1 in 1993 for championship number four. But where I thought he showed this conviction the most was in Adelaide in 1989 where the weather conditions were absolutely ridiculous. After a single lap, Alain drove back into the pits and quit in protest as he felt it was too dangerous. He proved to be right as accident after accident meant the race got called off, but not before there was plenty of damage. While lots of fans called Alain a wimp, Gerhard Berger rightly said that actually, “Alain was the guy with the biggest balls”.


People often say that you shouldn’t meet your idols but I am glad to say I wholeheartedly disagree with that theory. I’ve been fortunate to have dinner with Alain on a few occasions and spent some time with him at places like the Goodwood Festival of Speed and the Monaco GP. He was absolutely fantastic and allowed me to go back into fan mode asking him all the questions I wanted to over the years. The man is still so damn fit and competitive it’s amazing – competing and winning in ice racing in the Andros Trophy as well as cycling thousands of kilometres a year. A true sporting legend.

Alain Prost : « Senna m'a dit que, d'une certaine manière, j'étais sa motivation première »


Ayrton Senna, juste avant de s'élancer au Grand Prix de Saint-Marin 1994, course qui lui sera fatale.

Pour Alain Prost comme pour des millions de téléspectateurs, comment oublier ce dimanche 1er mai 1994 ? Jour funeste où la formule 1 d'Ayrton Senna s'encastre, en Italie, lors du Grand Prix de Saint-Marin, contre l'un des murs du circuit d'Imola. Fraîchement retraité, Prost est sur les lieux du drame. Pour TF1, il commente en direct la course qui coûtera la vie à l'icône brésilienne. Un sportif dont il fut, encore quelques mois plus tôt, le plus grand rival.

>> Lire notre sélection d'archives (en édition abonnés) : Il y a vingt ans, la mort d'Ayrton Senna
Le Français ne participera pas, jeudi 1er mai, vingt ans plus tard, à la journée de commémoration organisée en Emilie-Romagne. « Je n'ai pas besoin de passer quelques jours à Imola pour me rappeler cet accident, explique-t-il au Monde.fr, aujourd'hui âgé de 59 ans. Le souvenir est là. Je ne peux pas ne pas m'en souvenir. De toute façon, il ne se passe pas une semaine sans que l'on ne me parle pas de Senna. » 

« SENNA ÉTAIT UN PEU MYSTIQUE, JE FAISAIS OFFICE D'ANTI-HÉROS »
De même qu'il y a eu Anquetil et Poulidor en cyclisme, il y a eu Prost et Senna en formule 1. A la fin des années 1980, sur les circuits, les deux pilotes se livrent une guerre acharnée qui marquera l'histoire du championnat du monde de formule 1. Plus âgé, Alain Prost conclut sa carrière en 1993 sur un quatrième et ultime titre de champion du monde, après ceux de 1985, 1986 et 1989.

Senna mourra brutalement une demi-saison plus tard, à l'âge de 34 ans, des suites de lésions au cerveau et d’une hémorragie. Avec un titre de champion du monde en moins (1988, 1990, 1991), mais couronné d'un prestige considérable : « Senna était un peu mystique, il avait un côté fascinant. C'était une sorte de héros. A l'inverse, moi je faisais office d'anti-héros. Quand on était ensemble en course, qu'on soit adversaires ou coéquipiers, je ressentais ça auprès du public. Mais ce n'était pas grave, je l'assumais tout à fait, et je le comprenais. »

La rivalité Prost-Senna culmine en 1988 et 1989, lorsque les deux pilotes se retrouvent dans la même écurie, chez McLaren. Senna s'adjuge le titre la première année, et Prost, la seconde. Mais ce dernier préférera rallier dès 1990 la prestigieuse Scuderia Ferrari, dont le siège se situe dans la même région que le circuit d'Imola.

Prost raconte : « Quand j'ai fini ma carrière, en 1993, Senna m'a dit, redit, expliqué que, d'une certaine manière, j'étais sa motivation première. Il voulait me battre. Quand il me l'a dit, j'ai pris ça comme un compliment. A partir du moment où j'ai arrêté de courir, on s'est beaucoup plus parlé que durant notre carrière. J'ai appris à l'apprécier humainement et à comprendre rétrospectivement son comportement face à moi. »

Ayrton Senna lors du Grand Prix du Japon, en 1989.
Ayrton Senna lors du Grand Prix du Japon, en 1989. © Paul-Henri Cahier / The Cahier Archive
A Imola, ce 1er mai 1994, le Grand Prix de Saint-Marin n'est que le troisième rendez-vous de la saison. Incapable de marquer le moindre point au Brésil et au Japon, Senna vit des débuts difficiles au sein de l'écurie Williams, lui qui vient de quitter Mc Laren. « Je ne l'avais jamais vu autant perturbé et préoccupé par la sécurité des pilotes en général, se souvient Alain Prost. Ça correspondait à son état d'esprit du moment. Il semblait bien différent de celui que j'avais connu quand je courais encore, six mois plus tôt. Quelqu'un de plus fragile, beaucoup moins serein. Avant, on avait l'impression que rien ne pouvait détruire Senna. Et puis là, d'un coup, on sentait qu'il était un peu moins bien. »

SENNA COMPTAIT RENDRE HOMMAGE À RATZENBERGER
En cas de victoire à Imola, Ayrton Senna aurait hissé un drapeau autrichien en hommage à Roland Ratzenberger. Egalement victime d’un accident mortel, la veille, lors des qualifications, ce pilote de 33 ans avait presque le même âge que lui quand il s'est tué, à 24 heures d'intervalle. Il effectuait seulement sa première saison sur le circuit, pour le compte de l'écurie Simtek.

Depuis ce week-end funèbre, plus aucun pilote de F1 n'a trouvé la mort en Grand Prix. « Avec les nouveaux éléments de sécurité comme le HANS [système pour protéger le cou et la tête], Ratzenberger ne serait sans doute pas mort, estime Prost. Et dans le cas d'Ayrton, il s'agit de malchance, car si une pièce de suspension n'avait pas pénétré son casque, la gravité de l'accident n'aurait pas été la même. »

Le 1er mai 1994 à Saint-Marin, après l'accident mortel d'Ayrton Senna.
Le 1er mai 1994 à Saint-Marin, après l'accident mortel d'Ayrton Senna. AFP/JEAN-LOUP GAUTREAU
Lorsque Senna heurte brutalement le mur du virage de Tamburello, à 14 h 17, Alain Prost s'apprête à vivre un moment de télévision d'« une lourdeur incroyable » : « Un nouveau départ de la course a été donné environ une heure plus tard. Pendant tout ce temps, on ne savait pas très bien. Des images passaient en boucle. On ne pouvait ni être optimiste ni être pessimiste. Parfois, des informations rassurantes nous parvenaient. Parfois, le contraire. »

Toujours est-il qu'à l'issue de l'accident, le spectacle continue. Le pilote qui remporte cette course tragique s'appelle Michael Schumacher. L'Allemand de 25 ans, future star de Ferrari, roule alors pour Benetton. Il décrochera en 1994 le premier de ses sept titres mondiaux. Record inégalé. Mieux que Senna (3), Prost (4), et même Juan Manuel Fangio (5). Ce coureur argentin des années 1950 représentait « un modèle pour Ayrton Senna », selon Paul-Henri Cahier, photographe qui l'a côtoyé pendant ses dix ans de carrière en F1, un parcours auréolé de 41 victoires en 161 Grands Prix.

Aujourd'hui, même si Prost, Fangio et Schumacher ont obtenu plus de sacres que lui, « Magic Senna » reste au moins considéré comme leur égal. Dans le magazine britannique Autosport, un sondage mené en 2009 auprès de 217 pilotes retraités ou en activité désigne même le Brésilien comme le plus grand pilote de tous les temps. « Chacun se fait sa propre opinion, répond Alain Prost. Oui, on peut porter un jugement sur une saison, mais de là à établir un classement définitif… En tout cas, Senna était un talent brut. Ce que je peux dire, c'est qu'il s'agit sûrement du meilleur coéquipier que j'aie jamais eu. »

En savoir plus sur http://www.lemonde.fr/sport/article/2014/05/01/alain-prost-senna-m-a-dit-que-d-une-certaine-maniere-j-etais-sa-motivation-premiere_4410337_3242.html#0chGhzsUrvoLFAHD.99

F1 needs solutions, not criticisms - Prost

Four-time world champion Alain Prost believes that Formula 1 needs solutions rather than criticisms, as it looks to rebuild its popularity over the next few years.

On the back of falling television audiences and concerns about rising costs, the FIA has given its president Jean Todt and commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone a mandate to make change.

Prost has often expressed concerns in the past about the state of F1, but thinks it better now to keep his feelings about the situation in private, as he thinks constant criticisms only make the situation worse.

And he believes negativity tends to result in the focus being on specific aspects of the sport, whereas he suggests a wide scale revision is needed.

"I don't want to enter too much into this perspective and I'll tell you why: people only talk about one thing and that is the problem with F1," Prost said in an interview with Motorsport.com.

"People look at the engine, the chassis and then the sporting regulations. But, in my opinion, we need to have a complete package and that is going to take a long time.

"So I don't want to see things going out in the press, as I can see sometimes quotes that don't reflect what I think. There are a lot of things that you need to change altogether."

A different way

When asked if he shared Todt and Ecclestone's concerns that something needed to be done, Prost said: "Yes, but as I said I think the better way is by having a full package [of changes].

"It is not only the engine, or the chassis. It is revenues, it is sporting regulations, it is everything altogether.

"You need to give the possibility to small teams to be more competitive, not only by adding more money, but by finding different ways in the regulations, [especially] the technical regulations."

Frédéric Vasseur avec Alain Prost pour diriger l'équipe Renault ?

TRANSFERTS - Frédéric Vasseur, patron à succès d'ART en GP2, pourrait gérer la future équipe Renault au quotidien à Enstone, en tandem avec Alain Prost.

Le projet de reprise du Lotus F1 Team par Renault devrait se concrétiser dans les jours qui viennent, avec une annonce possible dès ce week-end à Monza. C'est qu'il y a le feu à Enstone où Gérard Lopez joue la montre en attendant la finalisation du deal avec Renault.
 
Il est désormais acquis que le motoriste français va reprendre la main à court terme, même si on ignore encore sous quelles couleurs, quel nom et avec quel moteur les "E24" courront en 2016.
En marge de cette affaire, nous avons appris que Frédéric Vasseur pourrait rejoindre Alain Prost à la tête du nouveau Renault F1 Team. Le manager français, copropriétaire de l'écurie ART Grand Prix présente sur bien des fronts (GP2, GP3, DTM, etc) avec Nicolas Todt, céderait la direction opérationnelle de son équipe à Sébastien Philippe, ancien pilote reconverti dans le management. 

Vasseur, qui est aussi le constructeur des monoplaces de Formula E (Spark, c'est lui), se concentrerait sur la Formule 1 en prenant la direction générale du team à Enstone, sous la houlette d'Alain Prost dans un rôle de président non-exécutif semblable à celui tenu par Niki Lauda chez Mercedes.
Qui coiffera la casquette de directeur d'équipe ? Peut-être Cyril Abiteboul, l'actuel directeur général de Renault Sport F1.
 
 
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