As Aussie as they come: 70 years of Australians in F1

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Brendan Lines May 29, 2020

Only two Australians Sir Jack Brabham and Alan Jones have claimed Formula 1’s ultimate prize to be World Champions. Yet despite the sometimes sporadic presence of Australians in Formula 1’s post-war era, their trademark grit, determination and no ’BS’ approach to racing, has left an unmistakable legacy as Formula 1 celebrates its 70th anniversary in 2020.

Of the fifteen Australian drivers that have raced in Formula 1, some have been less proclaimed than others, but nonetheless they have all been accomplished drivers in their own right. Daring to take on the glamorous and sometimes dangerous dance of Formula 1’s high stakes competition.

Never a ‘shrinking violet’

Aside from heritage, Australia’s guard of Formula 1 drivers display an inherent determination, motivation and self-sufficiency spawned from moving to Europe to climb the ranks to Formula 1.

UK Formula 1 Journalist and broadcaster Edd Straw, who has interviewed personalities the likes of Brabham, says there are common traits making Australian drivers quite revered characters.

“We come to think of Australians as direct, no nonsense, straight shooting, they say what they think and it’s very difficult to come up with examples of ones who are ‘shrinking violets’ as we might say,” Straw says.

“If you’re going to come to Europe, you’ve got to fight for a career in what’s a very difficult environment and make it, you’re going to have to be somebody who’s going to get their foot in and really make a bit of noise sometimes,

“We do expect them to be Alan Jones, Mark Webber types, and Daniel Ricciardo he’s a kind of this friendly jokey character, but underneath all that there’s a fierce competitive spirit and there are times he’s not afraid to say what he thinks,” Straw says.

So if we take that initial move to Europe as the first defining step on our nation’s Formula 1 journey, then the next step is the characters defined by turning a wheel in anger against the best in the world.

Brabham: Constructing a legend

If there is a personification of ‘Formula 1 Legend,’ then Sir Jack Brabham embodied that legend. Brabham’s will and determination encapsulated ‘Aussie fighting spirit’ on the sporting world stage in the twentieth century.

Sir Jack Brabham – Image: Drivetribe

Winning the Drivers World Championship and Constructors World Championship in a car baring his own name, is a feat that will probably never be repeated in Formula 1.

The perpetuity that comes with Brabham’s legacy is the most apt accolade that could be bestowed on him.

From his humble beginnings in the Royal Australian Air Force, Brabham throughout his career was capable of feats of ingenuity that coupled with his fierce driving would enable him to beat the best.

Brabham won the first of his three World Championships in 1959 with Cooper, but despite the successes of the team in that season, Brabham still had his frustrations with gearbox reliability.

Fabricating his own parts to modify a Citroen gearbox, Brabham improved the car’s reliability, subsequently beating his team-mate at the time, the late Sir Stirling Moss to the championship.

When we think of Formula 1’s big name constructors like Ferrari, Lotus or McLaren we think of ‘one man’s vision’ in Enzo Ferrari, Colin Chapman, and Bruce McLaren respectively.

Brabham’s partnership with engineer Ron Tauranac did create a unique dynamic, as Tauranac was a critical element to the success of the Brabham name as a World Championship winning constructor.

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Ron Tauranac (left) with Sir Jack Brabham – Image: F1.com

Another successful partnership that followed was Sir Frank Williams and Sir Patrick Head. Though marginally different in that the Brabham-Tauranac pairing was a driver-engineer, the Williams-Head partnership was a owner-engineer relationship. Yet both did have the symbiotic hallmarks that made for a successful pairing.

Another example would be the pairing of Ron Dennis and John Barnard who brought about McLaren’s dominance of the 1980’s.

Brabham’s legacy built on sheer determination, toughness and grit characterises exactly what ‘Aussie fighting spirit’ in Formula 1 is.

Proudly flying the flag

Typically Australian drivers have been expected to carry the hopes of a nation alone. Brabham’s success paved the way for other Australians to get their start in Formula 1, such as driver and now Motorsport Australia administrator Tim Schenken OAM.

Schenken’s is one of the only five Australian drivers to step onto a podium and the next after Brabham.

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Tim Schenken – Image: Snaplap

Schenken first drove for Brabham in 1969 in the factory Formula 2 car, but after a season stint with Frank Williams Racing Cars (now Sir Frank Williams) in 1970, Schenken returned to Brabham in 1971 posting his career best result, a third at the 1971 Austrian Grand Prix.

Schenken says wearing expectation well gives Australian drivers a certain amount of buy-in from the motorsport world.

Tim Schenken in the 1971 Brabham BT33

“I think we’re all pretty well much the same, people at the top of their sport, they are incredibly dedicated, they’re very focussed on what they are doing, there are the odd ones who are naturally gifted, but they are few and far between,

“Australians are very highly regarded as team members, drivers or whatever they do in motorsport and I’d imagine in other sports,

“There’s certainly a lot less ‘BS’ with Australians and New Zealander’s also are a bit the same,” Schenken says.

Schenken was followed by the likes of Vern Schuppan, Larry Perkins and Alan Jones throughout the 70’s and 80’s in various racing outfits.

Circling back to Schenken’s time with Williams in 1970, it would be the first time Brit Sir Frank Williams in the early guises of his career would sign an Australian driver full-time.

Later, as Team owner of Williams Grand Prix Engineering, Williams went on to sign Australian drivers Alan Jones and Mark Webber.

“I’m not sure they (Williams) are particularly attracted in that regard to Australians, mind you if you had a couple of drivers from different nationalities maybe he’d err on the side of the Australians because he knows there’s a bit of toughness and determination there,” Schenken says.

A.J: The archetype Aussie

Toughness and determination on-track mixed with trademark no ‘BS’ approach is personified by none other than 1980 World Champion Alan Jones or ‘A.J,’ who won Williams his first World Championship.

F1 World Champions

Sir Jackie Stewart (left) with Alan Jones (right) as World champion in Montreal, Canada 1980 – Image: Motorsport Images

Jones viewed any rival car as ‘another object to be passed,’ Jones never won many friends on-track with his aggressive driving style as Jones says in a 2019 interview with journalist Tom Clarkson.

“I think I was pretty aggressive, I think I was very much head down bum up and go for it, I took things personally, like if someone passed me I took it personally,” Jones says.

But Jones’ bond with Sir Frank Williams and engineer Sir Patrick Head off-track was very different, built on mutual goals and hard working ethic — all of whom were racers at heart.

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Sir Frank Williams (left) Alan Jones with Sir Patrick Head (right) – Image: Allinsport

“You get the best out of me without threats or promises,” says Jones, as Williams was a master of channelling Jones’ raw and honest feedback about the car into results.

Jones recounts a conversation about an under-powered engine at Watkins Glen in 1980, where Williams said to Jones: “If I don’t believe you, I’m an idiot, because I’m employing a bloke I don’t believe, and I’m the guy who’s paying you good money to drive the car so if I don’t take notice of you, who’s the fool?” Jones says.

Off-the-back of his success with Williams, Jones created the archetype of what a no ‘BS’ Australian Formula 1 driver typically is.

Continuing the legacy of Aussie grit

If a no ‘BS’ approach forged in competition is the catalyst of the archetypes created by Australian drivers in Formula 1, so just how has their stories rhymed or echoed over 70 years of Formula 1 to create an on going legacy?

When Mark Webber came to Formula 1 scoring an ‘unthinkable’ fifth place in the 2002 Australian Grand Prix with the Australian owned Minardi outfit, many would argue Webber and Jones were cut from the same cloth.

To some point that is true, but Webber was his own man in Formula 1, taking dual Monaco Grand Prix victories (2010, 2012) across his eight career victories. Webber’s first Monaco win in 2010 was the climax to a stunning Formula 1 comeback story.

In his 2010 book ‘Up Front’ Webber says “If breaking my leg in Tasmania was the absolute low point, an accident that left me fighting for my sporting life, then Monaco less than 18 months later was the absolute high — so far,” Webber says.

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Mark Webber’s famous splash into the Monaco Harbour after his 2010 win – Image: Daily Telegraph

Webber wrestled with the label of the ‘number-two’ driver from some during the most defining part of his career at Red Bull.

Yet while Webber is a very personable and liked type in the paddock, he does exude that no ‘BS’ approach of his compatriots, ensuring he was listened to and taken very seriously as a major contributor to Red Bull’s Formula 1 success.

From 2010 to 2014 Webber drove Red Bull to four successive Constructors Championships, just missing the 2010 championship to team-mate Sebastian Vettel.

The next chapter

Australia’s connection to Formula 1 may have begun through cultural ties back to Britain, but ultimately our drivers found their own way to write a unique chapter in Formula 1’s history books.

Australians have managed to arrive in the sport throughout different eras bringing a common no non-sense, no ‘BS’ approach to their racing, yet still be affable key figures that have left a long-lasting and unique impression.

The smiling ‘Honeybadger’ Daniel Ricciardo – Image: Renaultsport

As we look to the future we see similar story beats in Daniel Ricciardo’s career in some of his more serious moments and candid moments having a ‘shoey’, as he continues to fight for his World Championship dream, our story will continue to unfold.

It’s no ’BS’ Australia’s story in Formula 1 is a unique one.

The show goes on for ‘Oval’ Showdown

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Brendan Lines    May 22, 2020

The AFL and the South Australian Government have agreed to exemptions to fly-in umpires and broadcasters, allowing a ‘lock’ for the round 2 Showdown at Adelaide Oval to go ahead.

Port Adelaide captain Tom Jonas and Crows captain Rory Sloane at Adelaide Oval – Image: The Advertiser.

AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan’s ‘How we start is not how we will finish’ statement at last Friday’s 2020 season re-launch was fair warning at the time.

As both Adelaide teams have arrived at a very different place today — as doubts shrouded the possibility of the game going ahead in Adelaide last night.

The AFL will fly a cohort of umpires to Adelaide to serve mandatory 14-days quarantine in South Australia, in order to meet the shortage of only two qualified AFL umpires locally.

Broadcast technicians will be exempt to fly in, being allowed only travel to Adelaide Oval to provide coverage, commentators are not exempt.

Fortunately, broadcasters have kept their South Australian TV crews at the ready through JobKeeper, who are now trained in the appropriate COVID-19 protocols.

Fox Sports earlier in the week indicated its coverage of the NRL’s round 3 re-start will adopt a more Olympic Games style of Player segregation, if all going well that format could be used to televise AFL matches.

This will implement a ‘clean zone’ for players, coaches, and officials on the Field of Play and a dedicated ‘dirty zone’ for other media, with strict health and safety protocols in place for any personnel and equipment entering the ‘clean zone.’

As commentators are not exempt they could potentially call the Showdown from a studio hub across a slot beginning 4pm to 4.30pm, then crossing to an evening game in Melbourne afterwards.

Earlier this week calls came from both clubs to protect the showdown, the ‘lock’ now around the Showdown and new training exemptions offered this week affords some rare certainty for both clubs, as they can now delay their respective moves to a Gold Coast hub.

Port Adelaide chief executive Keith Thomas said on Tuesday the recent exemptions for full-contact training would allow Port Adelaide players to re-start the season on an ‘equal footing’ with competitors.

While Crows coach Matthew Nicks slated that this Sunday would have been the day the Crows would re-locate to the Gold Coast. 

While the green-light looks likely, the final decision now rests with the AFL, who is set to make its announcement on the 2020 fixture on Monday.

‘Pre season 2.0’ underway, Hinkley ‘icy’ towards shared hotel with Crows

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Brendan Lines    May 18th, 2020  

Life after lock-down began today as Port Adelaide players took part in their first non-contact ‘pre-season 2.0’ training sessions at Alberton.

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Keeping their distance: Port Adelaide players training at Alberton – Image: PAFC

Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley spoke just before the conclusion of the midday training group of eight lead by Captain Tom Jonas.

“It’s exciting to have footy back, we know we still got a little way to go, starting the road to getting back to out there and playing, for everyone, for the fans, the community, for us, for the players that are out there now running around it’s just great having it back, and have a bit of light as to where we are going,” he said.

The clubs training regime looks much different than ever before, as groups of eight players are staggered across six training sessions throughout the day beginning as early as 6.30am.

The group lead by Jonas included mid-fielders Tom Rockliff and Xavier Duursma, in what Hinkley describes is a ‘selected’ group.

“Without saying they’re random, they’re just selected based on a mixture of players, different types, positional, age, all the things you would consider, because some of the challenges would be you are trying to protect the whole squad, not just a small squad,” he said.

This will be the order of training for  players under the AFL’s COVID-19 protocols until full-contact training resumes on May 25th.

By then, Port Adelaide will relocate to the Gold Coast hub with Adelaide counterparts the Crows and W.A teams the West Coast Eagles and Fremantle.

Hinkley was ‘icy’ at the prospect of sharing accommodation with rival club Adelaide, after Port Adelaide president David Koch’s ‘We just don’t like you’ comment on breakfast radio in Adelaide.

“We are arch enemies a bit, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to put them together, we have these great matches and these great grudge matches and we’re going to be going into a place and be buddies? I not sure about that it doesn’t quite feel right in Adelaide,” Hinkley said.

Hinkley shutdown questions over wether any request was put to the AFL to remain seperate on his behalf.

“They’re not my issues, my issue is making sure them boys out there are ready to play football and that’s all I care about.

“Wether we live with the Crows or don’t live with the Crows, or Freo [Fremantle] or West Coast, or whoever it might be, we will do whatever we have to do to make sure we win the footy,” he said.

As Alberton re-opened itself to a new-world of ‘over and above’ pandemic testing protocols set out by the AFL, the squad moving to the Gold Coast has completed all it’s isolation and testing.

Except Western Australian players Mitch Georgiades and Jake Pasini who are currently completing their 14-day quarantine periods due to conclude tomorrow.

Brave new world for Crows and Port as AFL resumes June 11

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Brendan Lines    May 15th, 2020

AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan has confirmed the 2020 AFL season will resume on June 11th at a press conference in Melbourne this afternoon, confirming both Adelaide teams will relocate to the Gold Coast.

AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan speaking at Marvel Stadium today – Image: Afl.com

McLachlan mapped out the road back to competition, announcing teams can return to training early as next Monday, with full-contact training starting May 25th for all 18 clubs.

The remaining 144 games and finals of the 2020 fixture are likely to be played in four to six week blocks, ‘roughly’ maintaining the fixtures current form, however McLachlan says ‘How we start is not how we will finish.”

The opportunity to return to play has been afforded to the AFL after consultation with Victorian, New South Wales and Queensland governments.

“Throughout this pandemic we’ve angered over every decision in line with the advice of the respective government and relevant medical authorities, our industry understands the opportunity we have been given,” he said.

The fixture of the remaining games is to be released in the coming days, matches will be scheduled at AFL venues in states allowing full-contact training and matches to take place.

Expectedly, South Australian teams the Adelaide Crows and Port Adelaide will join their Western Australian counterparts the West Coast Eagles and Fremantle Dockers relocating to the Gold Coast to play in one of the designated hubs.

The Crows and Power will have to go through their relocation, quarantining and training concurrently before the May 25th date, as the South Australian government would not allow any travel concession to both teams.

“They will be based on the Gold Coast for an initial period for up to four weeks and the AFL will remain to continue to be responsive with fixturing, so it can be responsive to any changes to restriction in either state,” McLachlan says.

The AFL has committed to funding the visitation of families to players based in the Gold Coast hub, observing relevant government and ‘over and above’ AFL protocols McLachlan says.

“The AFL will implement protocols over an above the government restrictions to protect the health and safety of every member of our industry and the wider community.

“These have been developed with the advice from the federal state and territory governments, along with the relevant chief health officers as well as the AFL’s own medical team and with consultation with players coaches and clubs,” he said.

Measures under this advice McLachlan says will protect players, officials and staff across training, travel and matches, but another set of restrictions will apply when away from club bases.

This will include a risk assessment relating to players living environments and limitations of visitation to their homes from friends an family.

The long arm of restrictions has already begun and will undoubtedly reach every corner of AFL life for the duration of the pandemic, as the AFL has enshrined its COVID-19 protocols into its rules with sanctions and penalties attached.

Right now COVID-19 testing is taking place across all returning personnel to the clubs. Further daily screening of players and bi-weekly COVID-19 testing has also been mandated, which will be conducted 24-hours prior, with the results posted before ‘contact’ sessions and games.

The Grand Final is tipped to be held in late October at the MCG, but if the season does go deeper into the year the AFL is likely to arrange Marvel Stadium as an alternative.

Orange is the new ‘Mc’ for Ricciardo

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Brendan Lines May 14th, 2020

Australian Daniel Ricciardo tonight has signed a multi-year deal to drive for McLaren in 2021, ending his two year tenure as a Renault driver.

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Daniel Ricciardo with new McLaren team-mate Lando Norris – Image: F1.com

Ricciardo now takes over the vacant seat left by Carlos Sainz who has signed with Ferrari also tonight.

With racing on hold, possibly returning in July, Formula 1’s driver market ‘silly season’ is in full swing, triggered by the departure of four-time World Champion Sebastian Vettel from Ferrari on Tuesday.

The 30-year old Aussie steps into what has been a resurgent McLaren outfit, which finished fourth in the 2019 World Constructors Championship ahead of Ricciardo’s former Renault team.

McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown has welcomed Ricciardo to the team in a statement on McLaren’s website.

“Signing Daniel is another step forward in our long-term plan and will bring an exciting new dimension to the team, alongside Lando. This is good news for our team, partners and of course our fans.

“I also want to pay tribute to Carlos for the excellent job he has been doing for McLaren in helping our performance recovery plan. He is a real team player and we wish him well for his future beyond McLaren,” he said.

An established race winner with seven Grand Prix victories, Ricciardo has become a sought after talent according to McLaren Team principal Andreas Siedl.

“Daniel is a proven race-winner and his experience, commitment and energy will be a valuable addition to McLaren and our mission to return to the front of the field. With Daniel and Lando as teammates, I believe we have two racers who will continue to excite our fans and help the team grow,” he said.

Ricciardo is the first Australian F1 driver to take a race seat in McLaren — who next to Ferrari are one of Formula 1’s most successful and historic teams.

Ricciardo will join his team-mate 20-year old Lando Norris, who will be in his third year with the team in 2021, is fresh off a ‘wildcard’ victory in the Supercars eSeries on Wednesday night.

McLaren have been on a long road back from its halcyon championship winning days, which seemingly pushed two-time World Champion Fernando Alonso away from the sport in 2018.

The question remains why would Ricciardo risk it all again? perhaps its been all too long between a ‘shoey’ for the smiling Australian — who put on a brave face amid less than desirable results in 2019 with Renault.

After a near billion-dollar investment into Renault’s factory team, its poor results has lead to much uncertainty around the team’s future, even before the 2020 season was put ‘on ice’ from the COVID-19 pandemic.

However McLaren taking customer engines from reigning World Champions Mercedes next year, ahead of the new regulations delayed for 2022, may have been a big carrot for the Australian to make the move.

In order for Ricciardo to bed himself in a team with a clear long-term commitment to fight for the World Championship and provide the Australian a return to the top step of the podium for another ‘shoey.’

Force power and horsepower: Star Wars and motorsport strong with the force

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Brendan Lines May the 4th be with you, 2020

The world’s of Star Wars and motorsport would not generally parallel each other, but anything is possible in Hollywood and on the day when we are all entertaining our inner Star Wars geek, the link between force power and horsepower might be stronger than we think.

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Star Wars creator George Lucas with (from Left) Red Bull’s Christian Klien, Christian Horner, Ian ‘The Emperor’ McDiarmid, Vitantonio Liuzzi and David Coulthard surrounded by Stormtroopers, Chewbacca, C-3PO, R2-D2 and Darth Vader, Monaco GP 2005 – Image Red Bull.

Star Wars creator George Lucas recounts in his biography George Lucas: A Life by Brian Jay Jones, Lucas had aspirations to be a racing driver. Fuelled by his love for racing and his first car, Lucas ‘hotted up’ a two-cylinder Autobianchi Bianchina.

A close brush with death in a car accident, changed Lucas’ focus to filmmaking (and we’re glad he did), it might just be a case of art imitating life in Lucas’ 1973 coming of age hit American Graffiti, which depicts 1950s hot rod street-racing, akin to the racing Lucas says happened around his US hometown of Modesto, California.

Which does suggest some of the Star Wars/motorsport cross-overs that have happened since might be more than a happy coincidence.

The most well-known Star Wars/motorsport cross-over was in 2005 when Red Bull’s Formula 1 team ran a special Star Wars inspired livery, marking the release of the prequel trilogy’s concluding chapter “Episode III: Revenge Of The Sith.”

Star Wars on the Red Bull Racing F1 cars at Monaco 2005

David Coulthard in the Star Wars liveried RB1 at Monaco 2005 – Image: Red Bull

Red Bull Team principal Christian Horner agreed with creator George Lucas’ Lucasfilm to incorporate the Star Wars theme into the RB1 livery for the 2005 Monaco Grand Prix.

But it would not be in the ‘glitz and glam’ spirit of Monaco if the cross-over stopped there.

Over the Grand Prix weekend much loved characters Chewbacca, Stormtroopers and even the Sith Lord himself Darth Vader could be seen around the pit paddock.

In true imperial style Darth Vader and his Stormtrooper henchmen took over the Red Bull garage and pit crew, even running the RB1 on the power of the dark side.

Putting the Storm Troopers to good use

Stormtroopers take over running Red Bull’s pitstop in Monaco – Image: Red Bull

2005 was Red Bull’s first year in Formula 1 and perhaps a touch of the Force helped the team on its way to taking consecutive Driver and Constructor World Championships in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013.

Strangely enough, we suspect perhaps the McLaren garage was under the influence of the Dark Lord during its Mercedes powered days back in 2004.

Darth Vader and McLaren team members from 2004 – Images: Starwars.com & F1.com

In 2015, the Holden Racing Team (HRT) marked the release of Episode VII: The Force Awakens, producing two liveries inspired by both the light and dark sides of the force respectively for its Bathurst 1000 challengers.

Perhaps it was just the ‘will of the force’ that HRT driver Garth Tander and his co-driver Warren Luff placed their First Order inspired Commodore in third for The Great Race, earning Tander the nickname ‘Darth’ Tander.

HRT’S Light side and Dark side liveries – Image: Supercars & Starwars.com

The synergy between motorsport and Star Wars does reciprocate to the ‘big screen’ as seen, or heard in 1999’s Episode I: The Phantom Menace. A key sequence in the film is a young Anakin Skywalker channeling his burgeoning force powers in Podracing.

It makes perfect sense that Star Wars sound-designer Ben Burtt sampled real world engine sounds for the Podracers.

J.W Rinzler’s 2010 book ‘The Sounds Of Star Wars documents Burtt’s team creating individual tailored sounds for each Podracer to make them stand out. Sounds from Porches and Mustangs were sampled and manipulated with various pitch-shifting and doppler effect added.

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Anakin Skywalker’s Podracer takes on rival Sebulba in ‘Episode I: The Phantom Menace’ – Image Starwars.com

Watching Anakin’s Podracer whizz across the desert through Beggars Canyon to win the Boonta Eve Classic, is very reminiscent of races on Earth like the Dakar Rally or The Fink Desert Race — and is that a Formula 1 car we can hear?

The parallels between motorsport and a galaxy ‘far far away’ might be closer than we think, between technology, racing and the power to sell merchandise.

It may just be a while until we see a hyper-drive powered F1 car blasting into lightspeed, so for now the Millennium Falcon will remain the fastest hunk of junk in the galaxy.

‘Simply The Best’: Senna’s Adelaide legacy lives on

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Brendan Lines May 1st, 2020

Ayrton Senna’s Formula 1 career spanned just 10 years, in that time Senna left an indelible mark not just on Formula 1, but his star shone so brightly across Adelaide’s Grand Prix years from 1985 to 1995, he became part of our sporting history.

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Ayrton Senna takes to the podium in Adelaide 1993 – Image: Motorsport.com

Today marks 26 years since the passing of the Three-time Formula 1 World Champion, who’s legendary life and career was cut-short after an accident at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix which tragically took his life.

Amid the accolades, what makes Senna’s legacy so unique is that it’s not for us left behind to try and match his talent, it’s an aspiration to be who we are no matter the odds to whole heartedly believe and challenge yourself to be the best you can be.

As Senna shone in Adelaide in his pursuit to be the best, he left us with many reasons why we can look back with fondness over his racing legacy in Adelaide.

First driver to score pole position on the streets of Adelaide

In just his second year of Formula 1, the 25-year old Brazilian came to Adelaide for the first time to race at our inaugural Grand Prix in 1985.

In all of Senna’s career he could always produce one blinding lap that would silence the competition in qualifying. On a dusty and new Adelaide street circuit, Senna pushed his Lotus to the point of driving ‘untidy’ in the practice sessions.

But come Saturday’s qualifying session, Senna had it all in front of him, with Williams’ Nigel Mansell just under half-a-second faster — Senna produced another signature spectacular lap to take the first ever Formula 1 pole position in Adelaide.

The elusive Adelaide victory finally comes

Despite his 41 wins and 65 pole positions, victory in Adelaide eluded Senna for most of his career. From nine starts in Adelaide Senna won twice (1991, 1993), placed second (1988), retired five times (1985, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1992) and was disqualified once (1987).

Senna was leading a soddenly wet 1989 Adelaide Grand Prix, when blinded by spray at high speed he collided with Martin Brundle’s Brabham, creating one of the most spectacular pieces of footage in the early days of TV’s on-board cameras.

In 1991 Senna finally won, being one of the best wet weather drivers Formula 1 has ever seen, it was only fitting Senna won in a monsoonal downpour that saw the race officials declare Senna the winner after just 14 laps. The 1991 Adelaide race remains the shortest Grand Prix ever held in Formula 1 history.

‘An end of an era’ victory in 1993

As quickly as South Australian’s took Senna to heart, he was taken away shortly after his victory at the 1993 Adelaide Grand Prix. At the time it was a remarkable win, just on the merit Senna was driving a rather inferior McLaren-Ford. He took pole position and won the last race he would compete in the team that made him a World Champion.

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Ayrton Senna’s victory lap after the 1993 Adelaide Grand Prix – Image: Adelaide GP

But in retrospect that victory will be remembered for more sombre and heart felt reasons. As it would be Senna’s final victory before his untimely death. Senna himself called the 1993 victory ‘an end of an era’ as it also saw the retirement of arch-rival and past-McLaren team-mate Alain Prost, who finished second to Senna in the race.

Senna invited Prost to take the top step of the podium with him, in a kind gesture that seemingly put to rest their heated and bitter rivalry.

Adelaïde 1993 : Senna-Prost la réconciliation - Warm-Up F1

Alain Prost (Left) and Ayrton Senna share the podium at Adelaide 1993 – Getty Images

Adelaide’s adopted hero

In the days following the retirement of World Champion Alan Jones and before Mark Webber and Daniel Ricciardo gave Australians born and bred stars to cheer for — Adelaide adopted Senna as our hometown hero.

Senna looked ‘at home,’ as his intense personality and ferocity on-track became relaxed when he landed in Adelaide. It may have been because Adelaide held the final race of the year in what many remember was a ‘party atmosphere.’

Senna could be seen enjoying the city’s hospitality and being part of many off-track moments across the Grand Prix weekend that saw his unique charisma come to the fore, even despite his then feud with Jordan driver Eddie Irvine in 1993.

In his openness to the media, he candidly spoke with raw honesty in interviews, which perhaps hit a chord with Adelaide fans. It was just before Adelaide held the 500th World Championship race in 1990, that Senna gave the famous ‘Designed To Win’ interview and famous quote to three-time world champion Jackie Stewart, after Senna and Prost’s collision that decided the 1990 World Championship.

“If you no longer go for a gap that exists, you are no longer a racing driver.” – Ayrton Senna, 1990

But Senna truly won over Adelaide fans after his 1993 victory in Adelaide, when he joined American singer Tina Turner onstage at her after-race concert just before the rendition of her hit ‘Simply The Best.’

It was not just speed and single-mindedness he was known for, Senna a devout Christian, by contrast he was known for amazing feats of kindness and compassion. His Instutio Ayrton Senna founded and run by his family, continues to provide the development of children’s education.

His memory here in Adelaide is woven deeply into our sporting consciousness, it’s hard to not think about the Adelaide Grand Prix years, for those who lived through them, without a fondness for Senna.

Even today’s generation is reminded of his impact now as the Supercars race through the Senna Chicane just off Wakefield Street, which is marked by Senna’s memorial plaque.

From rough diamond to master: Ayrton Senna through the years at ...
Ayrton Senna’s memorial next to the Senna Chicane – Image: Advertiser
He was beloved the world over, in his home country over one million Brazilians attended his state funeral. It is not often that a person comes along who can be so mutually respected the world over for who they are, because they carry a humanity we can all see and admire — the world was at a loss when Ayrton Senna passed and still is today.

RIP Ayrton Senna da Silva.