Table of Contents

Report
Background
Race
Classification
Qualifying
Race
Championship standings after the race
References
External links

1993 European Grand Prix

TypeF1
CountryUnited Kingdom
Grand PrixEuropean
Official NameSega European Grand Prix
Image
Date11 April
Year1993
Race No3
Season No16
LocationDonington Park, Leicestershire, United Kingdom
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course Mi2.500
Course Km4.023
Distance Laps76
Distance Mi189.983
Distance Km305.748
WeatherVery cold, rain with dry spells
Pole DriverAlain Prost
Pole TeamWilliams-Renault
Pole Time1:10.458
Pole CountryFrance
Fast DriverAyrton Senna
Fast TeamMcLaren-Ford
Fast Time1:18.029 (lap record)
Fast Lap57
Fast CountryBrazil
First DriverAyrton Senna
First TeamMcLaren-Ford
First CountryBrazil
Second DriverDamon Hill
Second TeamWilliams-Renault
Second CountryUnited Kingdom
Third DriverAlain Prost
Third TeamWilliams-Renault
Third CountryFrance

The 1993 European Grand Prix (formally the Sega European Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 11 April 1993 at Donington Park, Leicestershire. It was the third race of the 1993 FIA Formula One World Championship. The race was contested over 76 laps and was won by Ayrton Senna for the McLaren team, ahead of second-placed Damon Hill and third-placed Alain Prost, both driving for the Williams team.

Senna's drive to victory is regarded as one of his finest, and his first lap exploits are particularly lauded, in which he passed four drivers – Michael Schumacher, Karl Wendlinger, Damon Hill and Alain Prost – to take the lead in a single lap in damp conditions. The race was the first held under the European Grand Prix title since 1985, and to date is the only Formula One Grand Prix to have been held at the Donington Park circuit.

Report

Background

After plans to hold an Asian Grand Prix at the Nippon Autopolis in Japan failed to materialise, the first European Grand Prix for eight years was run as the third race of the 1993 season. Donington Park was awarded the race, having unsuccessfully bid to host the British Grand Prix. Video game company Sega sponsored the race and the logo could be seen throughout the Grand Prix and on the podium. Sega also had naming rights to the Grand Prix.

Ivan Capelli had agreed to part ways with the Jordan team after failing to qualify at the previous round in Brazil. He was replaced by veteran Belgian driver Thierry Boutsen.

Race

Ayrton Senna won the race for McLaren.

The Williams cars were 1–2 in qualifying with Prost on pole ahead of Hill, Schumacher, Senna, Wendlinger and Michael Andretti. At the start, it was damp and Schumacher blocked Senna and both lost time and Wendlinger took third. Having dropped to fifth, Senna quickly passed Schumacher at the third corner. He then went after Wendlinger, passing him through the Craner Curves with Schumacher and Andretti trying to follow through. Schumacher went through but Andretti hit Wendlinger and both were out, meaning Andretti was still yet to complete a racing lap in his Formula One career. Senna went after Hill now and took second at McLean's Corner. Now Prost was the target and the lead was taken at the penultimate corner – the Melbourne Hairpin. Going into the second lap, Senna led Prost, Hill, Rubens Barrichello (who had started 12th), Jean Alesi, Schumacher and JJ Lehto.

The track began to dry and everyone pitted for dry tyres. Lehto was fifth, having started from the pit lane, but he retired with handling problems on lap 14. Gerhard Berger took the place but he too retired with suspension problems six laps later. The rain returned and the leaders now pitted for wets. Mark Blundell was forced off by Senna whilst battling Fittipaldi at the Esses and then spun off backwards into the gravel trap whilst attempting to rejoin the track. Schumacher stayed out and was leading but spun out on lap 23 as a result of being on the wrong tyres. The track began to dry and everyone pitted once again with Senna having a problem and losing 20 seconds. Prost now led Senna, Hill, Barrichello, Derek Warwick and Johnny Herbert.

It began to rain and the two Williams stopped for wets while Senna stayed out. It was the correct decision because it began to dry again. The Williams stopped yet again for dries. Prost stalled in the pits in his stop and when he rejoined, he was a lap behind and down in fourth. Barrichello was now second but it rained and then stopped again. He went to the pits twice and by now Hill was in second, albeit a lap down. Barrichello, third, had trouble with his fuel pressure and retired, giving the place to Prost. Senna set the fastest lap on lap 57, on a lap when he drove into the pit lane but aborted the pit stop, showing that there actually was a shortcut through the pit lane. This is due to the Grand Prix configuration of Donington, which has the pit entry before the final hairpin corner onto the start/finish straight.

Senna won from Hill and Prost, having made four pit stops in the wet-dry conditions compared to Prost's seven. Williams technical director Patrick Head explained: "Our active car maintained very low ride heights, just a few millimetres above the ground, and gained aerodynamic performance by this, but when the water was deeper than the ride height of the car, our drivers were 'surfing'". Herbert finished fourth for Lotus, stopping only once, while all the other finishing drivers making several pit stops. Riccardo Patrese and Fabrizio Barbazza completed the top six. By the end, Senna had lapped the entire field except for Hill, who finished over a minute behind.

The Sonic the Hedgehog trophy

At the end of the race, Senna was led onto a podium and given a trophy that depicted Sega's mascot, Sonic the Hedgehog, holding a trophy with the Sega logo underneath. A widely circulated image shows Senna holding the trophy. After this marketing photo op, he was given the official award, a trophy that does not depict either Sonic the Hedgehog or the Sega logo. McLaren is still in possession of the Sega trophy; for a long time, it was thought to have been lost until McLaren's official Twitter account revealed it is in one of their storerooms. On 12 June 2020, McLaren put the trophy in a trophy case in McLaren Technology Centre.

Classification

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap
Sources:
12 Alain ProstWilliams-Renault1:24.4671:10.458
20 Damon HillWilliams-Renault1:24.0141:10.762+0.304
35 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford1:26.2641:12.008+1.550
48 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Ford1:23.9761:12.107+1.649
529 Karl WendlingerSauber1:26.8051:12.738+2.280
67 Michael AndrettiMcLaren-Ford1:26.8591:12.739+2.281
730 JJ LehtoSauber1:25.4691:12.763+2.305
828 Gerhard BergerFerrari1:25.9711:12.862+2.404
927 Jean AlesiFerrari1:25.6991:12.980+2.522
106 Riccardo PatreseBenetton-Ford1:27.2731:12.982+2.524
1112 Johnny HerbertLotus-Ford1:27.1731:13.328+2.870
1214 Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Hart1:26.5571:13.514+3.056
1311 Alessandro ZanardiLotus-Ford1:28.7821:13.560+3.102
149 Derek WarwickFootwork-Mugen-Honda1:28.0961:13.664+3.206
1519 Philippe AlliotLarrousse-Lamborghini1:28.6481:13.665+3.207
1623 Christian FittipaldiMinardi-Ford1:28.0651:13.666+3.208
1720 Érik ComasLarrousse-Lamborghini1:29.3101:13.970+3.512
183 Ukyo KatayamaTyrrell-Yamaha1:29.8511:14.121+3.663
1915 Thierry BoutsenJordan-Hart1:28.7011:14.246+3.788
2024 Fabrizio BarbazzaMinardi-Ford1:27.2751:14.274+3.816
2126 Mark BlundellLigier-Renault1:27.3021:14.301+3.843
2225 Martin BrundleLigier-Renault1:26.7881:14.306+3.848
2310 Aguri SuzukiFootwork-Mugen-Honda1:30.1071:14.927+4.469
2421 Michele AlboretoLola-Ferrari1:30.0491:15.322+4.864
254 Andrea de CesarisTyrrell-Yamaha1:29.1771:15.417+4.959
DNQ22 Luca BadoerLola-Ferrari1:31.1781:15.641+5.183

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
Source:
18 Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Ford761:50:46.570410
20 Damon HillWilliams-Renault76+ 1:23.19926
32 Alain ProstWilliams-Renault75+ 1 lap14
412 Johnny HerbertLotus-Ford75+ 1 lap113
56 Riccardo PatreseBenetton-Ford74+ 2 laps102
624 Fabrizio BarbazzaMinardi-Ford74+ 2 laps201
723 Christian FittipaldiMinardi-Ford73+ 3 laps16 
811 Alessandro ZanardiLotus-Ford72+ 4 laps13 
920 Érik ComasLarrousse-Lamborghini72+ 4 laps17 
1014 Rubens BarrichelloJordan-Hart70Fuel pressure12 
1121 Michele AlboretoLola-Ferrari70+ 6 laps24 
Ret9 Derek WarwickFootwork-Mugen-Honda66Gearbox14 
Ret15 Thierry BoutsenJordan-Hart61Throttle19 
Ret4 Andrea de CesarisTyrrell-Yamaha55Gearbox25 
Ret27 Jean AlesiFerrari36Gearbox9 
Ret10 Aguri SuzukiFootwork-Mugen-Honda29Gearbox23 
Ret19 Philippe AlliotLarrousse-Lamborghini27Collision15 
Ret5 Michael SchumacherBenetton-Ford22Spun off3 
Ret26 Mark BlundellLigier-Renault20Spun off21 
Ret28 Gerhard BergerFerrari19Suspension8 
Ret30 JJ LehtoSauber13Handling7 
Ret3 Ukyo KatayamaTyrrell-Yamaha11Clutch18 
Ret25 Martin BrundleLigier-Renault7Spun off22 
Ret29 Karl WendlingerSauber0Collision5 
Ret7 Michael AndrettiMcLaren-Ford0Collision6 

Championship standings after the race

PosDriverPoints
Source:
10px
1 Ayrton Senna26
10px
2 Alain Prost14
10px
3 Damon Hill12
10px
4 Mark Blundell6
10px
1
5 Johnny Herbert6

PosConstructorPoints
Source:
10px
1
1 McLaren-Ford26
10px
1
2 Williams-Renault26
10px
2
3 Lotus-Ford7
10px
4 Benetton-Ford6
10px
2
5 Ligier-Renault6


References



External links


European Grand Prix
European Grand Prix
Category:European Grand Prix
Category:Sega
European Grand Prix
Category:Auto races in the United Kingdom