Ayrton Senna: Brazil Mourns F1 'Superhero' 25 Years After His Death
30th April 2019
Apart from his exceptional driving skills, his attention to other elements of the sport, such as physical and mental preparation, as well as understanding the vehicle and the technology that powered it, set him apart from other drivers
- A master on the Formula One racing track, triple world champion Ayrton Senna was the pride of Brazil. Twenty-five years after his tragic death in the San Marino Grand Prix, he remains one of the country´s biggest sporting legends
- The anniversary of Senna's death on Wednesday -- dubbed "Senna Day" -- will revive the sense of loss and bewilderment that followed the shocking crash on the Imola circuit in Italy on May 1, 1994, that took the 34-year-old's life
- A survey in 2014 showed 47 percent of people in Senna's home city of Sao Paulo ranked him as the biggest sporting name in the country. Football great Pele was a distant second
SAO PAULO, Brazil-
A master on the Formula One racing track, triple world champion Ayrton Senna
was the pride of Brazil. Twenty-five years after his tragic death in the San
Marino Grand Prix, he remains one of the country´s biggest sporting legends.
The anniversary of Senna's death on Wednesday -- dubbed
"Senna Day" -- will revive the sense of loss and bewilderment that
followed the shocking crash on the Imola circuit in Italy on May 1, 1994, that
took the 34-year-old's life.
It will also serve as a bitter reminder that since Senna's
last title in 1991, there has never been a Brazilian world champion.
"There were some successes after Ayrton Senna ... but
the lack of an internal structure in Brazilian motorsport did not allow its
development," said Alexander Grunwald, a Brazilian motorsports
journalist.
Senna's death sparked an outpouring of grief around the
world.
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But his loss was felt acutely in Brazil where the sight of
Senna, easily identifiable by his distinctive yellow crash helmet, taking the
chequered flag, had been a rare source of joy for ordinary people struggling to
make ends meet.
"In the 1980s we were living with hyperinflation, the
end of the military dictatorship -- it didn't make sense to be proud of
Brazil," explained Grunwald.
"But Senna was carrying the Brazilian flag around the
world like a symbol that made so many Brazilians proud."
Senna's legacy was to "transform" F1 racing, said
Grunwald.
Apart from his exceptional driving skills, his attention to
other elements of the sport, such as physical and mental preparation, as well
as understanding the vehicle and the technology that powered it, set him apart
from other drivers.
Such was his popularity among Brazilians that 25 years after
his death Senna's image continues to be used in advertising and social
campaigns.
A survey in 2014 showed 47 percent of people in Senna's home
city of Sao Paulo ranked him as the biggest sporting name in the country.
Football great Pele was a distant second.
Pele, a three-time World Cup winner, played at "a time
when people listened to football on the radio or read it in the newspaper -- it
wasn't the same intensity or emotion," explained Grunwald.
"With Senna, it was Sundays with the family" in
front of the television.
Cultural and sporting events are planned for "Senna
Day" at Sao Paulo's Interlagos track.
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- Rivalry -
Charismatic and controversial, Senna was crowned the F1
world champion in 1988, 1990 and 1991 when he drove for McLaren.
He had already switched to the Williams team when he was
killed.
It was at McLaren that Senna's notorious rivalry with French
driver Alain Prost began -- a relationship that has been scrutinized over and
over by F1 observers for years.
"It's obvious that everything was not perfect ... there
was rivalry on the track," said Brazilian F1 journalist Fred Sabino.
However, "the positive aspects outweighed the
negative," he added.
After years of public bickering the two drivers appeared to
resolve their differences before Senna´s death.
Prost helped carry the coffin of his deceased team-mate.
"Determination" and "dedication" are the
words often used to explain Senna's success on the track.
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They are also the values extolled by the Ayrton Senna
Institute, which his sister Viviane founded in 1994 to offer opportunities for
disadvantaged children.
Books and documentaries about Senna's life show a man
focused on his career almost to a mystical level.
In several interviews, Senna discussed his deep Catholic
faith and praised the virtues of mental discipline -- so strict that it
sometimes allowed him, he claimed, to enter another dimension while
driving.
Off the track, Senna's two great loves were Brazilian TV
star Xuxa and the model Adriane Galisteu, with whom he shared his last months.
- 'Superhero' -
Before Senna, two-time world champion Emerson Fittipaldi
(1972 and 1974) and three-time world champion Nelson Piquet (1981, 1983 and
1987) put Brazil on the F1 map.
In the past 25 years, Rubens Barrichello and Felipe Massa --
eleven podiums each but without a world title -- were the best Brazilian F1
drivers.
This year, there is not a single Brazilian on the grid.
"Senna was the third driver in a line of champions ...
but in motorsport there is that cyclical thing," said Sabino.
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"The names that came later ended up suffering a bit
with the complaints of fanatics used to victories."
Senna, he said, embodied the "Brazil that worked, the
great idol, a superhero."
"He ended up dying on the track, which also helped in
the consolidation of the myth."