Saturday, May 02, 2020

Senna


I am starting a 3-part series dedicated to my favourite sport stars. Starting off with a South American Superstar!

There was boy born with a silver spoon during the 60s, started to drive the jeep in his father’s farm at a very young age, entered his first kart competition by 13 that too on pole position! He did not finish the race as he collided with a fellow driver. He was very devout Christian, loved live to the fullest, never gave an inch, stood up to powerful people when he was wronged, never shy of a fight but always there to help a human being.

I am talking about the Brazilian F1 legend Ayrton Senna da Silva or more popularly known as Senna. My fascination towards him started exactly 26 years ago. The first time ever I heard of his name was when I was leaving to either Tirupur or Coimbatore from Trichy. Early in the morning, with my dad, we boarded a bus and I bought a newspaper to read during the journey. What caught my eye was an article about a formula 1 driver who had lost his life! My love for Ayrton Senna started with the news of his death. This was also incidentally my first brush with F1 and I started following it only a few years later. I hope to pay him a small tribute on his death anniversary.

It is my humble opinion that there was never a racing driver who made you believe that he can win if he was given a steering wheel and four wheels! His mere presence was enough to rattle his opponents. He is a three-time F1 championship winner, held record for most pole starts for a very long time before Schumacher with his blazing Ferrari overtook him in the mid-2000s. The one record he will be proud of and the envy of every other F1 driver is the most wins at the Monaco Grand Prix (GP). It is standing till date. The increase in the number of races in a season, the total change in technology, design of the cars somehow in my opinion is making the races more about the cars and less about its drivers. Nowadays we do not get the raw talent of the driver displayed in F1. Senna was the last of the classical drivers relying more on themselves and less on their machine. Seems enticing? I will leave you with a few nuggets of his racing life.

In his debut year,1984, Senna got his first podium finish in his F1 career at the Monaco GP chasing Alain Prost (his arch rival) in rain! This is as romantic as it can get for any Senna Fan. Senna ruled the Monaco GP, was the rain master and always showed he owned the car and not the other way! In this race he started 13th and was catching up Alain Prost at more than 4 seconds per lap when at the 31st lap the race was unfairly stopped. If it had continued for a few laps Senna’s first podium finish may have been a win!

Two other races that I can recall for their sheer drama are the 1986 Spanish GP where Nigel Mansell pitted about 10 laps to go and nearly made up the lost time by driving couple of seconds faster than the race leader Senna. But this was a testament to Senna’s raw driving skills. It may be easy to catch up with him by throwing a superior strategy/vehicle/ fresh tyres/ kitchen sink at him but overtaking him is totally different deal. Senna won the race by 0.014s !

The other race is the 1991 Brazilian GP. This was his first and only home win and to add to that he won the race with a gear box problem. He drove his car without the 3rd, 4th and the 5th gears. This is why I repeated say Senna was more than just the car he was driving. Look at the pain in his face as he tries to lift his winner’s trophy. He was exhausted, had cramps and had to be driven to the podium in a medical car.

In 1994 Senna switched to Williams and wanted to regain his world title. During the qualifiers at San Marino Roland Ratzenberger lost his life and Rubens Barrichello was very seriously injured. He went to the hospital to meet Rubens, talked with his arch rival Prost to set up a drivers’ association with a focus on drivers’ safety. Finally, when Senna’s body was removed from his car, he had two flags which he wanted to wave when he won, one was Brazilian and the other was an Austrian flag in Roland’s honour. Such was his love for the sport and confidence in himself. That was the last death on the F1 racing track and it set off a very serious rework to increase driver safety. The worst accident in the recent years I remember is of another Brazilian Filipe Massa. But I believe Senna gave his life to make sure no one else suffers his fate.

There is an amazing movie about him with haunting music on him titled Senna. Even if you are hardened Schumi fan like one of my friends’ you will still love it and admire Senna ! enjoy the trailer and is also available on Netflix.


Genius – Maverick – Superstar – Legend – Senna !! Beautifully described.

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