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1989 German Grand Prix

The 1989 German Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at the Hockenheimring on 30 July 1989. The race was won by Ayrton Senna, ahead of Alain Prost and Nigel Mansell.


1989 German Grand Prix
Race 9 of 16 in the 1989 Formula One World Championship
30 July 1989
LI Grosser Mobil 1 Preis von Deutschland
Hockenheimringnear Heidelberg, West Germany
Permanent racing facility
6.802 km (4.227 miles)
45 laps, 305.865 km (190.055 miles)
Warm, cloudy
.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul{line-height:inherit;list-style:none;margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol li,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul li{margin-bottom:0} Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda
1:42.300
Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda
1:45.884 on lap 43
Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda
Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda
Nigel MansellFerrari
Lap leaders

The 1989 German Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at the Hockenheimring on 30 July 1989. The race was won by Ayrton Senna, ahead of Alain Prost and Nigel Mansell.

Prior to the race meeting there had been a major shakeup of management at Team Lotus. Long time Lotus man and team boss since Colin Chapman's untimely death in 1982 Peter Warr had been asked to leave the team and was replaced as team manager by Rupert Manwaring, while Lotus also had a new chairman in Tony Rudd.

Pre-qualifying had been reorganised going into the second half of the season, with several drivers and teams either losing or gaining the right to progress without the need to pre-qualify. Brabham, Dallara and Rial had scored enough points across the opening rounds of the season to enable them to escape the Friday morning sessions entirely. Larrousse, with their Lamborghini V12-engined Lolas had scored no points thus far, so were required to pre-qualify for Grands Prix. Philippe Alliot was now partnered by Michele Alboreto who had left Tyrrell after a sponsorship dispute, replacing Éric Bernard, who had stood in at Larrousse for two races.

Also new to pre-qualifying was Roberto Moreno, joining his Coloni team-mate Pierre-Henri Raphanel; and Gabriele Tarquini, joining his AGS team-mate Yannick Dalmas in the Friday morning sessions. This was despite Tarquini's sixth-place finish at the Mexican Grand Prix, as Minardi had scored three points at Silverstone. Onyx had also only scored two points so were forced to continue to pre-qualify. Osella, EuroBrun and Zakspeed had scored no points thus far, so also had to continue to pre-qualify.

Bertrand Gachot topped the pre-qualifying session for the third time in a row, with his Onyx team-mate Stefan Johansson second. The two Larrousse-Lola drivers were third and fourth, with Alboreto edging out Dalmas in the AGS by a thousandth of a second. Nicola Larini was sixth in his Osella, with his team-mate Piercarlo Ghinzani again failing at this stage, down in eighth. Moreno and Raphanel were ninth and tenth, with Gregor Foitek eleventh in the new, untested EuroBrun ER189. The Zakspeeds were bottom of the time sheets, with Aguri Suzuki outpacing Bernd Schneider for only the second time this season.

PosNoDriverConstructorTimeGap
37Bertrand GachotOnyx-Ford1:47.283
36Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford1:47.700+0.417
30Philippe AlliotLola-Lamborghini1:47.746+0.463
29Michele AlboretoLola-Lamborghini1:47.919+0.636
41Yannick DalmasAGS-Ford1:47.920+0.637
17Nicola LariniOsella-Ford1.48.301+1.018
40Gabriele TarquiniAGS-Ford1:48.558+1.275
18Piercarlo GhinzaniOsella-Ford1:48.564+1.281
31Roberto MorenoColoni-Ford1:48.567+1.284
32Pierre-Henri RaphanelColoni-Ford1:48.780+1.457
33Gregor FoitekEuroBrun-Judd1:49.458+2.175
35Aguri SuzukiZakspeed-Yamaha1:49.527+2.244
34Bernd SchneiderZakspeed-Yamaha1:50.455+3.172
  • Driver failed to pre-qualify.

The McLaren-Honda's of Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost dominated qualifying on the ultra fast Hockenheim circuit, with Senna just under a second faster than Prost, who was himself almost eight-tenths faster than the Ferrari 640 of Nigel Mansell.

During the Friday session Senna ran over a stone which put a sizeable hole in his car's undertray and the resulting damage would require a complete change of car, the problem being that the team only had three of the new transverse gearbox cars in Germany. As a precaution, team manager Jo Ramírez instructed the team's secondary (test) crew, who were on their way to Imola for a week of testing with the new car, to stop in Dijon (eastern France) in case the race team needed a replacement chassis. When Senna's car was deemed too badly damaged, the test crew made their way to Hockenheim and McLaren were back to having three full cars ready for use by Saturday's morning practice.

PosNoDriverConstructorQ1Q2Gap
1Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda1:42.3001:42.790
2Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda1:43.3061:43.295+0.995
27Nigel MansellFerrari1:44.0201:44.076+1.720
28Gerhard BergerFerrari1:44.4671:44.509+2.167
6Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault1:45.0621:44.511+2.211
5Thierry BoutsenWilliams-Renault1:45.5201:44.702+2.402
19Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford1:45.0331:45.040+2.733
11Nelson PiquetLotus-Judd1:47.3161:45.475+3.175
20Emanuele PirroBenetton-Ford1:46.5211:45.845+3.545
4Jean AlesiTyrrell-Ford1:47.5511:46.888+4.588
26Olivier GrouillardLigier-Ford1:47.4081:46.893+4.593
7Martin BrundleBrabham-Judd1:47.2161:47.796+4.916
23Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford1:48.2221:47.380+5.080
15Maurício GugelminMarch-Judd1:47.3871:47.578+5.087
30Philippe AlliotLola-Lamborghini1:47.4861:47.566+5.186
8Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd1:47.5111:47.552+5.211
9Derek WarwickArrows-Ford1:47.7561:47.533+5.233
12Satoru NakajimaLotus-Judd1:48.7821:47.663+5.363
3Jonathan PalmerTyrrell-Ford1:47.8361:47.676+5.376
21Alex CaffiDallara-Ford1:48.6711:47.679+5.379
22Andrea de CesarisDallara-Ford1:47.8791:48.005+5.579
16Ivan CapelliMarch-Judd1:48.2391:48.078+5.778
25René ArnouxLigier-Ford1:48.2661:48.598+5.966
36Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford1:49.9351:48.348+6.048
10Eddie CheeverArrows-Ford1:48.3961:48.553+6.096
29Michele AlboretoLola-Lamborghini1:48.6701:48.726+6.370
24Luis Pérez-SalaMinardi-Ford1:49.5871:48.686+6.386
37Bertrand GachotOnyx-Ford1:49.2521:49.004+6.704
38Christian DannerRial-Ford1:50.6791:49.767+7.467
39Volker WeidlerRial-Ford
  • Driver failed to qualify.

The race started with Senna on pole position and Prost alongside him. At the start, Gerhard Berger in the semi-automatic Ferrari made a strong start from fourth, passing both Senna, Prost and his teammate Mansell to lead tinto the first corner with Senna, Prost and Mansell following in succession. At the start, Philippe Alliot went off the track after he was touched from behind by the Minardi of Pierluigi Martini and lost control of his Lola, spinning off into the grass. He was able to rejoin but his race only lasted 20 laps before his Lamborghini developed an oil leak. His new teammate Michele Alboreto was forced out of his first race with Larrousse just past turn 1 on the second lap after his car's electrics failed. Alboreto had qualified 26th and last, only 0.016 ahead of the Minardi of Luis Pérez-Sala.

Berger's lead was to last about a quarter of a lap as a result of the greater power of the Honda V10 engines. Senna had Berger before the first chicane, and Prost outbraked him at the Ostkurve. At the start of the second lap, it was Senna leading from Prost, Berger, Mansell, Thierry Boutsen (Williams-Renault), Alessandro Nannini (Benetton Ford), Emanuele Pirro (Benetton-Ford), Riccardo Patrese (Williams-Renault), and Nelson Piquet (Lotus-Judd).

The McLarens of Senna and Prost and the Ferraris of Mansell and Berger started to pull away from the field, with the Benettons of Pirro and Nannini, and the Williams of Patrese just barely clinging on (Boutsen retired on lap 5 after being punted off by Pirro at the Bremsschikane 2). On lap 14, Mansell had been hounding Berger for 2 laps, Berger had a puncture right when approaching the first chicane, and he went up on the marker, launching his Ferrari in midair, landing on a grassy patch and went across the track, just barely avoiding Mansell and came to rest on the trackside grass.

Prost and Senna were on the limit the entire race and Prost hounded Senna for 16 laps, until he went in for his pit stop for tyres, which was a slow one of 18 seconds (a good pit time during that era was around 6 to 8 seconds) which put Mansell in second place and gave Senna a stronger lead. The next lap, Mansell came into the pits for his tyre change and his pit stop was faster than Prost's but still a poor stop of 11 seconds, which dropped him down back to fourth behind, Senna, Pirro and Prost. Senna decided to take advantage of his lead and came into the pits for his tyre change, his stop was even worse than Prost's, lasting 23 seconds. All 4 wheels were replaced in good time, but team boss Ron Dennis was forced to hold his driver when the left rear wheel changer didn't think he had located the wheel properly and they had to take it back off to get it set right. This dropped the World Champion down to second behind Prost while Pirro, now also in the new Benetton and the only team car left in the race after Nannini's new Ford V8 had succumbed to an electrical misfire on lap 7, had come into the pits for a tyre change and dropped back to fourth behind Mansell.

Pirro crashed into the styrofoam barriers at the stadium entrance on lap 26 and had to be taken to the hospital after one of the barriers had hit his helmet. With Mansell having problems with his Ferrari, Senna and Prost battled for the entire race, as both drivers were driving on the limit. They started trading off fastest laps (the V10 McLaren-Honda's fastest race laps were 1:45.884 (Senna) and 1:45.977 (Prost). The next best race laps were the V12 Ferrari's with Mansell recording a 1:48.722 and Berger a 1:48.931. No other driver in the race lapped under 1:49) and Prost held off Senna for almost the entire race. On lap 43 on the straight heading into the Stadium section, the new transverse gearbox on Prost's McLaren malfunctioned and lost sixth (top) gear allowing Senna, in the process of setting his fastest race lap, to pass him at turn 11. Prost limped around the track for the next 2 laps well over a minute ahead of Mansell and thus in little danger of dropping back any further while Senna cruised around the track to grab his fourth victory of the season, followed by Prost, Mansell, Patrese, Piquet and Derek Warwick (Arrows-Ford) in sixth.

In the post race press conference, Senna refused to speculate on whether he would have been able to pass Prost if he hadn't lost top gear, instead stating that after suffering four straight DNFs (that had handed his team mate a healthy 20 point championship lead as Prost had won 3 of those races), winning was all he was concerned about. For his part, Prost was of the firm belief that he would have had no trouble holding on for the win had he not had a gearbox problem.

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
1Ayrton SennaMcLaren-Honda451:21:43.30219
2Alain ProstMcLaren-Honda45+ 18.15126
27Nigel MansellFerrari45+ 1:23.25434
6Riccardo PatreseWilliams-Renault44+ 1 Lap53
11Nelson PiquetLotus-Judd44+ 1 Lap82
9Derek WarwickArrows-Ford44+ 1 Lap171
22Andrea de CesarisDallara-Ford44+ 1 Lap21
7Martin BrundleBrabham-Judd44+ 1 Lap12
23Pierluigi MartiniMinardi-Ford44+ 1 Lap13
4Jean AlesiTyrrell-Ford43+ 2 Laps10
25René ArnouxLigier-Ford42+ 3 Laps23
10Eddie CheeverArrows-Ford40Fuel System25
8Stefano ModenaBrabham-Judd37Engine16
12Satoru NakajimaLotus-Judd36Spun Off18
16Ivan CapelliMarch-Judd32Electrical22
15Maurício GugelminMarch-Judd28Gearbox14
20Emanuele PirroBenetton-Ford26Spun Off9
30Philippe AlliotLola-Lamborghini20Oil Leak15
3Jonathan PalmerTyrrell-Ford16Engine19
28Gerhard BergerFerrari13Puncture4
36Stefan JohanssonOnyx-Ford8Overheating24
19Alessandro NanniniBenetton-Ford6Electrical7
5Thierry BoutsenWilliams-Renault4Collision6
21Alex CaffiDallara-Ford2Engine20
29Michele AlboretoLola-Lamborghini1Electrical26
26Olivier GrouillardLigier-Ford0Gearbox11
24Luis Pérez-SalaMinardi-Ford
37Bertrand GachotOnyx-Ford
38Christian DannerRial-Ford
39Volker WeidlerRial-FordPush-start
41Yannick DalmasAGS-Ford
17Nicola LariniOsella-Ford
40Gabriele TarquiniAGS-Ford
18Piercarlo GhinzaniOsella-Ford
31Roberto MorenoColoni-Ford
32Pierre-Henri RaphanelColoni-Ford
33Gregor FoitekEuro Brun-Judd
35Aguri SuzukiZakspeed-Yamaha
34Bernd SchneiderZakspeed-Yamaha
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.
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