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Roland Ratzenberger

Austrian racing driver (1960–1994)

Roland Ratzenberger

Summary

Austrian racing driver (1960–1994)

FieldValue
nameRoland Ratzenberger
imageRoland Ratzenberger.jpg
captionRatzenberger at the 1994 Brazilian Grand Prix
birth_nameRoland Walter Ratzenberger
birth_date
birth_placeSalzburg, Austria
death_date
death_placeBologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
death_causeInjuries sustained at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix
spouse
embedyes
nationalityAUT Austrian
years
teamsSimtek
races3 (1 start)
championships0
wins0
podiums0
points0
poles0
fastest_laps0
first_race1994 Brazilian Grand Prix
last_race1994 San Marino Grand Prix
embedyes
years
teamsBrun, Toyota, Porsche, SARD
best_finish5th ()
class_wins1 ()

Roland Walter Ratzenberger (; 4 July 1960 – 30 April 1994) was an Austrian racing driver, who competed in Formula One at three Grands Prix in .

Born and raised in Salzburg, Ratzenberger began his racing career as a protégé of Walter Lechner, joining the Lechner Racing School at the Salzburgring upon graduating from technical school, aged 18. Ratzenberger progressed to Formula Ford in 1983, winning multiple national and continental titles, as well as the Festival in 1986. Ratzenberger balanced his next two seasons between touring car racing and Formula Three; he contested the World Touring Car Championship in 1987 with Schnitzer, achieving four podium finishes in 10 races whilst driving the BMW E30 M3. After finishing third in the 1989 British Formula 3000 Championship and retiring from his 24 Hours of Le Mans debut, Ratzenberger moved into Japanese motorsport with Toyota. Amongst competing in World Sportscar, All-Japan Sports Prototype, Japanese Touring Car and Japanese Formula 3000, Ratzenberger also entered four further editions of Le Mans from to , winning the C2 class at the latter in the Toyota 93C-V with SARD.

Ratzenberger signed for Simtek in , making his Formula One debut at the , where he did not qualify. He made his only Grand Prix start at the subsequent , finishing 11th after starting 26th. During qualifying for the at Imola, Ratzenberger died as the result of a basilar skull fracture sustained in an accident at the Villeneuve Curva, colliding with a concrete barrier at 225 kph in his Simtek S941. He was the first fatality in the Formula One World Championship since Riccardo Paletti in 1982. The weekend became notorious for the fatal accident of Ayrton Senna the following day, with both deaths leading to widespread safety reforms and the re-establishment of the Grand Prix Drivers' Association.

Early and personal life

Roland Walter Ratzenberger was born in Salzburg, Austria, on 4 July 1960. When he was seven, his grandmother took him to a local hillclimb race at Gaisberg. Ιn 1969, the Salzburgring opened near his home. As a teenager, he discovered that racer and Formula Ford team owner Walter Lechner was based nearby and, while studying at a technical school, began to hang around the workshop. On finishing his education at eighteen, he joined Lechner, who was at this time opening a racing school at the Salzburgring.

In the winter of 1991, in Monaco, and after what Adam Cooper described as "a whirlwind courtship", Ratzenberger married the former partner of another driver, becoming stepfather to her son from a previous relationship. They were divorced early in 1992.

Career

Roland Ratzenberger's helmet.

Ratzenberger began racing in German Formula Ford in 1983, and in 1985 won both the Austrian and Central European Formula Ford championships. In 1985, he entered the Formula Ford Festival at Brands Hatch in England, finishing second. He returned in 1986 to win the event, before graduating to British Formula 3 the following season. While in the UK, he briefly gained fame for the similarity of his name to that of TV puppet Roland Rat, with whom he appeared in an edition of TV-am; the TV-am branding appeared for a time on his car.

Two years in British F3 yielded two 12th places in the championship with West Surrey Racing and Madgwick Motorsport. Ratzenberger also raced in other cars besides single seaters, once finishing second in the 1987 World Touring Car Championship driving a Team Schnitzer BMW M3. In 1988, he entered the final few rounds of the British Touring Car Championship in a class B BMW M3, racing for the Demon Tweeks team. The next year, he entered the British Formula 3000 series, finishing third overall, and also raced in the Le Mans 24 Hours for the first time; the Brun Motorsport, Porsche 962 he shared with Maurizio Sandro Sala and Walter Lechner retired in the third hour. He would take part in the next four Le Mans races, with Brun again in 1991, and with the SARD team in 1990, 1992 and 1993.

In the 1990s, Ratzenberger began racing primarily in Japan. He won one race each in 1990 and 1991 in the Japanese Sports Prototype Championship with the same SARD team he drove for at Le Mans. He also returned to touring car racing in the Japanese Touring Car Championship, finishing seventh in 1990 and 1991 in a BMW M3. During the latter year, Ratzenberger tested a CART Lola T91/00 for Dick Simon Racing at Willow Springs.

This paved the way for a return to Formula 3000 in the Japanese championship, with the Stellar team in the 1992 season. His year began poorly but, when the team upgraded their two-year-old Lola for a new model, Ratzenberger won once to finish seventh overall. He remained in the series in 1993, finishing 11th. That year, he achieved his highest finish at Le Mans, as he, Mauro Martini, and Naoki Nagasaka finished fifth in a Toyota 93 C-V.

Formula One

Roland Ratzenberger on his last day (30 April 1994) at Imola during the San Marino Grand Prix. Later that day, Ratzenberger was killed during qualifying.

Ratzenberger greatly desired to race in Formula One, especially as former rivals in F3000, such as Eddie Irvine and Johnny Herbert, had managed to reach the top level while he had not.

In 1994, Ratzenberger achieved his ambition of becoming one of the few Austrian Formula One drivers. After gaining a sponsor in a wealthy German, Barbara Behlau, who negotiated a deal over the 1993-4 winter, Ratzenberger signed a five-race deal with the new Simtek team, partnering David Brabham. With a very uncompetitive car, Ratzenberger failed to qualify for the first race at Interlagos. However, the next round at the TI Circuit in Aida went much better, as he not only managed to qualify, but finish in a very commendable eleventh place, even considering that he was the only driver who had raced at the venue before.

Death

Crash

The San Marino Grand Prix at Imola would have been Ratzenberger's third race in Formula One. During the first qualifying session on Friday 29 April, he asked the more experienced Brabham to test his car out; the Australian vindicated Ratzenberger's assessment of the brakes, which had been troubling him at the previous races. According to Brabham, the issue was soon resolved to the satisfaction of both. The session was overshadowed when Jordan driver Rubens Barrichello hit a kerb at the Variante Bassa corner; his car, travelling at 225 kph, was sent airborne, and collided with the tyre barrier. Having received injuries to his nose and arm, Barrichello was transferred to a nearby hospital, and took no further part in the weekend.

The next day, the second qualifying session proceeded as normal until the moment of his accident. Early in the session, Ratzenberger went off the track at the Acque Minerali chicane. With his sponsor in attendance for the first time, and at the halfway point of his contract, he decided to carry on, after checking the car to the best of his abilities.

Ratzenberger was transferred by ambulance to Imola Circuit's medical centre, then by air ambulance to the Maggiore Hospital in Bologna where he was pronounced dead upon arrival. He had suffered three individually fatal injuries: a basilar skull fracture, which was named as the official cause of death; blunt trauma from the front-left tyre penetrating the survival cell; and a ruptured aorta. Ratzenberger was the first racing driver to lose his life at a Grand Prix weekend since the season, when Riccardo Paletti was killed at the . Ratzenberger was also the first driver to die as a result of a crash in a Formula One car since Elio de Angelis during testing for the season. He was also the first Austrian driver to die as a result of a crash during qualifying in a Formula One car since Jochen Rindt in the season.

''Villeneuve Curva'', the location of Ratzenberger's fatal crash. [[Ayrton Senna]] was killed the next day at the previous bend.

Bernie Ecclestone personally delivered the confirmation of Ratzenberger's death to the stunned Simtek team. Grieving, Brabham made the decision to compete on Sunday:

Ayrton Senna commandeered an official car to hurry to the medical center; he learnt of Ratzenberger's death from friend and neurosurgeon Sid Watkins. Watkins suggested to the inconsolable Senna that he withdraw from the following day's race and go fishing instead, and asked him if he wanted to stop racing. Senna famously responded "I cannot quit, I have to go on," and, having returned to his garage, decided to withdraw for the remainder of qualifying.

Ratzenberger's spot on the starting grid was left empty. Paul Belmondo was reported to have been offered the final position on the grid but declined, out of respect for Ratzenberger and on the grounds that he had not earned that race spot.

Race and aftermath

During the seventh lap of the race the following day, Senna's car ran wide at the Tamburello left-hander and struck an unprotected concrete barrier at 233 km/h, resulting in multiple fatal injuries. When track officials examined the wreckage of Senna's racing car, they found a furled Austrian flag. Senna had planned to raise it after the race, in honour of Ratzenberger. The race was won by Michael Schumacher, with Nicola Larini and Mika Häkkinen in second and third positions respectively, while Brabham retired after 27 laps. Out of respect for Ratzenberger and Senna, no champagne was sprayed at the podium ceremony.

The death of Senna, a three-time world champion, mostly overshadowed Ratzenberger's: while all active Formula One drivers attended Senna's funeral, only five (Brabham, Herbert, Heinz-Harald Frentzen, and Ratzenberger's compatriots Karl Wendlinger and Gerhard Berger) attended Ratzenberger's. FIA president Max Mosley was also in attendance, noting in an interview ten years later:

As a tribute, Ratzenberger's name was left on the [[Toyota 94C-V]] which he intended to drive at Le Mans.

Ratzenberger was buried in Maxglan, in Salzburg.

At the next race in the F1 calendar, Monaco, the first two grid positions were left empty and painted with Austrian and Brazilian flags, to honor Ratzenberger and Senna, respectively. Due to drive later that year in the Le Mans 24 Hours for Toyota, Ratzenberger's name was left on the car as a tribute, with his friend Eddie Irvine taking his place at the wheel.

Legacy

During the customary pre-race drivers' briefing on 1 May 1994, the remaining drivers agreed to the reformation of the Grand Prix Drivers' Association, with Senna, Berger and Schumacher intended to be its first directors. The reformed association subsequently pressed for thorough improvements to safety after the Imola crashes and others during 1994; for , the FIA mandated the use of the HANS device, designed to prevent the type of injury suffered by Ratzenberger.

Racing record

Career summary

SeasonSeriesTeamRacesWinsPolesF/LapsPodiumsPointsPosition1985198619871988198919901991199219931994
German Formula Ford 1600Van Diemen???????
Formula Ford Festival10000N/ANC
EFDA Euroseries Formula Ford 160010000N/ANC
Esso Formula Ford 1600 Championship???????
Formula Ford 1600 – Ford Race of Champions11001N/A1st
Formula Ford FestivalVan Diemen11101N/A1st
World Touring Car ChampionshipSchnitzer Motorsport10010414610th
British Formula ThreeWest Surrey Racing900021012th
Formula 3 Euro Series21012355th
European Touring Car ChampionshipSchnitzer Motorsport100000NC
British Formula ThreeMadgwick Motorsport90000412th
British Touring Car ChampionshipDemon Tweeks710242611th
British Formula 3000Spirit Motorsport81346373rd
All-Japan Sports Prototype ChampionshipToyota Team SARD50110136th
Deutsche Tourenwagen MeisterschaftMarko RSM20000147th
World Sportscar ChampionshipToyota Team Tom's200001031st
Repsol Brun Motorsport
24 Hours of Le MansBrun Motorsport / Alpha Racing Team10000N/ADNF
Japanese Touring Car ChampionshipAuto Tech Racing62005987th
All-Japan Sports Prototype ChampionshipToyota Team SARD51001389th
Japanese Formula 3000Team Noji International40000NC0
World Sportscar ChampionshipToyota Team Tom's10000NC0
24 Hours of Le MansToyota Team SARD10000N/ADNF
All-Japan Sports Prototype ChampionshipToyota Team SARD711012715th
Japanese Touring Car ChampionshipAuto Tech Racing630051257th
World Sportscar ChampionshipTeam Salamin Primagaz200000NC
Japanese Formula 3000Stellar International11202197th
All-Japan Sports Prototype Championship – Class 2Auto Tech Racing82006855th
All-Japan Sports Prototype ChampionshipKitz Racing Team w/ SARD60001467th
IMSA GT ChampionshipTeam 0123100012317th
Japanese Formula 3000Stellar International100001612th
24 Hours of Le MansY's Racing Team / Sard Co. Ltd.10000N/A5th
Formula OneMTV Simtek Ford100000NC

Complete World Touring Car Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearTeamCar1234567891010DCPoints1987Schnitzer MotorsportBMW M310th146
MNZ
DSQJAR
2DIJ
RetNUR
3SPA
6BNO
4SIL
RetBAT
RetCLD
3WEL
4FJI

Complete British Touring Car Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position – 1982–1990 in class) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap – 1 point awarded ?–1989 in class)

YearTeamCarClass12345678910111213DCPtsClassnowrapDemon TweeksnowrapBMW M3BClass B}}13th264th
1988SILOULTHRDON
RetTHR
8SIL
16SIL
RetBRHSNEBRH
11BIR
CDON
13SIL
9

24 Hours of Le Mans results

YearTeamCo-driversCarClassLapsPos.Class
Pos.
CHE Brun Motorsport
JPN Alpha Racing TeamBRA Maurizio Sandro Sala
AUT Walter LechnerPorsche 962CC158DNFDNF
JPN Toyota Team SARDFRA Pierre-Henri Raphanel
JPN Naoki NagasakaToyota 90C-VC1241DNFDNF
CHE Team Salamin Primagaz
AUS Team SchuppanSWE Eje Elgh
GBR Will HoyPorsche 962CC2202DNFDNF
JPN Toyota Team Tom's
JPN Kitz Racing Team with SARDSWE Eje Elgh
GBR Eddie IrvineToyota 92C-VC23219th2nd
JPN Y's Racing Team
JPN Sard Co. Ltd.ITA Mauro Martini
JPN Naoki NagasakaToyota 93C-VC23635th1st

Complete British Formula 3000 results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrant123456789DCPtsnowrapSpirit Motorsport3rd37
1989BRH
2THR
2OUL
8†*DON*
1BRH
2SNE
2SIL
3*OUL*
RetBRH

† — Did not finish the race, but was classified as he completed over 90% of the race distance.

Complete Japanese Formula 3000 results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrant1234567891011DCPointsnowrapTeam Noji InternationalNC0nowrapStellar International7th19nowrapStellar International12th6
1990SUZ
DNQFUJ
RetMIN
RetSUZSUGFUJFUJ
RetSUZ
15FUJ
DNQSUZ
1992SUZ
DNQFUJ
13MIN
3SUZ
RetAUT
RetSUG
4FUJ
RetFUJ
4SUZ
1FUJ
25†SUZ
Ret
1993SUZ
RetFUJ
10MIN
RetSUZ
6AUT
CSUG
16FUJ
CFUJ
3SUZ
6FUJ
14SUZ
7

† Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.

Complete Formula One results

(key)

YearEntrantChassisEngine12345678910111213141516WDCPointsnowrapMTV Simtek FordnowrapSimtek S941nowrapFord V8NC0
BRA
DNQPAC
11SMR
DNSMONESPCANFRAGBRGERHUNBELITAPOREURJPNAUS

References

References

  1. "Pilote des 24 heures du Mans : Roland Walter Ratzenberger".
  2. Cooper, Adam. (May 2014). "This charming man". [[Motor Sport (magazine).
  3. (2006). "Who's Who: Roland Ratzenberger". F1Fanatic.co.uk.
  4. "Image of Ratzenberger's racing car with ''TV–am'' branding".
  5. Daniel Taslidzic. "Today would've been Roland Ratzenberger's 58th birthday: This is his story". Dvevnik Sa Putovanja.
  6. Cooper, Adam. (30 April 2020). "Roland Ratzenberger: The inside story of the Imola weekend". motorsport.com.
  7. Chowdhury, Saj. (30 April 2020). "Remembering Roland Ratzenberger". [[BBC Sport]].
  8. Hamilton, Maurice. (1998). "Frank Williams". Macmillan.
  9. (5 April 1994). "Barrichello's great escape". News Publications Ltd..
  10. Sam Tremayne. "A racer through and through - Ratzenberger remembered". Formula 1.
  11. Campbell, Paul. (1 May 2014). "From the Vault: the tragic death of F1 driver Roland Ratzenberger in 1994". The Guardian.
  12. "Race Car Deaths: The Medical Causes of Racing Deaths with Examples and Resulting Race Car Improvements".
  13. Saj Chowdhury. (30 April 2014). "Brabham on Ratzenberger and Senna". BBC Sport.
  14. Collantine, Keith. (30 April 2014). "How Ratzenberger's death stunned F1". RaceFans.
  15. Cascella, Paola. (13 March 1997). "Senna Morte Al Computer". [[La Repubblica]].
  16. Longmore, Andrew. (31 October 1994). "Ayrton Senna: The Last Hours". News International.
  17. (May 2018). "Imola 1994: Memories from Senna's rivals".
  18. Majendie, Matt. (30 April 2014). "Formula One's forgotten man: 20 years on from the death of Roland Ratzenberger". CNN.
  19. (23 April 2004). "Max went to Roland's funeral". GPUpdate.net.
  20. Jeff Pappone. (17 February 2011). "Fastest sport is slow to implement safety measures". [[The Globe and Mail]].
  21. "Roland Ratzenberger race results". TouringCars.net.
  22. "Roland Ratzenberger Results". Motorsport Stats.
  23. "Complete Archive of Roland Ratzenberger". Racing Sports Cars.
  24. "Roland Ratzenberger". [[Motor Sport (magazine).
  25. "All championship race entries, by Roland Ratzenberger". ChicaneF1.
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