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Ayrton Senna turns 50, here’s a great 60-min documentary of the greatest racing driver ever to have lived

Star Named Ayrton Senna from Aldo Villamil on Vimeo.

21st March 1960 saw the birth of a future three-time Formula One World Champion and a type of driver that the world has never seen before and perhaps will never see again. The name Ayrton Senna meant a lot of things for a lot of people, for the owners of Grands Prix it meant income from the influx of fans, for bosses it meant having to build a perfect car for the Brazilian to fight for championships or deal with his Latin temper, for other drivers it meant just one thing, loosing out to him.

There will be some to argue that Senna was a bully and that Prost of Mansell were better drivers than him. But one only needs to review the qualifying session of the 1988 Monaco Grand Prix where he became a passenger of a surreal ride that he later described as “well beyond his conscious understanding”, Senna pushed so hard that day that he was two seconds faster than the other champion Alain Prost in a similar Mclaren. This just goes to show the extent of his determination, skill and understanding of driving. I have posted a short history of Senna after the jump that I sourced from formula1.com, it’s written by Gerald Donaldson and reveals in short the brilliant life and drive of racing’s greatest ever driver, Ayrton Senna. But it’s hour-long video above that really blew my mind.

History

He streaked through the sport like a comet, an other-worldly superstar whose brilliance as a driver was matched by a dazzling intellect and coruscating charisma that illuminated Formula One racing as never before. No one tried harder or pushed himself further, nor did anyone shed so much light on the extremes to which only the greatest drivers go. Intensely introspective and passionate in the extreme, Ayrton Senna endlessly sought to extend his limits, to go faster than himself, a quest that ultimately made him a martyr but did not diminish his mystique.

Ayrton Senna da Silva was born on March 21, 1960, into a wealthy Brazilian family where, with his brother and sister, he enjoyed a privileged upbringing. He never needed to race for money but his deep need for racing began with an infatuation for a miniature go-kart his father gave him when he was four years old. As a boy the highlights of Ayrton’s life were Grand Prix mornings when he awoke trembling with anticipation at the prospect of watching his Formula One heroes in action on television. At 13 he raced a kart for the first time and immediately won. Eight years later he went single-seater racing in Britain, where in three years he won five championships, by which time he had divorced his young wife and forsaken a future in his father’s businesses in favour of pursuing success in Formula One racing, where he made his debut with Toleman in 1984. At Monaco (a race he would win six times), his sensational second to Alain Prost’s McLaren – in torrential rain – was confirmation of the phenomenal talent that would take the sport by storm.

Deciding Toleman’s limited resources were inadequate for his towering ambition, Senna bought out his contract and in 1985 moved to Lotus, where in three seasons he started from pole 16 times (he eventually won a record 65) and won six races. Having reached the limits of Lotus he decided the fastest way forward would be with McLaren, where he went in 1988 and stayed for six seasons, winning 35 races and three world championships.

In 1988, when McLaren-Honda won 15 of the 16 races, Senna beat his team mate Alain Prost eight wins to seven to take his first driving title. Thereafter two of the greatest drivers became protagonists in one of the most infamous feuds. In 1989 Prost took the title by taking Senna out at the Suzuka chicane. In 1990 Senna extracted revenge at Suzuka’s first corner, winning his second championship by taking out Prost’s Ferrari at Suzuka’s first corner. Senna’s third title, in 1991, was straightforward as his domination as a driver became even more pronounced, as did his obsession with becoming better still. Some of his greatest performances came in his final year with McLaren, following which he moved to Williams for the ill-fated 1994 season.

Beyond his driving genius Senna was one of the sport’s most compelling personalities. Though slight in stature he possessed a powerful physical presence, and when he spoke, with his warm brown eyes sparkling and his voice quavering with intensity, his eloquence was spellbinding. Even the most jaded members of the Formula One fraternity were mesmerised by his passionate soliloquies and in his press conferences you could hear a pin drop as he spoke with such hypnotic effect. His command performances were captured by the media and the world at large became aware of Senna’s magnetic appeal.

Everyone marvelled at how he put so much of himself, his very soul, into everything he did, not just his driving but into life itself. Behind the wheel the depth of his commitment was there for all to see and the thrilling spectacle of Senna on an all-out qualifying lap or a relentless charge through the field evoked an uneasy combination of both admiration for his superlative skill and fear for his future.

He drove like a man possessed – some thought by demons. His ruthless ambition provoked condemnation from critics, among them Prost who accused him of caring more about winning than living. When Senna revealed he had discovered religion Prost and others suggested he was a dangerous madman who thought God was his co-pilot. “Senna is a genius,” Martin Brundle said. “I define genius as just the right side of imbalance. He is so highly developed to the point that he’s almost over the edge. It’s a close call.”

Even Senna confessed he occasionally went too far, as was the case in qualifying for the 1988 Monaco Grand Prix, where he became a passenger on a surreal ride into the unknown. Already on pole, he went faster and faster and was eventually over two seconds quicker than Prost in an identical McLaren. “Suddenly, it frightened me,” Ayrton said, “because I realised I was well beyond my conscious understanding. I drove back slowly to the pits and did not go out anymore that day.”

He said he was acutely aware of his own mortality and used fear to control the extent of the boundaries he felt compelled to explore. Indeed, he regarded racing as a metaphor for life and he used driving as a means of self-discovery. “For me, this research is fascinating. Every time I push, I find something more, again and again. But there is a contradiction. The same moment that you become the fastest, you are enormously fragile. Because in a split-second, it can be gone. All of it. These two extremes contribute to knowing yourself, deeper and deeper.”

His self-absorption did not preclude deep feelings for humanity and he despaired over the world’s ills. He loved children and gave millions of his personal fortune (estimated at $400 million when he died) to help provide a better future for the underprivileged in Brazil. Early in 1994 he spoke about his own future. “I want to live fully, very intensely. I would never want to live partially, suffering from illness or injury. If I ever happen to have an accident that eventually costs my life, I hope it happens in one instant.”

And so it did, on May 1, 1994, in the San Marino Grand Prix, where his race-leading Williams inexplicably speared off the Imola track and hit the concrete wall at Tamburello corner. Millions saw it happen on television, the world mourned his passing and his state funeral in Sao Paulo was attended by many members of the shocked Formula One community. Among the several drivers escorting the coffin was Alain Prost. Among the sad mourners was Frank Williams, who said: “Ayrton was no ordinary person. He was actually a greater man out of the car than in it.”

Text – Gerald Donaldson

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    A1Diablo
  • Mar 23, 2010
Saw the video several months ago and i was trying to compare what was said and what my own memories were of him as a fan. I think there were probably 3 races where Senna undeniably showed his brilliance and proved beyond ANY doubt that his driving ability was at a level above everyone else in F1. I don't think there has been a driver since then that surpassed the brilliance he showed in those 3 races and they were:

'84 Monaco GP in the Toleman-Hart
'88 Monaco GP qualifying in Mclaren-Honda
'93 Donington GP in Mclaren-Ford

Was a big Senna fan until Schumacher burst into the scene.

I recall that he was very spiritual but very 'difficult' in character as well, when it comes to racing and winning. A bit too intense and arrogant for his own good and that actually pissed me off as a fan in the early 90s.

However despite all that he also showed great humanity and kindness. I think that prevailed when he was able to put aside his 'driver' personality which was bitterly competitive. Although he was abrasive at times in character he did have good intentions and he pushed hard for better safety. In one practice session Erik Comas crashed and was stuck in his car I think. Whether there was a fire risk or not I cant recall but Senna when passing the stricken car stopped, jumped out his own car and ran to aid Comas out the car. You just don't see that in F1 today.

When Senna crashed in '94 and the race red-flagged, Comas drove out the pitlane, ignored the redflag and drove to the accident scene to try and help. It was a moving sight.

Senna was somewhat 'bi-polar' I would say. Brutally confident and aggressive as a driver but at other times very kind and cared very much about the welfare of his fellow drivers.

Prost was a superb driver and very confident but even he admitted that on track Senna was a bit too much for him. He said he wanted to win but he wanted to live as well (one race Senna squeezed him so close to the pitwall at top speed). Prost retired citing family reasons and that his son Nicolas was important etc.

Senna, the driver on the other hand looked like he would win at all cost including his life despite his push for better safety, off the track. The intensity was clearly evident. Strange personality. He bullied/scolded other drivers in the paddock(and anyone in his way) but somehow he felt that it's in the interest of safety.. probably confused between 'safety' and 'I want to win'.

His kindness was more evident in the few years before his death. He sincerely mended his relationship with Prost. Even 'dedicating' his race to him on TV. He even carried the Austrian flag in his car at Imola, intending to wave the flag in respect to Ratzenberger who died in practice. He almost did not race that fateful weekend as Ratzenberger's death and Barrichello's crash incident(almost suffocating) moved him too much. It certainly moved the whole F1 paddock. Spectators got hurt as well I think that weekend. It was just a really BAD race weekend for everyone.

I feel he should not have raced but he and the team had commercial obligations and so as a professional he had to. The faults actually fell mostly on the organizers including FIA because the sport was becoming too dangerous. I remember a few scary incidents in the years preceding his death. A horrendous crash by Martin Donnelly in Lotus(I think)was scary. Was thrown completely out the car. Fortunately and miraculously he lived.

Senna's death shook F1 right to the core, for good reasons. It was even worse in Jackie Stewart's days. Stewart quit the sport because he had enough and wanted to live and be with his family. More important things in life than winning to race.
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    zooropa
  • Mar 23, 2010
Thanks for posting this up.. I dare say he is the greatest F1 driver ever.. Haters GTFO
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    Andrea
  • Nov 1, 2010
I think people like A1Diablo should shut their mouth before starting on a long, unnecessary comment with an incredible annoying and unbearable patronising tone...

Typical british, I would say, this kind of comments daring to judge the most incredible F1 driver of all times clearly belongs to british pubs atmosphere, with tons of beer and stupid british people marking stupid and low quality remarks on everything.

The fact that this british commentator doesn't understand at all a passionate personality, a passionate person that dedicated himself to his craft more than any other in the sport, doesn't make Ayrton Senna be "difficult" and "strange", but rather makes A1Diablo seem too superficial, low class and short minded. Which, by no means is Ayrton Senna's fault.

I think definitely people like A1Diablo should stfu, and dedicate themselves to comment on football news, which for sure correspond much better to their annoying, forgettable and middle class personnalities.
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    Navneet
  • Feb 1, 2011
Hi, Can someone put the English translated version of this video?
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Andrea? You come off as an idiot and a troll. There was nothing patronizing about that first post. Senna WAS a very difficult personality. The man divorced his young wife and "married" Formula 1. He was either loved or hated by other drivers and was known to have long depressive states in the off season. Most likely he was bipolar. That would explain why he could process information on a track faster than other drivers. Often there is a genius to the bipolar mind. Heightened emotions and senses. His driving can only be described as manic. Prost was smooth. Senna man handled the car. He would pop on and off the throttle mid corner til he "felt" the grip. He did not roll on the throttle like most drivers. He's one of the last drivers that actually drove entire races at 10/10ths which is the total opposite to modern F1 cars where overrated drivers like Jenson Button can win races by saving their tires and balls out racers like Hamilton, who destroyed Button in qualifying all three years at Mclaren, are penalized for driving at the limit. He was narcissistic, altruistic, charismatic and intense. That's why his documentary won Sundance. And won over audiences that could not care less about racing. No other documentary about any sports hero from any sport has garnered such awards. He hit the kill switch for Comas and there is a brilliant French documentary where Comas speaks for an hour how he owes his life to Senna. He educated 15 million homeless children in Brazil with his money and foundation. But did put other drivers lives at risk. As well as his own. To say the least, he was absolutely fascinating. The only modern driver that somewhat shares his mentality is Alonso. They both wear the word arrogant very well but that is what is needed to win. A profound amount of self belief.
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    DeaconFrost
  • Jan 31, 2013
Fanboys must accept that there were negatives as well as positives for the sake of consistency.

Senna = bi-polar. Well put.
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