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- <text id=94TT0610>
- <title>
- May 16, 1994: Sport:Chronicle of a Death Foretold
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 16, 1994 "There are no devils...":Rwanda
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 74
- Chronicle of a Death Foretold
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> One of the fastest men on wheels dies after a change of Formula
- One rules
- </p>
- <p>By Michael S. Serrill--Reported by Ian McCluskey/Brasilia and Kate Noble/London
- </p>
- <p> A million people, many weeping, lined the streets of Sao Paulo.
- Outside the gates of the local legislature, a chant went up:
- "O-le, o-le, o-le, o-la! Sen-na, Sen-na!" It was a rhythmic
- requiem for the hero who lay within, one of Brazil's greatest
- heroes and among the fastest men on wheels on earth--Ayrton
- Senna da Silva, dead at 34, killed in a Formula One crash at
- the San Marino Grand Prix in Imola, Italy. In his 10 years of
- Grand Prix competition, the Brazilian had won 41 races and three
- world championships. Senna would be mourned officially for three
- days, declared President Itamar Franco. On the flight home from
- Europe, Senna's coffin, curtained off in the business-class
- section, had already become a shrine as passengers came up and
- knelt beside it in prayer. Later, as he was being laid to rest
- in Morumbi cemetery, planes of the Brazilian air force twisted
- overhead, drawing a giant S and a heart in the sky.
- </p>
- <p> Amid the grief there was also anger. Though Senna himself was
- famously fatalistic about his participation in a sport in which
- speeds of more than 180 m.p.h. are not uncommon, there were
- those who thought he had died needlessly. No one had been killed
- in a Formula One race for 12 years, yet at San Marino alone
- there were five accidents and two deaths. The day before Senna
- missed a turn and drove his Williams-Renault into a concrete
- wall, Austrian rookie Roland Ratzenberger had perished in a
- similar accident during qualifying trials.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the drivers on the Grand Prix circuit blamed a spate
- of crashes this season on an effort by the International Federation
- of Automobiles (FIA), Formula One's Paris-based governing body,
- to sharpen competition by banning the use of high-tech devices
- thought to give the richer racing teams an unfair advantage.
- In doing so, the drivers charged, the federation had made the
- sport far more dangerous. Senna himself had expressed misgivings
- even before the start of the season. "It's a great error to
- remove the electronics from the cars," he said. "The cars are
- very fast and difficult to drive. It is going to be a season
- of accidents." After Ratzenberger's death, an article Senna
- wrote for the German newspaper Welt am Sonntag appeared. It
- said his concerns had been "borne out in tragic fashion." Little
- did Senna know that his would be the next tragedy.
- </p>
- <p> Federation officials insisted that the rule changes had nothing
- to do with the deaths of Senna and Ratzenberger--a view supported
- by some Formula One engineers. But in Brazil the fans were not
- listening to explanations. Some of those who filed past Senna's
- coffin carried placards calling the federation ASSASSINOS. Senna's
- younger brother Leonardo blamed the FIA as well as Formula One
- team owners, insinuating that they cut back on safety measures
- to make races more exciting and thus attract more spectators.
- "In Formula One it seems people only think about money," he
- said.
- </p>
- <p> In the San Marino qualifying runs, Senna had posted the fastest
- time and won the advantage of the inside starting position,
- something he had achieved 64 times before, far more than any
- other competitor. As he prepared for the actual race, however,
- the possibility of disaster was clearly on his mind. During
- a practice run April 29, fellow Brazilian Rubens Barrichello
- had taken a bend called Variante Bassa too fast, barrel-rolled
- his Jordan Hart and been lucky to come out of it with no more
- than a broken nose and a concussion. Then came Ratzenberger's
- death April 30, which so upset Senna that afterward, he walked
- out onto the course and stood, teary-eyed, in the Villeneuve
- turn where the Austrian had crashed.
- </p>
- <p> A few hours later, Senna was approached by an old friend, Austrian
- Niki Lauda, a former world champion who was permanently disfigured
- in a fiery 1976 crash. A strong advocate for driver safety ever
- since, Lauda discussed with Senna the possibility of reviving
- a Formula One drivers' association that Lauda had headed until
- his retirement in 1985 and that had since fallen dormant. "Ayrton
- fully agreed that drivers need to be more involved on safety
- issues," the Austrian said later. "He was going to do it, to
- get the drivers together in Monte Carlo," the site of the May
- 15 Monaco Grand Prix.
- </p>
- <p> On May 1, the San Marino race got off to an ominous beginning
- when Finnish driver J.J. Lehto's Benetton-Ford stalled on the
- starting grid. The cars behind swerved to avoid it, but Pedro
- Lamy's Lotus caught the Benetton on the left side, ripping off
- the wheels and sending debris spinning across the track and
- into the crowd, injuring four people.
- </p>
- <p> While the track was being cleared under the caution flag, the
- competitors followed a pace car for five laps. As soon as the
- contest resumed, Senna and Michael Schumacher, driving another
- Benetton-Ford, roared ahead, renewing their battle for the lead.
- Then, speeding into a turn called Tamburello, Senna lost control
- and, at 180 m.p.h., crashed nearly head-on into the wall. The
- car spun back onto the track and then slued to the side. As
- paramedics rushed to remove Senna from the wreck, his head moved
- briefly--the last sign of life spectators saw. He was helicoptered
- to a hospital in nearby Bologna where, four hours later, he
- was pronounced dead of massive head injuries.
- </p>
- <p> Could the electronic and other driver aids that had been stripped
- from the cars at the federation's request have prevented the
- accident? Perhaps. Because only the three biggest and richest
- teams could afford such technology as well as the engineering
- expertise to design and install it, the federation felt they
- had an unfair advantage.
- </p>
- <p> The leading drivers protested that the most powerful of the
- Formula One cars risked running out of control without the banned
- equipment. Senna had argued that his car was in particular need
- of the active suspension system. He complained in the Welt am
- Sonntag article that his car was "react((ing)) nervously" to
- the uneven surface of the Imola course and that he was having
- "difficulty with the suspension." Schumacher, who would eventually
- win San Marino, told reporters that the rear of Senna's car
- had touched the track, on the sixth lap and again on the seventh,
- just before the Brazilian lost control.
- </p>
- <p> Others were not so certain that the FIA alone was to blame.
- The owner of Ratzenberger's Simtek Ford said his driver's fatal
- accident was caused by a malfunction in the front end of the
- car. Might Senna's crash have been a case of driver error? "Ayrton
- Senna made a mistake," Carweek magazine quoted Williams-Renault
- technical director Patrick Head as saying. "We have checked
- the telemetry. He slightly lifted his foot just at that dip
- in the place where the tarmac changes. That caused a loss of
- grip from the car." A Williams spokesman later denied that Head
- said Senna had made a mistake.
- </p>
- <p> After the disastrous weekend, the FIA board of directors met
- in emergency session, but the only decision it made was one
- designed to improve safety in the pits--a reaction to a relatively
- minor mishap in which a wheel flew off a car and hurtled into
- the Ferrari pit, injuring three mechanics. The federation also
- announced that it would study the possibility of installing
- speed controls on Formula One cars, and that it would consider
- requiring the installation of air bags to prevent the kind of
- head injuries that apparently killed Ratzenberger and Senna.
- After the race, Italian officials launched an investigation
- to see whether the sponsors of the Imola race should be held
- criminally responsible for failing to maintain the circuit properly.
- </p>
- <p> Lauda gives the FIA the benefit of the doubt. Drivers, he explains,
- "see accidents happen but nobody getting hurt, and they stop
- thinking about what is really at risk. If we start believing
- that motor racing is not dangerous, then we are all stupid.
- It's almost as though God has held his hand over Formula One.
- At Imola, he took it away. And we saw again the brutal reality
- of what Formula One racing is all about."
- </p>
- <p>FORMULA FOR DISASTER
- </p>
- <p> The new rules that may have made racing more dangerous
- </p>
- <p> Active Suspension, a computer-controlled driver aid that helped
- keep the car level, was barred
- </p>
- <p> Telemetry, radio transmission between the car's onboard computer
- and computers in the pit, was prohibited
- </p>
- <p> Traction control, which prevents wheel spin at the start of
- the race and then regulates acceleration in corners and wet
- conditions, was banned
- </p>
- <p> Antilock brakes, another computer controlled aid, were excluded
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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