List of Formula One Grand Prix wins by Ayrton Senna

Ayrton Senna was a Brazilian racing driver who won three Formula One World Championships. He entered Formula One in 1984 with the Toleman team, but after one season, he moved to Lotus.[1] He spent three seasons with Lotus before moving to McLaren in 1988.[2] Over the next five years, the intense rivalry between Senna and Alain Prost, a leading Formula One driver, came to the forefront, with particularly notable race incidents and collisions occurring between the two.[3] Senna won all three of his World Championships during his six seasons with McLaren, in 1988, 1990 and 1991. He wanted to move to Williams after 1992, but was prevented from doing so by a clause in Alain Prost's contract.[1][4][5] He moved to Williams in 1994, but during the third race of the season, he was killed in an accident while leading the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix.[6][7] He was among the most dominant and successful Formula One drivers of the modern era, and is considered by some as the greatest racing driver of all time.[8][9]

Black and white photograph of Senna
Ayrton Senna won 41 Formula One races and three World Championships before his death in 1994.

Senna achieved his first victory in Formula One at the 1985 Portuguese Grand Prix on 21 April. John Blunsden of The Times described the win as "one of the most telling examples of supreme driving ability",[10] while fellow driver Patrick Tambay described the race as a nightmare, as it was "very, very flooded everywhere, the cloud ceiling very low and the light very poor".[11] He won two races in each of his three years with Lotus before moving to McLaren for the 1988 season. He secured his first Formula One World Championship that year and enjoyed his most successful season in terms of race wins. His eight victories that year set a new record for the most wins in a season, breaking the previous record of seven by Jim Clark.[12][13] In the subsequent three seasons with McLaren, he won six or more races each season, securing two more Formula One World Championship titles in 1990 and 1991. Senna managed only three victories in 1992. His final win in Formula One came at the final race of the 1993 season at the Australian Grand Prix. In all, Senna won 41 Grands Prix at seventeen different circuits.[14][15]

By winning 41 races from 161 Grand Prix starts, Senna is currently ranked sixth overall in the all-time Formula One Grand Prix winners' list. 35 of his victories were for McLaren, and 32 of his wins were in cars with a Honda engine. Of his remaining nine victories, five were achieved with Ford powered cars, and four with Renault. He was most successful at Monaco, where he won six times during his career, including a record five consecutive times between 1989 and 1993.[16][17] His largest margin of victory was 1:23.199 at the 1993 European Grand Prix, while the narrowest margin was at the 1986 Spanish Grand Prix, when he beat Nigel Mansell by 0.014 seconds, one of the closest finishes in Formula One.[18]

Wins

Key:

  • No. – Victory number; for example, "1" signifies Senna's first race win.
  • Race – Race number; for example, "1" signifies the first race Senna took part in. Races in which Senna unsuccessfully attempted to qualify are included.
  • Grid – The position on the grid at which Senna started the race.
  • Margin – Margin of victory, given in the format of minutes:seconds.milliseconds
  • – Driver's Championship winning season.
Grand Prix victories[15][19]
No.RaceDateSeasonGrand PrixCircuitGridMarginTeamEngineChassisRef
11721 April 19851985PortugueseAutódromo do Estoril11:02.978LotusRenault97T[20][21]
22815 September 1985BelgianCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps20:28.422[22]
33313 April 19861986SpanishCircuito de Jerez10:00.01498T[23]
43822 June 1986DetroitDetroit Street Circuit10:31.017[24]
55131 May 19871987MonacoCircuit de Monaco20:33.212Honda99T[25]
65221 June 1987DetroitDetroit Street Circuit20:33.819[26]
7651 May 19881988San MarinoAutodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari10:02.334McLarenMP4/4[27]
86812 June 1988CanadianCircuit Gilles Villeneuve10:05.934[28]
96919 June 1988DetroitDetroit Street Circuit10:38.713[29]
107110 July 1988BritishSilverstone Circuit30:23.344[30]
117224 July 1988GermanHockenheimring10:13.609[31]
12737 August 1988HungarianHungaroring10:00.529[32]
137428 August 1988BelgianCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps10:30.470[33]
147830 October 1988JapaneseSuzuka Circuit10:13.363[34]
158123 April 19891989San MarinoAutodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari10:40.225MP4/5[35]
16827 May 1989MonacoCircuit de Monaco10:52.529[36]
178328 May 1989MexicanAutódromo Hermanos Rodríguez10:15.560[37]
188830 July 1989GermanHockenheimring10:15.560[38]
199027 August 1989BelgianCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps10:01.304[39]
20931 October 1989SpanishCircuito de Jerez10:27.051[40]
219611 March 19901990United StatesPhoenix Street Circuit50:08.685MP4/5B[41]
229927 May 1990MonacoCircuit de Monaco10:01.087[42]
2310010 June 1990CanadianCircuit Gilles Villeneuve10:10.497[43]
2410429 July 1990GermanHockenheimring10:06.520[44]
2510626 August 1990BelgianCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps10:03.550[45]
261079 September 1990ItalianAutodromo Nazionale Monza10:06.054[46]
2711210 March 19911991United StatesPhoenix Street Circuit10:16.322MP4/6[47]
2811324 March 1991BrazilianAutódromo José Carlos Pace10:02.991[48]
2911428 April 1991San MarinoAutodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari10:01.675[49]
3011512 May 1991MonacoCircuit de Monaco10:18.348[50]
3112111 August 1991HungarianHungaroring10:04.599[51]
3212225 August 1991BelgianCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps10:01.901[52]
331273 November 1991AustralianAdelaide Street Circuit10:01.259[53]
3413331 May 19921992MonacoCircuit de Monaco30:00.215MP4/7A[54]
3513816 August 1992HungarianHungaroring30:40.139[55]
3614013 September 1992ItalianAutodromo Nazionale Monza20:17.050[56]
3714528 March 19931993BrazilianAutódromo José Carlos Pace30:16.625FordMP4/8[57]
3814611 April 1993EuropeanDonington Park41:23.199[58]
3914923 May 1993MonacoCircuit de Monaco30:52.118[59]
4015824 October 1993JapaneseSuzuka Circuit20:11.435[60]
411597 November 1993AustralianAdelaide Street Circuit10:09.259[61]

Number of wins at different Grands Prix

Ayrton Senna accumulated 41 career victories with Lotus and McLaren
Senna racing for Lotus in 1985
Senna on his way to victory for McLaren at the 1988 Canadian Grand Prix
Senna won the Monaco Grand Prix six times during his career, including 1991.
Senna won the 1993 European Grand Prix in changing conditions, achieving the biggest victory margin of his career.
Victories at different Grands Prix
No.Grand PrixYears wonWins
1Monaco Grand Prix1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 19936
2Belgian Grand Prix1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 19915
3Detroit Grand Prix1986, 1987, 19883
4German Grand Prix1988, 1989, 1990
5San Marino Grand Prix1988, 1989, 1991
6Hungarian Grand Prix1988, 1991, 1992
7Spanish Grand Prix1986, 19892
8Canadian Grand Prix1988, 1990
9United States Grand Prix1990, 1991
10Italian Grand Prix1990, 1992
11Brazilian Grand Prix1991, 1993
12Japanese Grand Prix1988, 1993
13Australian Grand Prix1991, 1993
14Portuguese Grand Prix19851
15British Grand Prix1988
16Mexican Grand Prix1989
17European Grand Prix1993
Total number of Grand Prix wins:41

Number of wins at different circuits

Victories at different circuits
No.CircuitYears wonWins
1Circuit de Monaco1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 19936
2Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 19915
3Detroit Street Circuit1986, 1987, 19883
4Hockenheimring1988, 1989, 1990
5Autodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari1988, 1989, 1991
6Hungaroring1988, 1991, 1992
7Circuito de Jerez1986, 19892
8Circuit Gilles Villeneuve1988, 1990
9Phoenix Street Circuit1990, 1991
10Autodromo Nazionale Monza1990, 1992
11Autódromo José Carlos Pace1991, 1993
12Suzuka Circuit1988, 1993
13Adelaide Street Circuit1991, 1993
14Autódromo do Estoril19851
15Silverstone Circuit1988
16Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez1989
17Donington Park1993
Total number of Grand Prix wins:41

See also

References

External links