Template:Infobox Grand Prix race report

The 1988 Italian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 11 September 1988 at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, Monza. It was the twelfth race of the Template:F1 season. It is often remembered for the first win and 1–2 finish for the Ferrari team after the death of team founder Enzo Ferrari, and as the only race of the 1988 season that was not won by McLaren-Honda. It is also the only Grand Prix in the Template:F1 season without a McLaren-Honda driver on the podium, as well as Ferrari's last win at Monza until 1996.

ReportEdit

QualifyingEdit

Qualifying at Monza went as expected with the McLarens of Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost heading the field, Senna the only driver to lap under 1:26. In the first Italian Grand Prix since the death of Ferrari founder Enzo Ferrari, his team's scarlet cars were 3rd and 4th on the grid, Gerhard Berger in front of Michele Alboreto. As a mark of respect for the Ferrari founder, Alboreto and Berger were allowed to be the first cars to take to the track for Friday morning's first practice session.

Showing the difference in horsepower between Template:F1 and 1988, Senna's pole time of 1:25.974 was 2.514 seconds slower than Nelson Piquet's 1987 time of 1:23.460. For the most part, qualifying times in 1988 had either matched or actually beaten the times from the previous year showing advances in engine response, aerodynamics, tyres and suspension. However, on a power circuit such as Monza, the loss of some Template:Cvt was very noticeable.

The third row of the grid was a surprise, even at this power circuit. Ever since the item was made compulsory for turbo powered cars at the start of the 1987 season, the Arrows team had been experiencing problems with the FIA pop-off valve on their Megatron turbo engines, the problem being that the valve was cutting in too early and the drivers weren't able to exploit the full available power. In 1987 this meant that drivers Derek Warwick and Eddie Cheever struggled to keep up with their turbocharged rivals. In 1988 it meant they were often only as fast as the leading atmos, and often they were in fact slower, even on noted power circuits such as Silverstone and Hockenheim which should have suited their turbo power. Along with some new turbos, the team's engine guru Heini Mader had finally solved the pop-off valve problem (which turned out to be the pop-off valve being located too high above the engine, a problem Honda and Ferrari had long since solved), and suddenly with an extra Template:Cvt at their disposal the Arrows A10Bs were actually Template:Convert faster than the Honda-powered McLarens across the start line and by the time they reached the speed trap before the Rettifilo, Cheever was reported to be the only car to hit Template:Convert while the McLarens and Ferraris were timed at around Template:Convert, though even Cheever's speed was some Template:Convert slower than had been achieved by Piquet in a Williams-Honda at the circuit in 1987. This newfound power allowed Cheever and Warwick to line up 5th and 6th respectively, one place in front of reigning World Champion Piquet in his Lotus Honda. This also meant that turbos filled the first seven places on the grid.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Piquet's Lotus teammate Satoru Nakajima qualified 10th, with the Lotuses split by the fastest non-turbos, the Benetton-Fords of Thierry Boutsen and Alessandro Nannini in 8th and 9th places on the grid.

Defending World Champion Piquet, the race winner in 1986 and 1987 when driving for Williams, never looked at ease during qualifying at a track where the Honda powered Lotus 100T should have been a long way ahead of at least the 'atmo' cars. Only late on in qualifying was it discovered that the team had inadvertently set up both Piquet and Nakajima's cars with the settings for the Imola circuit and not for Monza (the major differences being higher wing settings for Imola, and almost reversed tyre camber, steering caster and weight distribution with Monza being a clockwise run circuit while Imola runs anti-clockwise).<ref>Template:Cite AV mediaTemplate:Cbignore</ref>

The 1988 Italian Grand Prix was the last race of the first turbo era in Formula One in which all cars powered by turbocharged engines that entered actually qualified for the race. The McLarens, Ferraris, Arrows, Lotuses, Zakspeeds and the single Osella of Nicola Larini all qualified in the top 20 with the slowest, Larini, being a somewhat creditable (for the time) 4.5 seconds behind Senna and an improvement as the Osella with its ancient Alfa Romeo based V8 turbo had been some +7.572 slower at Hockenheim.

RaceEdit

With emotions running high so soon after the death of Enzo Ferrari, the tifosi had been praying for a Ferrari victory at Monza. However, with McLaren having won all 11 races of the 1988 season up to this point, hopes for a home victory seemed bleak.

Nigel Mansell was still affected by chicken pox and forced to sit out. Martin Brundle, his replacement in Belgium, was asked to race again but his Jaguar Sportscar team boss Tom Walkinshaw vetoed the move, so the second Williams seat went to team test driver (and Brundle's chief rival for the 1988 World Sportscar Championship) Jean-Louis Schlesser.

Prost managed to jump Senna at the start, but as he changed from 2nd to 3rd on the run to the Rettifilo his engine began to misfire and would not run properly again. This allowed Senna to power past into the lead before the chicane. Berger followed Prost with Alboreto, Cheever, Boutsen, Patrese and Piquet running in line. Senna built up a 2-second lead after the first lap and Prost, realising after the first lap that the misfire was not going away, decided to turn his boost up to full and give chase to his teammate.

Berger had initially given chase and stayed within a couple of seconds of Prost, but before lap 10 had started to drop back in order to save fuel. By lap 30 the Frenchman had reduced Senna's lead to only 2 seconds, but as he went by the pits at the end of lap 30 the misfire suddenly got worse and by lap 35 had been passed by Berger and Alboreto and was heading for the pits and his first mechanical retirement of the season (and the only time in 1988 that a McLaren would retire due to engine failure). While this was happening Alboreto, troubled by gear selection problems early in the race, had dropped back from Berger to allow his gearbox oil to cool hoping it would come good. It did and the Italian in the All-Italian car began to charge at the Italian Grand Prix, and was catching his teammate.

Later in the race Berger and Alboreto began closing on Senna rapidly, though it was assumed that Senna was merely pacing himself to the finish, and Senna himself later said that he had things well in hand. With two laps remaining, Senna attempted to lap the Williams of Schlesser at the Rettifilo. Senna headed to the left to pass the Frenchman on the inside of the first chicane, but Schlesser locked his brakes and the Williams slid forward towards the gravel trap. Using his rallying skills, Schlesser managed to collect the car and turned left to avoid going off. Senna, who had taken his normal line and had not counted on Schlesser regaining control, was struck in the right rear by the Williams, breaking the McLaren's rear suspension and causing the car to spin and beach itself on a kerb, putting the Brazilian out of the race. BBC commentator James Hunt placed the blame squarely on Schlesser, although many felt that Senna had not given any allowance for Schlesser to come back on the track. Senna's compatriot and close friend Maurício Gugelmin, whose March-Judd had also been about to lap Schlesser and was behind the McLaren after being lapped on the run past the pits, saw the collision in its entirety. "I think he'd felt that Schlesser would go straight off, and in that situation you have to keep going. It's a difficult situation, but I don't think Ayrton took a risk."<ref name="88MonzaRacer">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

It was generally thought that Senna had used too much fuel in the first half of the race in his bid to keep in front of Prost and that was why the Ferraris were rapidly catching him towards the end of the race, with Berger reducing what was a 26-second gap when Prost retired, to be only 5 seconds behind when Senna and Schlesser collided 14 laps later. Senna's former Lotus team boss Peter Warr commented after the race that he felt Prost, knowing he wouldn't finish the race, had suckered his teammate into using too much fuel in the hope that it would keep his championship hopes alive. He also added that if Senna had thought about it he'd have realised that to stay close to him, Prost must have also been using too much fuel and that was not something the dual World Champion usually did. Prost's tactics may have contributed to McLaren missing out on a perfect season, but they had the desired effect as Senna scored no points (after four straight wins including Britain where Prost failed to finish) and he was still in with a good chance of winning his third World Championship.

The Tifosi were overjoyed as Berger inherited the win, with Alboreto taking second place only half a second behind in the first Italian Grand Prix since the death of the great Enzo Ferrari. Alboreto was actually the fastest driver on the track in the last laps and gained over 4 seconds on his teammate in the final 3 laps. American Eddie Cheever (who actually grew up in Rome) finished in 3rd place for Arrows, 35 seconds behind the Ferraris and only half a second in front of his teammate Derek Warwick in a great race for the Arrows team. Warwick had actually got a bad start and had fallen outside of the top ten. However, with the Megatron engine now producing full power the Englishman began to charge and ran the last 10 laps challenging his teammate. The remaining points went to Italian Ivan Capelli, a considerable achievement by the atmospheric March-Judd on a circuit which requires powerful engines (Capelli spent the first half of the race locked in a battle for 6th place with the Williams of Riccardo Patrese and Warwick's Arrows). Capelli's high place also showed just how aerodynamic the Adrian Newey designed March 881 was. Sixth place went to the Benetton-Ford of Thierry Boutsen.

Motor racing journalist Nigel Roebuck later reported that after the race an overjoyed member of the Tifosi had approached Schlesser, shook his hand and said "Thank you, from Italy".

Another hard luck story was Alessandro Nannini who was forced to start his home Grand Prix from the pits due to a failed throttle on the warm up lap. By the time the Benetton team fixed the problem, Senna was coming through the Parabolica on his first lap meaning the Italian, who was to start 9th, was last and almost a lap down within the first lap of the race. For the rest of the afternoon Nannini charged, setting the fastest lap of the race for atmospheric cars and finishing in 9th place.

Post-race scrutineeringEdit

In the scrutineering bay, Berger's Ferrari's fuel capacity was checked four times. The first time, FISA officials were able to refill the tank with 151.5 litres of fuel, exceeding the limit of 150 litres. A second refill and then a third were undertaken, and still the Ferrari took too much. Eventually they succeeded in adding just 149.5 litres at the fourth time of asking.<ref name="88MonzaRacer" /> Eddie Cheever's Arrows had the same problem as Berger's Ferrari when his fuel tank was at first found to be 151 litres, but further checking found it to be under the limit at 149.5 litres.

ClassificationEdit

Pre-qualifyingEdit

Pos No Driver Constructor Time Gap
1 36 Template:Flagicon Alex Caffi Dallara-Ford 1:30.877
2 31 Template:Flagicon Gabriele Tarquini Coloni-Ford 1:32.860 +1.983
3 33 Template:Flagicon Stefano Modena EuroBrun-Ford 1:33.292 +2.415
4 21 Template:Flagicon Nicola Larini Osella 1:33.738 +2.861
DNPQ 32 Template:Flagicon Oscar Larrauri EuroBrun-Ford 1:34.044 +3.167

QualifyingEdit

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Gap
1 12 Template:Flagicon Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda 1:26.160 1:25.974
2 11 Template:Flagicon Alain Prost McLaren-Honda 1:26.277 1:26.428 +0.303
3 28 Template:Flagicon Gerhard Berger Ferrari 1:28.082 1:26.654 +0.680
4 27 Template:Flagicon Michele Alboreto Ferrari 1:27.618 1:26.988 +1.014
5 18 Template:Flagicon Eddie Cheever Arrows-Megatron 1:28.101 1:27.660 +1.686
6 17 Template:Flagicon Derek Warwick Arrows-Megatron 1:28.258 1:27.815 +1.841
7 1 Template:Flagicon Nelson Piquet Lotus-Honda 1:28.440 1:28.044 +2.070
8 20 Template:Flagicon Thierry Boutsen Benetton-Ford 1:29.607 1:28.870 +2.896
9 19 Template:Flagicon Alessandro Nannini Benetton-Ford 1:28.969 1:28.958 +2.984
10 6 Template:Flagicon Riccardo Patrese Williams-Judd 1:30.124 1:29.435 +3.461
11 16 Template:Flagicon Ivan Capelli March-Judd 1:29.513 1:29.696 +3.539
12 2 Template:Flagicon Satoru Nakajima Lotus-Honda 1:29.541 1:30.570 +3.567
13 15 Template:Flagicon Maurício Gugelmin March-Judd 1:30.145 1:30.035 +4.061
14 23 Template:Flagicon Pierluigi Martini Minardi-Ford 1:30.734 1:30.125 +4.151
15 10 Template:Flagicon Bernd Schneider Zakspeed 1:30.773 1:30.161 +4.187
16 9 Template:Flagicon Piercarlo Ghinzani Zakspeed 1:31.182 1:30.035 +4.061
17 21 Template:Flagicon Nicola Larini Osella 1:31.721 1:30.481 +4.507
18 22 Template:Flagicon Andrea de Cesaris Rial-Ford 1:31.263 1:30.560 +4.586
19 24 Template:Flagicon Luis Pérez-Sala Minardi-Ford 1:30.944 1:30.698 +4.724
20 30 Template:Flagicon Philippe Alliot Lola-Ford 1:31.168 1:30.962 +4.988
21 36 Template:Flagicon Alex Caffi Dallara-Ford 1:30.989 1:31.009 +5.015
22 5 Template:Flagicon Jean-Louis Schlesser Williams-Judd 1:31.548 1:31.620 +5.574
23 14 Template:Flagicon Philippe Streiff AGS-Ford 1:31.676 1:31.687 +5.702
24 25 Template:Flagicon René Arnoux Ligier-Judd 1:32.049 1:32.316 +6.075
25 29 Template:Flagicon Yannick Dalmas Lola-Ford 1:32.164 1:32.686 +6.190
26 4 Template:Flagicon Julian Bailey Tyrrell-Ford 1:32.573 1:32.290 +6.316
DNQ 3 Template:Flagicon Jonathan Palmer Tyrrell-Ford 1:32.405 1:33.067 +6.431
DNQ 26 Template:Flagicon Stefan Johansson Ligier-Judd 1:33.272 1:32.438 +6.464
DNQ 31 Template:Flagicon Gabriele Tarquini Coloni-Ford 1:32.829 1:35.805 +6.855
DNQ 33 Template:Flagicon Stefano Modena EuroBrun-Ford 1:34.727 1:33.226 +7.252

RaceEdit

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 28 Template:Flagicon Gerhard Berger Ferrari 51 1:17:39.744 3 9
2 27 Template:Flagicon Michele Alboreto Ferrari 51 + 0.502 4 6
3 18 Template:Flagicon Eddie Cheever Arrows-Megatron 51 + 35.532 5 4
4 17 Template:Flagicon Derek Warwick Arrows-Megatron 51 + 36.114 6 3
5 16 Template:Flagicon Ivan Capelli March-Judd 51 + 52.522 11 2
6 20 Template:Flagicon Thierry Boutsen Benetton-Ford 51 + 59.878 8 1
7 6 Template:Flagicon Riccardo Patrese Williams-Judd 51 + 1:14.743 10  
8 15 Template:Flagicon Maurício Gugelmin March-Judd 51 + 1:32.566 13  
9 19 Template:Flagicon Alessandro Nannini Benetton-Ford 50 + 1 Lap 9  
10 12 Template:Flagicon Ayrton Senna McLaren-Honda 49 Collision 1  
11 5 Template:Flagicon Jean-Louis Schlesser Williams-Judd 49 + 2 Laps 22  
12 4 Template:Flagicon Julian Bailey Tyrrell-Ford 49 + 2 Laps 26  
13 25 Template:Flagicon René Arnoux Ligier-Judd 49 + 2 Laps 24  
Ret 11 Template:Flagicon Alain Prost McLaren-Honda 34 Engine 2  
Ret 30 Template:Flagicon Philippe Alliot Lola-Ford 33 Engine 20  
Ret 14 Template:Flagicon Philippe Streiff AGS-Ford 31 Clutch 23  
Ret 10 Template:Flagicon Bernd Schneider Zakspeed 28 Engine 15  
Ret 22 Template:Flagicon Andrea de Cesaris Rial-Ford 27 Chassis 18  
Ret 9 Template:Flagicon Piercarlo Ghinzani Zakspeed 25 Engine 16  
Ret 36 Template:Flagicon Alex Caffi Dallara-Ford 24 Engine 21  
Ret 29 Template:Flagicon Yannick Dalmas Lola-Ford 17 Radiator 25  
Ret 23 Template:Flagicon Pierluigi Martini Minardi-Ford 15 Engine 14  
Ret 2 Template:Flagicon Satoru Nakajima Lotus-Honda 14 Engine 12  
Ret 24 Template:Flagicon Luis Pérez-Sala Minardi-Ford 12 Gearbox 19  
Ret 1 Template:Flagicon Nelson Piquet Lotus-Honda 11 Clutch 7  
Ret 21 Template:Flagicon Nicola Larini Osella 2 Engine 17  
DNQ 3 Template:Flagicon Jonathan Palmer Tyrrell-Ford        
DNQ 26 Template:Flagicon Stefan Johansson Ligier-Judd        
DNQ 31 Template:Flagicon Gabriele Tarquini Coloni-Ford        
DNQ 33 Template:Flagicon Stefano Modena EuroBrun-Ford        
DNPQ 32 Template:Flagicon Oscar Larrauri EuroBrun-Ford    
Source:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
CitationClass=web }}</ref>{{safesubst:#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Center with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | style }}

Championship standings after the raceEdit

  • Bold text indicates the World Champions.

Template:Col-start Template:Col-2

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 Template:Flagicon Ayrton Senna 75
2 Template:Flagicon Alain Prost 72
3 Template:Flagicon Gerhard Berger 37
4 Template:Flagicon Michele Alboreto 22
5 Template:Flagicon Thierry Boutsen 21
Source: <ref name="Championship">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Template:Col-2

Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 Template:Flagicon McLaren-Honda 147
2 Template:Flagicon Ferrari 59
3 Template:Flagicon Benetton-Ford 30
4 Template:Flagicon Lotus-Honda 17
5 Template:Flagicon Arrows-Megatron 17
Source: <ref name="Championship"/>

Template:Col-end

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings. Points accurate at final declaration of results. The Benettons were subsequently disqualified from the Belgian Grand Prix and their points reallocated.

ReferencesEdit

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