Ferrari
T641 1990
Nigel
Mansell, originally brought into Formula One by the
legendary Colin Chapman of Team Lotus, had a career
marked by close misses, tragic accidents and equipment
failure, and perhaps the most dominant single season
ever by an F1 World Champion.
Mansell's early years with Lotus and Williams were a
learning period in which this hot-tempered Brit mastered
the craft of F1 racing the traditional way with
mistakes as in his slide into the Armco at a
rain-filled 1984 Monaco while leading in the JPS Lotus.
Mansell's aggressive overtaking moves earned him the
affectionate titles "IL Leone" (The Lion)
from the Ferrari Tifosi, who embraced him as one of
their own, and "Red 5," for the number worn
on his Canon-Williams-Renault during the 1992 championship
season.
Mansell's
single season record of nine wins in 16 races, combined
with 14 poles and five consecutive GP victories, tying
Jim Clark, has been matched
only by Michael Schumacher
in the 17-race 1995 and 2001 seasons. His 1991 chase
of eventual World Champion Ayrton
Senna, ended by a spin into the gravel at Suzuka,
was marred by the loss of a wheel during an ill-fated
pit stop at Estoril and the extraordinary electrical
failure of his Renault "black box" (once again
while leading) in the final corner of the Canadian GP.
Earlier, Mansell missed two other "sure" championships
in 1986 and 1987 when he had a tire explode at 250kph
on the main straight in Adelaide, Australia while leading,
and the next year when he crashed during practice at
the final race in Suzuka, Japan, breaking his back.
Mansell's
mercurial relationship with the F1 establishment
epitomized by his 1990 "retirement" from Ferrari,
his subsequent departure announcement from Team Williams
midway through the 1992 campaign after learning that
Frank Williams had signed Alain
Prost for the next season, and his final 1995 "comeback"
in the so-called "fat" McLaren, especially
redesigned to fit his extra-wide rump are the
stuff of Grand Prix legend. But perhaps his crowning
achievement was Mansell's back-to-back championships
in F1 and IndyCar, a feat sure never to be repeated.
But for a brush of the wall in the closing laps of the
1993 Indianapolis 500, Mansell came within a hair's
breadth of becoming just the 4th Formula One World Champion
in history to drink the fabled milk of Indy.
Nigel
Mansell's Career Profile |
Seasons |
Races |
Wins |
Poles |
Fastest
Laps |
Points |
F1 Titles |
14 |
185 |
31 |
32 |
30 |
480 |
1 |
|