Roland Ratzenberger - 24 Years Later

— WARNING - THIS POST CONTAINS VIDEOS THAT MAY REQUIRE DISCRETION —

Roland Ratzenberger - 24 Years Later

— WARNING - THIS POST CONTAINS VIDEOS THAT MAY REQUIRE DISCRETION —

Roland Ratzenberger was an Austrian racing driver who lost his life on this day 24 years ago, in 1994. Born 4th July 1960 in Salzburg, Austria, he began his racing career in German Formula Ford in the mid-1980s, winning the Central European Championship in 1985.

In 1989, he entered the British Formula 3000 Championship, finishing 3rd overall in his debut season. The same year, he also entered into the world famous 24 Hours of Le Mans with the Brun Motorsports team and their Porsche 962. He for the following 4 years, with Brun Motorsports once again in 1991, and with the SARD team in 1990, ‘92 and ‘93. His highest finish was in 1993 when he finished 5th in a Toyota 93 C-V.

Ratzenberger in the Porsche 962 in 1989.
Ratzenberger in the Porsche 962 in 1989.

Ratzenberger’s Formula 1 career began in 1994 at the Brazilian Grand Prix, which was the first round of the season. Driving for the Simtek-Ford team, he wasn’t able to make much of the S941, his car for the season.

Qualifying a mighty 6.745 seconds slower than Ayrton Senna’s pole time of 1:15.962, he wasn’t able to qualify for the race. His teammate, David Brabham, (son of 3-time world champion Jack Brabham) finishing last of the 12 finishers, 4 laps down from the winner,a lesser known 7-time world champion, Michael Schumacher.

Ratzenberger during qualifying at the 1994 Brazilian GP
Ratzenberger during qualifying at the 1994 Brazilian GP

Roland’s Formula 1 career was cut dramatically short. He only has one F1 finish to his name, where he finished in 11th, which was also last. This occured at the Pacific Grand Prix, at the TI (Okayama) Circuit in Aida, Japan. This was his second Grand Prix.

His third was the fateful San Marino Grand Prix. The San Marino GP is best known for being the weekend at which 3-time champion, and F1 legend, Ayrton Senna’s was killed in a crash, just the day after Ratzenberger (stay tuned).

Rubens Barrichello crashed during Friday practice
Rubens Barrichello crashed during Friday practice

Taking place at the Imola circuit within the principality of San Marino, Italy, the 3rd round of the ‘94 season saw Ratzenberger run over the curb at the ‘Acque Minerali’ chicane while on a fast lap. Instead of returning to the pits to get his front nosecone replaced, he stayed out for another fast lap. After exiting the ‘Tamburello’ corner at Turn 1 at nearly 200mph, his front wing failed at ‘Villeneuve Curva’, the next turn after Tamburello.

The failure of the wing caused the car to head towards the opposing concrete barrier. Although the crash structure of the car was near intact, the force of the impact fractured his skull, but not enough to kill him instantly.

The session was Red-flagged as Doctrs attended to him. After being taken to the circuits medical center by ambulance, he was later air lifted to Maggiore hospital. He was the second driver to be admitted that weekend, after Ruben Barrichello just the day before, as mentioned earlier.

Maggiore hospital is where Ratzenberger lost his life later the same day. He was just 33 years of age.

Remote video URL

Famous F1 commentator Murray Walker later announced Ratzenberger’s death on TV, there is a clip below.

Remote video URL

Roland Ratzenberger was also the first person to be killed on a race weekend since Riccardo Paletti at the 1982 Canadian Grand Prix. Roland was also the first to be killed in a Grand Prix car in general since Elio de Angelis died in a testing accident at Paul Ricard in France in 1986.

Rest in peace Roland, the Formula 1 community thinks of you to this day. You are still missed.

Thanks all for reading, drive safe,
675LT_ftw

Comments

Raregliscor1

It is a touch of a shame that Roland’s death is sometimes overlooked by Ayrton’s death a day later. I’m happy whenever they make a point of saying that Ayrton was carrying a Austrian flag inside his car to wave at the finish..which he unfortunately never got to do.

04/30/2018 - 20:21 |
66 | 0

I believe Senna was deeply touched by Ratzenberger’s death just the day before his.. I think its due to how deeply religious he was… Such a shame that he never flew the Austrian flag in rememberance of Roland…

04/30/2018 - 20:28 |
36 | 0
CannedRex24

I don’t want to sound as a douche

But I’m very sure that The only reason People know Bout Ratzenburger was because of Sennas death

He was always “oh that guy that died the day before Senna”

Say the accident happened on some other Grand Prix or say Senna didn’t lose his life the next day, poor Roland would have been lost in the history books

I like how we’re giving a nice tribute to to him
But why can’t we do that to every other driver that lost their life In F1, not just the famous ones and ratzenburger for example

05/01/2018 - 02:41 |
18 | 4

I think its because they all thought that F1 was now very safe and nobody could be killed. Look at Barrichello the day before, he nearly died, then Ratzenberger on the Saturday, then Senna the day after.

We lost two, nearly 3 young racing drivers in their prime… Its the fact that it all happened in one race weekend which makes it worse..

05/01/2018 - 07:09 |
6 | 0

It wasn’t because of Senna’s death that people remember him but his humble gesture that was supposed to showcase after he’d potentially win the race - Senna was carrying the Austrian flag in his race suit which he decided to wave after he finish the race. Obviously that didn’t happen, but that one touching tribute was the reason people remember Roland Ratzenburger.

05/01/2018 - 09:17 |
4 | 0
87CarreraG50

You can actually buy his old Formula Ford car right now

05/01/2018 - 09:12 |
0 | 0

Oooh. Im interested 😃

05/01/2018 - 16:36 |
0 | 0
Robert Gracie

I remember that black weekend in May 1994, that was the very first race I ever watched the San Marino Grand Prix of 1994, that race is etched into my memory….

05/01/2018 - 09:40 |
0 | 0

First race you watched? That must be horrible. Im not old enough to have seen it, but my father watched it and he’s still horrified by what he saw that day.

05/01/2018 - 16:36 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

His father Rudolph (84) is quite an active Facebook user and he’s a strong halo-supporter.

05/01/2018 - 10:56 |
2 | 0
675LT_ftw

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

The more you know… Its nice to know that he supports the halo to prevent other accidents such as that of his son. 👍

05/01/2018 - 16:35 |
2 | 0
Robert Gracie

Also minor correction to the article, Jack Brabham won the World Drivers Title 3 times, 1959, 1960 and 1966

05/01/2018 - 11:26 |
2 | 0

Oops, my mistake… Thanks for the correction 👍👍

05/01/2018 - 16:32 |
2 | 0
redflamexfire(R32 squad)

If I’m correct Senna also passed away on the 1st of may.

05/02/2018 - 06:13 |
0 | 0

Yes. Ive written an article on Senna too… Check it out!!

05/02/2018 - 06:53 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Please edit next to last paragraph, it’s ‘de Angelis’ not ‘dear’
Sadly, I watched both incidents ‘live’ on tv, and having been a cop that’s seen the worst you can imagine, this was very upsetting.
Initially I thought both would be ok, but obviously we know what happened subsequently.
Perhaps the dark side to all this is that both deaths played out on tv, quite intrusive I guess.
I remember as a kid hearing that Jim Clark had died, saw Rindt crash and die, and it was usual to have at least one fatality a season
My love for F1 died that weekend

05/02/2018 - 08:26 |
0 | 0
Noah 7

Jack Brabham is a 3 time World Champion. 2 were in cars he built. ‘59, ‘60, ‘66.

05/03/2018 - 08:50 |
0 | 0

Topics

Sponsored Posts