Posted: 2024-04-30 22:01:32

Formula 1 is a sport of glitz and glamour.

Some of the world's most recognisable brands travel to some of the greatest cities on Earth to see who has the fastest car.

But for all the celebrity status the sport enjoys, every race weekend contains a fatal risk that the sport has had to reckon with.

"I would say I knew as soon as I drove around the car and saw him, I just had a sense he was gone."

In 1994, Australian F1 driver David Brabham was driving his car in qualifying for the San Marino Grand Prix.

He drove past the wrecked car of his teammate Roland Ratzenberger, who had just gone off track and slammed into the barriers at high speed.

"If you see a dead body it's a very different experience," he told ABC Sport.

"When I got back to the pits I remember my wife Lisa asking me 'What do you think?' and I said 'I think he's gone'. That was the only thought I could have."

Roland Ratzenberger was an Austrian driver who had devoted his life to motor racing.

An F1 driver in a blue cap and white racing suit, with a blue background, poses and smiles.

Roland Ratzenberger debuted in F1 in 1994, after several years of competing in motorsport categories around the world.(Getty Images: Paul-Henri Cahier)

His passing was a tragedy ultimately overshadowed by the death of Ayrton Senna, who would suffer the same fate just 24 hours later during the grand prix.

But his teammate Brabham remembers a man with a passion for racing, a genuine personality and someone who inadvertently turbo-charged a push for driver safety which has had immeasurably positive consequences.

Ratzenberger breaks through with Brabham at Simtek

Ratzenberger's long road for F1 finally culminated when he was handed a five-race contract with Simtek in 1994.

The 33-year-old was finally given his chance after years of persistence, teaming with Brabham, the son of three-time world champion Jack.

"I knew of Roland well before I worked with him at Simtek and that's because he was quite a successful driver in many different disciplines," Brabham said.

"He always came across as someone very versatile — driving touring cars, sports cars, racing in Japan. It was obviously great to see he had an opportunity at a relatively late age to get to his dream which was in Formula 1."

Former F1 driver David Brabham, wearing a black cap, smiling for a picture while standing on an F1 grid

David Brabham, pictured at the Australian Grand Prix 2023, was the teammate of Roland Ratzenberger.(MB Media via Getty Images: Qian Jun)

In the back-marker Simtek, Ratzenberger failed to qualify for the opening race in Brazil but did qualify and complete the Pacific Grand Prix, held in Japan.

"You could see it on his face. He was just so, so excited to be in Formula 1. He had worked very hard in the background and never gave up hope that he was going to be in Formula 1. I think that was the big thing, he never gave up on that dream."

Ratzenberger's crash shocks the F1 world

The weekend started ominously, with Brazilian driver Rubens Barrichello suffering a high-speed crash during practice on Friday, sending him to hospital. 

The first of two fatal accidents that weekend would come on the Saturday during qualifying.

Ratzenberger's front wing gave way while he was travelling at high speed, suspected of being damaged during an earlier lap.

The remains of a wrecked F1 car are hoisted on a crane, with the help of a track marshall

The remains of Roland Ratzenberger's car after his fatal crash during qualifying for the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix in Imola. (Getty Images: Paul-Henri Cahier)

The wing was lodged under the car lifting the front wheels, taking away Ratzenberger's ability to steer and most of his braking.

The Austrian was helpless as his car ploughed into a concrete wall at speeds around 300kph.

"Once we learnt what happened to Roland everybody obviously down the pit lane, not just us, were in a state of shock — and the whole world was when that news came out," Brabham said.

"It was something we didn’t hear that often, certainly not compared to my father’s day. Formula 1 had been pretty safe for a while up until that point."

Ratzenberger's death was the first during a grand prix weekend in more than a decade.

Almost a generation of F1 fans had not dealt with such a tragedy, and it weighed heavily in the paddock.

"I had the responsibility I guess to make the decision of what we do," Brabham said, talking about whether Simtek would race on the Sunday.

"You don't know what the hell is going on … you're mind's in places it's never been before and it was very difficult to know how to deal with the situation because everything was so new."

The team made the decision to race the following day, something Brabham said the team felt Roland would have wanted.

A wreck of an F1 car, recently hitting a wall, with dust, smoke and debris flying in the air

Formula 1 racer Ayrton Senna crashes into a wall during the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix in Imola, Italy. Senna later died at the Maggiore Hospital in Bologna.(Sygma via Getty Images: Alberto Pizzoli)

The race began with a major crash, which was later followed by the crash of Senna, leading to his death.

"Each of these impacts, from Reuben's, to Roland's to the start and then to Ayrton's, they were violent accidents.

"They were like four violent accidents all happening very close to one another which I think was hard and difficult for people to comprehend.

"It did take time. Because it was a new experience it was difficult to know how to process it properly. I think it affected not just me, I think everyone on the grid. It affected a lot of junior drivers.

"I think it took a little bit of time for people to feel 100 per cent comfortable again racing at full speed. I know it affected me for several races afterwards, because your mind's not in the place it was before and you're trying to get it back to that place."

Driver safety becomes Roland's lasting legacy

Thirty years on from one of F1's darkest hours, the sport has a very different complexion.

Driver safety is more of a focal point for organisers than ever before. 

Safety features on a Formula 1 car are better than ever before — with the protective halo over the driver's cockpit the most recognisable.

The sport has not been without tragedy since 1994, with Jules Bianchi and Anthoine Hubert both being involved in fatal crashes during F1 weekends.

However, Brabham says the improvements to safety made since the deaths of Ratzenberger and Senna potentially saved many lives.

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