The 1994 Simtek season was Simtek's 1st season as a constructor. Their season was overshadowed by the death of their driver Roland Ratzenberger in qualifying for the San Marino Grand Prix. Among their race drivers was David Brabham, the son of Sir Jack Brabham, who had previously drove for his father's team Brabham and competed in all races this year.
Charlie Moody, a former Leyton House manager, was appointed Simtek's team manager.[1]
Ratzenberger's death meant that other drivers had to step in. Andrea Montermini was supposed to have replaced him from the Spanish GP onward, but suffered crash injuries in qualifying for the same race, so Frenchman Jean-Marc Gounon filled the seat for seven races, and recorded the team's best finish of ninth place at his home race. Gounon was later replaced better-funded by Domenico Schiattarella and Taki Inoue for the last three races.
Race-by-race[]
Brazilian Grand Prix[]
This began Simtek's Formula One campaign. Brabham qualified in 26th place, and Ratzenberger failed to qualify. Brabham finished the race in 12th place and last after many top drivers were forced to retire.
Pacific Grand Prix[]
In this race, Ratzenberger completed his first Grand Prix start in 11th and last place, whilst Brabham was out of the Grand Prix by lap 2 after electrical problems.
San Marino Grand Prix[]
This was the darkest race weekend in the team's history. During qualifying on April 30, Roland Ratzenberger crashed at the Curva de Villeneuve at high speed, suffering a basal skull fracture. He died on arrival at the Maggiore hospital in Bologna. David Brabham opted to continue racing out of respect for his team-mate and to raise the morale of a devastated Simtek team. In tribute to Ratzenberger, "For Roland" was painted on the car's airbox. During the race the next day, Williams driver and race leader Ayrton Senna also suffered fatal injuries after crashing at the Tamburello corner. Later on in the race, Brabham spun off and retired after completing 26 laps.
Monaco Grand Prix[]
In their first race after the passing of Ratzenberger, Simtek ran just one car for the next race in Monaco. Brabham lasted 45 laps before retiring with engine failure.
Spanish Grand Prix[]
The team promoted their test driver Andrea Montermini to a race seat, replacing the late Ratzenberger, from this race onward. Sadly, Montermini's season ended before it even began after a huge accident in qualifying, breaking his ankles. Brabham qualified in 24th and finished in 10th, running 4 laps down, the first top 10 finish for Simtek.
Canadian Grand Prix[]
After the injuries sustained by Montermini which kept him out of the season, Simtek again ran just the one car of Brabham. The Australian finished the race in 14th.
French Grand Prix[]
Former Minardi-Ford driver Jean-Marc Gounon became Brabham's third-team mate this year, replacing Montermini. He finished his debut race in 9th, whilst Brabham retired again. It was the best finish this season for Simtek.
British Grand Prix[]
For the first time this season both of Simtek's drivers finished a race, with Brabham finishing in fifteenth ahead of his team-mate Gounon.
German Grand Prix[]
After both drivers filled the thirteenth row on the grid, they looked set for a top 10 finish after many leading drivers retired, including Michael Schumacher in particular which left 10 drivers still in the race. However, near the end of the race, both drivers went out in the space of two laps, plagued by the failures on both cars of Brabham's clutch and Gounon's engine.
Hungarian Grand Prix[]
Belgian Grand Prix[]
Italian Grand Prix[]
Portuguese Grand Prix[]
European Grand Prix[]
The better-funded Italian driver Domenico Schiattarella replaced Gounon from this round onwards, and made his Formula One debut at this race. He managed to finish the race in 19th place, 5 laps behind race winner Michael Schumacher.
Japanese Grand Prix[]
Japanese pay driver Taki Inoue drove the second Simtek car for this race only. He was one of the three local drivers at this race along with Tyrrell-Yamaha's Ukyo Katayama and Larrousse-Ford's Hideki Noda. Brabham qualified in 24th and Inoue in 26th. However, Inoue crashed into the pit wall and retired after just 3 laps. Brabham finished the race in 12th, albeit 2 laps down.
Australian Grand Prix[]
Domenico Schiattarella, who was retained by Simtek for their short-lived 1995 season, was reinstated for this race. The qualifying results were the same as the last race, with Brabham in 24th and Schiattarella in 26th. They ended their season with a double retirement and no championship points.
References[]
- ↑ "People: Charlie Moody". GrandPrix.com. Inside F1, Inc.. http://grandprix.com/gpe/cref-moocha.html.