For many Brazilians, the sound of rain on a Sunday in March 1991 still carries a certain electricity. That was the day Ayrton Senna, drained to the point of collapse, finally won his home Grand Prix. He had come close before, too close, but never quite reached the top step at Interlagos. When he finally did, fighting a crippled McLaren over the closing laps, he offered something beyond sport: endurance, faith, and the feeling that human limits could bend.
The car that carried him there, McLaren MP4/6-1, is now set to cross the auction block. Displayed first at Abu Dhabi Collectors’ Week in early December, it will be offered from its sole private owner with an estimated sale price between 12 and 15 million US dollars. The opportunity is, in every sense, unrepeatable.
The Race That Defined Him
Senna’s victory in São Paulo has long been framed as divine intervention. Starting from pole, he led early but came under heavy pressure from Nigel Mansell’s Williams. Only when Mansell’s gearbox failed did Senna’s own troubles begin. Fourth gear disappeared, then fifth, and soon after sixth nearly followed. In the closing laps he was locked in top gear, his car barely able to crawl through the slower corners. Yet somehow, through the worsening drizzle, he managed to hold off Riccardo Patrese by less than three seconds.
When the flag fell, Senna could barely lift the trophy. “By the finish I had nothing left,” he said later. “God gave me this race.” It was his first home win, the hardest of his career, and the moment that crystallised his legend.
A Masterpiece of Its Era
MP4/6-1 was more than just the vessel for that victory. It was the first chassis of McLaren’s 1991 campaign, the very car Senna tested alongside Gerhard Berger at Estoril that February. Designed by Neil Oatley, it was a study in precision: a 3.5-litre Honda V-12 capable of 720 horsepower, spinning to 13,800 rpm, coupled to a six-speed manual gearbox and wrapped in a carbon-fibre monocoque.
The MP4/6 would go on to claim eight wins that season, securing both the Drivers’ and Constructors’ Championships and marking Senna’s third and final world title. It also holds a technical footnote in racing history. It was the last car with a manual gearbox and a naturally aspirated V-12 engine to win the Formula 1 World Championship.
From Factory Treasure to Auction Star
After the 1991 season, chassis MP4/6-1 was retired and kept by McLaren for nearly three decades. Before being sold to its current owner in 2020, it was fully recommissioned to race-ready condition by McLaren Heritage. More recently, it has been inspected and run by marque specialist Lanzante Ltd in Petersfield.
The car will be offered with a McLaren Certificate of Authenticity and the full suite of supporting equipment, including an external starter, fuel primer, engine pre-heater, and more. For the new custodian, it represents not just a piece of history but a living, functioning machine prepared to run as it once did on that unforgettable day.
Legacy, Made Tangible
Senna’s MP4/6-1 is more than a car. It is a story bound in carbon fibre, a moment in time when mastery met adversity and willpower overcame machinery. Few machines can claim to have carried a driver to immortality. This one did, on a rain-slick circuit in São Paulo almost 35 years ago.
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