Video
WATCH: The incredible story of how the McLaren MP4/4 redefined dominance in F1
Share
While Red Bull broke numerous records with the championship-winning RB19 in 2023, many F1 fans will remember the McLaren MP4/4 as setting the benchmark for dominance during a memorable 1988 season.
A new documentary on F1 TV tells the story of that remarkable year from inside the McLaren team. In F1 Icons: Redefining Dominance, Steve Nichols – Car Designer and Engineer of the MP4/4 – recalls the approach to designing the car and why he had concerns about the process.
With two star drivers in Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna eager to try out the team’s new challenger for the first time, there were nerves for Nichols ahead of the initial test. However, the drivers were astonished by the sheer speed of the MP4/4, with Nichols recalling Senna’s particularly stunned reaction and Prost’s bold prediction about the car.
F1 ICONS: Trailer
The story of 1988’s Brazilian Grand Prix curtain-raiser reveals how, after such high pre-season expectations, Senna and Prost experienced contrasting fortunes in the opening race. The famous rivalry between the two racers is explored, as Nichols explains how the initially “good” relationship deteriorated, while their intra-team battle became particularly apparent during the Monaco Grand Prix weekend.
WATCH: How Prost returned from the sidelines to make a title-winning comeback
Insiders lift the lid on how the squad’s clean streak of wins eventually came to a halt, while Nichols looks back on Senna’s “incredible” team radio response to clinching his debut Formula 1 world championship at Suzuka.
Having won all but one Grand Prix that year, Nichols and Gary Wheeler, Senna’s #2 mechanic, reflect on how it felt to be a part of one of the strongest periods of dominance in the sport’s history.
Click here to watch F1 Icons: Redefining Dominance on F1 TV. You can also find every episode of the series so far by clicking here.
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
News Leclerc singles out 'highlight of the season' for Ferrari as he hails 'good job'
Feature IN NUMBERS: How 2024 came to be one of the most thrilling F1 seasons yet
Report END OF YEAR REPORT: Mercedes – An inconsistent season and a bittersweet farewell for Hamilton
Feature END OF YEAR REPORT: Ferrari – A ‘huge step forward’ in a successful season, but can they improve further in 2025?