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Williams-Renault FW14B
Pole/Winner, 1992 German Grand Prix
driven by Nigel Mansell

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By any other standards, the weekend would have been a breeze for
Mansell. But for team Williams in 1992 it was no walk in the park!
Mansell scooped qualifying, 0.550 seconds ahead of his teammate, and
better than 1.1 seconds ahead of 1991 World Champion, Ayrton Senna in
the McLaren-Honda. And he did so on a single qualifying run, aborting
the session due to damage from debris sustained on his second outing!
When the race got underway on Sunday, July 26, 1992, Mansell got away
poorly but managed to retain the lead after some heavy braking and a
brave run through turn one with Patrese knocking at the door. Having
survived the first corner, the two Williams teammates stormed away
from the field and settled into a pace that the competition couldn't
match but that was comfortable for the remarkable Williams/Renault
combination.


Mansell came into the pits ahead of schedule, suffering from a sudden
oversteer condition and with a warning light suggesting a deflating
rear tire. The Brit regained the track just ahead of Schumacher but
with Patrese in the lead and Senna in second. The Brazilian made
Mansell fight for the position for several laps but, perhaps feeling a
pass was inevitable, eventually waived the Williams by after the pair
tangled at the Ostkurve chicane on lap 19. Mansell inherited the lead;
Patrese having stopped for tires a few laps prior.
As the laps wound down Mansell was very concerned about a vibration
coming from the left-front tire. On the fast Hockenheim circuit the #5
Williams was shaking so badly that the Lion, as he was nicknamed, had
to back off on the straights just to see where he was going! With a
comfortable lead he could afford to do so and scored a victory that
placed him on the cusp of his first and only World Championship!
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