A bottle of Moet used by racer Ayrton Senna during the award ceremony at the Monaco GP with an autograph, 1993
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A bottle of Moet used by a racer during the award ceremony at the Monaco GP with an autograph, 1993
The 1993 Monaco Grand Prix was the sixth stage of the 1993 Formula 1 World Championship. It was held on the highway in Monte Carlo. In this championship, along with Senna, the strongest racing drivers such as Michael Schumacher and Alain Prost participated in the race.
It was from the Monaco track that Ayrton Senna's career began. Here, in the Principality, the Brazilian made himself known to the world during his first season in Formula 1 in 1984 at the wheel of a modest Toleman-Hart car and for the first time in his career climbed the podium of Grand Prix winners. That's when one of the most beautiful rivalries in the history of motorsport was born - between Senna and Prost, which was repeated in 1993. Before the 1993 Monaco Grand Prix, the press warned racing driver Damon Hill that Ayrton Senna could win for the sixth time and take the crown of his father Graham Hill, known for his victories as the "King of Monaco". Father and son had five Monte Carlo wins each in their careers. Many of the racing drivers did not even imagine that the record of 24 years ago would be broken right before their eyes. In the end, Ayrton Senna started in third place, and he faced a difficult task. After all, he had previously had an unpleasant accident in the first corner, having suffered a sensitive hand injury, and missed most of Saturday's training due to a breakdown and, until recently, had a clear advantage in speed over the cars of rivals, now lost his former superiority.
All these seemingly failures accompanying the racing driver at the beginning faded after his victory. Senna managed to win the race, taking the 39th victory of his career and the third victory in the 1993 season, receiving the unspoken title of "King of Monaco". Ayrton Senna, according to custom, in honor of the victory, arranged a shower of champagne on the podium, a bottle of which is presented in our gallery.
The tradition of celebrating victory with champagne, which originated with Formula 1 on July 2, 1950 in Reims, France, has become an integral part not only of this championship, but also of motorsport in general. In 1950, at the end of a long and beautiful race, Juan Manuel celebrated his success with a bottle of champagne for the first time in history. The idea to present champagne to the winner of the race appeared on the initiative of two cousins, hereditary champagne producers and motorsport fans - Paul Shandon Moet and Frederic Shandon de Bray. Moet and Shandon enjoyed the privilege of supplying champagne to the races until 2000.
At the same time, from 1950 to the end of the 1960s, the winners were content with a glass of champagne. Everything changed in 1967, when the talented and cheerful American Dan Gurney, having won the 24 Hours of Le Mans, shook the bottle at the finish line, which was traditionally given to the winners and the cork that flew out guaranteed him an excellent shower of foam drink and a spectacular sight.
Materials:glass.