In 1989, Ayrton Senna was disqualified after winning the Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka. He had collided with Alain Prost at the シケイン, continued via the escape road, and rejoined to win. The stewards ruled that he had cut the シケイン and gained an advantage, stripping him of victory and handing the 選手権 to Prost. One year later, at the same サーキット, Senna drove into Prost at the first corner. Both cars were eliminated, and Senna won the 選手権. Two collisions, two years, one サーキット. Suzuka has hosted more 選手権-defining moments than any other venue in Formula 1, and the reason is not coincidence — it is because the サーキット rewards the kind of commitment and precision that separate the great from the merely fast.
Honda's test track: 1962
The Suzuka サーキット was built in 1962 as a Honda test track, designed by Dutch engineer John Hugenholtz. Its most distinctive feature is the figure-eight layout — the track crosses over itself via an overpass — which creates a サーキット that is both fast and technically demanding in a way that few other venues can match.
The サーキット hosted its first Japanese Grand Prix in 1976, at Fuji Speedway. But Suzuka's first F1 レース came in 1987, when it replaced Fuji as the home of the Japanese Grand Prix. From that point, Suzuka became the regular venue for one of the most 重要 races on the calendar — often the シーズン finale, often the 選手権 decider.
The Senna-Prost years: 1989-1991
The 1989 Japanese Grand Prix is one of the most controversial races in Formula 1 history. Prost led the 選手権 and needed only to finish ahead of Senna to secure the title. When Senna attempted to pass at the シケイン, Prost turned in and the two cars collided. Prost retired. Senna continued via the escape road, pitted for a new nose cone, and rejoined to win. The stewards disqualified Senna for missing the シケイン, handing the 選手権 to Prost. Senna and McLaren appealed, but the disqualification stood.
In 1990, the 選手権 positions were reversed: Senna led, and Prost needed to win. Senna, still furious about the previous year's decision, took the inside line into the first corner and drove into Prost. Both cars were eliminated, and Senna clinched the 選手権. The collision was widely condemned, but Senna later admitted that his anger over 1989 had influenced his approach.
The 1991 レース was less dramatic but equally significant. Senna won, securing his third world 選手権, but famously let his teammate Gerhard Berger through to win the レース on the final lap — a gesture of sportsmanship that partially redeemed the controversies of the previous two years.
The corners that define Suzuka
Suzuka's figure-eight layout creates a サーキット that flows in a way that few others can match. The opening sector is fast and rhythmic: the Esses — a sequence of left-right-left-right corners taken at high speed — reward precision and confidence. A ドライバー who finds the right rhythm through the Esses carries momentum that compounds through the entire sector.
130R, the high-speed left-hander in the second sector, is one of the most demanding corners in Formula 1. It is taken at over 300 km/h in modern cars, and the consequences of getting it wrong are severe — Allan McNish crashed heavily there in 2002, and the corner was subsequently modified with additional runoff. Even with the changes, 130R remains a test of whether a ドライバー is willing to keep the right foot planted when every instinct says to lift.
Spoon Curve, the double-エイペックス right-hander that follows 130R, is a technical corner that punishes overdriving. The entry requires patience, the mid-phase rewards commitment, and the exit determines the speed down the back ストレート to the final シケイン. Drivers who find the right balance through Spoon often find time that is invisible on telemetry but visible on the stopwatch.
The modern era: 2009 to present
After a brief absence in 2007-2008, when Fuji hosted the Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka returned to the calendar in 2009 and has remained ever since. The サーキット has been modified several times — the Degner curve was reprofiled, runoff areas were expanded, and the final シケイン was adjusted — but the fundamental character has been preserved.
Suzuka's position on the calendar — often in the autumn, often in the closing stages of the 選手権 — means that it frequently hosts title-deciding races. Sebastian Vettel clinched his second 選手権 at Suzuka in 2011. Max Verstappen secured his second title there in 2022. The サーキット's demand for complete ドライバー 性能 — precision, bravery, rhythm, and レース craft — makes it a fitting stage for the sport's highest-stakes moments.
Why drivers love Suzuka above all others
Ask the current グリッド which サーキット they most enjoy driving, and Suzuka consistently tops the list. The reason is the combination: the Esses require rhythm, 130R requires bravery, Spoon requires patience, and the whole lap requires the kind of commitment that leaves no room for hesitation. The figure-eight layout means that the サーキット never settles into a predictable pattern — every sector presents a different challenge, and the transitions between them demand constant adjustment.
Suzuka also rewards the ドライバー more than the car. A great ドライバー in a good car can beat a good ドライバー in a great car at Suzuka, because the サーキット amplifies the difference between precision and approximation. That is why it has produced so many 選手権-defining moments, and why it will continue to do so for as long as Formula 1 exists.