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A memorial statue of Brazilian F1 driver Ayrton Senna is seen in the park inside the race track at Imola. Photo: Reuters

Ayrton Senna casts a mighty shadow

Twenty years on from Brazilian star's death in crash at the Imola Grand Prix, the pain still lingers for fans and family, admits his sister Viviane

For Brazilians of a certain generation, the death of Ayrton Senna is not unlike September 11 or the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

Everyone remembers where they were when they heard the news.

"It's funny, it doesn't seem like it was 20 years ago," his sister Viviane Senna says of the Formula One great's fatal crash at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix.

"It seems so long ago and yet so recent. There's no one who, unsolicited, doesn't tell me what they were doing and where they were when the accident happened. Everyone knows. Everyone remembers. It's incredible."

There's no one who, unsolicited, doesn't tell me what they were doing and where they were when the accident happened. Everyone knows. Everyone remembers. It's incredible
Viviane Senna

Even though two decades have passed, Senna still casts a mighty shadow over both his sport and Brazil. The three-time world champion followed in the slipstream of compatriots Emerson Fittipaldi and Nelson Piquet but his success and popularity left both behind.

During Senna's peak years, between the first title with McLaren in 1988 and his death in a Williams in 1994, Formula One almost rivalled football as Brazil's most popular sport.

Things are different now, in Brazil at least, and Formula One has lost that passionate following. Felipe Massa is the country's only active F1 driver and Senna remains the last champion.

Viviane Senna at the Ayrton Senna institute. Photo: Reuters

Even Viviane says her brother would today baulk at what she classed "first a business, second a business and third a business, and maybe a sport in fourth or fifth or sixth place.

"I don't think it would be just him, lots of people don't think Formula One is as exciting," she adds in an interview in Sao Paulo, at the Ayrton Senna Institute, the educational charity she runs.

"The role of the car is even greater today than it was when Ayrton raced. The drivers made much more of a difference back then. Every race was a show, there was always a mishap, something electrifying always happened.

"Ayrton was called the King of Trouble because wherever he went something would happen. So there was competition back then. It was a sport that had excitement. Today it's lost that."

Viviane, nevertheless, says if her brother were still alive he would probably still be involved in the business, perhaps managing a team like past triple champions Jackie Stewart or Niki Lauda did.

She also reveals that, like all drivers, Ayrton had harboured ambitions of driving for Ferrari.

"He always told me that he would like to race with Ferrari. I think he'd liked to have done that before he retired. Now I think he would be involved in racing in one way or another, maybe with a team or as a businessman.

"He also wanted to be a forestry agent in Angra dos Reis, near Rio. When he was in Brazil he always liked to be there or on the farm, close to nature. He said it recharged his batteries so he could spend a year on the front lines in Europe.

He also wanted to be a forestry agent in Angra dos Reis, near Rio. When he was in Brazil he always liked to be there or on the farm, close to nature
Viviane Senna

"And he'd be involved in the institute. Even though he didn't understand the issues, he'd learn and be involved. He might not be there on a day-to-day basis, but he'd be close and know what was going on."

The Ayrton Senna Institute is a non-profit organisation envisaged by Senna before his death and created by his sister a few months after it.

Ayrton Senna of Brazil gives the thumbs-up to crowds of spectators from the victory podium after winning the Japanese Grand Prix at the Suzuka circuit in 1993. Photo: Reuters

Based in his home city, it raises funds through donations and by licensing Senna-related merchandise.

The money is used to create and promote innovational education projects to benefit Brazil's ailing public schools and the cash helps train 75,000 teachers and educational professionals each year. More than two million children are aided annually and the institute is recognised by Unesco for the work it does. Viviane, 55, is one of Brazil's most respected leaders.

However, she laments the lack of visionaries elsewhere in a nation that is having enormous trouble in preparing to host the 2014 World Cup, due to kick off in less than two months.

Stadiums are late, including the one being built by Ayrton's favourite team, Corinthians. Airports and public transportation projects have been scaled back or abandoned altogether.

"I think all Brazilians know that we could have taken more advantage of this opportunity," says Viviane. "We haven't developed our airports, we haven't built the infrastructure. We've done less than we could and should have. That's not opinion, it's reality."

Viviane says Brazil is full of potential but, as the World Cup organisation proves, much of it remains unfulfilled. She points to her brother's brilliance on rain-splashed circuits as an example of what Brazil sometimes lacks.

"Ayrton was considered the king of the rain, but to be king of the rain he had to fail first. He was leading a kart race in Interlagos when he was 12 and he lost control of the kart in the rain and he spun off," she recalls.

"And so every time it rained he got in the kart and he drove, wherever he could, he drove till it was dark and he'd come home completely soaked. And that was how he learned to drive in the rain.

"He had talent and that talent wasn't enough, he had to have the discipline and the persistence to develop his talent. Those attitudes are as important as opportunities and what Brazil needs is opportunities and the persistence to develop.

"I think Brazil has got much, much better over the last 20 years. There is an immense potential and talent here, like Ayrton had, but talent and potential need opportunities first and foremost and Ayrton had that."

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Senna casts a mighty shadow
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