Pre-qualifying report As at the previous event in
Hungary, the Friday morning pre-qualifying session was dominated by
Brabham, who achieved their second 1–2 in succession. On this occasion,
Martin Brundle was fastest, 1.5 seconds quicker than his team-mate
Mark Blundell. Third, over 3.5 seconds slower than Brundle, was
Olivier Grouillard for
Fondmetal, the fourth time this season he had pre-qualified. Over a second behind Grouillard was
Alex Caffi, pre-qualifying for the first time in three attempts for
Footwork. Missing out by 0.45 of a second in fifth place was Caffi's team-mate
Michele Alboreto, the first time he had failed to pre-qualify in his three attempts. A fraction slower in sixth, after suffering a huge accident, was
Gabriele Tarquini in the
AGS, nearly two seconds ahead of
Pedro Chaves in the
Coloni. Bottom of the time sheets was the other AGS of
Fabrizio Barbazza, who also crashed during the session.
Pre-qualifying classification Qualifying report Ayrton Senna was fastest most of the weekend and duly took pole position, but Ferrari were right on his heels.
Alain Prost qualified third on the road while
Jean Alesi had set the fastest first and second sectors only to come across traffic at the end of the lap, resulting in a sixth place start, which would be elevated to fifth.
Riccardo Patrese had originally qualified second, but after Saturday qualifying his car was found to not have a reverse gear as per the safety regulations and Patrese's Saturday times were wiped out, he had to start a disappointing seventeenth on the grid. Patrese's misfortune promoted Prost to second, with
Nigel Mansell third,
Gerhard Berger fourth, Alesi fifth, and
Nelson Piquet sixth while the sensation of qualifying, Schumacher, was an amazing seventh for his first Grand Prix. The top ten was completed by Roberto Moreno in the second Benetton,
Pierluigi Martini in a Minardi and the ever-impressive
Stefano Modena in a Tyrrell.
Qualifying classification ==Race==