The McLaren MP4/8A is the sixth such chassis made.
It’s very one in which the legendary Ayrton Senna won the 1993 Monaco Grand Prix.
That was the last of the record six times he won the iconic race. It was also
one of five grand prix victories he took in that, his last season with the
team. The next year, he switched to Williams in an ill-fated move that would
claim his life.
Powered by a Ford/Cosworth V8, the MP4/8A was more
simply known as the MP4/8 before the modified 8B was developed. But that model
was used as a test-bed for a Lamborghini V12 engine, and was never raced. The
MP4/9 that followed the next season packed a Peugeot V10 that served as a
stop-gap for one year. The next season, McLaren embarked on its long
relationship with Mercedes.
Resplendent in timeless Marlboro livery, Senna’s
last McLaren will hit the auction block in Monaco next month. Bonhams (which
will handle its sale) won’t say exactly how much it thinks it will sell for,
but it tells us the sale price will be “in excess of five million euros.”
That’d be about US$ 6.2 million at current exchange rates. But we have every
reason to believe it will fetch far more than that. Especially with all the
hype surrounding the new road-going, track-focused McLaren Senna supercar.
The current record, in case you’re wondering, for a
grand prix racer sold at auction was set by a 1954 Mercedes-Benz W196 that
Bonhams sold for $30 million at Goodwood in 2013. The highest price paid at
auction for a modern F1 car is the US$ 7.5 million that Sotheby’s sold
Schumacher’s Ferrari F2001 for in New York last year.
What’s more is that this won’t be the only piece of
Senna’s history from Monaco coming up for sale in Monte Carlo next month. The
same auctioneer will also be selling off the Toleman-Hart TG184 in which Ayrton
first contested the famous race (to a controversial near-miss).
And rival auction house RM Sotheby’s will be selling
off the suit that he wore in the race in 1987. The bottom line is that the
glamorous Mediterranean enclave will be the place to be for fans of the late,
great Brazilian driver. That is, those with the wherewithal to acquire a piece
of the action.