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Banned by Mansell? Coulthard’s wild Williams story

The Williams garage in 1994 wasn’t short on drama – but few stories are quite as deliciously petty as the one David Coulthard has now brought back into the spotlight.

That season, following the tragic loss of Ayrton Senna, few plots were as thickened as the driver rotation within the Grove-based outfit.

Coulthard had begun the year as Williams’ test driver before being thrust into a race seat following Senna’s death at the San Mario Grand Prix, the third race of the season. It was a seismic moment that would reshape the entire season.

With Nigel Mansell returning to Williams for four races alongside Damon Hill – Magny-Cours, Jerez, Suzuka and Adelaide – tensions, or at least hierarchy, were never far away.

‘Can he not be in the garage?’

While Coulthard was there to learn, Mansell – ever the master of the "mental game" – apparently found the sight of his replacement in the garage a bit too much to bear.

“I remember sharing the car with Nigel and I remember actually I went to the Japanese Grand Prix, and Nigel asking that I wasn’t in the garage, because he felt that was a distraction,” Coulthard revealed on the Up To Speed podcast.

©Williams

If Mansell wanted quiet, the Williams mechanics had other ideas.

“And the Williams mechanics, in the fun way that any mechanic likes to do, [created] a photograph of me with a red circle and a straight line through, a sort of no-entry [sign], put outside the garage.

“It was slightly to take the mickey out of Nigel because, of course, Frank [Williams] was like: ‘No, he’s our race driver stroke test driver. We need him to be listening to what the car’s doing.'”

In other words: Coulthard wasn’t going anywhere.

Suzuka chaos, and a front-row education in survival

The race itself only added to the surreal atmosphere. A rain-soaked Suzuka turned into a lottery of grip, visibility, and survival.

“I remember that Japanese Grand Prix was the one that it rained torrentially, and there were cars spinning off on the start-finish straight,” Coulthard recalled.

“Back in those days, we raced in all conditions. I’m not trying to belittle modern Formula 1, and there’s very good reasons why cars don’t drive in the sort of conditions we used to.

“But I remember being in the garage, watching cars flying off the circuit, left, right and centre and going: ‘I’m so happy it’s Nigel Mansell in the car and not me.'”

Hill ultimately took victory, with Michael Schumacher second, while Mansell brought it home in fourth.

For Coulthard, it was one of those formative weekends where chaos, humour, and top-level politics all collided under one very wet Japanese sky – and somehow, a “no-entry” sign became part of the Williams legacy.

Read also: Coulthard puzzled by FIA silence on Verstappen Suzuka media row

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Michael Delaney

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