Damon Hill took his sole World Drivers' Championship title in 1996 when the title fight went down to the wire against teammate Jacques Villeneuve.
The pair took their FW18s to the front row in qualifying, with Jacques slightly edging Damon by 0.461s for his third pole (and our 12th) of the season.
It was the ideal starting position for Jacques, who needed to win and have Damon out of the points to take the crown, but he fell back at lights out before retiring with a wheel bearing issue.
Without a second Williams car in the race, Damon was the champion, but that didn't stop him from crossing the line in P1 to secure his crown in style.
Overcome with emotion, legendary British commentator Murray Walker was lost for words watching Damon taking the chequered flag, famously saying, 'And I've got to stop because I've got a lump in my throat' to conclude the '96 season.
Riccardo's last hurrah
Riccardo in the FW14B at Suzuka
Italian racer Riccardo Patrese had a challenging year in 1992 as he watched Nigel Mansell sail to the title with relative ease.
Riccardo, by contrast, often had to settle for a lower step on the podium, finishing half of the season's 16 races in P2 or P3, while Nigel took nine victories.
That wasn't the case in the year's penultimate round at Suzuka, though, where Riccardo took his last win for Williams and the last of his F1 career.
As had often been the case that year, Nigel led from pole position and enjoyed a lead over the sister FW14B.
Unfortunately for the Briton, reliability issues hit his car, and he retired in the final laps, letting Riccardo through as he slowed.
However, Nigel's bad luck was to Riccardo's advantage, and the Italian lapped every car aside from the podium finishers to take our then-highest win tally in a single season with 10 top-step triumphs.
Wet-weather masterclass
If ever there was a race that defined both Damon Hill’s resilience and the magic of Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka, it was 1994.
Locked in a fierce title battle with Michael Schumacher, Hill arrived knowing second place simply wouldn’t cut it. But with torrential rain hammering the circuit and Schumacher widely regarded as the sport’s ultimate wet-weather specialist, the odds were stacked firmly against the Williams driver.
What followed was anything but straightforward. After a chaotic opening phase littered with incidents, the race was stopped and restarted, turning it into a unique two-part contest decided on aggregate time. Schumacher held the advantage, but a crucial strategic call to pit again late in the race handed Hill his opportunity.
From there, it became a sprint to the flag, and Hill delivered when it mattered most. Keeping his composure in treacherous conditions, he did just enough over the final laps to overturn the deficit and seal a remarkable victory.
Damon had kept his championship hopes alive in one of Suzuka’s most dramatic showdowns.
Nicky's storming strategy
Nicky surveys the situation ahead of the restart in 2022
Nicholas Latifi advanced an incredible 10 positions during the 2022 Japanese GP to take home two points after a calm drive and plucky strategy worked wonders for team and driver.
Woeful wet weather was the story of that weekend in Mie Prefecture, with Pirelli even cancelling a planned dry-weather tyre test on Friday.
We didn't know it then, but that rain helped Nicky understand how the intermediate and wet weather tyres handled a slippery Suzuka surface, which proved pivotal on Sunday.
There were only two racing laps of action before the red flag waved in the race, and the Canadian returned to the garage to analyse the data.
Upon the restart nearly two hours later, an immediate switch to intermediate tyres as the Safety Car period ended advanced Nicky up to P8 thanks to an incredibly powerful undercut, and he eventually finished P9 during the shortened race.
That teamwork between pit wall and driver ensured Nicky wouldn't leave the sport without scoring points in his final season, and those two points scored ended up being the last in his F1 career.
Brotherly love
Ralf crosses the line in Suzuka to claim his final podium finish for Williams
The Japanese Grand Prix is a springtime affair these days, but that's a marked change from previous years, where it sat close to the season's end, leading to so many 'last time' moments.
Like Riccardo's last win and Nicky's final points, Ralf Schumacher enjoyed a 'last' time memory alongside his brother Michael Schumacher in 2004.
The brothers had previously shared a 'Schumacher 1-2' finish four times over their time racing in F1 together in 2001, 2002, and 2003.
Despite Michael's dominance in 2004, the siblings hadn't managed to even share the podium that year, partly due to Ralf's injury during the US Grand Prix weekend.
Ralf hadn't lost any speed during his time away and was the only driver close to Michael's speed in Suzuka in just his second race back in the cockpit.
The Schumacher brothers took their fifth and final '1-2' in F1, with Ralf's P2 finish also being his last podium in Williams overalls before he moved to Toyota for 2005.
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