By Andrew Downie SAO PAULO, April 25 (Reuters) – For Brazilians of a certain generation, the death of Ayrton Senna is not unlike September 11 or the assassination of John F. Kennedy. “It’s funny, it doesn’t seem like it was 20 years ago,” his sister Viviane Senna said of the Formula One great’s fatal crash at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix. Even though two decades have passed, Senna still casts a mighty shadow over both his sport and Brazil. During Senna’s peak years between the first title with McLaren in 1988 and his death in a Williams in 1994, Formula One almost rivaled football as Brazil’s most popular sport.
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