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Interview with Jarno Trulli: Driving on Sheer Frustration
by Roger Horton
Jarno Trulli is frustrated. He is undeniably one of the more talented drivers in Formula One today, and yet, after 70 Grand Prix starts, the Italian driver has only 24 World Championship points to show for it. Last weekend was, to some extent, the epitome of Trulli's career so far: circumstances and poor reliability contrived to deny him of a brilliant third place in qualifying, and a well deserved points-finish in the race. Roger Horton talked to the somber youngster during the Canadian GP weekend and heard from him about his struggles with Lady Luck
BMW-Williams-Michelin Q&A
by Roger Horton
The Canadian Grand Prix marked the second victory for the Williams-BMW-Michelin combination. Only this time, unlike San Marino, Ralf Schumacher beat his brother Michael in a straight fight after a race-long duel. After the race, Roger Horton caught up with some of the key players in Ralf's win: Michelin boss Pierre Dupasquier, BMW motorsport director Dr. Mario Theissen, technical director Patrick Head, and race engineer Sam Michael. He got most of his questions answered
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McLaren start the team's 500th GP |
Michael Schumacher wins the Canadian GP |
Two laptops are stolen from the Minardi pits |
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The Canadian GP Review
by Pablo Elizalde
The Canadian Grand Prix added another leaf to Formula One's history book, courtesy of the Schumacher Bros. But the race itself belonged to Ralf Schumacher, who not only took his second win of the season (and career), but also did so in the most dominant and mature fashion. Pablo Elizalde reviews the weekend's events and climax
Reflections from Montreal
by Roger Horton
For the second time this season, Sir Frank Williams and his partner Patrick Head were able to leave a Grand Prix as impressive winners. This time they had beaten the acknowledged best car and driver combination in the pitlane in a straight race-long contest and come out on top. Roger Horton returns from the Canadian paddock with a few insights and reflections on the weekend's events
The Strongest Virtue
by Richard Barnes
There are many qualities that F1 drivers exhibit in abundance - courage, talent, aggression, concentration, calmness. Sunday's Canadian GP illustrated the value of a vital and often-overlooked driver quality - patience. Richard Barnes writes about those who command this virtue, and those who sadly lack it
Fishing for Future Designers
by Karl Ludvigsen
With tugs-of-war running over the services of Adrian Newey as well as Gustav Brunner, it's becoming quite clear that F1's pool of good designers is dwindling fast. Award winning writer Karl Ludvigsen looks down the pitlane in search for the next drawing board star
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Team Connaught, Part II: Remembrance of Things Fast
by Thomas O'Keefe
There once was a team called Connaught. It was a small team, but it was very much admired - still is, by many motor racing fans. The story of Connaught, and the seven years it participated in motor racing, including Formula One, is a fascinating one, and very typical of Grand Prix racing as it was then, and as it is now. Thomas O'keefe researched the highs and lows of the marque and presents a four-part series of articles about the unique constructor
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