Bring Back V10s - Classic F1 stories The Race
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Bring Back V10s celebrates a classic era when Formula 1 was loud on the track and off it. Join host Glenn Freeman and a range of guests as they take a deep-dive into a golden age of F1 from 1989 to 2005, when superstars like Schumacher, Senna, Mansell and Prost were thrilling fans and rising talents like Alonso, Button and Raikkonen were establishing themselves as modern greats. Go back in time as we recall information you might have forgotten and unearth previously unknown details about some fascinating tales from F1's history.
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1997 revisited: Canadian GP
The 1997 Canadian Grand Prix featured all kinds of drama: Jacques Villeneuve crashed out of his home race early on, some drivers could barely make a set of tyres last 10 laps, David Coulthard lost victory when his car stalled while making a precautionary pitstop, and Michael Schumacher claimed the win in a race that was cut short when Olivier Panis crashed heavily in his Prost, breaking both of his legs.
Glenn Freeman, Matt Beer, Ben Anderson and Edd Straw debate all of that, plus Alex Wurz's F1 debut and how the Benetton team he joined was getting on 18 months on from losing Schumacher to Ferrari. -
1997 revisited: Spanish GP
Jacques Villeneuve got his faltering F1 title bid back on track at the 1997 Spanish Grand Prix, as Williams's superiority - with one car, at least - was restored at Barcelona.
Behind Villeneuve, Olivier Panis came through from the middle of the pack to claim second on Bridgestone tyres that held up much better than the Goodyears - but could he have won the race without an unwanted intervention from a lapped Eddie Irvine?
We also discuss Ferrari's lack of pace, Michael Schumacher's lap one heroics, and what on earth was going on with Heinz-Harald Frentzen in the second Williams. -
1997 Revisited: Monaco GP
Michael Schumacher was at his sublime best on the soggy streets of Monte Carlo, while Williams dropped the ball in spectacular fashion with a disastrous strategy call before the race even started. It was also a day for the underdogs, with Rubens Barrichello claiming Stewart's first podium finish, and Mika Salo nursing his underpowered Tyrrell into the points... without making a fuel stop!
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1997 Revisited: San Marino GP
Things finally came good for Heinz-Harald Frentzen at the 1997 San Marino Grand Prix, where his troubled start for Williams appeared to clear with a maiden victory narrowly ahead of Michael Schumacher's Ferrari. In round four of our 1997 Revisited series, we look back at how Frentzen came out on top, what went wrong for his Williams team-mate Jacques Villeneuve, plus Damon Hill's woeful collision with Shinji Nakano, David Coulthard's comedy engine failure, and another podium finish for Eddie Irvine.
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1997 Revisited: Argentinian GP
In round three of our look back at the 1997 F1 season, we recall Jacques Villeneuve's narrow victory over Eddie Irvine, plus Michael Schumacher making a mess of the start, a big 'what if' for Olivier Panis and Prost, and an even bigger 'what if' for Jordan after their drivers collided while in with a chance of winning the race.
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UNLOCKED: Listen to our members-only episode on Australia 1997
As we're between series on Bring Back V10s at the moment, we thought we'd share a little gift with those of you who aren't part of The Race Members' Club: The first episode of our special members-only series looking back at the 1997 F1 season one race at a time!
Glenn Freeman is joined by Edd Straw, Matt Beer and Ben Anderson to discuss the key moments from the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, where David Coulthard ended McLaren's mid-1990s winless streak, with a slight assist from an overambitious Eddie Irvine.
If you like what you hear and want more, click here to sign up to The Race Members' Club, or you can sign up for all of The Race's bonus audio content (but not the other perks of membership) directly in the Apple Podcasts app.
The second episode, looking back at the 1997 Brazilian Grand Prix, is out already and there's more on the way!
Customer Reviews
Maks
Great source of vintage F1 stories with good insights. Love the show!