Spanish Grand Prix: Can Barcelona provide another thriller?

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Fans watch the Spanish Grand PrixImage source, Getty Images
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The Spanish Grand Prix has been held in Barcelona since 1991

When one of the newest circuits on the block offers fans such a madcap spectacle, how does an F1 old guard reply?

Following Azerbaijan's bumps, blowouts and bonkers racing, Spain has to pick up the baton on a season which has already delivered in terms of thrills and excitement.

History tells us this shouldn't be a problem for the Spanish track. As the opening act of the European leg of the calendar, the grand prix has seen it all across the five venues it has been staged at.

Gilles Villeneuve crossing the line at the head of a five-car train for his final win in 1981; Williams' Pastor Maldonado's celebrating his sole victory over local boy Fernando Alonso in 2012 (while the Williams pit garage went up in flames); if fans want drama, this should be the place to find it.

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The man who made F1 great again - without meaning to

Since the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya took over hosting in 1991, Ferrari have chalked up seven team victories, 17 different drivers have taken the chequered flag, while 10 nationalities have been represented on top of the podium.

In 2016, Max Verstappen wrote his name in the record books as the youngest Formula 1 winner at the tender age of 18 years and 227 days.

Coming off the back of another controversial collision - this time with team-mate Daniel Ricciardo in Baku - Verstappen will be hoping for the positive headlines of two years ago this time around.

As the pre-season testing circuit, if a team can produce the goods in Barcelona, then glory in Abu Dhabi could be in sight come November.

With a new track surface which is smoother, less abrasive and up to two seconds faster than before, the question of "which team has the best car?" could, in some small way, be answered by whoever takes the chequered flag on Sunday.

Image source, Getty Images
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Fernando Alonso won his first Spanish Grand Prix in 2006

Rapido!

Image source, BBC Sport
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Michael Schumacher is the king of the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. Among the current crop of drivers, Lewis Hamilton, Kimi Raikkonen and Fernando Alonso are tied with two victories each

Flashback vote

The Spanish Grand Prix has plenty to offer when it comes to memorable F1 moments.

Does Michael Schumacher's wet-weather masterclass in 1996 take your pick?

Or maybe Ayrton Senna and Nigel Mansell's gripping battle in 1991 is the one for you?

Choose your favourite from the list below and we'll reveal the results online after the vote has closed.

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Previously in F1...round four, Azerbaijan

Image source, Getty Images
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Seb's three in a row qualifying poles: The Ferrari man took his place on the front row at the tricky Baku street circuit, putting in the graft on his first run of the top-10 shootout, clocking in 0.342 seconds quicker than Lewis Hamilton. "I felt the car was good in Q1, Q2 and then in the last section I knew I had the car that does what I want."

Image source, Getty Images
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Madcap Baku race day: The incidents just kept on coming in Azerbaijan. Ricciardo and Verstappen crash into each other, Vettel threw away the lead with a mistake at the restart and a tyre blowout ended Valtteri Bottas' hopes of a first win of the season. Lewis Hamilton benefited from the mayhem and was joined by Kimi Raikkonen and Force India's Sergio Perez on the podium

The track

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Back pocket facts

  • The Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona has been under construction for more than 130 years and it's only expected to be complete by 2026

  • Fancy walking around in your birthday suit down Las Ramblas? Not a problem in Spain, as the country currently has no laws against nudity in public

  • 700 people in the town of Coria del Río, near Seville, share the surname Japon (Spanish for "Japan") as they are descendants of 17th-century samurais who stayed there after an embassy returned to Japan

  • A different way to travel is the Spain to Portugal zipline. Measuring 2,365 ft long, it takes 60 seconds to get from Sanlucar de Guadiana, in Andalucia, to Alcoutim, in the Algarve

  • In 2011, the village of Sodeto, on the brink of financial ruin after the economic downturn, took a chance on the El Gordo (or "Fat One") lottery and won...700 million euros

Drivers' social

Image source, Twitter
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Max Verstappen living the life in Monaco

Image source, Sergio Perez Twitter
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No Champions League semi-final viewing for Sergio Perez after Baku. The Force India driver was cheering on his native Mexican team, Club America, in the Clausura 2018 Copa MX quarter-finals, with America celebrating a 4-1 win over Puma UNAM

Image source, Sauber/Twitter
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Sauber have shared some cracking behind the scenes pictures of what life is really like for a driver inside an F1 car. Marcus Ericsson could almost take a nap at 200mph in this position

Image source, Twitter
Image source, Sauber/Twitter
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A star: GCSE design and technology coursework completed

How to follow on BBC Sport

BBC Sport has live coverage of all the season's races on BBC Radio 5 live, BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, plus live online commentary on the BBC Sport website and mobile app - including audience interaction, expert analysis, debate, voting, features, interviews and video content.

All times BST and are subject to change at short notice.

Spanish Grand Prix coverage details

Date

Session

Time

Radio coverage

Online text & audio commentary

Thursday, 10 May

Preview

21:00-21:30

BBC Radio 5 live

Friday, 11 May

First practice

09:55-11:35

BBC Radio 5 live sports extra

From 09:30

Second practice

13:55-15:35

BBC Radio 5 live sports extra

From 13:30

Saturday, 12 May

Final practice

10:55-12:05

BBC Radio 5 live sports extra

From 10:30

Qualifying

14:00-15:00

BBC Radio 5 live

From 13:00

Sunday, 13 May

Race

14:00-16:00

BBC Radio 5 live sports extra

From 12:30

Monday, 14 May

Review

04:40-05:00

BBC Radio 5 live

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