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What to expect from Formula One's Spanish Grand Prix
Fernando Alonso Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

What to expect from Formula One's Spanish Grand Prix

After a wet and wild race in Monaco last weekend, Formula One is moving to Barcelona for its 33rd annual Spanish Grand Prix.

When Barcelona won the right to host the 1992 Summer Olympics, the city commissioned several new sports venues. Some, like the Palau D'Esports, were used for the Olympic Games themselves, while others were created in tandem to keep Barcelona a top a sporting destination. 

The Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, a sweeping, multi-purpose racetrack built just outside the city center, falls into the latter category: not used for the Olympics but developed in tandem with them to improve sporting infrastructure.

The Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya is a beloved track among drivers and fans. It has a good mix of high-speed corners (great for heart-in-mouth action) and low-speed corners (great for technical precision).

In fact, the circuit is so beloved that it often serves as a home base for F1 testing — when teams create new vehicles, they bring them to Barcelona to put them through their paces. It's a fast, fun track, and it's safe enough to allow drivers to really push the limits of their vehicles.

Need proof? Here are motorsport legends Nigel Mansell and Ayrton Senna in the inaugural Barcelona race in 1991, pushing each other into a wheel-to-wheel drag race across the circuit's longest straight:

Mansell and Senna grabbed the headlines in the '90s, but from the 2000s until today, the Spanish Grand Prix has been all about one driver: Fernando Alonso.

Alonso burst onto the F1 scene in 2001 as a hyped teen, and with the exception of  a two-year break from 2019-21, he has participated in every race since. He was the first Spanish driver to win the world championship, and his breathtaking talent — and instantly recognizable off-the-track trolling — won him legions of fans across Spain and beyond.

Alonso hasn't won a race in a decade. His last victory was in Barcelona in 2013, but for the first time in ages, he's in a car that's capable of challenging for victories. The 2023 Spanish Grand Prix, therefore, is all about Alonso. 

Can he clinch his 33rd career race win in front of an adoring home crowd?

All signs point to yesAlonso excelled in pre-race testing this week and finished second to defending world champion Max Verstappen in the latest practice session.

It's not just his performance on the track that looks promising. Happy coincidences are piling up, too. It's the 33rd annual Spanish Grand Prix, Alonso is chasing his 33rd race win and he'll be working out of ... you guessed it, garage No. 33.

The Spanish Grand Prix begins Sunday at 9 a.m. ET.

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