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Reversal of Fortune: How Antonio Pizzonia Recovered his F1 Career
by David Cameron
At the age of 22, Antonio Pizzonia was a promsing young driver about to make his debut in Formula One. Less than a year later, he was without a chance of getting a seat, after an abysmal season at Jaguar, that ended prematurely when the Ford owned team fired him for under-performing. A year later, the Brazilian's stocks are once again on the rise. Frank Williams, Sam Michael, Juan Pablo Montoya and Pizzonia himself tell David Cameron how the 24-year-old managed to recover his reputation. Exclusive for Atlas F1
Ann Bradshaw: Point of View
by Ann Bradshaw
In this week's column, Ann Bradshaw talks about the poor television coverage of the Japanese Grand Prix, the hype surrounding Takuma Sato, a simple solution to save the British Grand Prix, Dubai's sweltering heat, and much more
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Dear Ralf
by Karl Ludvigsen
A few months ago, Atlas F1's Karl Ludvigsen was critical of Ralf Schumacher following the German's unimpressive run of results in the early part of the season. He also questioned Toyota's decision of signing the Williams driver for next year. Following Schumacher's performance in Japan last weekend, however, Ludvigsen shows only fools can't change their minds...
The One-Day Weekend
by Richard Barnes
The one-day Japanese Grand Prix served as an acid test of which teams had arrived in Japan having done their Suzuka homework. The smart money was on Ferrari and Michael Schumacher and, as ever, they didn't disappoint. Atlas F1's Richards Barnes analyses the events of the penultimate round of the 2004 season
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