The Formula One season is finely poised at the moment. Following Ferrari's emphatic one-two win in Spain, it could easily turn into a one-make race. Kimi Raikkonen (pictured) looks on the top of his game after taking a comfortable win at the Circuit de Catalunya, moving to 29 points at the top of the drivers' standings. His Ferrari team-mate Felipe Massa - who seems to be recovering from his early season woes - took a well-deserved second, lifting him to fourth in the championship on 18 points. If Ferrari continues like this, the competition might as well pack up and go home.
But British driver Lewis Hamilton is still in with a chance. In Spain he managed to get his under-performing McLaren-Mercedes up into third place, putting Massa under pressure in the closing laps. Hamilton remains second in the championship, nine points adrift of Raikkonen. Meanwhile Polish driver Robert Kubica continued his strong run this season, taking fourth in his rapidly improving BMW Sauber. He's slotted into fourth in the standings, one point behind Hamilton and ahead of Massa by the same margin.
The only real drama of an otherwise rather dull, processional race was Heikki Kovalainen's terrifying 150mph accident on lap 22, caused by a tyre deflation. Fortunately the McLaren-Merecedes driver only suffered concussion and should be fit to race this weekend.
So there's all to play for as the F1 circus moves to Turkey for the fifth race of the season from Istanbul. Held at the relatively new 3.34-mile Speedpark circuit at Istanbul, the Turkish GP is a big favourite among the drivers. A fast circuit, it has a series of challenging corners, including the superb double-apex turn eight. Over-taking is reasonable here, so you can expect plenty of fireworks. Can Raikkonen extend his lead? Can Massa confirm his newly found form? Can the very promising Kubica improve his position? Or can Hamilton pull something very special out of the bag?
Steve Rider introduces the live coverage. James Allen and Martin Brundle provide the commentary, there's analysis from Mark Blundell, and trackside reports from Ted Kravitz and Louise Goodman.
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