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Schumacher Starts Season Right
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Australian All-Ferrari Front Row
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F-1 Opens Down Under
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Grand Prix of Australia Race Results
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Mika No More
Mika Hakkinen has insisted that he will never race in Formula One again. Hakkinen, who won the drivers' title with McLaren-Mercedes in 1998 and 1999, told Monday's Iltalehti tabloid newspaper that F1 was no longer a possibility, as he is quite simply too old. "Of course it's over," he said when asked about F1. "Write that. I'm ready to sign that," he added. "I'm now 36 years old. I'm not young anymore. Age is inevitably becoming an issue. It is impossible to think that I would drive in F1 for example in the 2006 season, because all the time the day is drawing nearer when my reactions become slower, my vision weakens and so on. That's the law of nature." The Finn, who will compete in the DTM this year with Mercedes, was rumoured to be on the brink of a come-back during 2004, before Williams opted to try and sign Jenson Button.
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Bahrain International Circuit

Barcelona, Spain

Budapest, Hungary

Hockenheim, Germany

Imola, San Marino

Indianapolis, U.S.A.

Istanbul, Turkey

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Magny-Cours, France

Melbourne, Australia

Monte Carlo, Monaco

Montreal, Canada

Monza, Italy

Nurburgring, Germany

Sao Paulo, Brazil

Shanghai, China

Silverstone, Great Britain

Spa, Belgium

Speilberg, Austria

Suzuka, Japan

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Melbourne, Australia
Each year a minor miracle takes place in Melbourne.
It’s the transformation of a leafy, inner suburban open space into an international gathering-point for some of the biggest movers and shakers in world sport.
For the 2004 Foster’s Australian Grand Prix a small army of construction workers, organizers, officials and volunteers will once again change Albert Park into a global shop-window for the finest in Australian major events.
A few miles of commuter roads suddenly become a 5.3-kilometre challenge to the greatest drivers in the world.
It’s a world-beating facility that attracts hundreds of thousands of people, from dedicated F1 aficionados to die-hard celebrity-watchers.
It’s an inner-city party that last for four days but brings year-round interest as Melbourne launches the annual FIA Formula One World Championship.
Visit www.grandprix.com.au for more information.

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