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Blundell's view: 2006 F1 season review - Pt. 1.

22.10.2006 Sao Paulo, Brazil, 2006 F1 World Champion, Fernando Alonso (ESP), Renault F1 Team - Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 18, Brazilian Grand Prix, Sunday Podium
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Blundell's view: 2006 F1 season review - Pt. 1.

Friday, 22nd December 2006

"You have to take your hat off to Alonso this year. He got the job done and didn't give up and even with all the technical things that were thrown at Renault, to try and take a bit of pace out of them..." - Mark Blundell.

by Rob Wilkins


The 2006 FIA Formula One World Championship will be remembered for many of reasons, principally though, when people talk about the season just gone, it will boil down to two main things. Namely: Fernando Alonso taking his second successive drivers’ title and Michael Schumacher pushing him close, make that very close, but ultimately having to settle for second, before hanging up his helmet and saying ‘Auf Wiedersehen’.

Here Crash.net columnist and ITV F1 pundit, Mark Blundell looks back over the year, in the first of two interviews about 2006.

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What will be remembered most about the year, at least according to MB?

Read on to find out…



Q:
Mark, looking back at the season as a whole: Do you think it will be remembered fondly?

Mark Blundell:
I think it will be thought of as a memorable season. Obviously at the end of it the championship went down to the wire, with one of the greatest drivers’ of all time, Michael Schumacher and also possibly one of the guys, who could become on the of the greatest of all time, two-time world champion, Fernando Alonso, battling it out for the title. So, yeah, there will be a lot of memories attached to the season overall.

Q:
In terms of the drivers’ championship, the battle came down to a fight between Fernando Alonso and Michael Schumacher. Alonso came out top. Do you think the best man won?

MB:
I believe that the best man won in terms of consistency and there were a number of points’ through-out the season, Monte Carlo being one of them, which was a bit costly to Schumacher. There was a little bit of inconsistency at the beginning of the season for Ferrari, which may have cost them. But you have to take your hat off to Alonso. He got the job done and didn’t give up and even with all the technical things that were thrown at Renault, to try and take a bit of pace out of them, it didn’t really have an overall effect.

Q:
For Alonso, it was a highly significant season. He took back-to-back drivers’ titles. Will that achievement though be overshadowed by Michael Schumacher’s decision to retire? What will people remember most about 2006 - Alonso taking his second drivers’ crown or Schumi hanging up his helmet?

MB:
People always remember winners. People will remember that Alonso won the world championship for the second year running and the fight was against Schumacher. But I don’t think there will be anybody thinking about Schumacher retiring and making it an easy job for Alonso. That was never the case. The fact of the matter is - the best man won the title. You have got to accumulate points at every single race to get the championship and that is what Alonso did. Every time he went out, he went out to get the points and to get the job done.
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Related Images
22.10.2006 Sao Paulo, Brazil, 2006 F1 World Champion, Fernando Alonso (ESP), Renault F1 Team - Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 18, Brazilian Grand Prix, Sunday Podium
Mark Blundell - Crash.net columnist and ITV F1 pundit
22.10.2006 Sao Paulo, Brazil, Fernando Alonso (ESP), Renault F1 Team and Michael Schumacher (GER), Scuderia Ferrari - Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 18, Brazilian Grand Prix, Sunday
Mark Webber looks on as potential replacement Fernando Alonso performs miracles with the Minardi
Mark Ellis - Jaguar Racing
Michael Schumacher`s Ferrari wore black as a mark of respect to the terrorist victims in America
Ferrari engineers stand in silence as a mark of respect to those killed and injured in America
The Ferraris wore black as a mark of respect for the terrorist victims in America
Michael Schumacher in the Ferrari F2001 minus the sponsors as a mark of respect for those lost in the terrorist attacks in the USA
Michael Schumacher`s blank Ferrari F2001 - as a mark of respect after the recent terrorist attacks in the USA
Michael Schumacher in the Ferrari F2001 minus the sponsors as a mark of respect for those lost in the terrorist attacks in the USA
The plain Ferrari F2001 - as a mark of respect after the recent terrorist attacks in the United of States of America
Michael Schumacher`s blank Ferrari F2001 - as a mark of respect after the recent terrorist attacks in the US
The plain Ferrari F2001 - as a mark of respect after the recent terrorist attacks in the US
Mark Blundell tests for Williams in 1990.
Mark Blundell in action during the 1994 Formula One season
Mark Blundell battles with the 1995 McLaren
Mark Blundell during his 1993 Formula One tenure with Ligier.
Mark Blundell in Mexico during the 1991 Formula One season.
Damon Hill, Michael Schumacher and Mark Blundell on the 1994 Spanish Grand Prix podium at Barcelona
Mark Handford - chief aerodynamicist, Jaguar Racing
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Mark Webber - Benetton-Renault B200B
Mark Webber - Benetton-Renault B200B
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