Unless I am very much mistaken...I AM very much mistaken...!
The lead car is unique, except for the one behind it which is identical.
This would have been Senna's third win a row if he'd won the two before
With half the race gone, there is half the race still to go.
I don't make mistakes. I make prophecies which immediately turn out to be wrong.
There are seven winners of the Monaco Grand Prix on the starting line today, and four of them are Michael Schumacher.
Mansell is slowing it down, taking it easy. Oh, no he isn't! It's a lap record.
We now have exactly the same situation as we had at the start of the race, only exactly the opposite.
IF is a very long word in Formula One; in fact, IF is F1 spelled backwards.
And Michael Schumacher is 37 seconds ahead, so he can refuel the car, change all four wheels, take off his helmet, have a smoke and a cup of tea, and rejoin in first.
Jenson Button is in the top ten, in eleventh position.
That's history. I say history because it happened in the past.
Mansell can see him in his earphone.
And the first three cars are all Escorts, which isn't surprising as this is an all Escort race.
Anything happens in Grand Prix racing, and it usually does.
Nigel Mansell is the last person in the race apart from the five in front of him
And there's no damage to the car. Except to the car itself.
[Andrea De Cesaris is] the man who has won more Grands Prix than anybody else in the history of Grand Prix racing without actually winning one of them.
You might not think that's cricket, and it's not, it's motor racing.
Do my eyes deceive me, or is Senna's Lotus sounding rough?
It's lap 26 of 58, which unless I'm very much mistaken is half way.
You can cut the tension with a cricket stump.
The European drivers have adapted to this circuit extremely quickly, especially Paul Radisich who's a New Zealander.
Let's stop the startwatch.
Speaking from memory, I don't know how many points Nelson Piquet has.