In his fifth grand prix for Minardi, Alonso qualified 18th – ahead of Renault's Giancarlo Fisichella and Jaguar's Pedro de la Rosa (who he's pictured racing into Turn 1). He finished 13th, ahead of Fisichella and his teammate Jenson Button!
Alonso qualified 18th and finished 11th, ahead of Heinz-Harald Frentzen (Prost), Olivier Panis (BAR) and both Arrows.
Qualified his Renault third behind a Ferrari front-row lockout, then beat Rubens Barrichello to second in the race, behind Michael Schumacher.
Alonso eclipsed Bruce McLaren's record to become the youngest-ever grand prix winner with a lights-to-flag victory from pole.
Perhaps his greatest defeat? Ferrari's Michael Schumacher deployed an incredible four-stop strategy to overcome Alonso, who had beaten him to pole.
In an epic display of defensive driving in the closing stages, Alonso held off Schumacher to record his best victory to date.
The race might be better remembered for Kimi Raikkonen's last-gasp pass on Giancarlo Fisichella for the win, but Alonso starred too – charging from 16th to third.
From 15th on the grid, after a 2sec penalty for brake-testing Robert Doornbos in practice, Alonso took just 17 laps to get into the lead – including an amazing pass on title rival Schumacher. His masterful performance was ended by a driveshaft failure that pitched him into the wall at Turn 2 after a pitstop.
His last win for Renault (for now, at least!) before moving to McLaren. Alonso was embroiled in a battle with Michael Schumacher for victory when Schuey's engine blew up, the win virtually assuring Alonso of a second title.
An insane race at times, as a thunderstorm halted the event. At the restart, Alonso prevailed after a tough battle with Ferrari's Felipe Massa.
Alonso's fourth win of the season, but his last for McLaren.
After his victory in Singapore (the most controversial of his career!), Alonso made it two from two at Fuji next time out by defeating a stern challenge from BMW's Robert Kubica.
Alonso scored a fortuitous victory on his first start for Ferrari, as leader Sebastian Vettel suffered a spark plug issue that dropped him to fourth.
Scored Ferrari's first win on home soil since the Schumacher era, by over-cutting the McLaren of Jenson Button.
With echoes of Imola 2005, Alonso clung on to record victory by 0.293s despite intense pressure from Vettel.
In a rain-affected race that ended in near-darkness, Alonso's fifth victory of the year (despite a botched pitstop) put him in the points lead as Vettel suffered an engine failure and Lewis Hamilton made a mistake.
With Vettel delayed in a pitstop, Alonso took full advantage to win by 16s. It would be his, and Ferrari's, only win of the season.
In mixed weather conditions, Alonso held off the surprise challenge of Sauber's Sergio Perez.
After a strategic error in qualifying meant he started 11th, a dramatic race unfolded. With a little help from a safety car period, and some great overtakes, Alonso ended up with a comfortable lead.
Failed to win the race or the title, but Alonso drove a blinder from eighth on the grid to finish second. Button just stayed agonisingly out of reach up front, as Vettel just did enough to grab the title.
Started only fifth, but pulled off some amazing moves in front of his home crowd. He passed Kimi Raikkonen and Lewis Hamilton in one move, undercut Vettel and then swept past leader Nico Rosberg for his last F1 victory. Inspired.
From fifth on the grid, Alonso moved into the lead mid-race, and looked good to win until a charging Daniel Ricciardo – on much fresher tyres – picked him off with a couple of laps to go. But he clung on to finish second.
From 12th on the grid in his recalcitrant McLaren-Honda, Alonso battled his way through to fifth – biffing his way past Massa and "yeehaw"-ing ahead of Carlos Sainz.
Storming drive to fifth from 11th on the grid, which included holding off Red Bull's Max Verstappen.
With both right-side tyres punctured in a collision, Alonso manhandled his car back to the pits. Not only that, he dragged it up to finish seventh – just 10s off the leader! Later he declared it "an unrepeatable race".
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