The bust and boom that will start Ferrari's second F1 millennium
Ferrari celebrated its Formula 1 history at the Tuscan Grand Prix, but its current car isn't going to add any more major achievements to that story. However, there is more than one reason why the future beyond the immediate looks good for the Scuderia.
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For nine laps, it looked as if the Ferrari might have something almighty to celebrate in the Tuscan Grand Prix - the event it was marking as its 1000th world championship race.
Once the real race had finally got underway after the first lap pile-up and safety car restart nonsense, Lewis Hamilton led Valtteri Bottas, with Charles Leclerc following in third. Charles Leclerc, in a Ferrari SF1000, in third on lap nine. That hasn't happened at any other point in the 2020 season thanks to the car's limitations.
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