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Russell "lost for words" after heartbreaking Canadian GP exit

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Russell "lost for words" after heartbreaking Canadian GP exit

F1 Canadian GP: Antonelli lands F1 2026 blow as Russell retires in Montreal

Formula 1
Canadian GP
F1 Canadian GP: Antonelli lands F1 2026 blow as Russell retires in Montreal

Russell suffers dramatic exit from F1 Canada GP

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Russell suffers dramatic exit from F1 Canada GP

Rosenqvist wins 2026 Indy 500 in closest-ever finish

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Rosenqvist wins 2026 Indy 500 in closest-ever finish

BTCC Snetterton: Shedden sees off Sutton for race three win, Ingram charges to third

BTCC
Snetterton (300 Circuit)
BTCC Snetterton: Shedden sees off Sutton for race three win, Ingram charges to third

McLaren: Pirelli F1 tests will help Ferrari, Red Bull for rainy Canadian GP

Formula 1
Canadian GP
McLaren: Pirelli F1 tests will help Ferrari, Red Bull for rainy Canadian GP

BTCC Snetterton: Sensational Sutton strikes from 10th to win, disaster for Ingram

BTCC
Snetterton (300 Circuit)
BTCC Snetterton: Sensational Sutton strikes from 10th to win, disaster for Ingram

LIVE: F1 Canadian Grand Prix updates - Antonelli leads as Russell and Norris among six retirees

Formula 1
Canadian GP
LIVE: F1 Canadian Grand Prix updates - Antonelli leads as Russell and Norris among six retirees

Prost says 2014 rules will put Formula 1 drivers to the test

Formula 1 drivers are going to face as tough a challenge as the teams next year in adapting to the new technical regulations, reckons former champion Alain Prost

As F1 gears up for the switch to 1.6-litre V6 turbo engines, Prost is in no doubts about the amount of work that is going to be needed for anybody to be successful in 2014.

"It is a big technical challenge - and the way it is done is going to be a challenge for the engineers making the engine for performance, reliability and everything; a big challenge for people working on the track, for the strategy; and a big, big challenge for the drivers too," said Prost, in an interview with AUTOSPORT.

"It is not going to be like the old days where you had to slow down for the fuel consumption. It will be a bit different.

"The way you are going to use the engine, relative to the quantity of the fuel, and relative to the extra energy you get from the electrical side, will be a great challenge for the drivers and engineers.

"And you are going to have a different way of using it.

"We still don't know how it will be today - but I think it is going to be interesting and very different."

Prost, who is helping Renault in an ambassadorial role, reckons there is the possibility for one team to emerge dominant next year, but thinks that is nothing new to F1.

"It's the first time for a long, long time that we have had such a big change," he explained.

"You can never be sure if there is one fantastic idea or a good engineer has found something.

"But it is much more difficult today to find that idea than it was in the 1980s when Colin Chapman was around or people were using active suspension.

"In F1, if somebody finds a fantastic idea he is going to be successful and others are going to make a copy and get better. But you need to accept that.

"What would be good also, and we must accept the competition, is that if we have three big [engine] constructors next year - we are going to have four [in 2015] - that if somebody makes a better engine with the different technology and a different way of doing it and they have the success, then you have to say well done."

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