Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 43. Chapters: Martin Brundle, Justin Wilson, Adam Carroll, Giorgio Pantano, Andy Priaulx, Rob Huff, J. R. Hildebrand, Gary Paffett, Will Bratt, Jeroen Bleekemolen, Nick Tandy, Robbie Kerr, Jolyon Palmer, Bjorn Wirdheim, Derek Hill, Kazim Vasiliauskas, Roger Yasukawa, Tobias Hegewald, Jack Clarke, Joe Tandy, James Jakes, Jason Moore, Josef Newgarden, Darren Turner, Jonathan Kennard, Ramon Pineiro, Phil Giebler, Jose Alonso Liste, Jeff Simmons, Christian Jones, Alex Brundle, Stefan Wilson, Roman Rusinov, Luciano Bacheta, Max Snegirev, Andy Lally, Ivan Lukashevich, Jaroslav Jani, Tristan Vautier, Thiemo Storz, Danny Watts, Niall Quinn, Felix Rosenqvist, Maria de Villota, Romain Dumas, Matt Hamilton, Bruce Jouanny, Justin Keen, Richard Plant, Carl Breeze, Dominik Jackson, Nigel Moore, Emmet O'Brien, Viktor Jensen, Joel Miller, Damien Faulkner, Alexander Tyuryumin, James Pickford, Andy Booth, Adam Wilcox, Karim Ojjeh, Sam Hancock, Richard Lyons, Jonathan Legris, Jacky van der Ende, Bruno Besson, Emilio de Villota, Jr., Allan Simonsen, Maxime Jousse, Tim Bridgman, Loic Deman, Shinya Nakazawa. Excerpt: Martin John Brundle (born 1 June 1959 in King's Lynn, Norfolk) is a British racing driver from England, known as a Formula One driver and as an F1 commentator for ITV Sport from 1997 to 2008 and for the BBC from 2009. Brundle contested the British Formula Three Championship with Ayrton Senna in 1983, finishing a close second, and the two progressed to Formula One the next year. Brundle failed to score a victory at the top level of single seaters, but he has been very successful in other disciplines. He was the 1988 World Sportscar Champion, with a record points haul, and won the 1990 Le Mans 24 hour Race for Jaguar in an XJR-12. Brundle had an unorthodox route to Formula 1. He began his racing career at the age of 12, competing in grass ...