Lewis Hamilton has the perfect opportunity to get back on the winning track in Sunday's Canadian Grand Prix after going astonishingly awry in Monaco.
Montreal is a favourite race for the double Formula One world champion, a fast track where he celebrated his first pole position and victory in his stellar 2007 debut season with McLaren. Since then, the Mercedes driver has won twice more in Canada.
"I think everything that needs to be said about Monaco has already been said. Obviously, it was a huge disappointment for me and also for the team," the Briton said before heading to Montreal.
"But we'll learn from it and move forwards together like we always do. I just want to get back out there and bounce back -- and I could hardly ask for a better place to do that than Montreal. This is always one of my favourite weekends."
Hamilton has suffered disappointments too at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, with its 300kph blasts and the 'Wall of Champions' at the treacherous final corner, and has yet to win there for Mercedes.
But when he has finished, it has been on the podium and his track record eclipses that of team mate and title rival Nico Rosberg. Three-nil on wins, 4-1 on podium appearances, 3-1 on poles and 6-1 on front row starts, the statistics all point to Hamilton.
"The racing is fantastic, the city is a lot of fun and the crowds are really enthusiastic...and it's given me some great memories, including my first win," said the Briton. "I know I've got the car underneath me and the team behind me to do it again, so I'm aiming for nothing less."
Rosberg, who became only the fourth driver to win Monaco three times in a row after Mercedes blew a surefire victory for Hamilton by calling him in for a needless pitstop while leading, is not to be under-estimated however.
The German, now only 10 points adrift of his championship-leading team mate after six races, qualified on pole in Montreal last year and is aiming for a hat-trick of wins for the season.
Both Mercedes drivers have new power units, having completed six race weekends on the previous ones, while rivals Ferrari may have upgrades to theirs.
Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo, a first time winner in Montreal last year, can only dream of such reliability but the race -- traditionally hard on brakes and engines -- can throw up surprises.
The Australian is on his fourth and final penalty-free engine already, with the team leaving Monaco mulling whether to take a hit and use a fifth in Canada.
Ferrari, who have not won since 2004 at a circuit named after their late local hero, will be hoping four times world champion Sebastian Vettel can at least finish on the podium for the sixth time in seven races.
Williams are confident too of a much better showing after failing to score in Monaco while McLaren's Fernando Alonso aims to open his account for the season two weeks after Jenson Button did the same.
Canadian Grand Prix Stats & Facts
- Lap distance: 4.361km. Total distance: 305.270km (70 laps)
- Race lap record: Rubens Barrichello (Brazil) Ferrari one minute 13.622 seconds (2004)
- 2014 pole: Nico Rosberg (Germany) Mercedes
- 2014 winner: Daniel Ricciardo (Australia) Red Bull
- Start time: 1800 GMT (1400 local)
- Tyres: Soft (yellow), Supersoft (red)
- Four times champion Sebastian Vettel has 40 career wins, double world champions Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso 36 and 32 respectively, Kimi Raikkonen 20, Jenson Button 15 and Nico Rosberg 10.
- One more win for Vettel would put him level with the late Brazilian triple world champion Ayrton Senna in third place in the all-time lists.
- Ferrari have won 222 races, McLaren 182, Williams 114 and Red Bull 50. Mercedes have won 34.
- McLaren have not won for 44 races, a run that dates back to Brazil 2012. They went 48 races without a win from 1993-97.
- Rosberg is chasing his third win in a row this weekend.
- Mercedes have been on pole for the last 17 races. The record for successive poles is 24 (Williams 1992/93).
- Hamilton has been on pole in five of the six races this season, Rosberg beating him in Spain. Hamilton has 43 career poles, Rosberg 16.
- Rosberg took 11 poles last year, when Mercedes and Williams were the only teams to start on pole.
- Ferrari's last pole was in Germany with Alonso in 2012.
- Only Mercedes and Ferrari drivers have appeared on the podium this season -- Hamilton, Rosberg, Vettel and Raikkonen.
- Hamilton has been on the podium for 13 races in a row, the longest such run he has had. Only two drivers -- Schumacher (19) and Alonso (15) -- have done better.
- Rosberg now has 32 career podiums, one more than the late Australian champion Jack Brabham. Hamilton has 76, four short of the late Brazilian Ayrton Senna.
- Vettel has been on the podium five times in his first six races for Ferrari.
- McLaren scored their first points of 2015 in Monaco, ending a run of five races without scoring -- their worst ever start to a season.
- Hamilton has won the Canadian Grand Prix three times (in 2012, 2010 and 2007).
- Hamilton, Alonso, Button, Raikkonen, Vettel and Ricciardo are the other previous winners still on the grid.
- Ferrari last won in Montreal, a circuit named after their late great Gilles Villeneuve, in 2004 with Michael Schumacher. The German won a record seven times in Canada.
- McLaren have won 13 times in Canada to Ferrari's 11.
- Since 2000, the race has been won from pole five times.
- The rain-hit Canadian Grand Prix of 2011 was Formula One's longest, lasting four hours four minutes and 39.537 seconds. That same race also saw the safety car deployed six times, another record.
- The 1973 Canadian Grand Prix at Mosport marked the first time a safety car was deployed in Formula One.
- Rosberg's Monaco GP win made him only the fourth driver to win that race three years in a row.