Circuit length: 5.412km
Lap record: 1:30.252 (Michael Schumacher, Ferrari, 2004)
Number of laps: 57
Race distance: 308.238km
Driver steward: Mika Salo
The pages of the F1 calendar have flipped ahead to Bahrain and the stage is set for some interesting racing. You see, the Bahrain International Circuit is known for the dust that blows across the track, getting into the working bits of the car and causing a loss of grip too. Temperatures at Bahrain soar, which is why tyre wear and tyre management are usually of prime importance during the race. And it's no different this year, either - while Pirelli had initially picked soft and hard tyre compounds for the race, they revised their choice of tyres after the Malaysian GP. Teams now get to pick between medium and hard compounds.
So who are we likely to see on the top step of the podium at Bahrain? Well, on the back of his successful campaign in China, Fernando Alonso does look strong. Indeed, he's the most successful driver at Sakhir, having won the race thrice - 2005, 2006 and 2010. His Ferrari team has won the race here four times, making it the constructor with the most wins in the country. But, there's simply no discounting the two Red Bulls. Sebastian Vettel won the race here last year, and after a controversial start to the 2013 season, is raring to get a clean win in the bag. Mark Webber, needless to say, will want the same thing. Discounting Kimi Raikkonen, even though the Finn has never won at this particular track, would be unwise.
Going into the race though, here are the championship standings:
Drivers championship
Sebastian Vettel 52
Kimi Raikkonen 49
Fernando Alonso 43
Lewis Hamilton 40
Felipe Massa 30
Mark Webber 26
Nico Rosberg 12
Jenson Button 12
Romain Grosjean 11
Paul Di Resta 8
Constructors championship
Red Bull Racing 78
Ferrari 73
Lotus 60
Mercedes 52
McLaren 14
Force India 14
Toro Rosso 7
Sauber 5
Williams 0
Marussia 0
Caterham 0