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Formula E season heads for thrilling final showdown
Head to head —
A single point separates Lucas di Grassi (left) and Sebastien Buemi in the Formula E World Championship.
Shivraj Gohil / Spacesuit Media
Champagne moment? —
Brazilian Di Grassi, who has won on three occasions in 2015-16, will start as favorite at Battersea but knows he can't afford to ease up.
Shivraj Gohil
Fast mover —
Buemi has chalked up three wins and six podiums this season, with the raw speed of the Renault e.Dams car helping keep the former Toro Rosso driver in the title hunt.
Charles Coates/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
Snapshot of a winning moment —
Di Grassi triumphed in Paris as the French public embraced the excitement of Formula E. He said: "The atmosphere here is amazing. Even people in houses were opening their windows to cheer me!"
At the Long Beach race, Di Grassi put the frustration of his disqualification in Mexico -- when it was discovered his car had contravened weight rules -- behind him and swept to victory in California.
CNN/FormulaE
Sporting spectacle —
Di Grassi and Buemi have been part of a season that has thrilled fans at races around the world.
Handout/Getty Images North America/Getty Images
Emerging star —
Sebastien Buemi makes his way out of a "tunnel" of staff at the Punta Del Este ePrix in Uruguay.
Handout/Getty Images South America/Formula E via Getty Images
Back and forth —
ABT Schaeffler driver Di Grassi and Buemi have been involved in a seesaw battle, swapping the lead on track and at the top of the leaderboard right the way through the season.
Shivraj Gohil
Dominant display —
Buemi enjoys the moment after his dominant victory in the opening round of season in China. Starting from pole position, he eased to an eventual 11-second winning margin.
Formula E
Setting up the grand finale —
Buemi took the checkered flag at the Berlin ePrix in May to ensure the nail-biting London decider. The Swiss clinched victory to close the gap to championship leader Di Grassi to a solitary point.
Shivraj Gohil / Spacesuit Media
Berlin brilliance —
Buemi celebrates in the German capital -- but will he be celebrating again in London? We'll know after this weekend.
Andrew Ferraro/Formula E
Green and pleasant —
Part of the circuit at Battersea Park, the host of the final Formula E weekend of the season.
IAN KINGTON/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Tough environment —
"It's fast, it has a lot of corners, and it is the second-longest track of the year," Di Grassi says of the 1.8-mile Battersea Park circuit.
Charles Coates/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
Qualified success? —
"The only downside of Battersea Park is that it's narrow -- not as wide as Buenos Aires or Mexico -- so to overtake is extremely difficult," Di Grassi explains. "So that means qualifying positions become very important."
Mark Thompson/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
Leafy suburb —
Di Grassi in action in the 2015 race in Battersea, a suburb in south-west London.
Mark Thompson/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
Pit stop? —
Last year's championship winner, leader Nelson Piquet of Brazil, takes his car around a corner near a pub on the borders of the Battersea circuit.
Charles Coates/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
Making a Bolt for it —
At last year's Battersea ePrix, Usain Bolt challenged Formula E drivers to a 100-metre sprint race.
Scott Heavey/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images for Visa
And the winners were... —
Last year's top three, Sam Bird (centre), Jerome d'Ambrosio (left) and Loic Duval (right) celebrate on the podium at Battersea Park. Who will be this year's winner?