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Canadian teen Stroll plays it cool in Canadian GP practice

If Lance Stroll felt any jitters during his first laps around Circuit Gilles Villeneuve they didn't show on the 18-year-old Formula One rookie.

Ferrari's Raikkonen fastest in 2nd session ahead of Saturday qualifying

Williams driver Canadian Lance Stroll, left, gets ready for the first practice session Friday at the F1 Canadian Grand Prix Montreal. via AP) (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

If Lance Stroll felt any jitters during his first laps around Circuit Gilles Villeneuve they didn't show on the 18-year-old Formula One rookie.

Stroll, a Montreal native driving for the Williams team, posted the 17th best time in a pair of 90-minute practice sessions on Friday that were dominated by the leading Ferrari and Mercedes AMG teams.

"There are always a bit of nerves but not on Friday, just on Saturday (in qualifying) and Sunday (in the race)," said Stroll. "But it's positive nerves.

"Those are the nerves that get me going, so it's good."

Ferrari veteran Kimi Raikkonen, coming off a second-place finish behind teammate Sebastian Vettel two weeks ago in Monaco, posted the fastest lap of one minute 12.935 seconds on the 4.361-kilometre track. The Finn was 0.215 seconds better than two-time defending champion Lewis Hamilton's Mercedes.

Formula One leader Vettel was third at 1:13.200 with Valtteri Bottas in the second Mercedes AMG fourth at 1:13.310. Max Verstappen's Red Bull was best among the rest at 1:13.338 even though his car stopped on the track with 17 minutes remaining.

Friday practices are for experimentation, when teams test different set-ups and tires to see what works best on the track known for its long straights leading to tight corners that ends with a particularly nasty chicane just before the finish. The start/finish line includes the infamous wall of champions, where six F1 champs have crashed over the years.

Ultrasoft tires seemed to work best, and Stroll's teammate Felipe Massa used those to post the sixth-quickest lap. Stroll gets his turn on them in the third practice Saturday morning before qualifying.

"Everyone's been doing different programs, so we'll have a better idea in qualifying," said Stroll, who is aiming to reach the final group in qualifying to earn a spot near the front for the race. "This track suits our car so if everything goes to plan, with the tires working and getting the laps done, it's possible.

Germany's Sebastien Vettel navigates his Scuderia Ferrari during practice Friday for the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal. (Clive Mason/Getty Images)

"We need to stay calm and concentrate on the job."

Stroll is gunning for a top-10 finish, which would bring his first F1 points. He was able to finish only two of six races so far, with his best result an 11th at the Russian Grand Prix.

But Williams has a history of good results in Canada. Bottas finished third the last two years before leaving Williams for Mercedes AMG, which caused the British team to bring Massa out of retirement to be Stroll's veteran teammate.

Massa's mentorship may be especially important this week.

"He needs to be calm," Massa said of Stroll. "He needs to understand everything about this track, how to approach the corners.

"This track actually looks maybe easier than it is to drive. It has so many tricks — over the curbs, over the braking, over the lines. So he has a lot to learn, but now he has the whole evening to look at data and how to improve and be ready."

They will all have trouble knocking the F1 leaders out of the top spots. Ferrari has a slight edge on Mercedes AMG so far in both the constructors standings and the drivers table, where Vettel leads Hamilton by 25 points.

But Hamilton has won five Canadian Grand Prix, starting in 2007, which is second only to Michael Schumacher's seven titles. Vettel won it in 2013 while Raikkonen's lone win was in 2005.

"There's stuff we want to improve on, so we'll see. It's tricky here," said Raikkonen.

Race contract extended to 2029

The Canadian Grand Prix will run at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve at least until 2029.

Mayor Denis Coderre and representatives of the federal and Quebec governments on Friday pledged $98.2 million to a five-year extension of a contract with Formula One owners Liberty Media. The current contract was to expire in 2024.

The federal government will put in $36.2 million, the province $28 million and the city $34 million.

Quebec will also put $18 million toward improvements to the race venue at Jean Drapeau Parc on two islands near downtown Montreal.

Building new paddocks and garages and improving the condition of the 4.361-kilometre track were promised when the current contract was extended but so far, little has been done.

Coderre said work will begin after next year's Grand Prix and will be completed in time for the 2019 race.