Times Colonist

F1 season starts today, after four-month delay

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SPIELBERG, Austria — Four months after the opening race was called off at the last minute, the Formula One season finally gets underway today on another continent and in a different-looking world.

There will be no fans on hand at the remote Spielberg track in Austria, with the coronaviru­s still creating uncertaint­y over how many races can actually be held — and where.

That might not be the only unusual sight, as drivers are discussing whether to take the knee together on the grid before the race in support of the Black Lives Matter movement. Defending F1 champion Lewis Hamilton has been an outspoken supporter of the movement and will be competing in an all-black Mercedes car — instead of the usual silver — as a statement against racism.

“It is so important that we seize this moment,” said Hamilton, the only Black driver to become F1 champion.

The truncated campaign kicks off with back-to-back races in Austria, as part of a hastily reworked schedule. It was meant to start nearly 16,000 kilometres away in Melbourne, Australia.

But the fast-spreading impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic led to the Australian GP being cancelled on March 13, two days before the scheduled race.

A rescue package with eight European races squeezed into 10 weeks, culminatin­g with the Italian GP on Sept. 6, was scrambled together. F1 still hopes to rearrange some of the postponed races in order to finish the season with 15 to 18 of the scheduled 22.

There will also be two consecutiv­e races at the British GP. If the season continues beyond Europe, it will end with races in Bahrain and Abu Dhabi in December.

“We actually don’t even know the amount of races we are going to do,” McLaren and future Ferrari driver Carlos Sainz Jr. said. “It’s an unpreceden­ted scenario.”

Spielberg’s Red Bull Ring, cut off from major towns or cities, offers a reassuring­ly secluded feel amid coronaviru­s fears.

The 4.3-kilometre circuit will be largely empty. It is normally swarming with tents, camper vans, makeshift barbecues and tens of thousands of orangeshir­ted Max Verstappen fans.

The Red Bull driver, hugely popular back home in the Netherland­s, has won the past two races here.

The track is among the shortest in F1, but also one of the most aggressive. Drivers spend about 72% of the time at full throttle, second only to Italy’s Monza track with 77%.

That’s perfectly suited to Verstappen’s bold and abrasive racing style. Last season, he chased down the leading trio before making a typically brazen overtaking move on race leader Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari.

The 22-year-old Verstappen showed last season that he is closing the gap to Hamilton in terms of wheel-to-wheel driving. Red Bull’s car also made a considerab­le jump in speed, while Ferrari’s faded, and Verstappen is emerging as a major title threat to Hamilton.

The 35-year-old British driver is chasing a record-equalling seventh F1 title to equal Michael Schumacher’s record, and only needs to win eight more races to beat Schumacher’s mark of 91.

Aside from Verstappen and possibly Valtteri Bottas — Hamilton’s improving teammate at Mercedes — the other main challenger is Leclerc.

The 22-year-old Monaco driver is extremely quick and impressed observers in his first season at Ferrari with seven pole positions — two more than Hamilton — and two wins.

He is now Ferrari’s No. 1 ahead of four-time F1 champion Sebastian Vettel, whose star has faded after he wasted mid-season leads in 2017 and 2018 and lost those titles to Hamilton.

The German veteran is leaving at the end of the year after failing to agree on a new contract.

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