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F1 drivers united against racism, if not taking a knee

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LONDON — Formula One drivers expressed unity in the fight against racism on Saturday but said taking a knee before Sunday’s season-opening Austrian Grand Prix would be a matter for each to decide.

Some, such as Frenchman Romain Grosjean and Danish driver Kevin Magnussen who race for the USowned Haas team, confirmed they would be making the gesture while others were more reticent.

The Grand Prix Drivers’ Associatio­n (GPDA) said in an earlier statement all 20 drivers stood “united with their teams against racism and prejudice.”

“We spoke a bit in the drivers’ briefing and yup, interestin­g, but it’s good that we’re kind of all at least in discussion and I don’t know what we’ll see tomorrow,” commented Mercedes’ six-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.

“I think, potentiall­y, people paying their respects in their own ways,” added the sport’s only Black driver who has campaigned actively against racial injustice and for greater diversity in Formula One.

Hamilton did not reveal his own plans.

Sunday’s grid procedures will be different to usual due to the COVID -19 pandemic, with drivers maintainin­g their distance from each other.

There is not expected to be any podium prize-giving.

Grosjean said that while some drivers were not keen to take the knee, all would wear T-shirts declaring “End Racism.”

Australian Daniel Ricciardo, who has been supportive of the Black Lives Matter movement, said nobody would be judged or criticized on their actions.

“There was a little bit of perhaps difficulty with some drivers and let’s say their nationalit­y and what something like taking a knee would represent,” he explained.

“We’re not going to try and put anyone in jeopardy... we’ll do what we feel comfortabl­e with.

“The intention is for us to support it and we’ll probably show that as a unit and then if a few of us choose to do something extra then that will be the case.”

Hamilton has “Black Lives Matter” on his helmet, as does Ferrari’s fourtime champion Sebastian Vettel, and has driven the debate in Formula One.

“Our voices are powerful and if we bring them together collective­ly we can have a huge impact,” he told reporters on Thursday. The champion last month criticized those who had stayed silent on the killing of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man who died in May after a white US police officer knelt on his neck. —

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