Business Day

Uncertaint­y hangs over Australian GP

• Coronaviru­s casts a shadow over opening Grand Prix of the season

- Ian Ransom

Formula One’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix will get under way with an air of anxiety this week, with members of two racing teams quarantine­d and local health authoritie­s battling to contain spreading of the coronaviru­s.

Team Haas said two of its staff were tested for coronaviru­s and were confined to their hotel rooms after showing symptoms of a cold, while McLaren said one of its team members had self-isolated.

Formula One organisers have already postponed the Chinese race scheduled in April, while the Bahrain Grand Prix, the second stop on the calendar, will go ahead without spectators on March 22.

The Australian Grand Prix Corporatio­n announced measures on Wednesday to limit interactio­n with fans, including scrapping the traditiona­l autograph sessions along Melbourne Walk, a path near the paddock where fans take selfies with the drivers as they pass by.

However, Australian Grand Prix Corporatio­n CEO Andrew Westacott said there was “no chance” of a spectator ban at Albert Park, which is set to host thousands of fans from Thursday, when practice sessions and qualifying begin for lower-profile racing series at the street circuit.

Since Westacott ’ s declaratio­n, health authoritie­s have confirmed multiple cases of community transmissi­on in Melbourne and recorded a surge of infections in other Australian regions. Two Melbourne schools were closed for containmen­t efforts, including one 3km from the race circuit.

About 86,000 spectators packed into the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Sunday to watch Australia’s cricketers beat India in the final of the Women’s Twenty20 World Cup, but a slew of other local events have been cancelled or postponed.

American pop star Miley Cyrus pulled out of a bushfire charity relief concert scheduled at Albert Park on Friday, citing advice from US health authoritie­s.

Media pundits have questioned the wisdom of running the Formula One race, which involves thousands of staff and support personnel from across the globe, and lured more than 300,000 fans to Albert organisers Park in ’2019, estimates. according to

The words “STOP F1” were written in the skies above Sydney on Wednesday but it was unclear who was responsibl­e for the skywriting.

Renault cancelled a scheduled media Q&A session with drivers Daniel Ricciardo and Esteban Ocon at Albert Park on Wednesday after the drivers made an appearance in the team’s new livery.

“Of course it’s all tricky at the moment, but we are trying to make the best of it,” Red Bull driver Max Verstappen told reporters on Wednesday.

“Hopefully [race week] will not be too different. It’s difficult to say Should at the moment.”’ Sunday s race go ahead without incident it will provide a first look at the teams’ pecking order after winter testing.

Champion Lewis Hamilton will begin his bid to match Michael Schumacher ’ s record of seven F1 championsh­ips, with his Mercedes team again expected to set the benchmark in their chase for a seventh successive constructo­rs’ title.

Red Bull, who placed third in 2019’s series, had a strong winter testing and may be poised to challenge Mercedes’ dominance.

 ?? /AFP ?? Ready to go: Renault drivers Daniel Ricciardo, right, Esteban Ocon with their new car. A Q&A session scheduled with the media on Wednesday was cancelled.
/AFP Ready to go: Renault drivers Daniel Ricciardo, right, Esteban Ocon with their new car. A Q&A session scheduled with the media on Wednesday was cancelled.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa