Business Day

Record 24-race calendar, new deal for Monaco

- Alan Baldwin

Formula One will have a record 24 races next season with Las Vegas making its floodlit debut in November and Monaco signing a new deal to secure its place on the calendar until at least 2025.

But while Formula One has been negotiatin­g with SA’s Kyalami circuit that deal has yet to be done.

The governing FIA announced the approval of the calendar, with the Las Vegas Strip circuit taking a November 18 date as the season’s penultimat­e round and third in the US. It will also be the first race to be held on a Saturday since 1985.

“The Las Vegas Grand Prix is going to take F1 race weekends to the next level,” said Formula One CEO Stefano Domenicali. “The entire city is buzzing with excitement for next year’s race.”

The Grand Prix’s 6.12km track along the famed Las Vegas Strip will see drivers roar past landmarks such as the Bellagio Fountains and Caesars Palace at an event expected to attract 170,000 fans.

Monaco, historical­ly the most glamorous race, had its future thrown into doubt earlier in the year amid contract renewal talks. Formula One said a new three-year deal had now been signed with the Automobile Club de Monaco, whose president, Michel Boeri, added that it was likely to be renewed.

The principali­ty retains its traditiona­l May 28 slot as the eighth race and middle part of a triple-header with Italy’s Imola and Spain’s Circuit de Catalunya near Barcelona.

This season was to have had a record 23 races but that was reduced to 22 after Russia’s race in Sochi was cancelled after the invasion of Ukraine.

Bahrain will open the season on March 5, with Abu Dhabi hosting the final round on November 26.

The calendar also avoids a clash with the 24 Hours of Le Mans sports car race, which will be celebratin­g its 100th anniversar­y next year on June 10-11.

The British Grand Prix at Silverston­e on July 9 will be on the weekend before the Wimbledon men’s and women’s tennis finals on July 15-16.

The traditiona­l August break

is maintained, with Belgium becoming the last race before it at the end of July and following on from Hungary rather than the first after. Belgium’s longerterm future remains uncertain, with organisers signing only a one-year extension in August.

“The presence of 24 races on the 2023 FIA Formula One World Championsh­ip calendar is further evidence of the growth and appeal of the sport on a global scale,” said FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem. “The addition of new venues and the retention of traditiona­l events underlines the FIA’s sound stewardshi­p of the sport.”

Qatar, with a race on October 8, returns as a fourth Middle Eastern round after being absent this year due to the country hosting the Fifa World Cup.

China, which last hosted a race in 2019, returns despite lingering uncertaint­y over Covid-19 restrictio­ns. France has been dropped as previously announced. Azerbaijan and Miami remain as back-toback races on April 30 and May 7, respective­ly.

There was no confirmati­on of which races would be held in the sprint format, with the sport seeking as many as six after three this year.

“Formula One has unpreceden­ted demand to host races and it is important we get the balance right for the entire sport,” said Domenicali.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Maximum effort: Max Verstappen is the reigning world champion and on course to retain the title.
/Reuters Maximum effort: Max Verstappen is the reigning world champion and on course to retain the title.

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