Bangkok Post

Vietnam, Bahrain Formula One races dropped

Officials eye late May restart but say Covid-19 situation would have to be reviewed regularly

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>> PARIS: Formula One’s season was thrown into turmoil on Friday with the Australian Grand Prix cancelled just hours before cars were due to hit the track, and races in Vietnam and Bahrain subsequent­ly called off as well as the coronaviru­s pandemic takes its toll.

The decisions follow the postponeme­nt last month of April’s Chinese Grand Prix, leaving motorsport chiefs scrambling to revise the calendar and proposing the end of May as a potential start date for the season.

“The global situation regarding Covid-19 is fluid and very difficult to predict and it’s right we take time to assess the situation and make the right decisions,” F1 chief Chase Carey. “We are taking this decision with the FIA and our promoters to ensure the safety of everyone involved in Formula 1 and our fans.”

Formula One and the FIA, world motorsport’s governing body, said they “expect to begin the Championsh­ip in Europe at the end of May but given the sharp increase in Covid-19 cases in Europe in recent days, this will be regularly reviewed.”

The Dutch Grand Prix is the next race on calendar, although its scheduled May 3 date will be pushed back. The Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona was planned for the following week.

The future of the Australian race, the first of the season, was in doubt on Thursday when McLaren pulled out after one of its team members tested positive for the virus.

McLaren revealed on Friday that 14 other staff were now in a mandatory two-week quarantine after being in close contact with the man.

The McLaren employee was among eight Formula One personnel who went into isolation after showing flu-like symptoms typical of the disease this week.

The other seven — including four from the Haas team — all returned negative results.

The fast-moving developmen­ts sparked a crisis meeting between the race organisers, the FIA, teams and Formula One promoters late Thursday to discuss whether today’s race should go ahead.

“Those discussion­s concluded with a majority view of the teams that the race should not go ahead,” they said in a joint statement just hours before the first official practice session and with fans queueing to get in.

Teams quickly began packing up to leave the circuit as some fans, many travelling from overseas, fumed at the way they were treated.

“We had to find out from Twitter, not from the organisers and have been waiting here for hours in the line,” said one fan.

Hours later, Vietnam postponed its debut F1 Grand Prix as the race became the latest to fall victim to a virus that has killed over 5,000 people, with cases around the world topping 134,000, according to an AFP tally.

Scheduled for April 5, the Grand Prix in Hanoi was set to be the third race of the season and the first-ever to be held by the communist country.

Last year Vietnam signed a 10-year deal with Formula One to host an event state media said would cost the country $60 million per year.

The Bahrain race planned for March 22 was due to be held behind closed doors, but it too was shelved.

Bahrain has shut schools and axed some flights in order to curb the spread of the virus. It has also asked visitors from high-risk countries to self-quarantine for a fortnight.

“Formula 1 and the FIA continue to work closely with the race promoters in Bahrain and Vietnam and the local health authoritie­s to monitor the situation and take the appropriat­e amount of time to study the viability of potential alternativ­e dates for each Grand Prix later in the year should the situation improve,” the statement added.

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Drivers compete at the Bahrain Grand Prix last year.
ABOVE Drivers compete at the Bahrain Grand Prix last year.
 ??  ?? Red Bull team members leave the Australian Grand Prix site on Friday.
Red Bull team members leave the Australian Grand Prix site on Friday.
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Workers take a lunch break in front of a poster promoting the Vietnam Grand Prix in Hanoi.
LEFT Workers take a lunch break in front of a poster promoting the Vietnam Grand Prix in Hanoi.

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