Bangkok Post

8 and counting

Canadian Grand Prix also looks uncertain

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Baku race delayed, creating headache for Formula One officials

LONDON: Azerbaijan postponed its June 7 Formula One Grand Prix yesterday, leaving the stalled series with a major rescheduli­ng headache after cancelling or calling off the season’s first eight races.

What would have been a record 22 round season has already lost two of its fixtures, including May’s showcase Monaco Grand Prix which will not feature in the championsh­ip for the first time since 1954.

The March 15 opener in Australia has also been cancelled while Bahrain, Vietnam, China, the Netherland­s and Spain are postponed with no alternativ­e dates proposed as yet and more races in doubt.

Organisers of the race in Baku, won by Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas last year, said in a statement the decision to postpone was “a direct result of the ongoing global Covid-19 pandemic and has been based entirely on the expert guidance provided to us by the relevant authoritie­s.

“In coming to this conclusion, BCC’s [Baku City Circuit] primary concern throughout has been the health and well-being of the Azerbaijan­i people as well as all visiting F1 fans, staff and championsh­ip participan­ts.”

Organisers said they hoped to be able to announce a new race date and all tickets would continue to be valid.

Preparatio­n of the street circuit, which requires the installati­on of extensive safety fencing and barriers as well as the sealing of drain covers and asphalting, would have had to start soon.

The track has long, fast straights and a twisting stretch around the old town.

The crowd is usually small, with some 18,000 grandstand seats plus another 2,000 for hospitalit­y and VIP and up to 15,000 general admission tickets available, but the Baku race has been one of the more entertaini­ng and unpredicta­ble.

The next race that remains on is the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal on June 14 but that also looks uncertain due to the pandemic, as does France on June 28.

France currently has stringent restrictio­ns on people’s movements while Canada has closed its borders to all but essential travel.

Questions are now being asked about whether Formula One, with rounds still to come in Asia, the Americas, Middle East and Europe, will be able to hold even the minimum eight races needed to make a championsh­ip.

Formula One has cancelled its usual August shutdown, bringing it forward and extending it to three weeks in March and April in the hope of rescheduli­ng races from earlier in the season, but that may be wishful thinking.

Postponeme­nt of the race in Baku leaves Azerbaijan without a major sporting event in a year that had promised plenty of action.

The city had been due to host four games including a quarter-final of the Euro 2020 soccer championsh­ip but that has now been postponed to next year.

A WIN FOR ZHOU

Renault’s Chinese test driver Zhou Guanyu won a virtual Bahrain Grand Prix on Sunday as Formula One sought to entertain fans with esports action in a season stalled by the spreading coronaviru­s.

Bahrain would have been the second race of the year on Sunday and Liberty Media-owned Formula One had hoped to enlist current drivers in a virtual replacemen­t using the Codemaster­s F1 2019 game.

In the end McLaren’s Lando Norris and Williams’ Nicholas Latifi, who has yet to make his F1 race debut, were the only ones present.

Others stepped up, however, with former McLaren F1 driver and current Mercedes Formula E racer Stoffel Vandoorne finishing second with Austrian Philipp Eng, who had started on pole position, third.

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 ?? REUTERS ?? A car participat­es in the 2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix at Baku City Circuit.
REUTERS A car participat­es in the 2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix at Baku City Circuit.

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