British GP could go ahead despite quarantine restrictions
Britain likely to waive quarantine restriction
LONDON: Formula One is working to put on a British Grand Prix in July even if the country imposes quarantine measures on visitors during the Covid19 crisis, F1 sources said on Sunday.
The Sun newspaper quoted a government source as saying there would be an exemption for sports, with Formula One and soccer teams free to travel from Britain and return without restriction once competition resumes.
It said athletes and teams would be expected to undergo a rigorous testing regime and isolate themselves immediately if they tested positive for the novel coronavirus.
Formula One sources told Reuters conversations with the government were ongoing.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in a televised address to the nation on Sunday that “it will soon be the time... to impose quarantine on people coming into this country by air.”
An association representing UK airlines said the government was planning a 14-day quarantine period for most people arriving from abroad to try to avoid a second peak of the coronavirus outbreak.
Manchester City and Chelsea are still in the Champions League, which has been halted since March at the last 16 stage, and would need an exemption to continue in the competition.
Quarantine also has big implications for Formula One, with the British Grand Prix at Silverstone scheduled for July 19 — the weekend after teams complete a planned double-header in Austria on July 5 and 12.
The race will be a 70th anniversary for Formula One at the English circuit which hosted the first world championship race in 1950.
Seven of the 10 Formula One teams are based in Britain and would be returning from a secure environment in Austria where they would have been effectively isolated for two weeks and repeatedly tested.
Formula One managing director Ross Brawn outlined last week some of the measures set to be implemented for the season-opening races.
“Everybody will be tested and will have a clearance before they even go into the paddock, and then every two days they’ll be tested whilst in the paddock and that will be with an authorised authority and consistent,” he told Sky Sports television.
“We’ll have restrictions on how people move around... we have to create an environment that, within itself is effectively a small bubble of isolation.
“And the teams will stay within their own groups. They won’t mingle with other teams, and they’ll stay at their own hotels.”
Silverstone has made clear that its race has to get government approval and cannot be a burden on policing or the medical services.
Britain’s coronavirus death toll — over 31,800 — is the second highest in the world, behind the United States.
Meanwhile, while Formula One rivals compete in virtual grands prix and various esports series during the Covid-19 lockdown, six-time world champion Lewis Hamilton has been busy racing against himself.
The Briton has been a keen gamer since boyhood and for some years a brand ambassador for the Gran Turismo franchise on Sony’s PlayStation.
“I’ve been working with them the last couple of years and I got to do this challenge, beat my time kind of thing,” the 35-year-old said in a Mercedes video interview discussing what he had been up to in the absence of real racing.
“So I’ve been racing myself, trying to beat my own laps and stuff. It’s been frustrating as hell because my laps are pretty decent I think.”
Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel, a fourtime world champion with Red Bull, made his esports debut this month after being sent a simulator to use at home but Hamilton said he was “not very interested” in that.
“I never drive the simulator, very rarely,” he explained. “I think with simulators it’s very, very difficult because the movement is never perfect.
“You’re at home with the simulator, so the seat doesn’t move. The mind is telling you the car’s moving but you’re not getting cueing of movements.”