Glasgow Times

F1 prepares for Bahrain opener after reschedule

- PHILIP DUNCAN

FORMULA ONE bosses have unveiled a revamped calendar following the postponeme­nts of the Australian and Chinese Grands Prix.

The traditiona­l curtainrai­ser at Melbourne’s Albert Park will move to November, while the round in Shanghai, scheduled to take place on April 11, will now only go ahead if another round drops off the schedule.

F1 officials have been forced into action with strict coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns in place in both countries.

The announceme­nt means two of the opening three rounds have fallen by the wayside. But the sport remains confident of staging a recordbrea­king 23- round campaign.

Lewis Hamilton will kick off his championsh­ip defence in Bahrain on March 28 before the circus heads to Europe for a race in Imola on April 18.

It is expected Portimao in Portugal will then host the third round on May 2 before the Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona a week later.

Australia’s new date of November 21 means the season will be extended by one week, with the campaign closing in Abu Dhabi on December 12.

The British Grand Prix retains

Romain Grosjean has revealed his hands are no longer in bandages just six weeks after he cheated death at the Bahrain Grand Prix. Grosjean’s Haas erupted into flames when he penetrated a steel barrier at 140mph on the opening lap of the race on November 29.

On Tuesday, he provided an update on his condition by posting an image of his bandage- free hands to Twitter while holding his pet cat, Petrus.

“Dressing fully off and Petrus happy,” he wrote, revealing for the first time the extent of the burns on his left hand. its original July 18 slot meaning it will avoid a clash with the Euro 2020 final at Wembley and the Wimbledon men’s final.

F1’ s new boss Stefano Domenicali said: “It has been a busy start to the year at Formula One and we are pleased to confirm that the number of races planned for the season remains unchanged.

“The global pandemic has not yet allowed life to return to normal, but we showed in 2020 that we can race safely as the first internatio­nal sport to return and we have the experience and plans in place to deliver on our season.

“It is great news that we have already been able to agree a reschedule­d date for the Australian Grand Prix in November and are continuing to work with our Chinese colleagues to find a solution to race there in 2021 if something changes.

“We are very excited to announce that Imola will return for the 2021 season and know our fans will be looking forward to the return of Formula One after the winter break.

“Obviously, the virus situation remains fluid, but we have the experience from last season with all our partners and promoters to adapt accordingl­y and safely in 2021.”

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