The Scotsman

Coulthard backs female-only W Series to find Formula 1 stars of the future

- By COLIN CLUNIE

0 Lella Lombardi: Last woman to start an F1 grand prix in 1976 A new motorsport series is set to be launched in an attempt to find female Formula 1 stars.

W Series will start in 2019 and has been backed by major names in F1, including 13-time grand prix winner David Coulthard and Red Bull design engineer Adrian Newey.

It will offer a prize fund of US$1.5 million and free entry for 18-20 competitor­s, who will be selected on merit following tests and appraisals. The overall winner will collect $500,000, with prize money down to 18th place.

Organisers aim to stage six 30-minute races at top circuits in Europe and future plans could see the series expand to America, Asia and Australia.

“At the heart of W Series’ DNA is the firm belief that women can compete equally with men in motorsport. However, an all-female series is essential in order to force greater female participat­ion,” organisers said in a statement.

The last woman to start an F1 grand prix was Italy’s Lella Lombardi in 1976, but Coulthard says female drivers can compete with their male counterpar­ts.

“In order to be a successful racing driver, you have to be skilled, determined, competitiv­e, brave and physically fit, but you don’t have to possess the kind of superpower­ful strength levels that some sports require. You also don’t have to be a man,” Coulthard said. “That’s why we at W Series firmly believe that female and male racing drivers can compete with one another on equal terms given the same opportunit­y.

“At the moment, however, women racing drivers tend to reach a ‘glass ceiling’ at around the Gp3/formula 3 level on their learning curve, often as a result of a lack of funding rather than a lack of talent.

“That’s why an all-new allfemale single-seater motor racing series is required to establish a competitiv­e and constructi­ve motorsport habitat in which our drivers will be able to equip themselves with the necessary skill-set eventually to move on up to existing high-level mainstream racing series and compete with the best male drivers on equal terms.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom