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F1 season set to rev up

Austria’s Spielberg circuit gets the all-clear

- AFP

FORMULA One’s truncated coronaviru­s-hit season will finally get under way with the Austrian Grand Prix on July 5.

The Austrian government also gave the Spielberg circuit the green light to stage a second race the following weekend. There won’t be any spectators.

Austrian Health Minister Rudolf Anschober said that the two races had been approved after F1 organisers “had presented a complete and profession­al plan” to combat the spread of COVID-19.

The F1 season was thrown into chaos with the cancellati­on of the traditiona­l curtain-raising Australian Grand Prix in March only hours before practice was due to begin.

It was one of 10 races either cancelled or postponed, yet F1 boss Chase Carey believes a 15 to 18 race season is still possible.

But Silverston­e’s hopes of also staging back-to-back races after Austria are in the balance after the British government insisted that all arrivals in the country undergo a two-week quarantine period.

Anschober added a caveat to Saturday’s statement, insisting the season’s belated restart would only go ahead if all the health assurances made by F1 were fulfilled.

“In addition to strict hygiene measures the plan also involves regular testing and health check-ups for teams and all the other employees,” he said.

“The crucial element will be the close co-ordination between the organisers and the regional and local health authoritie­s,” he added.

Its remote location made the Red Bull Ring circuit a “logical” location to stage the season’s first two races, F1 managing director Ross Brawn said this month.

With a local airport, the races can be held in an isolated environmen­t, essential in the fight against the pandemic that has killed less than 700 people in Austria, and more than 364,000 worldwide.

“One of the logistic challenges is getting everyone tested and cleared to enter the racing environmen­t,” Brawn explained in an F1 Nation podcast.

“Once we do that, it’s very attractive to keep everyone in that environmen­t, within that biosphere that we want to create, for another race.

“Austria fits that bill very well. It has a local airport right next to the circuit, where people can charter planes into. It’s not too close to a metropolis.”

The 2020 F1 season was to have featured a record 22 races, now it is set to be one of the shortest campaigns for more than a decade.

Carey outlined the blueprint for the rehashed season this month, involving additional European races through the traditiona­l August break.

“We will then plan to race in Asia and the Americas in September, October, November before finishing in the Gulf in Bahrain and Abu Dhabi in December,” he said.

“We expect the early part of the calendar to be races without fans, but we hope to be able to allow fans to attend in the latter part of the year.”

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