Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Formula One could return to Africa

- Reuters sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: Formula One wants to go back to Africa, with the Moroccan city of Marrakesh and South Africa’s Kyalami circuit keen to host a race, commercial managing director Sean Bratches said Thursday. Rwanda and Nigeria have also expressed interest in fan festivals on their territory. “It’s a marketplac­e in which we would like to race,” Bratches said at a Sport Industry Breakfast Club event, two days after F1 announced the return of the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort in 2020 after a 35-year absence.

Morocco and South Africa have hosted world championsh­ip grands prix in the past, Casablanca in 1958 and South Africa in East London in the 1960s and Kyalami 20 times between 1967 and 1993.

“We race on five continents now and the last habitable continent that we don’t race in is Africa,” said Bratches. “We’ve been having very productive conversati­ons in South Africa and to a lesser extent in Morocco about bringing a grand prix... we’re on it. It’s really important to us.”

Bratches said there was a “high degree of interest” from Morocco in a circuit race in Marrakesh, with the authoritie­s seeing F1, owned by Us-based Liberty Media, as an economic engine for growth and tourism.

The all-electric Formula E series already holds an annual street race there. “The vast majority of our grands prix are underpinne­d by government and it’s because it works. We shine a bright light on these cities,” said Bratches.

Yath Gangakumar­an, F1’s director of Strategy and Business Developmen­t, said that Rwanda and Nigeria were also keen to be involved in fan events. “I think Rwanda in particular have seen the benefits of the Arsenal sponsorshi­p deal,” he said. The Premier League club has had a ‘Visit Rwanda’ logo on players’ left shirt sleeves since last year.

“There’s a lot of interest not just for races but for actuations throughout the continent.” Next season will see two new grands prix added to the calendar, with Zandvoort and the debut of Vietnam, but Mexico, Spain, Germany and Britain are out of contract at the end of 2019.

Mexico, Germany and Spain face particular­ly uncertain futures. “We are optimistic about the prospect of a 21 GP schedule next year,” said Bratches. “I don’t think we are going to have more than that.”

He said “productive conversati­ons” were continuing with the Mexican promoter, whose race is set to lose essential government funding.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India