Reports F1 street races at risk due to pandemic are “completely wrong"

Reports F1 street races at risk due to pandemic are “completely wrong"

 

 

F1 Live F1 Replay F1 Standings

 
Get F1 news in your inbox! By signing up to the newsletter you agree to receive emails from that may occasionally include promotional content Leave this field blank Formula 1 has dismissed suggestions that street races will not go ahead as planned this year due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.Reports which surfaced over the weekend claimed that street races in Monaco, Baku, Singapore and Jeddah, as well as the Canadian Grand Prix in June, were all under threat of being cancelled because of rising concerns over the spread of coronavirus.Last year, the Monaco Grand Prix was not held for the first time since 1954 as it became an early casualty of the 2020 F1 calendar due to the COVID-19 outbreak, while races in Baku, Canada and Singapore were also shelved as a total of 13 events were cancelled.Despite this, F1 was still able to successfully pull together a 17-round, European-centric world championship having re-written its 2020 schedule, with the season beginning in early July with a double-header held in Austria.Amid concerns surrounding the emergence of new variants of the virus and new lockdowns being enforced across Europe, speculation over the viability of street races taking place this year has grown.Related ArticlesaccImages.createImage(); F1 Gossip: Eddie Jordan would show ‘replaceable’ Lewis Hamilton the dooraccImages.createImage(); Ex-Suzuki MotoGP boss Brivio joins Alpine F1 team as racing directorBut F1 has moved to categorically deny claims that the aforementioned rounds will be cancelled.In response to the reports, an F1 spokesperson told : “We have set out the details of the revised 2021 calendar and there are no other changes. The suggestion street races will not take place are completely wrong.”F1’s has already been forced to alter its initial plans for a record-breaking 23-round 2021 calendar, with the season start delayed by a week and moved to Bahrain after the Australian Grand Prix was postponed until November.Related ArticlesaccImages.createImage(); Sainz ramps up work on Ferrari simulator ahead of 2021 F1 seasonaccImages.createImage(); Russell learned to become more adaptable from Mercedes F1 cameoThe Chinese Grand Prix has also been postponed but championship bosses hope to re-arrange the race later in the season.As a result, Imola has been confirmed as returning to the F1 calendar to fill in as the second round of the season on 18 April, while the current ‘TBC’ slot on 2 May is expected to be taken by Portugal’s Portimao circuit. 

For motorsport news follow TRmotosports on social media.

facebook.com/TRmotosports
twitter.com/TRmotosports
instagram.com/trmotosports/
linkedin.com/company/trmotosports-com

Bir yanıt yazın

E-posta adresiniz yayınlanmayacak. Gerekli alanlar * ile işaretlenmişlerdir