What a revised 2021 F1 calendar could look like with Chinese GP at risk

What a revised 2021 F1 calendar could look like with Chinese GP at risk

 

 

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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 We are just a week into the start of the new year and there is already a growing sense of déjà vu surrounding the prospect of disruption to the 2021 Formula 1 season. The coronavirus pandemic wreaked havoc on the 2020 schedule – forcing the opening 10 rounds to be cancelled and resulting in a rejigged 17-round calendar being created – and it is looking increasingly unlikely that this year’s calendar will get away without some form of disturbance. F1 had hoped to return to some form of normality in 2021 despite the continued global pandemic, having announced an unprecedented 23 races for the upcoming season in November, but that plan is already coming under threat. Amid global fears over the emergence of a new fast-spreading strain of COVID-19 that has resulted in the United Kingdom entering a third national lockdown, and Australia still enforcing strict travel restrictions, the intended season opener in Melbourne looks set to be postponed from its 21 March date. The postponement of this year’s Australian Grand Prix is set to be made official by F1 and local organisers imminently, with the 2021 F1 season instead getting underway a week later in Bahrain on 28 March. Related ArticlesaccImages.createImage(); Why Mercedes remain relaxed over Lewis Hamilton’s F1 contractaccImages.createImage(); Determined Vettel has ‘so much to discover’ at Aston Martin F1 team”Melbourne has been – it’s not officially announced but it will be – not cancelled but postponed,” Aston Martin team owner told Reuters ahead of the announcement of new title sponsorship with American IT company Cognizant last week. But unlike in 2020, when the Melbourne event was shelved altogether, F1 is hopeful of re-arranging the race for a later slot in the season, most likely in November if an agreement can be struck.In the wake of Australia’s pending postponement, the three-day pre-season test is poised to move from its original location at the Circuit de-Barcelona Catalunya in Spain on 2-4 March to a slot later in the month at the Sakhir International Circuit, though an exact date is yet to be agreed on by the teams.Related ArticlesaccImages.createImage(); Sainz “exceeded expectations” during McLaren F1 stint – BrownaccImages.createImage(); Aston Martin owner Stroll targets world titles for rebranded F1 teamF1’s sporting regulations state that the pre-season test must take place “between 1 February and 10 days before the start of the first event of the championship”, meaning testing could theoretically finish as late as 16 March. XPB_982518_HiRes.jpg accImages.createImage();It has since emerged that the Chinese Grand Prix is also at risk of being postponed, with the race promoter calling for F1 to move the Shanghai race – which was the first race to fall from the 2020 calendar – to the second half of the year. China is due to stage the third round of the 2021 F1 world championship on 11 April but the original date is no longer looking viable. “4The re-scheduling of not one, but two races, into an already crammed second half of the season which features two triple-headers as it stands would provide F1 with yet another headache to work around. A postponement would also mean F1 would have two free races to replace in April, with China joining the already ‘TBA’ fourth round of the season on 25 April – a date which had originally been reserved for the delayed inaugural Vietnam Grand Prix that will no longer happen. It is understood that F1 is currently drawing up a contingency plan that would see both Portimao and Imola once again returning to fill the gaps after the two venues stepped in to host successful substitute races on the re-written 2020 calendar.”5According to reports including RaceFans, Imola will replace China but on the later date of 18 April to become the first European round of the year, with Portugal assuming a 2 May slot to form a back-to-back with the Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona on 9 May. M249046.jpg accImages.createImage();It is also claimed that the Australian GP will be delayed to 21 November, with the Sao Paulo GP moved forward by a week to create a triple-header of races in the Americas with the US and Mexican GPs following. Such a move would also require F1’s first-ever Saudi Arabian Grand Prix on the streets of Jeddah to be moved back to 5 December, with Abu Dhabi retaining its end-of-season slot but on the new date of 12 December. “6With F1’s traditional summer break returning this year in August, it is hard to see where China could fit into the picture.Potential revised 2021 F1 calendarRaceDateBahrain GP (Sakhir)March 28Emilia Romagna GP (Imola)April 18Portuguese GP (Portimao)May 2Spanish GP (Barcelona)May 9Monaco GP (Monte Carlo)May 23Azerbaijan GP (Baku)June 6Canadian GP (Montreal)June 13French GP (Paul Ricard)June 27Austrian GP (Spielberg)July 4British GP (Silverstone)July 18Hungarian GP (Budapest)August 1Belgian GP (Spa)August 29Dutch GP (Zandvoort)September 5Italian GP (Monza)September 12Russian GP (Sochi)September 26Singapore GP (Marina Bay)October 3Japanese GP (Suzuka)October 10United States GP (Austin)October 24Mexican GP (Mexico City)October 31Sao Paulo GP (Interlagos)November 7Australian GP (Melbourne)21 NovemberSaudi Arabian GP (Jeddah)December 5Abu Dhabi GP (Yas Marina)December 12  TBC – Chinese GP  

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