australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Australian GP and MotoGP cancelled for 2021 due to COVID-19 restrictions

The Australian Grand Prix was called off Tuesday for a second year in succession due to logistical problems caused by the pandemic, but Formula One bosses said they still planned on a 23-race season. The race had been scheduled on November 21, but hit roadblocks over Australia’s requirement for overseas arrivals to undergo 14 days of mandatory quarantine. The 2021 Australian MotoGP in October was also cancelled. With Formula One’s Brazilian Grand Prix taking place on November 7, drivers and teams would not have been able to complete the required lockdown in time, with suggestions of a more relaxed bio-secure bubble reportedly rejected. The Australian MotoGP scheduled for Phillip Island on October 24 fell for a second year with the Malaysian MotoGP brought forward a week to take its slot and an extra race weekend added in Portugal’s Algarve on November 7. Australian Grand Prix Corporation chairperson Paul Little said he was “deeply disappointed”. “We appreciate the challenge Australia faces with current international travel restrictions and the importance of vaccinations,” he added. The Formula One race had already been pushed back from its traditional season-opening slot in March to November, sandwiched between the Brazilian Grand Prix and the inaugural race in Saudi Arabia at the beginning of December. Cancellation means two years without a Formula One race at Melbourne’s newly-reconfigured Albert Park after the 2020 edition was dramatically called off just before the opening practice session. It follows the cancellation of the Singapore Grand Prix on October 3 also because of Covid-19 worries. Despite the setbacks, Formula One chief Stefano Domenicali said he was confident of still being able to stage a 23-race season in 2021. “While it is disappointing we won’t be racing in Australia this season, we are confident we can deliver a 23-race season in 2021 and we have a number of options to take forward,” he said. “We will be working through the details of those options in the coming weeks and will provide further updates once those discussions are concluded.” While Australia has been among the world’s most successful countries in containing the coronavirus, seeing just 30 000 virus cases since the pandemic began, it is badly lagging in vaccinations. So far, less than eight percent of its roughly 25 million residents have been fully vaccinated, one of the lowest proportions for any developed nation, with few signs that its borders will reopen any time soon. The decision to cancel could have ramifications for tennis’ Australian Open, with the 2022 season’s opening Grand Slam tournament due to begin in Melbourne in January. Players were forced to go through quarantine ahead of the tournament this year, but it sparked a flurry of complaints about the conditions and a public backlash. Victoria state Sports Minister Martin Pakula said he was confident it would be a different picture in January with more people in Australia being vaccinated as Pfizer doses become more readily available. “I’m very confident that the Australian Open will proceed and I’m very confident that next year’s Formula One will proceed,” he said. “It may not sound like a lot, but the difference between November and January is quite profound.”

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

New F1 engine rules postponed for one more year

New engine regulations in Formula 1 could be postponed for a year. In Austria, top carmaker officials – including Red Bull mogul Dietrich Mateschitz and also the CEOs of Audi and Porsche – met to discuss the new rules that are scheduled to debut in 2025. Formula 1 described the talks as “very positive”, declaring that “further news” would be forthcoming in the coming weeks. But ahead of the meeting, Red Bull team boss Christian Horner said the best way to create “a truly efficient, environmentally friendly, biofuel-powered engine from scratch” that is also cost-effective would be to delay until 2026. Curiously, title rival Mercedes agrees. “Perhaps we can find a compromise and extend the current regulations for another year,” said Toto Wolff. “Everyone wants to be 100 percent ready for the transition to the new regulations, but perhaps that is 2026. Formula 1 really needs to lead by example and meet the standards. “I don’t know what the solution will be,” the Mercedes boss added, “but we need an engine that is in the area of electrification whilst at the same time the cost of developing it should be lower than it is now.” Wolff said another key feature of the new engine will be biofuels. “Unfortunately, e-fuels are ten years late to Formula 1, which is very negative,” former Mercedes motorsport boss Norbert Haug told Auto Bild. “What is extremely positive, however, is that you can still feed the engines of tomorrow and get a sound from yesterday.”

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Ocon thinks his car is wrong, wants many parts to be changed

Esteban Ocon has urged Alpine to make major changes on his car after a poor run of form which saw the Frenchman consistently off the pace compared to teammate Fernando Alonso. Ocon failed to finish higher than 14th at F1’s first triple-header and qualified down in 17th at the Styrian and Austrian Grand Prix and has called it a forgetful two weekends. “The balance [of the car] felt actually fine,” Ocon told RacingNews365.com and other select members of the press. “Once I finished a lap, I felt like it was a good lap on that second of Q1 and I was pretty pleased with how it went. “Maybe half a tenth I could have gained, but that’s all about it, to be fair. Ocon did not rule out a complete change of chassis for the British GP and admits his performances have not been good enough. “The maximum possible would be very welcome,” added Ocon. “I will have a chat with the team and see what’s possible to do. But the more things we can change, the better it would be. Then it’s one doubt less. “It’s hard to place the finger on exactly what the problem is. We will change as many parts as possible on the car. That’s where it starts to be difficult when you don’t spot exactly what the issue is and then the lap time deficit is so big on such a small track. We need to keep digging in and keep staying together to go through this period as quickly as possible.”

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Australian GP set to return in April 2022

Victorian Sports Minister Martin Pakula has revealed his expectation that Formula 1 will return to Australia in April next year after the current-season event was cancelled on Tuesday. Despite teams travelling to Melbourne in 2020, the emergence of the coronavirus pandemic and subsequent positive cases registered in the F1 paddock resulted in the event’s cancellation. This year, the race was pushed back from its position as the season-opener to become the third-last race of the year in November, but on Tuesday it was announced this was no longer possible. “I had a conversation with the CEO of Formula 1 management Stefano Domenicali on Monday night,” Pakula said. “It was a very cordial conversation, we have a good relationship. I fully expect that these events will occur in 2022. “We’re aiming for an early-season F1 event next year and a MotoGP on a date still to be determined, but we will work very closely, both the government [and] the AGPC with Formula 1 Management and MotoGP to deliver those events.” Adding further detail, he commented: “We’ve been talking April with F1 for some time. “As you know, this year other events went into that first and second slot and I think F1 are keen to continue with those events.” Although there remains a significant amount of time before F1 was due to arrive in Melbourne, F1 is keen to finalise its fixture list for the remainder of the season with a 23 race calendar still a priority for Domenicali. Despite the disappointment at again missing out on hosting both F1 and MotoGP, Pakula said: “Quite legitimately, Formula 1 and MotoGP required assurances and undertakings and guarantees this week about the conduct of those events,” said Pakula. “I really do want to emphasise that I take no issue with the fact those organisations needed that assurance this week. “There’s a few months to go but they need to plan, and they need to have contingencies in place and given the very low national two-dose-vaccination numbers, and given the decision of National Cabinet on Friday, we’re simply not in a position to give F1 management or MotoGP the sorts of guarantees, assurances and comfort that they need this week. “I understand that for motorsports fans and for major events fans this is very disappointing news but some 1600 visitors in November, with the bespoke quarantine arrangements needed, in an environment when national cabinet has decided to half international arrivals and not look at different quarantine arrangement probably until the beginning of 2022, really makes it extremely difficult for us to give those organisations the guarantees they require.”

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

FIA responds after being criticized after massive Austrian GP penalties

FIA race director Michael Masi has explained the decisions to issue penalties to Lando Norris and Sergio Perez during the Austrian Grand Prix. The stewards resembled a card-happy football referee at the Red Bull Ring, dishing out six separate penalties during the race and three more afterwards. Some were more of a slam-dunk nature, such as Yuki Tsunoda twice crossing the white line at the pit-lane entry. Others were more subjective and which could have been construed as mere racing incidents. Three of those in the latter category involved Perez – firstly when he was forced off track by Norris just after the Safety Car restart, then twice for incidents between the Red Bull driver and Charles Leclerc. On the first occasion, Norris was hit with a five-second penalty, which he served at his pit-stop and was overtaken by Valtteri Bottas. For the other two, Perez received the same punishment. Norris’ penalty arguably cost him the chance to finish runner-up as he ended up two seconds behind Bottas, while Perez dropped from fifth to sixth behind Leclerc’s Ferrari team-mate, Carlos Sainz, as 10 seconds was added to his race time. Whereas Norris was defiant about his manoeuvre and also backed by Red Bull team boss Christian Horner, Perez later apologised to Leclerc who had angrily complained over the team radio about his rival’s driving. Masi insisted all three incidents had been judged on the same criteria. “In the first case, in Sergio’s one with Lando, he was wholly alongside Lando,” Masi told reporters. “Therefore, there is an onus to leave a car’s width to the edge of the track. “Then it was the same in reverse with Checo and at exit of turn four, and then Checo and Charles again at the exit of turn six. “Obviously I don’t sit in the stewards room to deliberate, but their view was in all three circumstances a car’s width should have been left to the edge of the track because the two cars were alongside each other.” Another factor may have been that there was gravel on the outside of turns four and six rather than an asphalt run-off area. Asked if the presence of gravel means incidents are viewed differently, Masi said: “Obviously, gravel does have an impact in those places, so you would say yes looking at it logically. “Each of those you have to look at on their merits, characteristics of the circuit etc.”

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Alonso felt bad after overtaking Russell for P10, ‘I felt sad…anyone apart from him!’

Fernando Alonso says he felt “sad” when he saw that it was George Russell up ahead as he charged towards the Williams star at the Austrian GP, as the two drivers heaped praise on one another when reflecting on a key battle that eventually extended Russell’s F1 points wait. Russell, in fine form all weekend, was in line for his first points as a Williams driver – in his 46th race with the team – on Sunday as he ran in 10th place in the late stages, but that position was snatched from him by two-time world champion Alonso in his faster Alpine car with just three laps remaining. “So close, yet so far,” admitted Russell, the British driver who has been plagued by misfortune in points positions in recent years. “I was driving as hard as I could as fast as I could, and then into the end if you could choose any guy to have behind you, you probably wouldn’t choose Fernando.” The respect was reciprocated from Alonso, who in the past has hailed Russell as his pick to star in F1’s future. “I felt a little bit sad for George because he drove an amazing weekend,” said F1 legend Alonso, 39. “When I saw P10 was him, I was hoping it was anyone apart from him in that spot! “But I had much better tyres, much better traction out of Turn Three and I could make the move three laps to the end.” Alonso then insisted: “He will have more opportunities for podiums and wins in the future.” Although Russell was forced to settle for 11th despite qualifying in the top 10, a first with Williams, he admitted he never really had the pace to contend with Alonso. “It was very tricky… with all of his experience, and speed as well,” said Russell. “Yesterday [in qualifying] he was very very fast and he should have finished inside the top five. “Trying to keep him behind, and with his speed this weekend, it probably never would have happened.”

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Verstappen wins Austrian GP, Bottas second as Norris gets a podium finish

Max Verstappen extended his lead in the drivers championship by taking his fifth win of the season in the Austrian Grand Prix. He bolstered his championship lead on a difficult day for rival Lewis Hamilton, who came in fourth after losing time with damage.The pair were separated by Valtteri Bottas, who Hamilton allowed by into second place on lap 52, and Lando Norris, who claimed a podium finish after an eventful race which included a five-second time penalty. Norris was sanctioned for an incident with Sergio Perez on the third lap of the race which sent the Red Bull driver into the gravel trap at turn four. Norris served his penalty at his pit stop, and finished the race with Bottas in his sights. Perez later collected a pair of identical penalties for similar incidents involving Charles Leclerc. Although he took the chequered flag in fifth, his two five-second penalties dropped him behind Carlos Sainz Jnr, who Leclerc waved past earlier in the race. Daniel Ricciardo added to McLaren’s points haul in seventh ahead of Leclerc. Pierre Gasly pitted twice on his way to ninth, while Fernando Alonso denied George Russell a point by passing the Williams driver with three laps to go.Yuki Tsunoda fell foul of the stewards twice on his way to 12th place, picking up a pair of penalties for cutting the pit lane entry line. Lance Stroll and Antonio Giovinazzi behind him also collected penalties for other infringements on a busy afternoon for the stewards. The day’s only retirement was Esteban Ocon, who suffered front-right damage at turn three on the first lap, retiring on the spot. 2021 F1 AUSTRIAN GRAND PRIX – RACE RESULTS POS DRIVER NAT. TEAM TIME 1 Max Verstappen NED Red Bull Racing 71 LAPS 2 Valtteri Bottas FIN Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team + 17.973s 3 Lando Norris GBR McLaren F1 Team + 20.019s 4 Lewis Hamilton GBR Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team + 46.452s 5 Carlos Sainz ESP Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow + 57.144s 6 Sergio Perez MEX Red Bull Racing + 57.915s 7 Daniel Ricciardo AUS McLaren F1 Team + 1:00.395s 8 Charles Leclerc MON Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow + 1:01.195s 9 Pierre Gasly FRA Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda + 101.844s 10 Fernando Alonso ESP Alpine F1 Team + 1 Lap 11 George Russell GBR Williams Racing + 1 Lap 12 Yuki Tsunoda JPN Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda + 1 Lap 13 Lance Stroll CAN Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team + 1 Lap 14 Antonio Giovinazzi ITA Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen + 1 Lap 15 Nicholas Latifi CAN Williams Racing + 1 Lap 16 Kimi Raikkonen FIN Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen + 1 Lap 17 Sebastian Vettel GER Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team + 1 Lap 18 Mick Schumacher GER Uralkali Haas F1 Team + 2 Laps 19 Nikita Mazepin RUS Uralkali Haas F1 Team + 2 Laps DNF Esteban Ocon FRA Alpine F1 Team DNF

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Toprak Razgatlioglu wins Donington WSBK taking championship lead as Rea crashes

Yamaha rider Toprak Razgatlioglu moved to the top of the World Superbike championship standings with victory in the final race of the weekend at Donington Park, as Jonathan Rea crashed out of the lead. Razgatlioglu and Kawasaki rival Rea were engaged in an entertaining dogfight for the lead, both riders having each won a race each so far this weekend, until the reigning champion made a rare error and suffered a low-side fall at Coppice on lap 11 of 23. That paved the way for Razgatlioglu to score his third win in four races and turn a 23-point deficit to Rea into a narrow two-point advantage. Following the damp Superpole race earlier in the day, conditions had dried out entirely by the start of the second full-length encounter of the weekend. Rea maintained his lead heading into the first corner, but Razgatlioglu shot up the inside from his grid slot of sixth into second and was soon challenging the Kawasaki rider for the lead. The Turkish rider made his move at Coppice on lap four, but could never make a break from Rea, only managing to pull around seven tenths clear before being reeled in once again. On lap 10, Rea took advantage of Razgatlioglu running slightly wide through Coppice to retake the lead – but at the same place the following lap he made the error that would cost him the championship lead. From that point on, Razgatlioglu was unchallenged, leading home a Yamaha 1-2 by 2.2s ahead of the GRT machine of Garrett Gerloff. American rider Gerloff had earlier made a pass on BMW man Tom Sykes to move into what had been third place prior to Rea’s crash, matching his personal best WSBK result in second. Sykes held off a recovering Scott Redding to score a second consecutive podium finish, while fourth for Redding marked the first points of a miserable weekend for the Ducati rider. Michael van der Mark (BMW) came out on top in a battle against former teammate Alex Lowes (Kawasaki) to score fifth place, while Chaz Davies concluded a difficult weekend aboard the Go Eleven Ducati in seventh. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Ducati) was eighth, ahead of Honda pair Leon Haslam – who dropped from fourth on the grid – and Alvaro Bautista. Following his crash, Rea was able to remount his battered Kawasaki and finish 20th, marking his first non-score since last year’s opening race of the season at Phillip Island. WORLDSBK DONINGTON PARK, GREAT BRITAIN – RACE RESULTS (2) POS RIDER NAT TEAM TIME 1 Toprak Razgatlioglu TUR PATA Yamaha 24 Laps 2 Garrett Gerloff USA GRT Yamaha +2.243s 3 Tom Sykes GBR Motorrad BMW WorldSBK Team +4.522s 4 Scott Redding GBR Aruba.It Ducati +5.151s 5 Michael Van Der Mark NED Motorrad BMW WorldSBK Team +13.315s 6 Alex Lowes GBR Kawasaki Racing Team +14.444s 7 Chaz Davies GBR GoEleven Ducati +16.684s 8 Michael Rinaldi ITA Aruba.It Ducati +18.757s 9 Leon Haslam GBR Team HRC +20.783s 10 Alvaro Bautista SPA Team HRC +22.938s 11 Andrea Locatelli ITA PATA Yamaha +23.194s 12 Lucas Mahias FRA Kawasaki Puccetti +25.442s 13 Axel Bassani ITA Motocorsa Ducati +32.898s 14 Tito Rabat SPA Barni Ducati +38.370s 15 Eugene Laverty IRL RC Squadra Corse BMW +39.776s 16 Luke Mossey GBR Pedercini Kawasaki +43.182s 17 Isaac Vinales SPA Orelac Racing Kawasaki +56.811s 18 Christophe Ponsson FRA Gil Yamaha +57.073s 19 Loris Cresson BEL Pedercini Kawasaki >1 Lap 20 Jonathan Rea GBR Kawasaki Racing Team >1 Lap 21 Jonas Folger GER Benovo BMW DNF

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Yamaha approached Oliveira after Vinales exit

Red Bull KTM rider Miguel Oliviera has revealed that he was approached by the Monster Energy Yamaha team about potentially replacing the departing Maverick Vinales for next season – but says that he rejected the offer in favour of honouring the contract he already has in place with his current employer. Vinales’ shock decision to leave Yamaha was officially confirmed earlier this week, with an imminent announcement expected on his move to Aprilia for next year. With the move creating a hole in the factory team’s line-up for next season, it’s so far been assumed that satellite rider Franco Morbidelli would get promoted to replace Vinales. Oliveira’s comments hint that Yamaha was nonetheless looking elsewhere – but with the Portuguese rider contracted to KTM until the end of 2022 and, unlike in Vinales’ case, with both parties happy with the current arrangement and KTM unlikely to give its blessing to breaking the deal early, he says he’s not going anywhere. “The market and contracts,” he told Portuguese website Motorcycle Sports at a media event this week, “especially in these modern days, come to demonstrate that – and we already have one or two cases there, where there is no desire on the part of one of the parties where the rider does not continue with the team or the team no longer wants the rider – that these contracts are broken. Nowadays, having a signed contract is worth what it’s worth. “I have my commitment to my team since last year for two years and I will not go back on that word. “Naturally, this situation with Vinales brought some nervousness to the talks for the future, and I was also approached in that sense, but as I said my focus is on my team. “It’s a great team and I believe I can be world champion with them and I have a contract and even win it. While I’m here there is a lot of work to do.” Morbidelli remains the obvious choice to replace Vinales alongside his former team-mate and Petronas Yamaha graduate Fabio Quartararo, after an impressive 2020 season that saw the Italian finish runner-up in the championship behind Joan Mir despite being on year-old satellite machinery. However, with MotoGP now entering the five-week summer break, Yamaha is under no pressure to rush the next step in the process.

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

‘Such a great driver, Lando’ Hamilton comments on the team radio after overtaking him for P2

Lewis Hamilton made a classy comment about Lando Norris during the Austrian Grand Prix as he passed his fellow Brit for second place at the Red Bull Ring while Max Verstappen led the way in Austria. Norris, who picked up his best qualifying position of his career for McLaren on Saturday, held off the seven-time world champion for 19 laps before the Mercedes driver swept past the 21-year-old. However, as Hamilton did it, he took to his radio to praise the younger driver for his performance. “Such a great driver, Lando,” Hamilton was heard telling his team. Norris had a torrid lap 20 as moments later he was handed a five-second penalty for forcing Red Bull’s Sergio Perez off the track on the opening lap. It was a double hit for Norris as stewards make their decision before Hamilton passes the McLaren with DRS up to Turn 4. Norris rejoined behind Hamilton’s team-mate Valtteri Bottas in a net fourth place after serving his penalty in the pitstop window. Lando was left frustrated on the radio as he was told about the penalty, exclaiming: “For what?!” as his engineer explained they would talk about it at the end of the race. “Whatever,” was the response from the McLaren man. “If it was for lap one (after the Safety Car), what does the guy expect trying to go around the outside?” Lando helped McLaren back to the front row of the grid for the first time since 2012, qualifying ahead of both Mercedes drivers and even split the two Red Bulls at the Red Bull Ring. “I feel epic!” said Norris after qualifying.

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

F1 confirms app was hacked only on the push notifications service no customer data was accessed

Formula 1 has confirmed its mobile app was hacked on Saturday in a “targeted attack”. The app sent out a random push notifications in the evening, which led to confusion on social media as it simply said “Foo”. However a second message followed, which said: “Hmmmm, I should check my security.. :)” F1 confirmed in a brief statement that its app was hacked, but doesn’t believe user data was accessed. “Our investigation confirms that this targeted attack was limited to the Push Notifications Service,” it said. “We will continue to investigate, review and improve safety measures but, at this time, have no reason to believe that any customer data has been accessed during this incident.”

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Vettel handed a three-place grid penalty and point after obstructing Alonso in Austrian GP quali

Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel was handed a three-place grid drop on his 34th birthday, on Saturday, for impeding Alpine’s Fernando Alonso in 2021 Austrian Grand Prix qualifying.The Formula 1 stewards also handed out one penalty point for the incident, with double world champion Alonso having to abort his flying lap in the second phase of qualifying and ending up 14th on the starting grid. Vettel qualified eighth and will still start ahead of Alonso. The German was seen apologising from his cockpit as the annoyed Spaniard passed the dawdling Aston Martin. The four-time F1 World Champion said in his team report: “It is a shame that Fernando had his lap impacted during Q2. I am sorry for him because there is nothing he could have done “All the drivers agreed yesterday to slow down on the straights between Turns Eight and Nine, which I did, but other drivers jumped the queue, then slowed down in the final corners, which is not allowed. That backed me up as well. It is a strange situation and something that is really difficult to avoid,” explained Vettel. Despite his understandable fury in the cockpit while it happened, Alonso was quick to exonerate his great rival: “It’s not Seb’s fault and, as drivers, we’re relying on our engineers to communicate things that are happening on track.” Vettel’s demotion lifts Williams’ George Russell to eighth on the grid instead, with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll and Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz also moving up a place.

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Lewis Hamilton set to extend contract with Mercedes for the next two years

Seven-time Formula One World Drivers’ Champion Lewis Hamilton will stay in Mercedes until 2023 after signing a two-year contract extension with the team. “It is hard to believe it’s been nearly nine years working with this incredible team and I’m excited we’re going to continue our partnership for two more years,” said the 36-year-old British legend in a statement on Saturday. “We’ve accomplished so much together but we still have a lot to achieve, both on and off the track.” “I’m incredibly proud and grateful of how Mercedes has supported me in my drive to improve diversity and equality in our sport. They have held themselves accountable and made important strides in creating a more diverse team and inclusive environment.” Hamilton made his F1 debut in 2007 in McLaren and joined Mercedes in 2013. He has achieved 98 wins in his career and shared the record of claiming seven world championships with Michael Schumacher. Earlier in 2021, Hamilton agreed to a one-year deal with Mercedes, leaving his future with the team in doubt. “It’s important we take time to evaluate, that we do what’s right for us in terms of health and mental wellbeing,” said Hamilton. Hamilton is currently No. 2 on the championship standings table following Max Verstappen of Red Bull Racing. “Now we are having this tight battle it has brought me closer to the team, it’s making me dig deeper and I love that, it has reinvigorated the love that I have for the sport.” Staying in Mercedes until at least 2023 means Hamilton is ready to face the possible challenges brought by an overhaul in F1’s technical regulations in 2022. F1 may go through a complete reboot after that. “As we enter a new era of F1 from 2022 onwards, there can be no better driver to have in our team than Lewis. His achievements in this sport speak for themselves, and with his experience, speed and race-craft, he is at the peak of his powers,” said Mercedes boss Toto Wolff. “This is fantastic news for Formula One and I am delighted that Lewis will stay in F1 for at least another two years. What he has achieved in this sport is incredible and I know he has more to come. He is a global superstar on and off the race track and his positive impact on Formula One is huge,” said F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali.

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Garrett Gerloff dominates in Donington second free practice

GRT Yamaha’s Garrett Gerloff topped the WorldSBK timesheets on Friday at Donington Park despite seeing the track for the first time this morning. The Texan – fresh from a stand-in ride at MotoGP Assen – finished three-tenths ahead of six-time champ Jonathan Rea with Toprak Razgatlioglu in third. Gerloff, on the SCX tyre, topped every single sector and hopes to continue his form into Saturday and Sunday. On the other side of the garage, it was a nightmare for Kohta Nozane, who was ruled unfit following his Navarra testing crash which left him with a fractured middle finger on his right hand. The Kawasaki duo of Jonathan Rea and Alex Lowes enjoyed a positive session, as both riders hit the ground running right from the start of the session. Both riders were running one-two in the session in the opening 20 minutes as they continued their work at their home round. Rea was super consistent throughout the opening day and ended the day in second place, whilst Lowes was also in fine form in the afternoon to finish fourth, leaving him on the combined. The factory Yamaha charge was led by Razgatlioglu despite a massive moment in the opening moments of the session, he was able to continue on his way and cement his position in the leading positions in third, putting in a long run in his second stint. Teammate Andrea Locatelli was impressive and was as high as fourth in the afternoon session before finishing eleventh overall. Aruba Ducati were also in contention, with home-hero Scott Redding debuting in front of his home fans in WorldSBK, finishing the day in fifth overall as he adapted to WorldSBK machinery at the circuit of which he won his first ever World Championship race at in 2008 in 125cc Grand Prix. Michael Rinaldi finished sixth in the afternoon session but was seventh overall as he also aimed to make a solid start after his double win at Misano last time out. Finishing in sixth overall was Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad), as he endured a busy day at Donington Park. A crash in FP1 at the Melbourne Loop left Sykes unscathed but he suffered a faster crash in the opening five minutes of FP2, leaving him out at McLean’s. He rejoined the session later on but relied on his morning time to put him sixth, whilst teammate Michael van der Mark had a rather unassuming day at Donington Park – the site of his first WorldSBK win – as he completed the day in tenth overall. Over with Leon Haslam (Team HRC) and teammate Alvaro Bautista, it was the ‘Pocket Rocket’ who was on-song as he put the Honda CBR1000RR-R inside the top ten at his local circuit. Across the box and it was Alvaro Bautista who seemingly struggled to get up to speed on Friday, having a very quiet day outside of the top ten. Come the close of business on Friday, it was Haslam who finished eighth with Bautista in 15th. With Gerloff on top, the rest of the Independent riders were further down but after following Jonathan Rea for a few laps, it was once again Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) who was the next best in ninth, whilst Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) could only manage 12th, ahead of Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) and Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team), with the three Independent Ducatis together. Isaac Viñales (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) was 16th ahead of a solid Luke Mossey (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) and Germany’s Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing). Eugene Laverty (RC Squadra Corse) completed 21 few laps in the day as he was blighted by tech issues in 19th ahead of Christophe Ponsson (Alstare Yamaha) and Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing).

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Rea tops Donington FP1 as Toprak Razgatlioglu comes in two tenths of a second later

Reigning Champion Jonathan Rea topped the opening session of the weekend by just over two tenths from Toprak Razgatlioglu; all five manufacturers in the top seven The MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship returned to Donington Park for the Prosecco DOC UK Round and six-time Champion Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) laid down the gauntlet by topping Free Practice 1 by over half-a-second of his nearest rivals as he looks to get back to winning ways. Rea posted a lap time of 1’27.841s during the 45-minute session to go fastest in the morning at Donington Park, ahead of Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK). The Turkish star missed out on running in the first 15 minutes of the session and ran out of sync with his rivals but was able to move up the order into second place. In third place was Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) with the British rider having a small crash at the Turn 11 Melbourne Hairpin when he lost the front of his BMW M 1000 RR, but he was able to return to the track after having his bike checked over in the garage. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) continued his recent fine form with fourth in the standings in the morning at Donington Park, finishing ahead of American Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) who is learning his second new track in as many weekends following his MotoGP™ last time out. British rider Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) was sixth, one second away from Rea’s time, after continually improving his time throughout the session. Leon Haslam (Team HRC) was in seventh as the highest-placed Honda rider with all five manufacturers securing a position in the top seven. Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) claimed eighth spot at his local track, just over a second off his teammate’s pace, finishing ahead of Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) in ninth; the Dutchman taking an early trip through the gravel at the Melbourne Hairpin, with Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) rounding out the top ten. It was a tough start to the weekend for both Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) and Eugene Laverty (RC Squadra Corse). Japanese rookie Nozane came into the weekend with a hairline fracture to his right middle finger following a crash during a test at Navarra and completed only four laps, while Laverty only completed an in-and-out lap without setting a lap time at all.

australian gp and motogp cancelled for 2021 due to covid-19 restrictions

Hamilton leads Mercedes 1-2 in Austrian GP FP2

Formula 1 world champion Lewis Hamilton set the pace as Mercedes hit back to lead the way in second practice at the Austrian Grand Prix. Hamilton was only seventh-fastest in first practice but posted the quickest time of the weekend so far with a 1m04.523s to head Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas by 0.189s during the qualifying simulation runs. Hamilton survived a trip through the gravel following a lock-up at Turn 4 as the seven-time world champion was caught out as rain fell in the closing stages of FP2. Current championship leader Max Verstappen, who had topped the morning session for Red Bull, was third and 0.217s down on his title rival’s benchmark. Aston Martin enjoyed a strong afternoon as Lance Stroll and Sebastian Vettel took fourth and fifth, ahead of the AlphaTauri duo of Yuki Tsunoda and Pierre Gasly. After China’s Guanyu Zhou made his practice debut in FP1, two-time world champion Fernando Alonso was back in action for Alpine on his way to setting the eighth-fastest time. Lando Norris took ninth in his McLaren despite a spin at Turn 2, while Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi rounded out the top-10 order as he returned to the cockpit of his C41 after Ferrari test driver Callum Ilott had participated in FP1. Sergio Perez was only 11th in the FP2 order and ended up nearly a second off the pace in the second Red Bull. The drivers once again had the opportunity to test out Pirelli’s beefed-up prototype tyre construction that will be introduced at the British Grand Prix, providing the Italian manufacturer is satisfied with the analysis collected on Friday in Austria. 2021 F1 AUSTRIAN GRAND PRIX – FREE PRACTICE RESULTS (2) POS DRIVER NAT. TEAM TIME 1 Lewis Hamilton GBR Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team 1m04.523s 2 Valtteri Bottas FIN Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team 1m04.712s 3 Max Verstappen NED Red Bull Racing 1m04.740s 4 Lance Stroll CAN Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team 1m05.139s 5 Sebastian Vettel GER Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team 1m05.268s 6 Yuki Tsunoda JPN Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda 1m05.356s 7 Pierre Gasly FRA Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda 1m05.379s 8 Fernando Alonso CHI Alpine F1 Team 1m05.393s 9 Lando Norris GBR McLaren F1 Team 1m05.466s 10 Antonio Giovinazzi GBR Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen 1m05.511s 11 Sergio Perez MEX Red Bull Racing 1m05.516s 12 Esteban Ocon FRA Alpine F1 Team 1m05.527s 13 Carlos Sainz ESP Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow 1m05.620s 14 Kimi Raikkonen FIN Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen 1m05.624s 15 Daniel Ricciardo AUS McLaren F1 Team 1m05.698s 16 Charles Leclerc MON Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow 1m05.708s 17 George Russell ISR Williams Racing 1m05.819s 18 Mick Schumacher GER Uralkali Haas F1 Team 1m05.911s 19 Nicholas Latifi CAN Williams Racing 1m06.014s 20 Nikita Mazepin RUS Uralkali Haas F1 Team 1m06.173s

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