Factory KTM and Tech 3 reveal colours for 2021 MotoGP

KTM says ‘its time for the Next Level’ as the Austrian Factory confirms February 12 as the online launch date for its two MotoGP teams. As its fifth season in MotoGP, KTM has labelled 2021 as ‘Round five’ and ‘time for the Next Level’ after ‘a breakthrough campaign in 2020 that delivered Grand Prix wins, a bundle of podium trophies, pole positions and new landmarks in the riders and manufacturers standings, the company is ready to strike again as MotoGP leaders this year with the KTM RC16.’ KTM came into last season with a best dry race result of sixth but finished it with eight dry podiums from the 14 rounds, including three victories. The first was by rookie Brad Binder at Brno – in only his third MotoGP appearance – followed by two more wins for Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull Ring, Portimao) at Tech3. Pol Espargaro also celebrated five podiums on his way to a new KTM high of fifth in the world championship, before leaving for Repsol Honda. Oliveira is switching across to the Factory team to take Espargaro’s place alongside Binder, with double Ducati race-winner Danilo Petrucci arriving at Tech3 to join Iker Lecuona. While Red Bull continues as title sponsor of the Official KTM team, they have withdrawn from Tech3 in the premier-class. The French team is now titled as ‘Tech3 KTM Factory Racing’ and is thus expected to take on an even more orange livery for 2021. Although KTM has now lost access to technical concessions, due to last year’s success, they are allowed to change their engine design ahead of the 2021 season. But once racing begins – like Suzuki, Yamaha, Ducati and Honda – they will not be able to make any engine modifications. Aprilia is the only manufacturer eligible for concessions in 2021.

Mercedes and Hamilton come to an agreement on the Verstappen clause

More and more sources, including F1 Insider, report that Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes have reached an agreement on the new contract of the seven-time world champion. It would also include a clause with veto rights over his teammate. The 37-year-old Briton has been driving for Mercedes since 2013 and has been world champion six times so far. Only in 2016 did he have to leave the title to teammate Nico Rosberg. Hamilton’s contract expired last year and negotiations have been ongoing for some time. According to insiders, Hamilton would sign a one-year contract with an option for a second season. His salary remains the same (estimated at 40 million euros per year). He will be allowed to use two advertising spaces on his helmet and overall. Much more striking however is the alleged clause in the contract which gives Hamilton a veto over his team mate. Among insiders this clause is even called the Verstappen-clause. It is an open secret that Max Verstappen is on Toto Wolff’s wish list, but many F1 experts believe that Hamilton would rather not have the young Dutchman as a teammate.

Mazepin in fresh controversy as he is fined for running a red light

Nikita Mazepin, who will make his debut as a Formula 1 driver next month, has been fined for failing to stop his car at a red light by a court in Oxfordshire. The 21-year-old was found to have passed through a traffic light in Bracknell 1.7 seconds after it turned red. Oxford and Southern Oxfordshire Magistrates’ Court ordered Mazepin to pay a total of £274 in fines, court costs and a victim surcharge. He was also given three penalty points on his road car driving licence.The incident occurred on June 24th last year, shortly before Mazepin began his Formula 2 campaign with Hitech. He ended the year fifth in the championship, but also attracted attention for his conduct on-track during the season. Mazepin was involved in a series of incidents over the course of the year for which he received a total of 11 endorsement points on his racing licence. That left him one point shy of an automatic ban by the time the season ended in December. He will make his Formula 1 debut in Bahrain next month for Haas. The team has faced criticism over the choice of Mazepin as its driver after a video appeared on one of his social media accounts last December showing him groping a woman in a car. Mazepin apologised for the incident, which Haas described as “abhorrent”, before later confirming he will make his debut alongside team mate Mick Schumacher.

AlphaTauri reveals the launch date for their 2021 F1 car

AlphaTauri becomes the fourth F1 team to announce its launch date as the wraps are set to come off the AT02 on 19 February. As it stands, McLaren is looking to be the first to launch, Daniel Ricciardo and Lando Norris revealing the MCL35M on Monday 15 February. AlphaTauri reveals the AT02 a few days later on the Friday, while on Monday 22nd, Alfa Romeo reveals its 2021 contender at an event in Warsaw. Tuesday 2 March sees the much anticipated reveal of the 2021 Mercedes – hopefully with the full driver line-up. Despite a significant step forward last year, AlphaTauri finished seventh in standings, one place down on where its predecessor, Toro Rosso, finished in 2019. Constantly having at least one of its cars finish in the points, there were a number of stand-out performances, not least Daniil Kvyat’s drive to fourth at Imola. However, the team’s highlight has to be its victory at Monza, Pierre Gasly giving the Faenza outfit its second ever win at the same circuit Sebastian Vettel claimed its first twelve years earlier. While Gasly is retained, he is joined by Japanese rising star, Yuki Tsunoda, and while there is no questioning the youngster’s talent it is thought his signing was partly to appease Honda.

Mclaren presents Ricciardo in team colours

McLaren has shared maiden images of Daniel Ricciardo in his new team colours ahead of the 2021 season, which will be Ricciardo’s first at the Woking-based squad. Having spent two years at Renault, Ricciardo has signed a deal to join McLaren from 2021 alongside Lando Norris, with its former driver Carlos Sainz departing to join Ferrari. McLaren ended the 2020 campaign third in the Constructors’ Championship, its best result since the 2012 season. Ricciardo too enjoyed a successful 2020 season, finishing the year fourth in the Drivers’ Championship, aided by scoring Renault’s first top-three finish of the turbo-hybrid era at the Nurburgring, before bagging a second podium at Imola. McLaren enters a new era in 2021 as it re-ignites its partnership with Mercedes, who will supply it with power units for the first time since 2014. The team has already announced that it will launch its car for the upcoming season, named the MCL35M, on February 15 at its Technology Centre in Woking. Despite stable technical regulations in place from 2020 to 2021 ahead of a big revamp in 2022, McLaren says that due to the switch to Mercedes from Renault engines, it is building “essentially a new car”. Ricciardo spoke about his highly anticipated move to McLaren alongside Norris, insisting that he is going to the team strictly for business, and warned not that he will not be part of a “meme power couple”. From 2014 to 2018, Ricciardo heightened his reputation after joining Red Bull’s senior outfit, scoring seven grand prix wins and 29 podiums. The upcoming year will be the Australian’s 11th in F1, having joined the grid as a Red Bull junior in 2011, competing half a season with HRT before joining Toro Rosso in 2012.

Lewis Hamilton’s contract saga is quite embarrassing

The saga surrounding Lewis Hamilton’s 2021 contract is becoming “embarrassing”. That is the view of former F1 driver Ralf Schumacher, referring to the fact that the only team with an official vacancy ahead of the new season next month is Mercedes. He told Sky Deutschland that Hamilton is taking a “risk” – perhaps not only with his image, but also because Mercedes has the highly competitive youngster George Russell waiting in the wings at Williams. When asked about Hamilton’s farcically-delayed contract negotiations, Schumacher said: “One thing is clear – Formula 1 is bigger than any one individual. “It’s February now and the most important man at the moment in Formula 1 – the seven-time world champion – is still not signed. “I find that a shame and, I have to say honestly, a bit embarrassing,” he added. “Lewis also must not forget the risk of what he is doing.” 45-year-old Schumacher said he isn’t sure why Hamilton and Mercedes are still yet to agree, adding: “It’s always said that it’s just about the money, but I hope not.”

Former Haas driver, Romain Grosjean makes a move to Indycar for 2021

Racing driver Romain Grosjean, who survived a fiery crash during a Formula One race last November, will compete in the 2021 IndyCar season with Dale Coyne Racing. The Frenchman was engulfed in flames for nearly half a minute after his Haas F1 car came into contact with another vehicle and crashed into a barrier at 140 mph. He escaped major injury, but suffered burns to his hands that required him to wear bandages for over a month. Grosjean, whose contract with Haas F1 was set to expire at the end of the year even before the incident, missed the final two races of what was his ninth full season in Formula One. The 34-year-old said he had to convince his three children to let him get back behind the wheel. “Initially they did not want me to race anymore and they told me to do every other job you can imagine — tennis player, artist, engineer, cook, you name it,” Grosjean said. “But I explained to them that I was the dad that I was because I had racing and that was a big, big part of my life and it made me happy.” Grosjean is schedule to get his first seat time in the Honda-powered car on Feb. 22 during a test day at Barber Motorsports Park ahead of the season-opening race there on April 18. “In the end, it’s got four wheels, one steering wheel, one seat, some aerodynamics,” Grosjean said. “I am confident we can get on top of things, even though there will be a learning curve. And I’m going to be a rookie, for the first time in a long time.”

Renault seeking Williams as F1 customer team

The Renault group CEO Luca de Meo has been making some interesting changes since his arrival in F1. Their team has now been renamed as ‘Alpine F1’ and a few key personnel have also come in to help elevate the French outfit’s results. But a further step that Renault are reportedly considering is pursuing a ‘customer’ collaboration with one of the F1 teams. This, apparently, could be Williams, who could evaluate a change in their power units for 2022. A report by Motorsport.com states, “The picture seems to lead to a single solution: the offer (by Renault) of its power units to Williams, the only team that today can evaluate the possibility of an engine change.” Williams have spent much of the last few seasons finishing last on the F1 grid. Naturally, with new owners, they would want to shake things up ahead of the new technical regulations being introduced. The report continues, “In the paddock there are those who have already made a first contact between the two sides, but there are three obstacles to overcome.” One of the major hurdles is reportedly the existing ties that Williams have with Mercedes. The German manufacturer has continued to supply engines to the Grove-based outfit from 2014. Over time, the two teams have also built good relations via Mercedes academy graduate, George Russell. To add to that, there is also an apparent time constraint to conclude any possible deal. Considering the 2022 cars would already be in a ‘design phase’, Renault will have to move swiftly to convince Williams.

Redding hits the track in Spain as the preparations for the 2021 WorldSBK season are ongoing

The 2021 MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship continues to edge closer to kicking off as more and more riders begin to take to tracks on their own motorcycles to get back up to speed. The British rider, runner-up in his rookie season in 2020, took to the Cartagena circuit in Murcia, Spain, aboard a stock version of the Ducati Panigale V4S. Redding knows the Cartagena circuit well from testing there at the start of 2019, but getting back up to speed this year was more crucial than ever, having not tested at the rain-hit Jerez test two weeks ago. He enjoyed his time on track as he got reunited with Ducati machinery on the Spanish circuit. Redding’s 2020 season was phenomenal for a rookie, starting with six consecutive podiums, which consisted of two race wins in the high heat of Jerez. He was pegged back by Jonathan Rea at Portimao before extending his lead at the Aragon Round. A crash during the inaugural Teruel Round saw Redding’s season start to unravel but he still took the title race to the final round of the season, ultimately finishing second overall. Redding, who has since travelled to the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto, said: “We’re here in Jerez. I’ve been training with my track bike, street bike, the V4S. It’s been super good, I’ve been a bit eager to ride the bike as everything’s been in delay and we didn’t get to test here a few weeks ago so I was able to swing my leg over the Panigale V4S and I look forward to getting on the race bike soon.”

Mercedes announce the date they will launch the 2021 F1 car

The Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team has announced that their 2021 car, the W12 will be unveiled on the 2nd of March, two weeks before the official pre-season testing gets underway at Bahrain. Mercedes is poised to stretch its winning record in 2021 after having dominated the sport’s hybrid era since the introduction of the new power units in 2014. The Brackley-based outfit has secured the Drivers’ and the Constructors’ Championship title in each season since the start of the new era with the team looking set to win its eighth successive titles in both championships this year. Teams have agreed to stick to the 2020 chassis due to the coronavirus pandemic this year, but cars will be different at various fronts. The aerodynamic development is still allowed and FIA has imposed new restrictions around the rear of the car, including the rear brake ducts and the back section of the floor in order to trim down the downforce produced by the cars. Moreover, Mercedes has also been forced to remove its controversial Dual-Axis system from its car for 2021. The Anglo-German team’s Technical Director James Allison said that the development work has been rather intense despite the unusually high amount of carry-over parts. “The rules are very, very different for 2021, the work we’ve had to do has been very wide-reaching. it’s been a really unusual, unfamiliar but intense winter development period for this new car” despite not having to work on a new chassis. “I say intense, because although bits of this car have carried over, the challenge of getting it ready for a new season has been every bit as difficult as it normally is because a lot has changed,” he stated. “Probably the most intense and difficult thing for us is reacting to the aerodynamic changes that come for 2021,” added Allison.

Hamilton comes to agreement with Mercedes on a two-year contract with three key demands granted

Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes have reportedly had a breakthrough in contract negotiations with an ‘agreement’ already in place. Hamilton’s future in F1 has dominated headlines in the offseason on whether or not he will stay at Mercedes. Talks over a new contract were put on hold until after the final race of last season in Abu Dhabi. Both parties indicated that they wanted to move forward with one another, suggesting an agreement would be relatively straightforward. But it’s been the complete opposite with negotiations taking well over a month, leading to speculation over Hamilton’s future. With Mercedes being the only F1 team not to have both driver slots confirmed for the upcoming season, there were even suggestions that they may have to find a replacement for Hamilton. George Russell was being touted as an alternative given he could be promoted from Williams, while Nico Hulkenberg was also reportedly an option. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff though has repeatedly stated his confidence that Hamilton would sign on. And it appears as though an announcement is imminent on Hamilton’s future with Mercedes. According to AutosportWeb, the 36-year-old has agreed terms on a new contract with the Silver Arrows and an announcement is expected to take place this week. It is suggested that there were three key aspects of the deal which were holding up negotiations over the past few weeks. But Hamilton has seemingly now agreed terms on the length of the contract, the basic salary and bonuses. And his new deal also reportedly includes a veto right regarding his choice in a team-mate at Mercedes. The contract will see Hamilton sign on with Mercedes until the end of 2022, although Hamilton is said to have an option to extend it for another year. It’s thought that this will be Hamilton’s final contract in F1, but the seven-time world champion insists he’s still as hungry as ever to succeed. “You’ve got to find what you’re passionate about and what you love doing, and me personally, in my journey, there was a point where it just got too serious,” Hamilton told the Formula for Success podcast. “We only have one life. You have to enjoy what you’re doing. You’ve got to find happiness every day in what you are doing and I think that has been really important for me to be able to live in the moment. “Yes, it’s a competitive space that I’m in, but damn when I get in that car and put down the visor and the team start up the car and I leave the garage, I have the biggest smile. Even today, after all these years of racing. “If there’s ever a day that that doesn’t happen, I don’t get that smile, I know that it’s done and I need to move on to something else.”

Is Valtteri Bottas in last chance saloon for the Mercedes drive?

Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas is entering a potentially career-defining season in Formula 1. The Finn’s seat at Mercedes is under serious threat for the future with George Russell seemingly a shoo-in for the Silver Arrows from 2022 onwards given his impressive form for Williams plus his stand-in heroics in Sakhir last year. So after finishing second in the standings for the second consecutive season, it appears Bottas is standing in the last chance saloon? Bottas’ recent exploits for Mercedes is a game of ‘Spot the pattern’ – win the first race of the season, have a numerical suffix added to your name – will it be Bottas 4.0 this term – fade towards the end of the year and end up closer to the cars behind than his team-mate in front. Indeed, last season he took victory in Austria, was given the name ‘Bottas 3.0’ and yet failed to build on his promising start, finishing 124 points behind team-mate Lewis Hamilton and just nine ahead of Max Verstappen. But is it all his fault? Last season was one of misfortune for Bottas. He looked strong at Imola, for example, before a large piece of debris became stuck in the W11’s floor assembly. He also came unstuck with tyre issues in both Silverstone races, with the failure in the British Grand Prix the most spectacular. Bottas can at least point to his stellar qualifying performances as a lifeline, regularly on par with Hamilton, who is undeniably one of the best qualifiers in F1 history. Yet there were plenty of examples where Bottas felt the pinch, including a dismal performance in the Turkish GP in which he spun six times at a time when his title aspirations were hanging by a thread. His run of 14th, eighth, eighth in one of the greatest F1 cars ever made was unacceptable. As everybody is aware, F1 is a results business. If you cannot get the job done, you are not going to be around for long because there is always someone waiting for one of the most precious jobs in motorsport. In a dominant Mercedes team, Bottas has scored nine wins from 79 races since his switch from Williams ahead of the 2017 season. Three of those were in his first year at the team, four in 2019 and just two last year. Compared to Hamilton, the numbers make for excruciating reading. The seven-time champion has won almost five times the amount of his team-mate with 42 in their time together. Even Verstappen, who for the large part has driven a middleweight Red Bull compared to the heavyweight champion Mercedes, has secured nine race wins since the beginning of the 2017 season. Put simply, it isn’t good enough from the Finn. Alarmingly, and arguably, a certain Russell was only a pit-stop blunder and a puncture away from being one win from one outing… The young pretender to the Mercedes throne is the real issue for Bottas. Until last season, there was nothing to make him squirm over his future at the team. Russell, though, was a spin behind a safety car away from a stunning season with Williams, with the Briton aiding the team’s overall resurgence and sparkling in the limelight of qualifying. At Sakhir, despite Bottas finishing ahead of his team-mate-for-the-weekend on track, the spectacular move into the turn six-seven-eight chicane that Russell put on Bottas underlined the predicament he is in. Russell, at the moment, looks a certainty for a 2022 berth at the champions, with the signs looking ominous for Bottas. What can save his seat? Of course, the seat does not yet belong to Russell, and an impressive season for Bottas would surely ensure he stays. Mercedes has proven in the past it is not in the business of promoting junior drivers for no reason. Esteban Ocon was released despite looking promising, as was Pascal Wehrlein. Red Bull has struggled to topple Mercedes with a single-car attack given the woes of its second driver since Daniel Ricciardo’s departure, a point that must surely play on Toto Wolff’s mind given Bottas does fare well compared to the team’s rivals. Hamiton’s future could well come to Bottas’ rescue, with the Finn unlikely to be moved aside should the British driver not racee for Mercedes from 2022 onwards. Bottas has the seat for now despite suggestions Russell is ready for the big time, but oh how he needs to make the most of this chance as it must surely be his last.

Mercedes presents the F1 powered AMG Project ONE on the track

Any chance we get to see the Mercedes-AMG Project ONE is a chance we’ll take and the brand has just released its latest clip. The short, 43-second-long video shows the ONE on track in its now-familiar silver and red camouflaged livery. We last saw the car looking like this when Sir Lewis Hamilton drove it in December. “I can still hardly believe that there will soon be a hypercar with a Formula 1 engine,” said Hamilton at the time. “We won the world championship with this engine in 2015, and I was involved in its development for a long time. I was able to drive the Project One during the film work for the new campaign, and I’m very proud of the extraordinary effort Mercedes-AMG has invested in this project. This car is absolutely unique.” The ONE will feature an engine that should be familiar for Sir Lewis since it’s the same 1.6-liter V6 that has powered his F1 car to six world championships. Revving up to 11,000 RPM in road-trim, the engine should produce more than 1,000 metric horsepower and a top speed of more than 217 mph. Mercedes-AMG is highlighting the electrified aspect of the car, which makes sense. As in F1, the ONE uses electric motors to achieve its ridiculous performance figures. The F1-car-for-the-road was initially supposed to debut in mid-2020 but delays have meant that an exact launch date is a little unclear at this point. Regardless, Mercedes-AMG has filled all 250 build slots, despite its $2.5 million price tag.

Albon to race in DTM in an AlphaTauri liveried Ferrari 488 GT3-Evo

Albon is set to share the AF Corse-prepared AlphaTauri car with New Zealander Nick Cassidy for the 2021 DTM season, dovetailing outings with his Formula 1 commitments with Red Bull – while alongside the pair, another New Zealander, former F3 competitor Liam Lawson, will drive a second 488, in Red Bull colours, as the Austrian company returns to DTM after two years out of the series. Having spent his whole career racing karts and single-seaters, meanwhile, Albon said he was looking forward to the challenge of getting up to speed with ‘tin tops’ – having only experienced closed cockpit machinery once before, when he drove Mercedes DTM and McLaren GT cars while competing for the 2014 McLaren Autosport BRDC Award. “DTM is a great series with highly talented drivers in the field and exciting racing,” said Albon. “I’ve only driven a ‘tin top’ once… and they’re really different to single seaters. There’s a lot less downforce and the tyres are very different, so it requires a different kind of driving style. “It will take a bit of time to get used to, but I’m looking forward to a new racing challenge when I’m available outside of my existing F1 commitments.” The eight-weekend DTM season will be kicking off on Monza on June 18-20 – although it’s yet to be confirmed which rounds Albon will contest.

Beard Motorsports owner Mark Beard dies at 72

Beard Motorsports team owner and former NASCAR driver Mark Beard Sr. has died at the age of 72. On Monday, the team announced his passing but added that they will press on with their plans of running the Daytona 500 in two weeks, fielding the #62 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE for Cup Series newcomer Noah Gragson. A cause of death was not specified, but an obituary from Charles R. Lux Family Funeral Home in his hometown Mount Pleasant, Michigan, explains he died on Sunday at his home. “It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of Mark Beard Sr., president of Beard Motorsports,” began a statement from the team. “Mark was passionate about racing and the businesses he built with his family, and even though he will be terribly missed, his work ethic and kind heart lives on with the many people he influenced. “While the family requests privacy at this time, they want to reaffirm Beard Motorsports’ commitment to compete in this year’s 500 where the team will race in Mark’s honour.” Beard began his driving career in karting and drag racing before moving into oval tracks such as dirt and ARCA, racing for car owners like Indianapolis 500 winner and fellow Michigan native Gordon Johncock. In 1982, he ran the inaugural Budweiser Late Model Sportsman (now the Xfinity Series) race at Daytona, where he finished eighteenth as an owner/driver. He would not make another start in the series until 1986 when he finished twenty-sixth at Charlotte. His driving days, plagued by little support, would end following various failed qualifying efforts in the early 1990s, with his final attempt being a DNQ at Michigan in 1995. Gary Neice, Dana Patten, Bobby Dotter (current owner of Xfinity team SS-Green Light Racing), L.D. Ottinger, Richard Lasater, Butch Miller, and Jim Brinkley Jr. would also race Beard’s cars during the decade. Off the track, Beard worked in the oil business; in 1984, he founded M&L Petroleum Inc. followed by Beard Oil in 2005. In 2009, he got back into racing as a team owner when he founded Beard Motorsports. His son Mark Beard II would also become a driver in late models for the family operation. Beard Motorsports débuted during the 2009 ARCA season with Clay Rogers. Due to the team’s small size and lack of funding, mechanical trouble plagued their early history, such as when Rogers moved from fortieth to third in their maiden start at Michigan but retired in thirty-second with an engine failure, followed by qualifying fourth in the next year’s race there but finishing thirty-second again due to a clutch issue. The team hoped to move into the Cup Series in 2014 with Rogers, but failed to qualify in both of their attempts at Richmond and Phoenix. After a two-year dormancy, Beard revived his Cup programme with Brendan Gaughan to run the superspeedway races. Gaughan would run seventeen races for Beard, all of which were at Daytona and Talladega with one being on the former’s road course in 2020, scoring four top tens and a best finish of seventh on two occasions. Gaughan retired after the 2020 season and the team added Gragson, an Xfinity Series regular who hails from Las Vegas like Gaughan, for the Daytona 500. Should Gragson race his way into the 500, it will mark his Cup début. “Heavy hearts today. Thinking about the Beard Family,” Gragson tweeted. “Time to go ‘drive the piss out of it’ and do it for Mr. Beard in the 500.” “From a young age Mark loved race cars,” read the obituary. “He started from building Go-Karts to realizing his goal of racing late models and Busch Grand Nationals at Daytona. In 2016 he established his own NASCAR Cup Team, running the #75, then the #62. Among his many leisure activities, Mark enjoyed boating, snowmobiling, hunting, and golfing. He was the kind of guy that brought life and laughter to any room, never knowing what he might say. Mark was a strong man who would do anything for his beloved family.”

Haas not able to fire up 2021 Ferrari engine

Haas is currently unable to fire up its Formula 1 engines in preparation for the 2021 season that begins with testing and the opening race in Bahrain next month. Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport reports that the small American team, which will field rookie Mick Schumacher this year, has received its customer engines for the new season from supplier and partner Ferrari. “The engine is allowed into Britain, but not the engineers you need to start it,” revealed correspondent Michael Schmidt. “As things stand at the moment, the earliest possible moment to bring the engine to life is the test in Bahrain.” Normally, Haas’ cars are assembled at the Dallara facility, which like Ferrari’s Maranello factory is based in Italy. But for the first time, Haas is assembling the 2021 car at its own Banbury (UK) base. “This year, that is easier in terms of logistics than to send our parts to Italy for assembly,” confirmed team boss Gunther Steiner. The problem is that Britain is requiring all Italian travellers to quarantine for 14 days, meaning that even Steiner himself is unable to travel to the Haas factory from the US at present. “If I wanted to fly to England, I would have to be in quarantine for two weeks,” Steiner said. “There are only exceptions for athletes.” Haas has made aerodynamic tweaks to its 2020 car in preparation for this season, but the team has decided against using any of the development ‘tokens’.