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.”

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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.

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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.

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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).

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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.

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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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Eriksson to remain in Dragon FE for New York as Mueller out again

Joel Eriksson will keep his Dragon Penske Formula E seat for next weekend’s New York City E-Prix double-header after deputising for DTM regular Nico Mueller last time out in Mexico. The Swede, who was officially named as the British based American team’s reserve driver in May, filled in for Mueller at both Puebla E-Prix last month finishing 17th and 15th after a penalty-affected weekend largely due to technical issues relating to an inverter problem, that caused the DPA team to break the seals on its homologated component. It had been expected that Mueller would return for the New York City races as there is no clash with his DTM commitments next weekend. The move could see Mueller’s two seasons as a DPA driver come to an end because the following Formula E rounds at the ExCeL Arena in London clash with the Norisring rounds of the DTM. That would mean only the Tempelhof Airfield races would be available for Mueller to compete and technically he could switch back into the seat despite Formula E working to a regulation that forbids driver changes for the final two races. This is because teams can revert to the originally nominated driver which means that Mueller could in theory return to the No.6 Penske cockpit. The Race understands that Mueller may be offered a covering role for the New York City E-Prix but is unlikely to be in the Big Apple. Factory Audi driver Mueller is driving in the new-look DTM championship this season in a Team Rosberg run Audi R8 LMS Evo and finished second in the first round at Monza last month. He was considered for a drive with the Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler squad in 2019 but instead joined Dragon along with Brendon Hartley in the summer of that year. Mueller’s maiden campaign netted no points despite a promising start with a seventh position on the Mexico City E-Prix start grid in February of 2020. This season he has scored points on three occasions; a fifth in the second Diriyah E-Prix, a fortunate second at the infamous first Valencia race and then a ninth in Rome. Despite the points haul, DPA’s pace has again been disappointing with the all-new Penske EV-6 failing to make an impact since it made its debut in Monaco. Eriksson will again partner Sergio Sette Camara who has collated 12 points so far this season, all thanks to a fourth place in Riyadh.

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Hamilton seems out of shape and tired in Austria

Lewis Hamilton was not in a great mood in the paddock on Thursday. The Briton returns to Spielberg where Max Verstappen was dominant last weekend, and according to Will Buxton and Lawrence Barretto, it showed on his face. It’s not yet the season start Hamilton had hoped for. In 2021, Mercedes are getting resistance for the first time in years, and Red Bull Racing even have the upper hand. The team and also Verstappen are on top of the championship, and the last four races have been won by Red Bull. Buxton and Barretto say they are tired at the end of this Triple Header, but also see that in Hamilton. poster”Lewis is [feeling tired] as well. He didn’t want to talk and wasn’t all that enthused about it. He was like ‘if it was a different track I’d be excited, but I’m not.’ I struggled to get anything out of him,” Buxton reveals in the Weekend Warm-Up. ”He has also had a tough couple races, so you can’t blame him for that. And he’s not delighted with the second race here,” says Barretto. ”If he had won last weekend, he would be like ‘loving it’ but now he has been in the simulator,” Buxton adds. That Hamilton had been in the simulator surprised many people, including Barretto. ”The fact that he has been in the simulator is interesting. Because he hates that, he never does that. So that suggests that he needs to find every bit of pace. If the simulator can give him that, he has to do it, even if he hates it,” Barretto concludes.

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Verstappen tops Austrian GP FP1 as Ferrari takes second and third

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen picked up on Friday where he left off last week at the Red Bull Ring, leading the field in the opening practice session for the Austrian Grand Prix. The Dutchman edged the Ferrari duo of Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz by a 0.266s margin, while Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas and AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda completed the top five. While the venue will look very familiar to teams and drivers this weekend, as a reminder, the field is running on a softer selection of compounds from Pirelli, with the Italian supplier opting for the C3, C4 and C5 tyres. But Pirelli was set to test a new, more durable tyre in FP1, with each team required to run on the new rubber during the session. Finally, FIA Formula Championship leader Guanyou Zhou took to the track in an official F1 session for the first time, the Chinese driver replacing Alpine’s Fernando Alonso. The young charger was also joined by Callum Ilott running in place of Antonio Giovinazzi at Alfa Romeo and Roy Nissany enjoying another FP1 outing with Williams. After the usual period of installation laps and early flyers, Verstappen was quick to assert his position at the top of the timesheet, and the Dutchman was followed by his fellow Red Bull and Honda-backed colleagues, namely Pierre Gasly, Sergio Perez and Tsunoda. Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll endured a laborious start to his weekend, spinning twice in the first 20 minutes of the session. Sainz was the first driver to break the Red Bull formation at the front when he slot in just behind Verstappen. But a decent lap by teammate Charles Leclerc allowed the Monegasque to snatch P2, just 0.266s off the pace setter. Meanwhile, Bottas in P5 was the quickest of the Mercedes pair while Hamilton lingered down the order, just inside the top ten with 15 minutes to go. Positions remained unchanged among the front-runners, with Verstappen’s fastest time 1m05.143s going unchallenged as he led Leclerc, Sainz, Bottas and Tsunoda. Alfa’s Kimi Raikkonen enjoyed a solid work session, the Iceman clocking in sixth and ahead of Hamilton, Perez, Gasly and Lando Norris. Ocon and Ricciardo lined up just outside of the top-ten, while both Aston Martin were also sat in the second half of the field. Alpine junior Zhou did a decent job to finish his maiden FP1 a creditable P14, while Ilott also kept himself out of trouble to end his session P16. Further behind, fellow young driver Nissany in P18 was faster than his Williams teammate Nicholas Latifi, while Haas’ Nikita Mazepin brought up the rear once again. 2021 F1 AUSTRIAN GRAND PRIX – FREE PRACTICE RESULTS (1) POS DRIVER NAT. TEAM TIME 1 Max Verstappen NED Red Bull Racing 1m05.143s 2 Charles Leclerc MON Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow 1m05.409s 3 Carlos Sainz ESP Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow 1m05.431s 4 Valtteri Bottas FIN Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team 1m05.445s 5 Yuki Tsunoda JPN Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda 1m05.474s 6 Kimi Raikkonen FIN Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen 1m05.586s 7 Lewis Hamilton GBR Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team 1m05.709s 8 Sergio Perez MEX Red Bull Racing 1m05.726s 9 Pierre Gasly FRA Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda 1m05.726s 10 Lando Norris GBR McLaren F1 Team 1m05.880s 11 Esteban Ocon FRA Alpine F1 Team 1m05.980s 12 Daniel Ricciardo AUS McLaren F1 Team 1m06.181s 13 Lance Stroll CAN Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team 1m06.203s 14 Guanyu Zhou CHI Alpine F1 Team 1m06.414s 15 Sebastien Vettel GER Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team 1m06.444s 16 Callum Ilott GBR Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen 1m05.564s 17 Mick Schumacher GER Uralkali Haas F1 Team 1m06.583s 18 Roy Nissany ISR Williams Racing 1m06.683s 19 Nicholas Latifi CAN Williams Racing 1m06.978s 20 Nikita Mazepin RUS Uralkali Haas F1 Team 1m07.316s

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Mazepin’s car is much heavier than Schumacher’s

Nikita Mazepin says he is driving a heavier car than the one raced more successfully by his high-profile teammate Mick Schumacher. “I wouldn’t say it’s unacceptable, it just complicates my job,” said the Russian rookie, whose Formula 1 debut this year has been tumultuous so far. “It does have quite a big impact on the weight distribution and the setup, but I’m surrounded by great engineers and I’m sure the situation will get better.” However, he will not get a new and lighter chassis until after the summer break. “When there are a lot of long straights and your car is heavier than the other one, it’s difficult stay ahead,” Mazepin insisted. The explanation for Mazepin’s heavier car is that the monocoque is older than the one used by Schumacher. “It’s a year old, and usually you do a new car every year. And sure, a chassis doesn’t get lighter after a year,” admitted team boss Gunther Steiner, referring to the fact that constant patch-up jobs add to the weight. “But the difference is not gigantic. It’s less than 20 kilos, or not even 10. Obviously a heavier car doesn’t make you faster. “Nikita will get a new chassis at Spa,” he added. The story may only now be breaking because of rumours that Mazepin’s father Dmitry – the team’s title sponsor via his company Uralkali – offered to pay more if Haas agrees to let his son drive Schumacher’s car. Auto Bild even claims that billionaire Mazepin snr would like Oliver Oakes – his son’s manager – to take over from Steiner as Haas team boss. When asked about his teammate’s heavier car, Schumacher said in Austria: “You have to ask the team.”

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Marquez Assen FP2 crash cost him podium

Marquez had a huge high-side during second practice at Assen last Friday and hurt his right ankle after a heavy impact with the ground. The crash was blamed on the Honda’s electronics, with Marquez admitting he was “angry” with how the crash happened and lost confidence in the bike as a result. But Honda reacted immediately and introduced tweaks to the bike’s electronics which eventually gave Marquez his confidence back. Wary that Assen would be a tougher challenge for both Marquez and Honda than the Sachsenring where the six-time world champion won, Puig is confident his rider could have fought for the podium again without his FP2 crash. “Yes, Sachsenring is a track which is very suitable for the Honda and also for Marc Marquez,” Puig said after the Assen race. “Marc had the chance there and he grabbed it with both hands. In the past Assen has never been an easy track like this, and it has been much tougher for all the Honda HRC riders. “We clearly understood it wouldn’t be easy before we arrived. “On Friday, Marc’s crash made the weekend even more complicated. “Without that crash, I think he would have been fighting for the podium as he wouldn’t have lost the confidence he did.” Marquez dropped into Q1 at Assen having struggled on Saturday morning and FP3, with a crash in qualifying leaving him 20th on the grid. However, he leaped up to 12th at the end of the opening lap and went on to finish seventh, with Marquez admitting he ended the race physically better than he anticipated despite the strain the Assen track put on his weak right shoulder. “We saw a great recovery from Marc at the beginning of the race,” Puig added. “He started in 20th and he recovered almost ten positions in just a single lap, this was the Marc that we know. “It shows his effort and the potential that he has, we are really looking forward to seeing him again in Austria after the break when he has recovered even further.”

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Toprak Razgatlioglu set to stay in WSBK for two more years

Toprak Razgatlioglu looks set to remain in WorldSBK for another two seasons following MotoGP interest. The Yamaha rider’s manager and former five-time WorldSSP champion Kenan Sofuoglu confirmed the news to Speedweek.com. Razgatlioglu had been seen as a major possibility for one of the 2022 MotoGP seats at Yamaha. In fact, the Turkish superstar was involved in talks to replace Franco Morbidelli at Petronas Yamaha for the Dutch MotoGP, before the team ultimately chose fellow WorldSBK rider Garrett Gerloff after Razgatlioglu declined the offer. This wasn’t seen as a huge surprise though, as Razgatlioglu has reiterated his desire on numerous occasions to remain in the Superbike world championship. Sofuoglu told Speedweek.com: “Our goal is to stay in the Superbike World Championship. Almost every brand has made Toprak an offer for next season, I talk to everyone, not just Yamaha. What I can already say: We are not going to the MotoGP World Championship, Toprak will compete in the Superbike World Championship for the next two years.” It should be noted that Razgatlioglu is tipped to remain with Yamaha in World Superbikes. The Japanese manufacturer is also said to be keen on retaining Andrea Locatelli at Pata Yamaha, which could make the decision for Gerloff to move to MotoGP a lot easier should he be offered a contract. Razgatlioglu is currently second in the championship – 20 points back from six-time world champion Jonathan Rea. The 24 year-old took his first victory of this season at Misano last time out, while round four gets underway tomorrow at Donington Park.

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60,000 fans maybe allowed to attend Austrian GP

A maximum crowd of 60,000 can gather for the second race in Austria this weekend. Last weekend, local covid restrictions capped the spectator numbers at just 15,000. However, many of those restrictions are now easing. “The Dutch people are coming and they will give Verstappen a second per lap,” beamed Dr Helmut Marko, the top F1 official for the circuit owner Red Bull. According to RTL, while Red Bull had hoped for a full house, 15,000 spectators will be welcome on Friday, 30,000 on Saturday, and 60,000 on Sunday. “We have to go back to normal and that includes major events,” Austrian chancellor Sebastian Kurz says. “We have to remember that the vaccinations also work on the Delta variant.”

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Mclaren wants Ricciardo to start scoring some more points

McLaren is turning up the heat on struggling team newcomer Daniel Ricciardo. Although earlier renowned as one of the best drivers in Formula 1, the 31-year-old Australian has notably struggled since joining impressive younger teammate Lando Norris this year at McLaren. The team is currently locked in a close battle with Ferrari to hold onto third place in the constructors’ world championship. “Daniel himself was very disappointed to not be able to continue his good development of the last races,” team boss Andreas Seidl, referring to the most recent race in Austria, is quoted by Marca. “But the fact that we are now going to race on the same track again is perfect for the learning process. We want to verify if we have drawn the right conclusions.” Seidl says McLaren needs Ricciardo to be scoring as many points as possible at each grand prix. “In the battle we are in, it is clear that we need to score points every weekend with both cars,” said the German. Ferrari, on the other hand, seems much more focused on preparations for the 2022 season rather than fighting for third place against McLaren this year. “How important is it for us to score more points than McLaren? Not very,” Ferrari team boss Mattia Binotto is quoted by international media.” “I already said at the beginning of the season that our main task is to prepare for the new regulations by improving in all areas.”

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Marko very optimistic Verstappen will be ‘more dominant’

After the Styrian Grand Prix the Formula One drivers remain on the Red Bull Ring for the Austrian Grand Prix. After a dominant performance in the first race at this circuit, Helmut Marko expects Red Bull Racing and Max Verstappen to dominate in the second race as well. The Red Bull Ring will host two races this season, as it did in 2021, and that’s not a bad thing for Red Bull Racing and Max Verstappen. Not only is it Red Bull’s home track, bringing a sea of Orange fans to the track for Verstappen, but it’s especially good because it’s a track that suits the RB16B well. That was evident at the Styrian Grand Prix when Verstappen managed to dominate the entire weekend. ”The circuit will stay the same and the cars will stay the same. The only thing that will change is the tyres. So I expect we can show the same dominance again, or maybe even more, with the softer tyres,” Marko told ServusTV. Pirelli will bring softer tyres to the Red Bull Ring this weekend, and that doesn’t usually benefit Mercedes. The Germans are better on Pirelli’s harder tyres, so a track that doesn’t suit them and even softer tyres won’t be ideal for Mercedes. Still Marko does not want to talk about a future world title. ”There are circuits where Mercedes will be strong again. I am afraid Silverstone is one of those circuits. The goal for us is to build up a margin for the races where we can’t win, and then take a two spot there a la Hamilton. That will continue to the end. We’re still a long way from predicting the world title,” concludes Red Bull’s chief executive.

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Sprint race winner will be taking the pole position as winner – Ross Brawn

Ross Brawn says that the winner of the Sprint Qualifying race will be the driver credited with having won pole position. The F1 MD was keen to clear up confusion over the fact that many had assumed the driver quickest in qualifying for the Sprint Qualifying race – and therefore starting it from pole position – would be credited with having won pole. However, Brawn says that it is the driver who wins the Sprint Qualifying race, and therefore starts the Grand Prix from pole, that is officially the pole winner. “I probably have to correct something I’ve said before because initially we thought it would still be the Friday qualifying,” said Brawn, according to Motorsport.com. “But, in fact, after discussions with the FIA, they feel pole position is the guy in front of the grid for the grand prix. “So it’s the person who finishes a sprint in first place, it’s the one who is on the front of the grid and has pole position for the race, the Grand Prix, on a Sunday. And that’s what we’ll count statistically towards the number of poles, because it is the sprint qualifying. “That’s one of the reasons the FIA want it covered that way,” he added, “so that we can ensure that the race is the race, the Grand Prix is the Grand Prix. And we don’t cannibalise the Grand Prix.” Brawn also confirmed that there will not be a podium ceremony following the Sprint Qualifying race, nor will the event feature the usual pre and post-race procedures. “We are trying to give a little bit of a fresh flavour, so that there’ll be a shorter period going on to the grid. There won’t be the driver parade, but there’ll be opportunities on the grid to interview the drivers. “And we’ve got some interesting things we want to try after the race, short, sharp,” he added. “There won’t be a podium, it will be rather like qualifying, because we want to keep the podium for the big event of the weekend. “We’ll just keep that in the bag, but there are some fresh things that we’re doing with the sprint, which I think will be nice to try. “We’re going to have a real competition on a Friday,” he said of qualifying for the Sprint Qualifying race – still with us? – and a new competition on a Saturday, and all of that should enhance the grand prix on the Sunday. So I don’t believe we cannibalise the grand prix in any way. This is all additive, and will contribute towards the whole weekend. “I guess to meet the criticism head-on, some people like the traditional approach and think we’re messing with something that doesn’t need messing with, and I understand that. “As you know, I’ve been in the sport a very long time. I think the way we’re exploring this opportunity is not going to damage F1 at all, and it will become clear, after the second or third of the events, how well this is succeeding, and how well the fans are engaging with it. “We’ve got new graphics, we’re doing a lot on social media in the next week or ten days. So we’re doing a lot to explain to our fans, what this is all about so that, when they turn the telly on at any stage, over the Silverstone weekend, they know exactly what’s going on.” Of course, while there won’t be a podium or any of the ‘traditional’ pre or post-race procedures there will no doubt be time allowed for the event’s newly announced sponsor, Crypto.com, and any other sponsors F1 can pick up along the way.

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