https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/article.f1-set-to-debut-new-tv-graphics-in-2020-showing-car-performance-driver.5A2eAwUbJj1plsECQemg3r.html Great more unnecessary information on the screen
All of this extra stuff on the screen reminds me of when Joe (Not-Sure) wakes up in Frito's apartment.....
Some utterly pointless (and also misleading) information being shown there. Why does anyone want to see where a car is expected to qualify?
https://uk.motor1.com/news/431154/the-red-bull-upgrades-revealed-at-its-filming-day/?fbclid=IwAR0zK7cEd4BxZ-GTGobrXzn5jjo4iUtka75bYakGUPYllf5YgrWj9nToFz4
Formula 1: US & Brazil races unlikely to happen - Toto Wolff https://www.bbc.com/sport/formula1/53278310
ESPN F1 observations of today - https://www.espn.co.uk/f1/story/_/id/29405308/is-racing-point-really-mercedes-closest-competitor-austria
Hockenheim has revealed that it will not hold a Formula 1 race this year because of the strict limits on the numbers of people who would be able to attend. The German circuit had been one of the leading contenders to grab a European race slot this year as F1 chiefs look to fill out their calendar. But despite lengthy talks with F1 owners Liberty Media over potentially hosting a race later this year as part of a triple header in October with Imola and Portimao, Hockenheim has ended talks because it was impossible to guarantee that enough fans would be allowed in to the venue. https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/150791/hockenheim-out-of-running-to-host-f1-race-in-2020
Latest possible additions to the calendar: Nuerburgring Portimao Imola If they all happen, we end up with even 16 races this year. Not bad at all. And I'm super thrilled about Portimao. Another test track, which would have never had a chance to host a F1 race. So cool to have a new track.
Received word today there will be no 2020 Canadian GP from the organizers after I mentioned to them earlier I didn’t plan on attending. I’m trying my best not to let all that power go to my head.
Will that still make it a world championship though ? According to the FIA, a series has to be run on 3 different continents to deserve the title of World Championship.
FIA says F1 2020 is still considered a World Championship as races were cancelled for reasons of force majeure.
BBC article on the new cancellations/additions - https://www.bbc.com/sport/formula1/53527355 Formula 1 has called off the US, Mexican and Brazilian Grands Prix this year as a result of the coronavirus crisis in the Americas. With infection rates rising in the three countries, F1 bosses believe it would be irresponsible to hold races there. Instead, three further races in Europe are to be added to the calendar. These will see a return for Germany's Nurburgring and Imola in Italy, and an F1 debut for Portugal's Portimao track. The US Grand Prix in Austin, Texas, had been due to be held on 23 October, with the Mexican race in Mexico City a week later and Brazil on 13 November. But F1 officials have accepted that it will be impossible to hold the races. Any hopes of reviving the Canadian race, originally scheduled for June and postponed in April, have also been abandoned. The coronavirus has a much lower prevalence in Canada, but the country has local restrictions and travel rules that make impossible to hold a race. An F1 statement said: "Due to the fluid nature of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, local restrictions and the importance of keeping communities and our colleagues safe, it will not be possible to race in Brazil, USA, Mexico and Canada this season." The grand prix at the Nurburgring, which last hosted a race in 2013, will be held on 11 October, when it will be vulnerable to bad weather. The date is the latest in the year a grand prix has ever been held on the historic track in the Eifel mountains, where snow has been known to fall even in the summer, and certainly cannot be ruled out in October. Portimao, on the Algarve, will follow on 25 October, with Imola on 1 November. Imola will be a two-day event, meaning there will be no Friday practice. Imola has long, historic connections with F1. It replaced Monza as the home of the Italian Grand Prix in 1980 and had a permanent home on the calendar as the San Marino Grand Prix from 1981 to 2006. It is also notorious as the track on which Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger were killed on consecutive days in 1994. Portimao is to be one of the first races to allow spectators this year - following the decision of the organisers of the Russian Grand Prix on 23-25 September to sell tickets to the event in Sochi on the Black Sea coast. F1 still does not have a full calendar, but says it remains hopeful of being able to have "between 15 and 18 races this year and end in the Gulf in mid-December". The additional three races at the Nurburgring, Portimao and Imola will take the calendar to 13, and the season is expected to conclude with two races in Bahrain and one in Abu Dhabi in November and December. And F1 is working on one or two races in Asia in early to mid-November. The new street circuit in the Vietnamese capital Hanoi, which had been due to make its debut as an F1 venue in April, is expected to hold a race, and there is a possibility of a return to Malaysia's Sepang track, which held a grand prix from 1999-2017.
While that's true Brawn already announced that they won't apply the 3 continents rule due to the circumstances. It will be a valid WDC. Some FChatters' opinions not withstanding....
Yes, true, but the FIA will have to extend that to other Word Championships too, I guess (WTCC, WRC, WEC, etc ...).
Imola is back.....flashback. CAUTION: EARGASM Tweet— Twitter API (@user) date Tweet— Twitter API (@user) date
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