2020 Monaco Grand Prix Cancelled
The Automobile Club de Monaco have confirmed that the 2020 Monaco Grand Prix has been cancelled.
All the latest Formula 1 travel news, including updates on the calendar and circuits.
The Automobile Club de Monaco have confirmed that the 2020 Monaco Grand Prix has been cancelled.
The 2020 Dutch, Spanish and Monaco Grands Prix have all been postponed as the coronavirus pandemic continues to delay the start of the Formula 1 season.
That’s the big question as COVID-19 cases grow exponentially around the world, especially in Europe. The first four races of the 2020 season have been cancelled/postponed, and more races are in doubt. Here’s the latest news.
Following the cancellation of the Australian Grand Prix, Formula 1 has announced the postponement of both the Bahrain and Vietnam Grands Prix.
The 2020 Australian Grand Prix has been cancelled after a member of the McLaren team tested positive for coronavirus.
While coronavirus has dominated the headlines, work on the Hanoi circuit has been completed and Chase Carey has presented a new timeline for the Miami GP.
The 2020 Bahrain Grand Prix will be a “participants-only” event, with the Bahrain International Circuit closing its doors to spectators due to the coronavirus outbreak.
The outbreak of coronavirus poses a threat to the Chinese Grand Prix, Saudi Arabia could join the calendar in 2021 and plans for the Miami Grand Prix are refined.
The Austrian city of Graz is set to commemorate local hero Jochen Rindt in 2020, 50 years after his tragic death and posthumous World Driver’s Championship.
The Hanoi Street Circuit nears completion, attendance figures for 2019 are revealed and could Formula 1 be heading to Panama in the near future? Here’s a round up of all the latest F1 calendar news!
Formula 1’s attendance figures reached new heights in 2019, with more than four million fans passing through the turnstiles over the season. For a second year in a row, the British Grand Prix was the best attended race.
As construction work continues at Zandvoort, F1 looks set to become carbon neutral by 2030 and Spain aims to extend its tenure on the calendar beyond 2020.