‘All systems go’ for rearranged Australian Grand Prix, organisers confirm
Organisers are ‘confident’ the race will go ahead in November despite border restrictions
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Your support makes all the difference.Australian Grand Prix chief Andrew Westacott said on Monday he was “confident” the race would go ahead in November but poured cold water on the idea that Melbourne could host back-to-back rounds of the Formula One championship.
The 2020 edition of the Australian Grand Prix was cancelled at the last minute as the Covid-19 pandemic took a hold on the world and the 2021 race has been moved from its traditional season-opening spot to November.
Australia’s borders remain effectively closed, however, and the government said last week that they could remain so until the middle of next year.
Westacott said the fine details of the health protocols that would allow Formula One teams to enter Australia and race were still being negotiated.
“We’re all systems go for 21 November for the Formula One event,” the chief executive of the Australian Grand Prix Corporation told ABC TV on Monday.
“We’re working very, very closely in concert with the Victorian government on every aspect of the Covid-safe plans and also the arrangement for the international
“As you can imagine, it’s something very, very complex, it’s very, very much a work-in-progress, and we’re working with the Victorian government ... on every one of the details right now.”
The one major international sporting event to take place in Melbourne since the start of the pandemic was the Australian Open tennis championships in February.
That was only possible after all players and support staff coming from outside Australia had quarantined for 14 days -- a logistical impossibility for the Formula One teams who are scheduled to race in Brazil on 7 November.
“We’re going to finalise all those details over the next four to five months,” Westacott added in an interview on Melbourne’s 3AW radio. “None of it is finalised, it’s been worked through at the moment.”
With the health situation in Brazil threatening that race, Australian driver Daniel Ricciardo last month suggested the teams might head straight to Australia for two rounds of the championship. Westacott thought that highly unlikely.
“I think the people in Brazil are very, very deadset on hosting their grand prix two weeks earlier than us,” he added. “We want to concentrate on delivering one GP here in Melbourne on 21 November ... Our job is to deliver it very successfully.”
Reuters
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