Formula 1 Racing

F1 teams back 10-car non-championship sprint race for rookies at end of season · RaceFans

Logan Sargeant, Williams, Bahrain International Circuit, 2023 pre-season test

Plans for a post-season sprint race for rookies are moving closer to becoming a reality, Formula 1 team bosses say.

The concept was originally mooted for 2025 but Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said momentum is growing for the race to take place this year following the post-season test at Yas Marina in Abu Dhabi.

“It’s like all things in life, if you want it to happen, you make it happen,” said Horner. “I think there was a clear directive to let’s get the job done for this year. So obviously that puts pressure on the Sporting Working Groups and the various team managers to work with the FIA to come up with a set of regulations.”

Horner said the event is likely to take place in a single day and run to the same regulations used for Formula 1’s sprint races.

“I think mainly adopting sprint regs and so on it’s eminently do-able,” he said. “It doesn’t need to be overly complicated.”

Teams would enter just one car instead of two, said Horner, meaning the grid would contain just 10 cars. The qualifying session would therefore need to be adjusted as the current SQ1 and SQ2 phases would become meaningless.

“It’s just going to be a single car from each team rather than two cars,” he explained. “Effectively you’re just using the mileage in a different way as opposed to just performing during a test day.

Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and go ad-free

“So I think the event will take place all in one day: Qualifying and then you put on another sprint race.”

It would be the 31st F1 race in what has already been the longest-ever F1 season, featuring 24 rounds plus six sprint races. However Horner believes it would be a worthwhile replacement for the regular young drivers’ test.

“It’s something that I tabled at the last couple of Formula 1 Commissions because I think it’s great for the young drivers,” said Horner.

“The problem with some of the rookie tests is they all get used for testing. You never know are they running on 50 kilos, 70 kilos, 30 kilos of fuel, what engine motor are they going? You don’t really know how the opposition is doing.

“So I think this, a non-championship race for the junior drivers, is a fantastic opportunity. It comes at the end of a busy season, but opposed to just running around burning fuel and tyres and only the teams that are running those drivers knowing whether they’re doing a good job or not, to give potentially 10 rookies the opportunity of jumping in the…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at RaceFans…