Formula 1 will be racing in Bahrain on November 29th and December 6th, but teams may well return to Sakhir just over three months later according to a draft calendar for 2021 that has come F1i’s way.
F1 boss Chase Carey said this week that the sport was in the process of finalizing a “pretty normal” schedule for next year, referring to a return to “a more balanced set of events across the globe” after this year’s disrupted campaign.
The FIA has yet to officially release a provisional calendar for 2021, but a ‘draft’ of next year’s agenda is currently circulating in cyberspace.
The season is set to open on March 14th in Bahrain where winter testing may also take place, with Melbourne pushed all the way back to October, a change justified by Australia’s current COVID-19 travel and border restrictions, the duration of which are unknown.
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Read also: Carey anticipates ‘pretty normal’ 2021 F1 calendar
Vietnam and Holland are earmarked once again for their maiden F1 events, but Germany and Brazil have predictably fallen off the schedule.
Formula 1 will return to the Americas, with Austin and Mexico City present in their usual November slots, but a Saudi Arabian Grand Prix at Jeddah scheduled as the penultimate round of the World Championship is another newcomer on the calendar.
Sadly, F1 will not return to the Mugello next year as many had hoped would be the case after this year’s thrilling event.
In addition to being provisional, the calendar would also require a COVID-19 sanitary all-clear from each hosting country. And that may be once again F1’s biggest hurdle next year.
Provisional 2021 F1 calendar:
1
Bahrain GP (Bahrain)
14 March
2
Vietnam GP (Hanoï)
28 March
3
China GP (Shanghaï)
11 April
4
Azerbaijan GP (Bakou)
25 April
5
Dutch GP (Zandvoort)
2 May
6
Spanish GP (Barcelona)
9 May
7
Monaoc GP (Monte-Carlo)
23 May
8
Canadian GP (Montreal)
6 June
9
Austrian GP (Spielberg)
20 June
10
French GP (Paul Ricard)
27 June
11
British GP (Silverstone)
11 July
12
Hungarian GP (Budapest)
25 July
13
Belgium GP (Spa)
29 August
14
Italian GP (Monza)
5 September
15
Russian GP (Sotchi)
19 September
16
Singapour GP (Marina Bay)
26 September
17
Japanese GP (Suzuka)
10 October
18
Australian GP (Melbourne)
24 October
19
US GP (Austin)
7 November
20
Mexican GP (Mexico)
14 November
21
Saudi Arabian GP (Jeddah)
28 November
22
Abu Dhabi GP (Yas Marina)
5 November
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