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Following F1’s new sprint format, the sprint race will no longer determine the grid for the main races on Sundays. Here’s what you need to know about the changes.
F1 has introduced a new sprint format — a newly approved shake-up to the sprint race set to debut this weekend at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
In Baku, which stages the first of this season’s six sprints, the 100-kilometer dash will become a standalone event on the Saturday of race weekends.
A shortened qualifying version will be held on the morning of the approximately 30-minute race to define the starting order for the sprint, which was first introduced in 2021.
Qualifying for Sunday’s Grand Prix will now be held on Friday, the traditional three-session qualifying, preceded by a first practice session.
F1’s new sprint format was given the green light by the teams at the Australian Grand Prix at the start of the month, with the changes rubber-stamped by the FIA’s F1 commission on Tuesday.
It’s our first #F1Sprint week of the season 💪
— Formula 1 (@F1) April 24, 2023
Bring on the street fight in Baku! 🇦🇿#AzerbaijanGP #F1 pic.twitter.com/tQcDyrRYtg
Up to now, the three sprints held in 2021 and last year have shaped the grid for Sunday’s main event.
Teams and Formula One believe the revised race weekend will now give Saturday’s action added excitement to fans by doing away with the often less-than-enthralling second practice session.
Saturday’s qualifying will be known as ‘the Sprint Shootout‘ with the first qualifying session or Q1 running for 12 minutes, Q2 for 10 minutes, and Q3 for eight minutes.
In sum, this is how the Azerbaijan Grand Prix weekend (and other sprint race weekends) will play out:
Introducing… Sprint Saturday ✨
— Formula 1 (@F1) April 25, 2023
🗓️ All-new weekend format
👀 Saturday's Sprint sessions do not affect the Grand Prix
⏱️ Friday's qualifying sets Sunday's grid
🆕 New Sprint Shootout qualifying session
The first Sprint Saturday is only four days away! 📅#F1Sprint pic.twitter.com/vPq9kYuyH4
F1 hopes that with its new standalone status drivers will have an added incentive ‘to go for it’, knowing any incidents will not have a bearing on where they start in the Grand Prix.
The Sprint points system remains unchanged, with eight going to the winner down to one for eighth place, meaning a maximum points haul of 34 on offer to a driver winning the sprint, Grand Prix, and posting the fastest lap.
Back to Baku 😎🌊#AzerbaijanGP #F1 pic.twitter.com/UpfBaOESl7
— Formula 1 (@F1) April 24, 2023
Announcing the changes the F1 Commission hoped the new format would deliver “more ‘jeopardy’ through a reduction in practice time and providing a greater incentive to drivers to race hard on Saturday”.
After Baku, there are sprints scheduled for Austria (Red Bull Ring), Belgium (Spa-Francorchamps), Qatar (Lusail Circuit), the United States (Circuit of The Americas), and Brazil (Interlagos).
© AFP
Banner image from AFP.
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