F1 executives in crisis meeting over Middle East conflict threatening Bahrain and Saudi Grands Prix, prioritizing safety amid red-highlighted risk map.
F1 executives in crisis meeting over Middle East conflict threatening Bahrain and Saudi Grands Prix, prioritizing safety amid red-highlighted risk map.
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F1 rules out replacements for Bahrain and Saudi GPs amid conflict escalation

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As Middle East tensions intensify following US and Israeli strikes on Iran, Formula 1 is unlikely to find last-minute substitutes for the threatened Bahrain (April 12) and Saudi Arabian (April 19) Grands Prix, prioritizing safety over maintaining a full 24-race calendar despite teams' revenue concerns. This follows earlier disruptions including a cancelled Pirelli test and travel chaos.

Building on initial contingency plans for European venues like Imola, Portimão, and Paul Ricard—which are now seen as logistically suboptimal—the series has flexibility having exceeded broadcast requirements, reducing incentive for costly replacements.

Ongoing conflict has caused flight delays and cancellations for personnel heading to the Australian Grand Prix, with some teams routing via Egypt, the UK, and Tanzania to bypass Gulf airspace. UK Foreign Office travel warnings complicate insurance for the races, which form a triple-header with Las Vegas.

Freight must ship post-Japanese GP (March 29), pressuring a decision. Options like double-headers at Suzuka or revivals at Imola/Portimão face commercial hurdles, unlike COVID-era adaptations. FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem stressed safety, while McLaren CEO Zak Brown noted: "Obviously the sport ourselves, the fans, the partners, our race team – all that will be of the utmost importance from a safety point of view." On finances: "I think given what's going on, we're not bothered if it does have a little bit of a financial impact."

The issue tops F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali's Saturday meeting with team principals in Australia. Losing both races would gap the calendar from March 29 to May 3, but paddock sources indicate acceptance without de-escalation.

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Discussions on X confirm F1's stance against replacing Bahrain and Saudi GPs if cancelled, citing logistical and commercial hurdles. Journalists emphasize safety over a full 24-race calendar despite teams' revenue worries. Fans propose European alternatives like Imola and Portimao. Some users criticize delays in decisions and urge immediate cancellations, while local voices show resignation but hope for continuation.

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Formula 1 is expected to announce within 48 hours whether to cancel its Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix scheduled for April, due to escalating conflict in the Middle East. The decision follows a 10-day deadline set after talks at the Australian Grand Prix, driven by logistical challenges from the ongoing US and Israeli war on Iran. Both races are likely to be axed, creating a six-week gap in the 2026 calendar.

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A day after initial reports of mounting concerns, the Bahrain Grand Prix appears set for cancellation amid Iran's attacks on Gulf targets, while Saudi Arabian organisers intensify efforts to secure the Jeddah event for the 2026 Formula 1 season.

Formula 1 is developing contingency plans for its Middle East races following cancellations caused by conflict in the region. Liberty Media reported strong first-quarter financial results despite the disruptions.

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Formula 1's unexpected April schedule break will help the Cadillac team address reliability issues and aerodynamic shortcomings, according to Valtteri Bottas. The cancellations of Bahrain and Jeddah races due to the Iran war create a five-week gap between the Japanese Grand Prix and Miami.

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