Formula 1 team principals met to review the Australian and Chinese Grands Prix under the championship's new regulations. They agreed that races have delivered high-standard action and positive fan response, posing no immediate concerns. Qualifying emerged as the priority for potential adjustments due to the 'lift and coast' technique used on fast laps.
Formula 1’s team principals convened to evaluate findings from the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne and the Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai, as the new regulations continue to be scrutinized. Reports indicate that all participants agreed the on-track racing has been of high quality, with strong public and fan approval, making races not a current cause for concern. Adjustments, if needed, will proceed deliberately to avoid knee-jerk reactions that could introduce new issues. Qualifying drew specific criticism in both events, where drivers must employ the ‘lift and coast’ technique even on their fastest laps, limiting the cars' and drivers' full potential. The group aims to explore measures enabling flat-out flying laps without fuel or tire management. Teams and drivers will contribute significantly to solutions, after which the FIA will propose options for further discussion. No changes are planned before the Suzuka weekend, thanks to a calendar break from the cancellations of the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix. Formula 1 returns at Miami on the first weekend of May. These would be targeted, non-radical measures to address issues from the first three race weekends. Meeting attendees confirmed no crisis exists, as results from Melbourne and Shanghai have eased pre-season concerns. Critical problems from Bahrain pre-season testing have resolved naturally without FIA intervention.