F1 cancels season-opening Australian GP amid virus concerns

2020 Formula One group CEO Chase Carey, Australian Grand Prix Corporation chairman Paul Little, Race director Michael Masi and Australian Grand Prix Corporation CEO Andrew Westacott during a press conference after it was announced the Australian Grand Prix would be cancelled after a McLaren team member tested positive for coronavirus. (Reuters)
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Updated 13 March 2020
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F1 cancels season-opening Australian GP amid virus concerns

  • Principals of nine F1 teams and organizers met overnight and “concluded with a majority view of the teams that the race should not go ahead”

MELBOURNE, Australia: As thousands of fans queued to get into the Australian Grand Prix for the first Formula One weekend of the season, the teams and drivers were packing up to leave.
Concern over the coronavirus left organizers with little choice Friday but to cancel the season-opening race, particularly after McLaren’s withdrawal because a team member tested positive for the COVID-19 illless and following heavy criticism from six-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.
The two practice sessions that usually showcase what the teams have been improving in the off-season were less than two hours from starting when the decision was publicly announced. Principals of nine F1 teams and organizers met overnight and “concluded with a majority view of the teams that the race should not go ahead,” a joint statement by motorsport’s governing body, local organizers and F1 said.
“It’s been a very fluid situation. I think we’ve made the right decisions,” F1 chairman Chase Carey said. “We’re all disappointed not to have it, but I think we’ve made the decision we had to made.”
“We’ve been certainly discussing this issue before last week. It’s not like it came out of the blue,” Carey told a news conference beside the F1 paddock that ended in light rain. “A week ago, it looked, when teams started traveling here, we felt it was the right decision (to stage the race). Clearly the situation changed in the interim.”
Fans will be refunded for their tickets. Negotiations are continuing with hundreds of suppliers for the race. Australian organizers haven’t ruled out staging the race on a later date.
Practice, qualifying and Sunday’s race were all scrapped, casting doubt over the Bahrain Grand Prix which is scheduled to be held next week and the Vietnamese GP, scheduled for April 5. Authorities in Bahrain have already said no fans will be allowed into the circuit. Carey said a decision on whether or not to go ahead with the the race would be made in coming days. The Chinese GP has already been postponed.
Hamilton used the first official news conference with F1 drivers in Melbourne to say he was shocked that organizers planned to proceed with the Australian Grand Prix, which regularly attracts more than 300,000 people over four days. McLaren’s decision to withdraw was ultimately the catalyst for the cancelation. That person and 14 other McLaren team members have been placed in quarantine in a Melbourne hotel for 14 days.
Hamilton’s Mercedes-AMG Petronas team said it sent a letter to the FIA and F1 requesting the cancelation and had commenced preparations to leave before the decision was publicly announced.
“The physical and mental health and well being of our team members and of the wider F1 community are our absolute priority,” the team said in a statement. “In light of the force majeure events we are experiencing with regards to the Coronavirus pandemic, we no longer feel the safety of our employees can be guaranteed if we continue to take part in the event.”
Hamilton was critical of the decision for the F1 show to travel to Australia, given the circumstances of other major sports and large-scale public gatherings being canceled all over the world.
“I am really very, very surprised we’re here ... it’s shocking we’re all sitting in this room,” Hamilton said. “It seems that the rest of the world is already reacting a little bit late ... yet Formula One continues.”
Asked why he thought organizers were persisting with the race, Hamilton said “cash is king.”
After the cancelation, he said in a social media post that “this is the right decision.”
“No one wants this, we all want to get in our cars and get racing, but we have to be realistic and we must put health and safety first,” Hamilton said. “The reality is, this is really serious with people dying every day, lots of people ill ... many people being affected financially and emotionally.”
Carey on Friday dismissed the “cash is king” comment, saying if that was the case, the Australian GP wouldn’t have been canceled.
Members of the US-backed Haas team had also been in isolation but they were cleared after tests. Local health authorities confirmed only one positive case in eight F1-related tests conducted so far.
There have been more than 128,000 cases and 4,700 deaths globally since the virus outbreak started in China late last year.
Most people quickly recover from the virus after experiencing only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.
According to the World Health Organization, people with mild illness recover in about two weeks.


Spain will host 2030 World Cup final, says RFEF president

Updated 28 January 2026
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Spain will host 2030 World Cup final, says RFEF president

  • Louzan did not say whether the match would be played at Santiago Bernabeu or Camp Nou
  • Once completed in late 2028, the new stadium in Morocco is expected to hold 115,000 spectators

MADRID: Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) President Rafael Louzan has said that Spain will stage the final of the 2030 World Cup, which will be co-hosted by Spain, Portugal and Morocco.
Morocco wants to stage the game in Casablanca at the Grand Stade Hassan II, a huge stadium currently under construction north of the city.
“Spain has proven its organizational capacity over many years. It will be the leader of the 2030 World Cup and the final of that World Cup will be held here,” Louzan said late on Monday ⁠at an event organized by the Madrid Sports Press Association.
Louzan did not say whether the match would be played at Madrid’s Santiago Bernabeu or Barcelona’s Camp Nou, the two leading candidates.
Once completed in late 2028, the new stadium in Morocco is expected to hold 115,000 spectators. Morocco’s Royal Football Federation (FRMF) ⁠President Faouzi Lekjaa last year expressed his wish to see a final against Spain in Casablanca.
Louzan also alluded to the challenges Morocco faced during its hosting of the last Africa Cup of Nations, including the chaotic scenes during the final between Senegal and Morocco this month.
That match, which Senegal won 1-0, was overshadowed by fan disruptions and player protests that temporarily halted play.
“Morocco is really undergoing a transformation in every sense, with magnificent stadiums,” Louzan said. “We must ⁠recognize what has been done well. But in the Africa Cup of Nations, we have seen scenes that damage the image of world football.”
FIFA and the Portuguese and Moroccan football federations have not responded to requests for comment on the final’s location.
FIFA told Reuters last year it was premature to decide the venue for the 2030 final, saying the host city for the 2026 World Cup final was revealed only two years before the tournament. World soccer’s ruling body has the final say on where the match will be played.