Formula E delivers record-breaking global TV audience for second season running

Formula E’s Season 8 has delivered a record-breaking TV audience for the second year running. (Formula E)
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Updated 13 October 2022
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Formula E delivers record-breaking global TV audience for second season running

  • Season 8 cumulative audience rises 20% year-on-year to 381 million

RIYADH: The ABB FIA Formula E World Championship has grown its cumulative audience for season 8 beyond the record-breaking levels achieved the previous year, which has been attributed to the four-way battle for the championship, a new qualifying format and a return to racing in Asia.

The new qualifying format saw all 22 drivers compete in two groups with the top four in each going into a head-to-head knockout “Duels” tournament. A first for world motorsport and a popular innovation for fans, the cumulative audience for qualifying increased 49 percent compared to audiences for the traditional fastest-lap format in Season 7.

The biggest-ever Formula E championship calendar of 16 races in 10 world cities included a return to Asia with successful debuts in Jakarta, Indonesia, and a double-header in Seoul, South Korea, to close Season 8. The Jakarta contest in June was the first in Asia since 2019 and the most-watched in the championship’s 100-race history with a cumulative audience of 27.6 million in Indonesia.

Live viewers made up the majority of Formula E’s audience for the first time in Season 7 and that trend continued in Season 8 with a 10 percent increase in live audiences year-on-year to 216 million, part of a 20 percent growth in total cumulative audience to 381 million.

Total viewing hours for Season 8 races increased by 58 percent compared to Season 7 and the championship enjoyed a 28 percent year-on-year increase in the average viewing duration per live race.

Across Formula E’s social and digital channels there were significant gains in video views (up 165 percent from Season 7) and engagements (up 49 percent) as a new social media content strategy came into effect.

Jamie Reigle, chief executive officer, Formula E, said: “The ABB FIA Formula E World Championship is building a passionate global fanbase, establishing itself as an appointment-to-view, premium live sport. Millions more fans tuned in to watch last season than ever before thanks to consistent scheduling, improved broadcast presentation and sporting innovations like our game-changing qualifying format. The championship went down to the wire in Seoul with four drivers vying for the title and Stoffel Vandoorne emerging as world champion.”

“We thank our global network of committed broadcast partners for their contribution to delivering a record-breaking Season 8. We will work together to build on our momentum and reinforce Formula E’s emergence as a mainstream sport for the next generation.”

The new Gen3 race car was unveiled earlier this year in Monaco as the fastest, lightest, most powerful and efficient electric contest car ever built. It will debut on Jan. 14, 2023, in Mexico City at the start of Season 9, followed by rounds two and three in Diriyah, Saudi Arabia, on Jan. 27 and 28.


Trump said Iran ‘welcome to compete’ in World Cup, says Infantino

Updated 11 March 2026
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Trump said Iran ‘welcome to compete’ in World Cup, says Infantino

US President Donald Trump has said that Iran is “welcome” to participate at the upcoming World Cup in North America, despite the ongoing Middle East war, FIFA chief Gianni Infantino said on Wednesday.
The war, triggered by US-Israeli strikes on February 28, has thrown into doubt Iran’s participation at this summer’s men’s football World Cup, jointly hosted by Canada, Mexico and the United States.
During a meeting to discuss preparations for the competition, “we also spoke about the current situation in Iran,” Infantino, the head of world football’s governing body, wrote on Instagram.
“During the discussions, President Trump reiterated that the Iranian team is, of course, welcome to compete in the tournament in the United States,” he wrote.
The comments marked the first time that Infantino, who in December created a FIFA peace prize and awarded it to Trump, has acknowledged the ongoing war in the Middle East.
Trump’s remarks to Infantino are a stark contrast to his comments to Politico last week.
Trump told Politico: “I really don’t care” if Iran play at the World Cup.
FIFA’s president has grown close to Trump since he returned to the White House, even attending his inauguration.

Asylum claims 

Iran’s federation football chief on Tuesday cast doubt on his team’s participation in the sporting extravaganza, following the defection of several women footballers from the Islamic republic during the Asian Cup in Australia.
“If the World Cup is like this, who in their right mind would send their national team to a place like this?” Mehdi Taj asked on Iranian state television.
While the event is spread out across three countries, Iran are scheduled to play all three group games in the United States, two in Los Angeles and one in Seattle.
Should Iran withdraw from the sport’s quadrennial showpiece, it would be the first time a country did that since France and India pulled out of the 1950 finals in Brazil.
On Tuesday, at the Women’s Asian Cup in Australia, some players from Iran’s team claimed asylum after they came under fire from state television for not singing the country’s national anthem before one match.
Five players, including captain Zahra Ghanbari, slipped away from the team hotel under the cover of darkness to claim sanctuary from Australian officials, the Australian government announced.
At least two more team members applied to stay later in the day, according to local media.
However, Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said on Wednesday that one of them had subsequently changed her mind.
Burke said in parliament on Wednesday that he had since been advised that one of the group “had spoken to some of the team mates that left and changed their mind.”
“She had been advised by her team mates and encouraged to contact the Iranian embassy,” he said.
“As a result of that, it meant the Iranian embassy now knew the location of where everybody was.”
The remaining players have been moved from a safe house to another location, he said.