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Motorsport Week
Home Single Seater Formula 1

F1 discussing potential Sprint format changes for 2024

by Taylor Powling
2 years ago
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F1 discussing potential Sprint format changes for 2024

Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing RB19 leads at the start of Sprint. 21.10.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 19, United States Grand Prix, Austin, Texas, USA, Sprint Day.

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Formula 1 is currently discussing with the teams potential changes to the Sprint format for next year that could include switching the places of the two qualifying sessions.

The Sprint configuration was introduced in 2021 but has been tweaked every year since as the sport bids to improve the racing spectacle on those select weekends.

But amid ongoing criticism that the format was discouraging drivers from taking risks, F1 established a secondary qualifying session, titled Sprint Shootout, to determine the grid for the Sprint race, ensuring that it would not impact Sunday’s grand prix.

However, the Sprint has continued to divide opinion among the drivers, which was heightened during the United States Grand Prix weekend when two cars were disqualified for a technical infringement related to excessive plank wear on their cars.

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Ferrari and Mercedes, the two guilty parties, confirmed that only being allotted one practice hour by the Sprint schedule contributed to their post-race exclusions.

Through discussions with the teams, F1 intends to take action by potentially moving Sprint qualifying to Friday, returning the traditional qualifying to Saturday afternoon.

This would effectively provide an opportunity to relax the restrictions on parc ferme once the Sprint race is completed on Saturday morning, allowing drivers and teams more flexibility to make alterations to their car set-up ahead of the later grand prix qualifying.

“We’ve been talking with Stefano [Domenicali, F1 CEO],” Mercedes Team Principal Toto Wolff told Sky Sports F1 on Friday in Sao Paulo. “Obviously, it’s his decision, but then you can correlate it easier.

“You do the Sprint Shootout [on Friday] and then the second qualifying for the race, which would be Saturday, two o’clock is the time we know. And it would create maybe less confusion.”

Tom McCullough (GBR) Aston Martin F1 Team Performance Director in the FIA Press Conference. 03.11.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 21, Brazilian Grand Prix, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Qualifying Day.

Aston Martin Performance Director Tom McCullough confirmed that talks were being held, adding his view that the revised format should be less complicated for fans.

“We obviously had the Sporting Advisory committee meeting this week and there have been discussions about how to improve how we go about the sprint event,” he concurred.

“The Sprint event was brought in for a reason, the fans. From a technical point of view, it’s a headache, the car goes into parc ferme after one practice session and it is difficult. But from a commercial side and from a fan side, I think there are elements that are exciting.

“It’s been tweaked already and I think it needs tweaking a bit more because now even my dad, who’s quite an understander and follower of Formula 1 sometimes says to me: ‘So just remind me, is it qualifying on Friday for the main race?’

“And I just think if somebody at that level is having questions, the fans are going to get confused. So, our job is to put a simpler, better, more understandable format and still have the excitement of two races.”

Meanwhile, Ferrari Sporting Director Diego Ioverno disclosed that other potential options were also being considered regarding the future of the Sprint layout.

But if the outlined proposal is approved, Ioverno warns that F1 must grant the teams enough time between the Sprint race and qualifying to respond to any issues.

“If you move the Sprint race on Saturday morning, then you have to make sure that you allow enough gap for teams to react for qualifying in case of problems,” he said.

“There are also other options on the table. There is still not a definite proposal but our target will be once that FIA and F1 decide the format, teams will have to work together to make it good for the spectators and good for us, because it’s quite tricky.”

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Comments 4

  1. Joseph Grace says:
    2 years ago

    I think that if the qualifying for the race is fine on Friday, it guarantees everyone pushes as the most points are won in that race. Then, instead of a separate shootout qualifying, they should use the Fridays qualifying in reverse order for the sprint. They would still race hard as it wouldn’t make a difference to Sundays race and the lesser teams get a small chance of points to play for.

    Reply
  2. Pietro says:
    2 years ago

    My two pennies worth: two or even three FP sessions on Friday, one sole qualifying on Saturday morning for both sprint and race, sprint on Saturday afternoon, main race on Sunday afternoon. I don’t particularly like the reverse order, as it is potentially prone for incidents and accidents, and an artificial twist. It’s more like an arcade game gimmick.

    Reply
  3. Steve Craven says:
    2 years ago

    Just get rid of the sprints. I have been an F1 fan since the early 1960s and the sprints are just silly. My reaction has been to no longer watch any session other than the actual full races – and not all of them. I fear F1 is alienating the hard core fan in a fever dream to offer as many races as NASCAR.

    Reply
    • Mike Elwin says:
      2 years ago

      I’m doing the same thing. I tried watching Friday and Saturday, but I just didn’t know which races were important and which weren’t, then I remembered that Sunday’s race is still the most important, so that’s what I watch. And, yes, sprints here and sprints and there are just shows to increase the incomes of everyone in F1. It’s a show business now featuring ridiculous obsessive-compulsive rule-making to increase the incomes still more.

      Reply

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