Australia to open the Formula 1 season in 2025 as Bahrain and Saudi races shift for Ramadan
LONDON (AP) — Lewis Hamilton’s first race in a Ferrari will be in Australia.
Next year’s Formula 1 season will open in Melbourne for the first time since 2019 after the full calendar for 2025 was revealed Friday.
The Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne will be the opening race because the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian rounds of the F1 championship — the first two races of this year — are shifting to mid-April dates to avoid a clash with the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
Next year, seven-time champion Hamilton will be starting a new era in his career when he s witches to Ferrari for 2025. That will follow 12 years with Mercedes, where Hamilton has won six titles.
Australia was last scheduled to host the opening race in 2020 but it was canceled hours before the Friday practice session was due to begin as the COVID-19 pandemic began.
After Australia, the next races on the 2025 calendar will be in China and then Japan, fitting F1’s plans to cut the travel distance between its events where possible with an eye to the sport’s environmental impact.
Related articles
Analysis: Larson enters conversation with Verstappen as best drivers in the world
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Ask almost any hardcore motorsports fan who the best driver in the world is righ2024-05-21FM urges U.S. actions to honor pledges
Beijing urges Washington to perceive China's development objectively and rationally, adopt a positiv2024-05-21Australia's 'expansion plan' for AUKUS raises concern
Australia's eagerness to include Japan in the AUKUS security collaboration is expected to ignite fur2024-05-21Xi sends congratulatory message to 37th AU Summit
Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday sent a congratulatory message to the 37th African Union (AU2024-05-21Four people killed in a house explosion in southwestern Missouri
GOODHOPE, Mo. (AP) — Four people in rural Missouri died when an explosion that could be heard 10 mil2024-05-21Xi stresses promoting equipment renewal, trade
Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central C2024-05-21
atest comment