Albon and De Vries to gain F1 seats from Russell’s Mercedes move, Giovinazzi loses out
2022 F1 season
Posted on
31st August 2021, 17:56 | Written by
Dieter Rencken and
Keith Collantine
George Russell’s move to Mercedes next year is expected to be confirmed in the near future, triggering further developments in the F1 driver market for 2022.
Former Red Bull driver
Alexander Albon and Formula E world champion Nyck de Vries are expected to join the grid next year as a result of Russell’s arrival at Mercedes.
Russell will replace
Valtteri Bottas, who
as RaceFans revealed previously is set to join Alfa Romeo. However the Swiss-run cars are expected to have two new occupants next year.
Kimi Raikkonen, the elder statesman of the F1 grid, will head for retirement after 19 years of competition in the sport’s top flight. In an unexpected development, his team mate Antonio Giovinazzi is also expected to be shown the door.
Giovinazzi’s replacement is understood to be Nyck de Vries, who clinched the Formula E title in Germany earlier this month. The arrival of the Mercedes-backed driver, who won the 2019 Formula 2 championship, will ensure the three-pointed star has another young racer on the F1 grid following Russell’s promotion. Alfa Romeo team principal Frederic Vasseur has close ties to his opposite number at Mercedes, Toto Wolff.
Ferrari Driver Academy member Giovinazzi is expected to retain his links to the team. He has been tipped to become their third driver and take a role in its recently announced Le Mans Hypercar programme.
De Vries was previously tipped to take Russell’s empty seat at Williams. However RaceFans understands that seat will go to Albon, who missed out on a chance to return to F1 next year when the team extended
Sergio Perez’s contract. Williams CEO Jost Capito has links to Red Bull from his time running Volkswagen’s World Rally Championship programme.
Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said last weekend Albon would continue his development role with their team unless they found a race seat on the F1 grid for 2022.
F1 bosses are 'apoplectic' at Lewis Hamilton for accusing the sport of greed after demanding refunds for fans following two-lap Belgian Grand Prix farce and feel the British star should have spoken privately
- Formula One bosses are said to be raging at Lewis Hamilton over his comments
- The current champion accused the sport of greed following the Belgian GP
- A source told Sportsmail that Hamilton should have spoken behind the scenes
By
JONATHAN MCEVOY FOR THE DAILY MAIL
PUBLISHED: 23:13 BST, 30 August 2021 | UPDATED: 07:41 BST, 31 August 2021
Formula One bosses are 'apoplectic' with
Lewis Hamilton for accusing the sport of putting money ahead of all else in the farce of the rain-sabotaged Belgian Grand Prix.
The seven-time world champion accused the sport that has made him a fortune worth more than £250million of greed by staging a ludicrous 'race' of just two laps behind the safety car on Sunday.
He said the 75,000 fans who were drenched to the bone should be refunded their ticket price, worth between £107 and £505.
Hamilton made a worthy point in recognising that some form of compensation is required, an argument Formula One bosses yesterday acknowledged they were looking into, but the Briton's stinging remarks that the non-event was a charade for commercial reasons has landed badly with the sport's hierarchy.
One source told Sportsmail: 'There is absolute fury internally at the naivety of Lewis's comments. He talks about handing back millions of pounds to fans, though he makes millions out of Formula One, and it guarantees his team's job, and he gives little or nothing back himself.
'He could have expressed his opinions privately rather than in the way he did, which makes no sense.
Formula One as a sport did not even make any financial benefit from acting as it had to on Sunday. It was about trying in difficult circumstances to get as much track-running as possible. The window to run a race was kept open as long as possible.
'People wonder if Lewis would have moaned if he had been on pole and won the race.'
As it happened, Hamilton started and finished third, with his title rival Max Verstappen winning from pole to cut his deficit from eight to three points going into the next race at home in Holland.
It is understood that Jean Todt, the FIA president, was particularly hurt by Hamilton's accusations, and he is due to issue a statement today defending the governing body's calls on the day.
In fairness, race director Michael Masi, the Australian who took control after the sudden death of the respected Charlie Whiting in 2019, was damned if he allowed racing to go ahead and damned if he didn't.
Former supremo Bernie Ecclestone told Sportsmail that he favoured the grand prix continuing as close to normal as possible.
The 90-year-old said: 'I would have said at 3pm when the race was due to start, let's try again at 4pm or 4.30pm. It doesn't look as if conditions will improve but I don't know. But regardless of what's happening it will start then.
'If you want to race, fine; if not, fine. Nobody could put a pistol to anyone's head. It was up to them. If I was at the back of the grid, I might decide it's not worth the risk because it's bloody dangerous out there. If I wanted to score points for the team and for myself, I might think I wanted to go ahead.
'We have raced in worse conditions than that and not called off the race.
'I remember 1976 at Fuji when James (Hunt) was going for the world championship and Niki (Lauda) decided he wouldn't race on. He pulled out. James won the title. They should have done the same on Sunday — a choice.
'People screamed at me saying the race should be called off in Japan, but I said it must be on.'
John Watson, who raced in Fuji that dangerous year and rates Spa a needlessly treacherous track, said: 'I agree with Bernie. I think the FIA were paranoid.
'In the preceding days, they had seen a near fatal accident in W Series and with Lando Norris in F1 qualifying, where he was over-confident and driving too fast, and that was factored in.'
EXCLUSIVE BY JONATHAN McEVOY: Formula One bosses are said to be raging at the seven-time world champion after he accused them of greed.
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