Formula 1 Discussion - And favourite driver?

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Bottas has one major advantage on his side though, Toto is his manager. That could be less useful soon though if rumours of Toto getting bored of it (and to be fair who wouldn't be at this point, you build a great team for some woke idiot to come and take all the credit) are true.

I recon Hamilton will stick around for one more season to win another gimme championship and out himself at the top rather then joint top. Then retire to avoid the possibility of Merc screwing up the new car and showing that Hambone needs the car to be built for him. Shit thing is if he does that and Russell is signed it could well be the moment merc do lose their dominance as we're heading to an aero dominated formula with very tricky 18" tyres that like to overheat, Merc have not previously excelled when faced with either of those things.
 
I typically go through posts on /r/formula1 every night as it is a good one stop shop for headlines and other stuff. Came across couple of posts, sources below. But check these out:
VBIG1.png

VBIG2.png

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SOURCE VB: https://www.reddit.com/r/formula1/comments/k8q8hx/bottas_has_removed_all_mercedes_references_from/

SOURCE GR: https://www.reddit.com/r/formula1/comments/k8s04v/george_russell_has_removed_all_references_to/

The VB changes seem legit. Weird.
 
I typically go through posts on /r/formula1 every night as it is a good one stop shop for headlines and other stuff. Came across couple of posts, sources below. But check these out:
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SOURCE VB: https://www.reddit.com/r/formula1/comments/k8q8hx/bottas_has_removed_all_mercedes_references_from/

SOURCE GR: https://www.reddit.com/r/formula1/comments/k8s04v/george_russell_has_removed_all_references_to/

The VB changes seem legit. Weird.
Interesting.

Given the power imbalance in the relationship between M-B and Williams, what are the chances of M-B leaning on Williams quite heavily to release George for the 2021 season, in exchange for Bottas and some cash? It'd give M-B and Toto the chance to stage manage Hambone's final F1 season via team orders to George, whilst establishing George as the successor to Prince Lewis' throne when he abdicates at the end of 2021.

Sure, it's a career limiting move for Bottas... but I think he's peaked as an F1 driver. It won't stop him from getting regular offers from mid-pack and backmarker teams for the next few seasons, though. Would be interesting to see Bottas as the number one driver at a less prestigious team instead of second fiddle at a top-tier team.

Probably 🌈, but I wouldn't rule anything in or out because it's 2020.
 
I skimmed through some comments and it appears there is no confirmation that those IGs were changed just after race. So, its all a bit strange, but certainly VB removed Merc within the last month.
Anyway, to make up for the prior post and it being most likely much ado about nothing, came across two other things that tie in to prior discussions about only the rich getting drives in the top formula series:

The exciting oversight that could rob top talents of a F1 future​

written by Elliot Wood 7 December 2020
Photo: Formula Motorsport Limited

The decision to run Formula 1’s two main support series on different weekends in 2021 has opened a dangerous box that is only going to benefit the richest of drivers. Is it an oversight or a modern trend?​

While many would think racing series organise their calendars in isolation, albeit following the tailcoats of bigger series with more negotiating power with circuits, the reality is it’s a collaborative proccess that brings in organising clubs, logistical partners, and even teams far from the series’ own control to ensure everyone gets a fair compromise on the dates they want and on the circuits they would like to race at.

The top-down structure does apply in some capacity, as most Formula 1 races are on long-term deals, but unless bankrolled by governments those are loss-makers for circuits; the biggest events in F1, Australian Supercars, the World Endurance Championship and IndyCar are constantly under stress and usually also under threat of falling off schedules permanently.

Formula E and WEC had a gentleman’s agreement not to run on the same weekends a few years ago as many drivers contested both series, but their difference in interests simply made that impossible in the end.

Junior single-seater series have similar problems where drivers and teams plans to contest full campaigns in two series before they find out a calendar revision has led to a schedule clash, or one series has snatched the date at a circuit that the other was aiming for to fit around the rest of its already-organised rounds.

And so we come to the two series that in some ways have it easier than most. The FIA’s Formula 2 and Formula 3 championships are run by the same organisation and their existence is tied to their status as supports to F1. Nine of F2’s 11 teams also compete in F3, and by running on the same weekends it’s made the logistics of competing in the two series at once much simpler. The responsibility of organising rounds is primarily down to F1 and the individual event promoters, freeing more time for Bruno Michel and his organisation to focus on other areas of F2 and F3’s direction.

So what is that direction? It’s splitting the calendars for both series heading into 2021, in the name of ‘cost-cutting’.
Now that argument – and its paddock repercussions – is a topic to be explored another day, because in the wake of F2’s season finale at Bahrain an even more worrying issue emerged: drivers are planning to race full-time in F2 and F3 next year.

With F2 and F3 running on separate dates and separate circuits for the entirety of their 2021 schedules, it frees drivers to race in both series. Now this makes a lot of sense for drivers who can afford it; it’s two chances to earn FIA superlicence points in two of the series with the largest points allocations to give.

As of a few months ago, a drivers moving up to F2 have been budgeting for a 12-round season in 2021. Now they’re only looking for the money for an eight-round season, albeit one with weekends consisting of three races rather than two. So adding a cheaper FIA F3 campaign – which is decreasing from nine to seven rounds in 2021 – makes a lot of sense.
Drivers want to go racing, they prepare for doing as much of it as possible, and so 15 full weekends of it is a dream scenario.

It’s also a potential dream scenario for the team that can convince a driver of its merits in both series, because it simplifies the signing of driver, sponsor and even staff contracts. Michel’s cost-saving plan, in wake of the budget-squeezing effects of the coronavirus pandemic, was for teams to only need one set of team personnel rather than two to participate in F2 and F3.

So if a driver has the money to race in both, and does so with the same team, then what’s to stop them from having the same engineer, same number one mechanic, so on and so on? It makes things cheapier and easier for the team involved.
And it would be super interesting to see how well a driver can perform when jumping between cars week-in, week-out.

But to the rest of the paddock, this is not a good move. Every team wants money to keep on going, but every team also wants to support as much young talent as possible and having seats blocked out by drivers doing two campaigns goes against that. You can imagine the management behind a young driver keeping in mind when a team opts for a driver who already has a seat in F1’s other support series over their own client, and then not pursuing seats with that team with drivers it looks after in the future.

The counter-argument is F2 needs to fill its grid and this is getting it done, when finding money to race in the world’s most expensive non-professional series is harder than ever. You very rarely see F2 and F3, and their predecessors GP2 and GP3, running without full grids and there’s a very good reason why.

So yes, this is a move that can only benefit the richest of drivers and will massively punish the drivers who really have to scrape together the budget to compete, and it will not be like missing out on a seat with the ‘only teams that can win’ in the lower formulae. Unless you’re a huge believer in the driver-development opportunities and the level of competition within Euroformula and Japan’s Super Formula Lights, there is no other equivalent at the FIA F3 level and above to race in.

If you miss out on a seat at the dominant Motopark in Euroformula or Prema in Formula Regional European Championship, you can always try your luck in the other series. If a driver arrives with the budget, there is always a seat going in either F3-level championship. Fail to join the top team in British Formula 4, and you can instead race in the series’ German, French, Italian or Spanish counterpart. A driver who has already had millions of pounds invested into their career by the time they are ready for F2 will not have that kind of freedom if their first-choice programme doesn’t happen.

And what F2 and F3 have done is only going to repeat itself further down the ladder. Formula Scout was privy to information in the early stages of the organisation of next year’s FREC calendar, and a direction was clear: avoid clashes with FIA F3, and we can convince drivers to compete in our series at the same time.

Euroformula was much the same, and no surprise given the success of Lukas Dunner this year, who finished second in the points in a part-time campaign dovetailed with a disappointing first season in FIA F3, and Red Bull juniors Yuki Tsunoda and Liam Lawson in 2019. They raced in both series but prioritised their weekends in the F1 support paddock too, and that’s what Euroformula promoter GT Sport wants to avoid in 2021.

The provisional Euroformula calendar for next year has nine rounds, and the single clash with FIA F3 is the season finale for both. It’s tricky for a driver to negotiate their way out of a contract to skip one round, but it’s been done so many times before that it’s clearly possible and teams don’t often oppose it for too long when they know the seat can be filled with more money.

FIA F3 won’t be the obvious choice to prioritise for that final round either, as a driver would want to drive in the series they’re more likely to get strong results or superlicence points from.

Again, seats are being blocked out. But the problem was already there; this latest development has just highlighted and enabled it further.

FREC’s three-car limit for 2021 expands to four when teams sign a female driver, and Euroformula squads can always run a second team under a different name if they sign too many drivers. Motopark did it this year via CryptoTower Racing Team, and Carlin did it back in the days of FIA European F3 when it had its Ricardo Gelael-supported Jagonya Ayam with Carlin outfit.

In a money-chasing world, you can’t blame the organisers of any of these series any more than the other. It’s down to the FIA World Motor Sport Council, which ratified F2 and F3’s calendars, to scrutinise what had been proposed.

Did it really just fail to see this coming: a scenario where potentially 10% of next year’s F2 grid becomes inaccessible due to drivers splashing the cash on racing in two series at once? And with recent revisions to the superlicence system meaning drivers can actually claim points from two non-overlapping series in a calendar year, it means a driver struggling to get the top results in F2 but with more than enough money to buy their way into F1 could hedge their bets on a series such as Asian F3 in the winter before doing the F2/F3 double to tot up their points tally.

And if the 2021 split calendar remains in the years beyond that, where the financial repercussions of the COVID-19 pandemic will still be felt, could a driver do that for year after year until they hit the 40-point mark needed to race in F1?
For all involved, this is a huge oversight that has probably put some of the most in-demand seats in racing further out of reach.
SOURCE: https://formulascout.com/the-exciting-oversight-that-could-cost-top-talents-of-a-f1-future/72350

And to continue the theme of rich kids/sons of former drivers coming through the ranks:

Sons of Jarno Trulli and Alex Wurz test in Italian F4 at Vallelunga​

written by Elliot Wood 7 December 2020

Sons of former Formula 1 racers took part in the first day of post-season testing for Italian Formula 4 at Vallelunga on Monday.

Charlie Wurz, son of two-time Le Mans 24 Hours winner Alex, was the second fastest of the day with US Racing and was 0.883 seconds off the pace set by Bhaitech’s recent series debutant Tikhon Kharitonov.

Wurz, who recently had his 15th birthday, has already been on the single-seater radar this year having been involved in a ACI Sport and Tony Kart-organised training camp and a Ferrari Driver Academy-organised assessment at Maranello that could earn him Ferrari Formula 1 junior status next year.

This season was his first in senior karting, and he finished ninth in WSK’s Euro Series and Open Cup, as well as 38th in the CIK-FIA European championship.

Enzo Trulli, son of 2004 Monaco Grand Prix victor Jarno, was also in his first season of senior karting competition this year with Dino Chiesa’s Kart Republic. Trulli came 15th in the European championship and 13th in the WSK Super Master Series.

In the Vallelunga test he’s driving for Regium Motorsport, a team actually yet to make its debut in Italian F4, and was fourth fastest over Monday’s sessions.

Between himself and Wurz was BVM Technorace’s Leonardo Bizzotto, a shifter karter who did private testing in an F4 car at the start of 2020.

Slowest of the five drivers who were present was Wurz’s karting team-mate Toni Kayla Naude, who was driving for Iron Lynx. The Swiss made the longlist for the FIA Women in Motorsport Commission’s new FDA-affiliated Girls on Track Rising Stars programme earlier this year.

On track at the same time as the depleted F4 field was the runners in Formula Regional European Championship’s first post-season test, those being just the two cars from DR Formula by RP Motorsport, and Formula 2 team Trident.

The Italian outfit was running two of its old GP3 machines for French F4 graduate Rafael Villagomez and Formula Renault Eurocup racer Laszlo Toth.
SOURCE: https://formulascout.com/sons-of-jarno-trulli-and-alex-wurz-test-in-italian-f4-at-vallelunga/72345
 
The FIA need to put a limit on where you can earn your superlicense points. Its quite clear the whole points system was an attempt to install a bit of meritocracy into the system not just ensure that people getting to F1 were up to it. If they let people earn those points in several series at the same time then it just drives this where those with the money backing go race in multiple series to rack up the points. They should say you can earn points in 1 series per season and you have to declare which one counts before they start.

If F2 and F3 giverning bodies allow that scenario above it is pretty short sighted as when those F2 driver get into F1 there isn't going to be the up and coming F3 drivers to graduate into F2.

It almost needs to be some sort of league system where coming in the top however many in the championship makes you eligible to move up to the next level (if you can find a drive) and in the case of F3 and F2 you could even throw relegation in there to ensure the cream rises to the top rather than getting log jammed in the lower series because F2 got full of pay drivers.
 
I know I'm a few days late to responding to these things, but I figured I'd weigh in all the same.
Aw man. I guess burns on the hands are no small thing for a racecar driver. It would have been a great bookend for his career to race one last time after that crash, just to show off his guts and that it didn't beat the love for the sport out of him.
It certainly would have been nice to see him come back a week later, but when you remember he really has stared death in the face and has a family to think of, he's inevitably going to be more caution - looking to IndyCar Jimmie Johnson is only doing road courses this next season out of a mix of caution and to allow him to spend more time with his family (I would wager).

I thought the aeroscreen on Indycars was pretty much just a halo with a bit of a windshield attached to it, to make it look less awkward.
In IndyCar the aeroscreen is a halo with a perspex screen fixed to it, since all the oval crashes throw up loads of tiny parts, which a halo doesn't protect against so much - whereas in F1 it's often a whole car, or a whole wing, so it's less likely to not get caught by the halo.

Grosjean was looking at driving for purgeout in the new wec hypercar class, not been confirmed yet but its been no secret he's had meetings with them even before him leaving Hass was confirmed.
Peugeot is still not confirmed in WEC's LMH category yet, and is looking at the alternative of LMDh which IMSA have created as the top class in their series. The two classes can interchange, i.e. an LMH car can run Daytona 24 in the top class with relevant BoP applied, and likewise an LMDh can run Le Mans in the top class with relevant BoP applied.

On the Indy aeroscreen, I look at pics and yeah @RomanesEuntDomus it does look like a halo. I wonder though if the metal portion in the middle is up to same standards as the F1 version.
If I correctly recall Marshall Pruett's piece on it a couple years back when IndyCar were also looking into a deflector plate/halo/aeroscreen concept at the same time as F1, a lot of the IndyCar drivers wanted either a small deflector plate just to stop anything flying directly at them, or the full aeroscreen which they got. As I have always understood it, they are built to the same/better standard as F1 since generally crashes on ovals have a lot more energy with a higher net speed of collision.

I think Magnussen is going to IMSA in the new Cadillac that Ganassi is racing. I must admit though, I don't follow the US racing series at all, prefer the European racing series. So I may be wrong on Mag, but thought I saw a tweet that said IMSA.
Magnussen is running for Chip in the Cadillac in IMSA's DPi class next season, alongside Renger Van Der Zande. I'd genuinely recommend you give IMSA a go, they have loads of different duration races, not all endurance, nor all sprint, and they do upload all of their races to YouTube without geo-block a few days/weeks after the event with full commentary, so it's extremely accessible in that regard - the commentary team being Radio Le Mans, so they know what they're talking about. It'd also be nice if this thread didn't only have me being a sad bugger watching every bit of motorsports there was.
 
In the late 80s to late 90s I watched everything that was available on TV (that being Nascar, Indy and F1) never missed a race. But then I slowly cut out Nascar (after Dale died) and Indy. In 2000 I went to Cdn GP and did so for next 3 years. By about mid 2000s, I only watched F1. Now with the Internet being what it is today, I watch F1/2/3, the other F3 series, like FREC, Asian F3, Toyota Racing Series, the odd F4 race, SuperFormula, and of course the Pau and Macau GPs. There are probably a couple of others I can't recall. Oh yes, I watch a bit of Le Mans and Daytona 24h too. But I never really liked those series where you have 3 or 4 classes of cars. Just too much for my head and weird watching the top class cars just basically zoom by the lower category models. Never got into MotoGP at all.

While the thread is titled F1, I don't think its a big issue if you want to yak about other series man. Now if you say you watch Top Fuel Drag Racing too, then yeah, you definitely all-in when it comes to motorsports dude! LOL
 
Yet another controversy with Mazepin, he posted an Instagram story of him touching a girl's boobs in a car. People calling for him to be sacked yet again.

Censored: SFW


Uncensored: NSFW
 
Yet another controversy with Mazepin, he posted an Instagram story of him touching a girl's boobs in a car. People calling for him to be sacked yet again.

Censored: SFW
wo422l.mp4

Uncensored: NSFW
DASH_1080.mp4
What a douche... but hey, if he gets Lewis riled up, it might be fun.
Though, if he continues like this, he might be out of a ride next season. Wouldn't surprise me if they slammed him with a revocation of his Super License the way they penalized Yuji Ide for flipping another driver. With shit like this, there seriously is not much goodwill on FIA's part.
 
The more he riles up the woke brigade the more I warm to him. Now we just need him to kamikaze Lewis and call him a gamer word.

I mean he's just another douchey rich kid but how many drivers of old lived the full playboy lifestyle?

Lets look at other professional sports with a bunch of overpaid kids, no bad behaviour there... oh wait.

Plus you can't tell me Lewis wasn't doing all this sort of bullshit before he got woke. He fired his dad as his manager because he told him to calm it the fuck down and concentrate on the racing.
 
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Another twist, statement from the girl herself.
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I personally think that the word "friends" isn't meant to refer to friendship, but if the previous info is correct then he might be a repeat client.
 
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I guess Mazepin's biggest contribution to the sport will be gamer words and making Lance Stroll look better in comparison.

I never watched Stroll in the junior series but Mazepin isn't a bad driver, his dad's money helps but on the track he does seem to go well (baring some slightly overexhuberant defending but then as we said loads of young drivers do that). He won't be winning world championships (certainly not in that car atleast) but various nontroversies aside he seems like a reasonable junious driver.
 

Haas condemns “abhorrent” Mazepin social media video​

2020 F1 season​

Posted on 9th December 2020, 10:38 | Written by Keith Collantine and Dieter Rencken

Haas has issued a strongly-worded statement criticising the behaviour of Nikita Mazepin, its new driver for the 2021 F1 season, in a video posted to his social media account yesterday.

A video appeared on Mazepin’s Instagram profile which appeared to show him reaching from the passenger seat of a car to touch the breast of a woman sat behind him, who tried to move his hand away. The footage was subsequently deleted, but has circulated elsewhere on social media, to widespread criticism.

Haas, who announced last week Mazepin will drive for them next year, responded by issuing a statement criticising both the video and Mazepin’s decision to share it on social media.

“Haas F1 Team does not condone the behaviour of Nikita Mazepin in the video recently posted on his social media,” it said.
“Additionally, the very fact that the video was posted on social media is also abhorrent to Haas F1 Team.
“The matter is being dealt with internally and no further comment shall be made at this time.”

Mazepin subsequently issued an apology on social media. “I would like to apologise for my recent actions both in terms of my own inappropriate behaviour and the fact that it was posted onto social media,” he said.
“I am sorry for the offence I have rightly caused and to the embarrassment I have brought to Haas F1 Team.
“I have to hold myself to a higher standard as a Formula 1 driver and I acknowledge I have let myself and many people down. I promise I will learn from this.”

Andrea D’lval, who was identified as the woman in the video, said in a social media post that: “Nikita and I have been good friends for a long time and nothing from that video was serious at all.

“We trust each other so much and this was a silly way of joking between us. I posted this video on his story as an internal joke. I am truly sorry. I can give you my word he’s really a good person and he would never do anything to hurt or humiliate me.”

Last weekend Haas team principal Guenther Steiner admitted Mazepin’s disciplinary record in Formula 2 meant they “have got our work cut out” to prepare him to race in Formula 1 next year. Mazepin accrued 11 penalty points on his licence during the championship, leaving him one short of an automatic ban.
SOURCE: https://www.racefans.net/2020/12/09/haas-condemns-abhorrent-mazepin-social-media-video/

The girl's IG: https://www.instagram.com/almadelcaribe/

Pretty much every pic is her in skimpy clothing, bikinis etc. in exotic locales. So, yeah she appears to be high-end lady of the evening.

I never watched Stroll in the junior series but Mazepin isn't a bad driver, his dad's money helps but on the track he does seem to go well (baring some slightly overexhuberant defending but then as we said loads of young drivers do that). He won't be winning world championships (certainly not in that car atleast) but various nontroversies aside he seems like a reasonable junious driver.
He was good in junior series, but if I recall his dad paid for loads of testing time and got him some preferential treatment with his bucks. He did have a fairly great crash though:
 

Well that seals it I'm going full mazapin fan. Anything that pisses these types off this much must be good

Merc have responded to the Instagram thing.

SmartSelect_20201209-145644_Chrome.jpg

Drivers who drove this season blocked from driving in the young driver test for their new teams.

SmartSelect_20201209-192110_Chrome.jpg

Edit: latest on Hamilton. Apparently Russell is doing Thursday press conference and the practices for Merc but if Hamilton if cleared for qualifying he's back in the merc. Sounds like a shit deal for Russell to me.
 
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Source: https://www.mercedesamgf1.com/en/ne...-accelerate-25-diversity-inclusion-programme/

Mercedes Launches ‘Accelerate 25’ Diversity & Inclusion Programme

The Mercedes F1 Team is excited to announce Accelerate 25, a five-year programme to mark the formalisation of our vision to become a more diverse and inclusive team.
With the launch of our black livery at the start of the 2020 F1 season, we made a commitment to promoting greater diversity and inclusion within our team and our sport.
A considerable amount of study, research and work has been undertaken at the team in the past months to deepen our understanding in this area and develop our culture and practices.
2020 has been a historic year for the team on track, but also within our core values and ambitions. We strongly believe a more diverse and inclusive team will not only make us faster, but also inspire others to set ambitious targets in this area.
To begin this new Accelerate 25 programme, we aim to continuously raise our standards of entry and until 2025, we aim for at least 25% of all new starters at our team to come from under-represented groups.
ACCELERATE-55

To enhance our understanding internally, the team is embedding Diversity and Inclusion more deeply within our values and behaviours. We have also begun our education programme with around 200 recruiters at the team having completed Unconscious Bias training, 150 managers completing a programme called ‘Inclusive Excellence’ and all managers will have completed this course by the end of the year.
Every employee will have participated in Diversity and Inclusion training by June 2021 and the team has started a Diversity and Inclusion forum, to encourage input from our employees from under-represented groups – in order to retain, develop and accelerate our progress.
An external specialist, the EW Group, has completed an in-depth analysis of our recruitment and development processes, with action plans underway to reach under-represented groups through mentoring, work experience, sponsorship and targeted advertising amongst our initiatives.
The team is also partnering with the Association for Black and Minority Ethnic Engineers (AFBE-UK) whose wealth of experience in working with organisations and engineering professionals to encourage and support engineers from black and minority ethnic backgrounds into engineering is a perfect fit, as we look to widen our appeal and increase the diversity of the talent within our team.
stemettes

We know that delivering measurable change is a long-term commitment, and one that begins during the education of the talented young people who will become our team-mates of the future.
So, we have started to develop targeted education initiatives to encourage and support students from under-represented backgrounds who aspire to reach F1.
This includes the Mulberry STEM Academy, which was announced last month in a partnership between the team and the Mulberry Schools Trust. It’s a five-year programme to give young people at the Trust and beyond access to inspirational role models, imaginative teaching and extra-curricular experiences to help develop their passion for STEM subjects and encourage them to continue these subjects in higher education.
We are also delighted to announce a forthcoming partnership with the award-winning UK social enterprise, Stemettes - who work to inspire the next generation of girls, young women and nonbinary young people into STEM fields through programmes, events and content platforms.
Collaboration is key to ensuring the changes that we are striving to make at the Mercedes F1 Team can be reflected across our sport and we are very proud to be working closely with Formula One’s key stakeholders to improve accessibility.
Both the FIA through its #PurposeDriven campaign, and Formula One through their #WeRaceAsOne activities trackside, have launched campaigns this season to widen the appeal and accessibility of Formula One.
This year, The Hamilton Commission was set up by our seven-time World Champion Lewis Hamilton, alongside The Royal Academy of Engineering, with the aim to identify the key barriers to recruitment and progression of Black people in UK motorsport and provide actional recommendations to overcome them.
The Commission will be a key source of inspiration, knowledge and support for the team. Both Dr Nike Folayan MBE, Chair of the AFBE-UK, and Dr Anne-Marie Imafidon MBE, Co-founder of the Stemettes are two of the newly appointed Commissioners on the Board of The Hamilton Commission.
Toto Wolff, CEO and Team Principal of the Mercedes F1 Team, said: “Before the start of this Formula One season, we made a commitment to use our global platform in Formula One to make a difference to the world around us through a carefully considered Diversity and Inclusion programme.
“Our legacy off the track is just as important to this team as the success that we have achieved with our historic seventh consecutive World Championship this year. We have a real opportunity to drive the change that we all want to see in our sport through strengthening an inclusive and diverse culture at our team and using our platform to take that thinking beyond just our factory.
“I am very proud of the work that has been done over the last few months to take an in-depth look at our practices, to assess our weaknesses and to develop a long-term plan and commitment to take the necessary actions and realise every advantage of becoming a more diverse team; this is the vision expressed by our new programme, Accelerate 25.”
Lewis added: “In what has been a really tough year for everyone, I am incredibly proud of my team as we reach the end of such an intense season. Not only have we made history on the track, but they have joined me in pushing for change off the track, by working to make our team and our sport more diverse.
“We have made some positive strides this year which I’m proud of, however we still have a long way to go and I know Accelerate 25 will give us the platform to deliver more meaningful change. I truly believe this will have a measurable and long-lasting impact on the face of sport for generations to come.”


Kinda hope this leads to the end of Mercedes's dominance.
 
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