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At the November 2011 meeting of the Formula One Commission in Geneva, several teams were given permission to change their constructor names – the name recognised by the FIA as the entity that effectively owns the team, and to which all results for that team are credited [36] – with final approval from the World Motor Sport Council granted ...
Formula One, abbreviated to F1, is the highest class of open-wheeled auto racing defined by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), motorsport's world governing body. [1] The "formula" in the name refers to a set of rules to which all participants and cars must conform. [ 2 ]
As of 2021, the sporting regulations established by the FIA's Statutes state that the minimum number of events needed to form a F1 season is 8. [6] [7] The season can be declared a World Championship if F1 visits at least 3 continents in that season according to the International Sporting Code. [8]
2021 Monaco Grand Prix [h] 2021 Belgian Grand Prix [7] Most starters: 34: 1953 German Grand Prix [12] Fewest starters: 6: 2005 United States Grand Prix (20 cars took warmup lap, but 14 cars pulled out before the start) Smallest winning margin: 0.01 s (timed to 2 decimal places) [i] 1971 Italian Grand Prix (Peter Gethin from Ronnie Peterson)
2:55 - 5 p.m.: United States Grand Prix (ABC, ESPN+, F1 TV Pro) United States Grand Prix details Track: Circuit of the Americas, 3.542-mile, 20-turn permanent racing facility in Austin, Texas
The 2012 United States Grand Prix (formally the 2012 Formula 1 United States Grand Prix) [1] was a Formula One motor race held at the Circuit of the Americas in Travis County, near Austin, Texas on November 18, 2012. The race, run over fifty-six laps, was the penultimate round of the 2012 championship. [6]
May 5, 2024; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Red Bull Racing driver Max Verstappen (left) and Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc (right) spray champagne on race winner McLaren driver Lando Norris (4 ...
2012 Chinese Grand Prix: 2016 Japanese Grand Prix: 15 United Kingdom: Damon Hill ‡ 22 1992–1999: 1993 Hungarian Grand Prix: 1998 Belgian Grand Prix: 16 Finland: Kimi Räikkönen ‡ 21 2001–2009, 2012–2021: 2003 Malaysian Grand Prix: 2018 United States Grand Prix: 17 Finland: Mika Häkkinen ‡ 20 1991–2001: 1997 European Grand Prix