Motorcycling: MotoGP cancels
season-opening Qatar race due to coronavirus
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[March 02, 2020]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - The season-opening
MotoGP race in Qatar next weekend has been canceled because of
travel restrictions on passengers from Italy and elsewhere due to
the coronavirus epidemic, MotoGP said on Sunday.
The floodlit night race was scheduled for the Losail circuit on
March 8.
The joint statement by MotoGP, the governing FIM and teams'
association IRTA said that as of Sunday all passengers arriving in
Doha on direct flights from Italy, or who had been in Italy in the
past two weeks, faced a minimum of 14 days in quarantine.
"Italy clearly plays a vital role in the championship and in the
MotoGP class -- both on track and off -- and therefore the decision
has been taken to cancel premier class competition," it said.
The Moto2 and Moto3 categories will still race due to those teams
and riders already being in Qatar for three days of testing last
week.
Ducati and Aprilia are Italy-based teams while Italian riders
include Yamaha's MotoGP great Valentino Rossi.
The 22-strong grid features six Italian riders, with Italian
engineers and mechanics spread across the paddock and a large media
contingent in attendance.
Italian Andrea Dovizioso won last year's Qatar Grand Prix for
Ducati.
The death toll from an outbreak of coronavirus in Italy has risen to
34, the Civil Protection Agency said on Sunday, with the cumulative
number of confirmed cases totaling some 1,694 in the worst such
contagion in Europe.
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THAI RACE
The second round on the MotoGP calendar is scheduled for Thailand on
March 22, but that too has been the subject of some uncertainty.
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Italy's Gazzetta dello Sport website reported that the Thai race at
Buriram was likely to be postponed until later in the season.
"I was waiting (for) the first race since the last race was
finished. So sad and disappointed after such good work but it is
what it is... let’s see when our first race will be ," Petronas
Yamaha's French rider Fabio Quartararo wrote on Twitter.
Formula One, whose season starts in Australia on March 15, has
already canceled its Chinese Grand Prix scheduled for Shanghai on
April 19.
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Ferrari team boss Mattia Binotto last week said he wanted travel
assurances before his staff started the journey to Melbourne.
Teams have already rerouted their flights through the Middle East to
avoid transit in Far Eastern countries, and Doha is a popular hub.
The Bahrain Grand Prix is also scheduled for the weekend after
Australia.
"If there are any medical screenings, we need to know about them,"
Binotto told reporters at testing in Spain. "It's important, really,
to make sure that before leaving, the picture, whatever is the
scenario, is known and clear."
Italy-based Ferrari, overall runners-up last year and the sport's
oldest and most glamorous team, also provide Haas and Alfa Romeo
with engines.
Alpha Tauri and F1's sole tire supplier Pirelli are also
headquartered in Italy.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ken Ferris)
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