Red Bull's Marko suggested 'corona
camp' for F1 drivers
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[March 31, 2020]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Red Bull's
motorsport head Helmut Marko suggested his Formula One and junior
drivers should catch the coronavirus while racing is on hold so they
would be protected from sickness later in the year.
The 76-year-old Austrian, a former grand prix racer who is now the
energy drink company's head of driver development, made the
startling revelation in an interview on Sunday with broadcaster ORF.
Marko added that the idea had "not been well received" by Red Bull
management.
"We have four Formula One drivers and eight or 10 juniors," he said.
"The idea was that we would organize a camp to mentally and
physically bridge the dead time and that would be the ideal time for
the infection to come.
"They are all strong young men in good health. That way they would
be prepared whenever the action starts."
Nearly 738,500 people have been infected across the world and about
35,000 have died so far, according to a Reuters tally.
Red Bull own two Formula One teams with Dutch 22-year-old Max
Verstappen and Thai racer Alexander Albon in the main one and
Frenchman Pierre Gasly along with Russian Daniil Kvyat at
Italy-based AlphaTauri.
The Formula One season is currently stalled after the cancellation
of the March 15 Australian season-opener in Melbourne due to the
spreading pandemic.
Six races have also been postponed and the showcase Monaco Grand
Prix in May canceled.
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Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
Formula One has said it hopes to get the season started some time in
the European summer with a reduced calendar of 15-18 races.
That may still be optimistic, even if the sport races into the New
Year as has been suggested.
Marko, whose Formula One career ended when he was blinded in his
left eye by a loose stone thrown up during the 1972 French Grand
Prix, said European countries had to emerge from lockdown before any
racing could happen.
Austria is due to host a grand prix at the Red Bull Ring on July 5
but that too remains uncertain.
Formula One teams, commercial rights holders Liberty Media and the
governing FIA have agreed to save money by using the same cars next
year, postponing a raft of major technical changes that had been due
in 2021.
"Liberty expects a loss of $200-300m in revenue, and this is also
transferred to the teams in a quota. That is why we decided to take
these austerity measures to make up for this loss of revenue," said
Marko.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London, editing by Christian Radnedge)
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