2013 race calendar keeps Formula 1 world guessing

Formula One World Championship, Rd1, Australian Grand Prix, Preparations, Albert Park, Melbourne, Australia, Thursday 15 March 2012.

For a sport timed down to the thousandth of a second and measured in millimetres, Formula One seems to be finding it difficult to get to grips with a calendar, with little more than two months to go before the Australian season-opener in Melbourne on 17 March, the sport has yet to confirm how many races there will be in 2013 as well as the locations for two of the races.

HRT Formula One Team mechanics in the garage. Formula One World Championship, Rd4, Bahrain Grand Prix, Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain, Sunday 22 April 2012.The fans can expect to see fewer teams on the grid, with HRT seemingly defunct but still supposedly seeking a buyer, but they are also still waiting for a definitive driver line-up with vacancies remaining at Caterham and Force India.

The first official test of the new campaign kicks off at the Jerez circuit in southern Spain on February 5 with McLaren currently set to be the first out of the box with plans to launch their car on January 31.

Most, but probably not all of the teams will have their new cars ready to hit the track as soon as the off-season testing ban is lifted – by which time they should also have a clearer picture of what the future holds.

July is the month of uncertainty as things stand, with the German Grand Prix – triple world champion Sebastian Vettel’s home race – scheduled for the seventh at a venue yet to be decided.

Nurburgring aerial viewThis year should be the Nurburgring’s turn to host the race under an alternation agreement but the circuit’s financial problems could mean it stays at Hockenheim, the country’s other Formula One track.

Either way, time is running out with local promoters usually seeking to maximise their chances of breaking even by putting tickets on sale for the race almost as soon as the previous one has finished.

“If the issue over whether there will be an F1 race at Nuerburgring in 2013 is sorted out by year-end, that would still be early enough,” Nurburgring GmbH managing director Thomas Schmidt said in November last year.

Subsequent reports in Germany have spoken of further meetings scheduled for this month with commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone. F1 tour packages for the German round have been conspicuously absent on the usual ticket websites.

Bernie Ecclestone on the grid Turkish Grand Prix, Race, Istanbul Park, Turkey, Sunday 8 May 2011.The 20-round calendar also has an empty slot for July 21 – reserved for another unnamed European event that Ecclestone has identified as being the Turkish Grand Prix.

However, the impetus to bring that country’s Istanbul Park circuit back into the championship stalled when the country’s government baulked at subsidising a race attended by few locals.

Ecclestone told Reuters last month that he was waiting for a response from the Turkish authorities and that the season was likely to be 19 races.

Bahrain, which was the big uncertainty last year due to violent civil unrest, remains on the calendar with an April 21 date as the fourth round of the season. The situation in the Gulf kingdom presently is described as tense.

The official starting list for 2013 that was issued in December had 11 teams, one down on last year, who have paid their entry fees.

(L to R): Paul di Resta (GBR) Force India F1 Third Driver with Adrian Sutil (GER) Force India F1. Formula One Testing, Day One, Jerez, Spain, Wednesday 10 February 2010.While most of the empty spaces for drivers’ names have now been filled, Force India have a coveted vacancy with Germany’s Adrian Sutil and Frenchman Jules Bianchi the recognised frontrunners.

Sutil has the experience, as a former driver for the Mercedes-powered team, and some financial clout but Bianchi is their reserve as well as being a member of Ferrari’s young driver academy.

If, as some reports suggest, Force India are considering switching to Ferrari engines in 2014 then Bianchi would likely sweeten the deal.

Russian Vitaly Petrov, who raced for Caterham last year, appears likely to retain that seat but he, like the fans holding off on their travel plans, would like a little more certainty. (Reuters)

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