2020 Formula 1 Austrian Grand Prix session timings and preview
The 2020 Formula 1 world championship will finally get underway with the Austrian Grand Prix on July 3-5, having been delayed by several months due to the coronavirus pandemic. Here’s all you need to know about the season opener.
Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes AMG W10, leads Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1 W10, Lando Norris, McLaren MCL34, Kimi Raikkonen, Alfa Romeo Racing C38, Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari SF90, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB15, Pierre Gasly, Red Bull Racing RB15, and the remainder of the field at the start
Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images
F1’s 70th anniversary season was originally due to begin at the Australian Grand Prix in March, but the race had to be cancelled prior to first practice after a member of the McLaren team tested positive for COVID-19.
Since then the entire calendar has been reshuffled, while a number of high-profile events such as the Monaco Grand Prix and the returning Dutch GP at Zandvoort being called off entirely.
As per the latest calendar, the championship will kick off with two races at the Red Bull Ring in Austria in consecutive weeks, followed by six more rounds in Europe – including another double-header at Silverstone in the UK. More races, including those outside Europe, will be announced in due course.
This weekend’s Austrian GP will be the first championship race to take place since the 2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, marking the end of a seventh-month long break.
The race will take place behind closed doors, with no fans allowed access at the track. There is also a restriction on the number of members each team can bring to a grand prix, and those present at the track must follow social distancing and other guidelines issued by the FIA.
Several procedural changes have also been made, with the traditional podium ceremony and the drivers' parade being dropped altogether.
However, there are no changes to the long-running weekend schedule. As usual, two 90-minute practice sessions will be held on Friday, followed by another 60 minutes of running on Saturday morning. A three part-qualifying session will take place later on Saturday, followed by the race itself – run to the same length of roughly 305km – on Sunday afternoon.
F1 had considered running reverse grid qualifying races to determine the starting order for the main event, but the proposal was shot down by Mercedes because it didn’t want the sport to introduce “gimmicks” to spice up the racing.
As with previous seasons, F1 will be broadcast via a wide variety of Pay TV and free-to-air channels all around the globe. Find the TV listings below. Can’t find your country or region in the list? Check the schedule page for the broadcast times in your local timezone.
2020 Formula 1 Austrian Grand Prix session timings in Europe
Friday
- Free Practice 1: 11am – 12:30pm CEST
- Free Practice 2: 3pm – 4:30pm CEST
Saturday
- Free Practice 3: 12pm – 1pm CEST
- Qualifying: 3pm – 4pm CEST
Sunday
- Race: 3:10pm CEST
2020 Formula 1 Austrian Grand Prix session timings in the UK
Friday
- Free Practice 1: 10am – 11:30am BST
- Free Practice 2: 2pm – 3:30pm BST
Saturday
- Free Practice 3: 11am – 12pm BST
- Qualifying: 2pm – 3pm BST
Sunday
- Race: 2:10pm BST
2020 Formula 1 Austrian Grand Prix session timings in the US
Friday
- Free Practice 1: 5am – 6:30am ET / 2am PT – 3:30am PT
- Free Practice 2: 9am – 10:30am ET / 6am PT – 7:30am PT
Saturday
- Free Practice 3: 6am – 7am ET / 3am PT – 4am PT
- Qualifying: 9am – 10am ET / 6am PT – 7am PT
Sunday
- Race: 9:10am ET / 6:10am PT
2020 Formula 1 Austrian Grand Prix session timings in Australia
Friday
- Free Practice 1: 7pm – 8:30am AEST
- Free Practice 2: 11pm – 12:30am AEST
Saturday
- Free Practice 3: 8pm – 9pm AEST
- Qualifying: 11pm – 12am AEST
Sunday
- Race: 11:10pm AEST
2020 Formula 1 Austrian Grand Prix session timings in India
Friday
- Free Practice 1: 2:30pm – 4:00pm IST
- Free Practice 2: 6:30pm – 8:00pm IST
Saturday
- Free Practice 3: 3:30pm – 4:30pm IST
- Qualifying: 6:30pm – 7:30pm IST
Sunday
- Race: 6:40pm IST
2020 Formula 1 calendar (first eight rounds only)
Date | Venue |
July 5 | Red Bull Ring, Austria |
July 12 | Red Bull Ring, Austria |
July 19 | Hungaroring, Hungary |
August 2 | Silverstone, Britain |
August 9 | Silverstone, Britain |
August 16 | Barcelona, Spain |
August 30 | Spa, Belgium |
September 6 | Monza, Italy |
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