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The COVID-19 pandemic has yet again forced the FIA to make a major change to the yearly calender; the season opener in Australia has been postponed to November, and now, the first race will take place in Bahrain. Moreover, Imola has supplanted the Chinese GP.

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Given that the new strain of the virus is spreading quite rapidly and forcing shutdowns again, a shortened season that includes doubleheaders like the ones we saw last year is a very real possibility.

Speaking to ORF as quoted by Motorsport-Total, Mercedes team boss, Toto Wolff, said, “This fear is of course justified, Australia has been postponed, but the Grand Prix is ​​so important that they didn’t want to cancel it entirely. It will follow suit at the end of the year.”

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“And China has a general ban for major events until August. These are two factors that cannot be influenced. That’s why we start in Bahrain.”

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Toto Wolff has high hopes

The Mercedes team boss is optimistic for the midpoint of the upcoming season, He stated, “I assume that we will have a reasonably normal season again after the summer”

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The plan for this season is to have 23 races throughout the year, but the pandemic creates a big obstacle to do so. Wolff commented, “It will certainly be incredibly difficult for the race team too. We will have three triple headers in a row.

“You won’t come home for four weeks. That is of course an enormous burden.”

No matter how optimistic or pessimistic we are for F1 to get back to a somewhat normal state, we will only find out once the season starts on March 28 and we get through the 23 races, one after the other.

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Also Read: Mattia Binotto Explains the Silver Lining to Ferrari’s Miserable F1 Form

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