Bahrain 2011 was firstly postponed due to civil unrest and scheduled to run in October, but they couldn't agree on re-hosting and then it was just removed from the calendar that year, leaving a gap.
We'll be at 200,000 cases 14 days from now. This thread should be re-named 'Are all 2020 GP's under threat of cancellation due to coronavirus?'Manoah2u wrote: ↑03 Feb 2020, 10:44No way the GP will happen unless in the coming weeks some wonder cure appears.
No single soul will have interest going there with the infection risk, and F1 certainly doesn't want to carry the weight of being a transmitter of this killer virus.
I also highly doubt the drivers or teams themselves would want to go, so i concider the Chinese GP actually happeing on 0%.
I'd say because Suzuka has not planned the race on the dates of China,
It maybe an inconvenience but that's surely better than canceling a GP.
It’s not a matter of inconvenience, It’s about the number of people that have bought tickets, my travel and hotel arrangements and booked holidays & time off workWass85 wrote: ↑03 Feb 2020, 17:12It maybe an inconvenience but that's surely better than canceling a GP.
You will still have done all that if it's cancelled won't you?the EDGE wrote: ↑03 Feb 2020, 17:17It’s not a matter of inconvenience, It’s about the number of people that have bought tickets, my travel and hotel arrangements and booked holidays & time off work
Technically you would be cancelling two GPs worth of contracts, logistics and tickets on the hope that when the dust settles the cost (to whom?) would be less.Wass85 wrote: ↑03 Feb 2020, 17:12It maybe an inconvenience but that's surely better than canceling a GP.
True, However it’s not the people with Chinese Grand Prix tickets I was thinking of, rather those with Suzuka tickets, I would quite rightly demand compensation for lost flights & hotels at the very least
Exactly. Why would China's problem become Suzuka's problem? To put it a bit blunt.
People are being locked in their homes, rounded up and relocated and arrested for just talking about it. That --- raises eyebrows. As this is an unknown entity at the moment it makes a lot more sense to be cautious than to risk an even more severe outbreak. The flu is everywhere and common, so it will cause more death, this virus isn't as of now.
Ebola usually only kills a few dozen people each year. Let's not worry about that either then.
People have been dying for a long time. We will never stop that.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑03 Feb 2020, 19:50Ebola usually only kills a few dozen people each year. Let's not worry about that either then.