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The Australian Grand Prix is planned to host the opening race of the 2025 season for the first time since 2019. It was the third round in the past three seasons, after the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix, respectively, with those events being pushed back in 2025 to avoid a conflict with Ramadan .
The Saudi Arabian Grand Prix first appeared on the first draft of the 2021 Formula One provisional calendar, which was shown to teams at a Formula One Commission meeting, held in October 2020. [5] The draft calendar saw all 22 races from the original 2020 calendar carried over, with the addition of Saudi Arabia. [6]
ART Grand Prix driver Evan Giltaire won the Drivers' championship title at the penultimate race. His closest challenger, runner-up Freddie Slater won the Rookie Cup at the final race, while his team, Mumbai Falcons Racing Limited , also secured its second Teams' Championship title after last winning it in 2023 .
Saudi Arabian Grand Prix (2021–present) Formula E Jeddah ePrix (2025) Former: GT World Challenge Europe 6 Hours of Jeddah (2024) WTCR Race of Saudi Arabia (2022) Grand Prix Circuit (2021–present) Surface: Asphalt: Length: 6.174 km (3.836 miles) Turns: 27: Race lap record: 1:30.734 (Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes W12, 2021, F1) Formula E Circuit ...
The 2025 LIV season will begin with dates in Saudi Arabia, Australia, Hong Kong and Singapore. ... Saudi Arabia's capital, with its 2025 kickoff tournament on Feb. 6-8 at Riyadh Golf Club. One ...
The race was held at the Jeddah Corniche Circuit in Jeddah, the same venue used by the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in Formula One.The track layout for the Formula E ePrix was shortened to 3.001 km (1.865 mi), with the addition of a hairpin connecting Turn 3 to Turn 22 on the F1 layout, and four chicanes placed on the front and back straightaways.
Grand Prix Circuit Race date 1 Bahrain Grand Prix: Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir: 2 March 2 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix: Jeddah Corniche Circuit, Jeddah: 9 March 3 Australian Grand Prix: Albert Park Circuit, Melbourne: 24 March 4 Japanese Grand Prix: Suzuka International Racing Course, Suzuka: 7 April 5 Chinese Grand Prix: Shanghai ...
The results of each Grand Prix held throughout the season are combined to decide two annual championships, one for drivers and one for constructors. [9] Grand Prix distance regulations have varied throughout Formula One history. [10] [11] Between 1950 and 1957, events ran for more than 300 km (190 mi) or three hours. [11]