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Red Bull official wanted drivers to deliberately catch coronavirus

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Vienna—Red Bull motorsport consultant Helmut Marko has admitted that he wanted the team’s Formula One drivers to deliberately contract coronavirus before the potential start of the new season.

The 76-year-old said his idea was to bring the team’s senior drivers, Max Verstappen and Alexander Albon, together with the junior drivers in a training camp.

“The idea was that we could organize a camp where we could mentally and physically fill this dead time,” Marko told Austrian television channel ORF.

“Then, of course, it would’ve been ideal for the infection to come.

“They are all young, strong men in good health. Then you would be prepared for whenever you start, and you would be ready for a very tough world championship.”

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Marko admitted that his plan was “not well received”.

The 2020 Formula One season has been thrown into disarray by the coronavirus pandemic, which has claimed over 33,000 lives worldwide according to an AFP tally.

So far, Grand Prix races scheduled for Bahrain, Vietnam, China, Netherlands and Spain have also been postponed while the iconic Riviera showpiece in Monaco and the season-opening Australian race were cancelled.

F1 chairman Chase Carey last week said he hoped the campaign would start in the summer with a revised calendar of “15-18 races”, down from an original 22.

Meanwhile, hunkered down with his parents in Normandy, Renault driver Esteban Ocon is racking up the hours on a Formula One virtual simulator to be ready when the season finally gets underway.

The 23-year-old is preparing for his first campaign with Renault after spending last year as a Mercedes reserve driver following a successful two-season stint racing for Force India.

“My days are full and I behave as if I was going to race next week,” the Frenchman told AFP. “I do a lot of racing on the simulator, and a great deal of sport.

“Nobody knows when the season will start, and as we have all the time we need now it’s easy to keep in top shape.”

The 2020 Formula One season has been thrown into disarray by the coronavirus pandemic, which has claimed over 33,000 lives worldwide according to an AFP tally.

So far, Grand Prix races scheduled for Bahrain, Vietnam, China, the Netherlands, Spain and Azerbaijan have been postponed while the iconic Riviera showpiece in Monaco and the season-opening Australian race were cancelled. 

“It will restart when it restarts, once things are safe,” Ocon said.

“The winter break should have been over a long time ago, and with everything that’s going on, we’re glued to the news every evening, we see the figures rising and the tough times the world is going through.  

“We just hope this will soon be over.”

France has been under lockdown since March 17, with Ocon spending his time on a simulator also being used by fellow F1 drivers Lando Norris and Max Verstappen.

“It keeps you up to speed facing off with good drivers. It keeps your reflexes primed,” he said.

“I’m hoping it will give me an edge, that when we get back I’ll be more ready. A real car, and real sport is always better than a simulator, but they are getting closer to the real thing these days.

“I train on Grand Tourismo, it’s a real leap forwards.” 

The earliest the F1 season could now get underway is at the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal, scheduled for June 14. 

Ocon, who finished a career-best eighth in the 2017 drivers’ world championship, said his competitive spirit burns bright even in virtual racing.

“I race to win, not for fifth or sixth place, but to win.

“I speak to the team every day, to see how everyone is and to get the lowdown from the engineers, there’s the marketing people too.

“There’s a lot going on despite the confinement.” 

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