Should F1 make sprint races separate from the grand prix?

F1’s sprint weekend format returned💎 for the first time in 2022 at last weekend’s Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.
The format sees qualifying moved to Friday in place of p🌠ractice in the after📖noon, while a shorter, 100km sprint race takes place on Saturday with the result determining the grid for Sunday’s grand prix.
- FIA hold up F1's plans to double sprint races for 202🎃3
- How modest🅺 Russell is hol🔜ding the early edge over Hamilton
- Leclerc’s Imola F1 mi🏅stake was ‘daft and unnecessary’ - Edwards
The format will be run at three grands prix this season (Imola, Austria and Br꧅azil) but there are plans for this to be doubled to six race weekends for 2023.
W🍬ith the🉐 sprint being used to determine the grid for the grand prix, there’s an argument that drivers aren’t taking as many risks and thus reducing the spectacle for fans.
In the latest episode of mahbx.com’s F1 podcast, Brundle explained why making the sprint a standalone 😼event would improve the show.
“The drivers are calling for those events to be more standalone rather than actually setting the grid for grand prix Sunday and that’s a very interesting concept,” Brundle said. “What we basically end up with then is a more of an F꧙2 event. They clea🃏rly like the concept, they want to go racing.
“From a drivers’ perspective and I thiꦏnk we saw this over that battle at the front of the field, drivers must be driving with the race on Sunday in the back of their minds and that can’t be that enjoyable from inside the cockpit to want to make the move, to want to go charging through, to want to defend hard and show the Tifosi what you’re made of iౠf you’re Charles Leclerc in the Ferrari but always knowing that if you overstep, you’ve got a long grand prix Sunday to think about it starting at the back of the field.
“I would really be supportive of the sprint race becoming its ow𝓡n thing, becoming its own entity delivering points, perhaps all the way down the field. That would be exciting for me.”

Legendary F1 commentator Ben Edwards feels F1 will be put under pressure to introduce further sprint weekends due t🔜o the like🃏ly benefits they would have on TV viewing figures.
“That might be an interesting option to go down that route and separating the two pieces might work very well,” Edwards added. “The trouble is, I just imagine the TV viewing numbers are going to go up with people watching both Saturday and Sunday because they’re watching races on two days and that’s going to put preཧssure on F1 to carry on that sort of thing rather than back off, although some of the teams will be against it.
“This is going to be an ongoᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱🧔ᩚᩚᩚing discussion going forward.”
Does the sprint race detract from the F1 Grand Prix?
A wet-affected qualifying on Frida🧸y at Imola left Sergio Perez and Carlos Sainz out of position on the grid.
The sprint on Saturday allowed the pair to cut their way throu𝐆gh the field, giving us some great wheel-to-wheel a🔴ction.
Similarly, Charles Leclerc’s good start from second on the grid handed him the lead into Turn💖 1.
Leclerc and Max Verstappen duelled for the sprint rac𝓰e victory 𒐪with the reigning F1 champion coming out on top.
Edwards questioned whe💜ther having a sprint race made fo🌳r a less dramatic grand prix.

“Well it did, oꦫf course, actually the sprint race was more entertainin♛g in some ways than the grand prix because you had people moving up, Edwards explained. “The danger is when you have a qualifying like you had on Friday afternoon as we did, a bit predictable and a few people out of position, particularly Carlos, Sergio.
“So that made the sprint race quite exciting because those guys had to fight their way up an🉐d we had a battle for the lead. The trouble was that everyone was in position and so we didn’t quite end up with that same battle tha𒀰t we might have enjoyed in the grand prix in the early stages. Mind you, of course, we had some dramas, we lost Sainz, we lost Ricciardo in the grand prix itself and I think that was a bit of a downer.
“There are a lot of positives by having a sprint race but there are some negatives as well. We did lose out I think a little bit in the grand prixꦯ itself in terms of some of the excitement.”
Download and listen to Episode 7 now at the following links…

With a sharp eye for F1’s controversies and storylines,ꦗ Connor is the heartbeat of our unbiased reporting.