Thursday, December 18, 2025

Mexico City announces Formula 1 race will be back this year

After a year-long hiatus due to Covid-19, Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum has announced that the Formula 1 Grand Prix is back on track for Mexico City this year. Decreasing numbers of Covid-19 cases in the city permitted the decision, the mayor said.

The fact that buildings at the Hermanos Rodríguez racetrack are currently being used as a provisional hospital for coronavirus patients will not be an obstacle, Sheinbaum said.

“If everything stays on track and vaccination continues, in October we will be in the situation of having all adults vaccinated and all activities can take place in October, November and December,” Sheinbaum said.

Mexico City is currently yellow (medium risk) on Mexico’s coronavirus stoplight map.

Formula 1 has had to change its plans in many countries due to pandemic logistics. Mexico, the United States and Brazil are currently on the 2021 calendar. Canada, however, was eliminated due to its health restrictions, including a two-week quarantine period for everyone arriving in the country.

The Mexico City race, scheduled for October 29-31, is a popular one. Tickets were sold out two weeks before the 2019 event for the fifth year in a row.

Also in 2019, it won the award for best live sporting event at the Leaders Sports Awards in London, England. The race was selected from among 450 events in five categories from around the globe.

Source: ESPN (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
child mailing letter

Mexico City’s Postal Palace opens special mail route to the North Pole

0
Postal staffers will not only see that the letters are mailed (and replied to) but also run workshops teaching the youngsters about addressing envelopes and applying stamps.
The Bank of Mexico building in Mexico City

Central bank cuts interest rate to 7% citing weak economic activity

0
The current exchange rate, weak economic activity and possible changes to global trade policy made the cut appropriate despite rising inflation, Banxico said.
A pile of coffee beans

Veracruz coffee producers call for a halt to ‘fraudulent’ coffee imports

0
Veracruz growers claim imported beans are being mislabeled to dodge U.S. and European tariffs — meaning "Mexican-grown coffee" might not always be Mexican.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity