Vettel back for Australian GP after COVID recovery
SILVERSTONE, England (AP) — Aston Martin driver Sebastian Vettel is “fit to race” after recovering from COVID-19, the Formula One team said Thursday.
Players.bio is a large online platform sharing the best live coverage of your favourite sports: Football, Golf, Rugby, Cricket, F1, Boxing, NFL, NBA, plus the latest sports news, transfers & scores. Exclusive interviews, fresh photos and videos, breaking news. Stay tuned to know everything you wish about your favorite stars 24/7. Check our daily updates and make sure you don't miss anything about celebrities' lives.

SILVERSTONE, England (AP) — Aston Martin driver Sebastian Vettel is “fit to race” after recovering from COVID-19, the Formula One team said Thursday.
Sebastian Vettel will return to the Formula 1 grid for the Australian GP after being cleared to race following his Covid enforced absence.
Four-time F1 world champion Vettel tested positive in the days leading up to the Bahrain season-opener, ruling him out of the race weekend and prompting Aston Martin to draft in Nico Hulkenberg as his replacement.
Sebastian Vettel has been declared fit to take part in next Sunday's Australian Grand Prix.
Sebastian Vettel has been declared fit to take part in next Sunday’s Australian Grand Prix.
LONDON : Sebastian Vettel will race for Aston Martin in Australia next week after missing the first two grands prix of the season due to COVID-19, the Formula One team said on Thursday.
With Round 3 coming up in Australia, here’s how the points are looking for 2022’s roster of F1 drivers.
Si no te has subido a un Fórmula 1 en los últimos tiempos y tienes que retomar el ritmo en Jeddah Corniche, algo no va a salir bien. Con esa impresión se bajan del coche Magnussen, piloto de Haas tras la salida del ruso Mazepin; o Hulkenberg, que sustituye a Vettel por COVID. El trazado saudí oficialmente tiene más de veinte curvas, pero en realidad solo hay seis puntos de frenada, se rueda prácticamente todo el tiempo por encima de los 250 kilómetros por hora y los pilotos lo definen como «una violenta montaña rusa», «una lavadora», según el alemán de Aston Martin, que acaba con los cuellos de quienes no han entrenado suficiente, sobre todo para quienes hace unas semanas no tenían previsto participar en el GP de Arabia Saudí.