How to watch the F1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix today: TV channel and live stream for second race of 2022 season
Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen do battle in the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix today.
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Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen do battle in the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix today.
Mick Schumacher will not be taking part in Sunday's Saudi Arabian Grand Prix after a horror crash in qualifying at Jeddah's high-speed street circuit on Saturday night. The great Michael Schumacher's son crashed his Haas car at 240kmh during the Saudi Arabian GP qualifying. With Mick Schumacher ruled out of Sunday's race, Haas have said that they will run just one car with the team's hopes resting on Danish driver Kevin Magnussen. "Schumacher was taken to the trackside medical centre following a significant accident at Turn 12," said Haas in a statement.
Mick Schumacher insisted Saturday 'I'm OK' but he will not take part in Sunday's Saudi Arabian Grand Prix after crashing his Haas car at 240kmh in qualifying on Jeddah's high-speed street circuit. "Hi everyone, I just wanted to say that I'm ok. Thank you for the kind messages. The car felt great @HaasF1Team, we'll come back stronger," tweeted the 23-year-old German driver who was airlifted to hospital after the crash. Haas, meanwhile, said they will run just one car in Sunday's race with Kevin Magnussen carrying their hopes.
Sergio Perez roared to a first career Formula One pole position on Saturday with a blinding lap under the floodlights in a crash-interrupted qualifying session for the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. The Red Bull driver left his best for last as he lapped the 6.1-km long Jeddah Corniche circuit on the banks of the Red Sea in one minute 28.200 seconds. The lap, 0.025 seconds quicker than second-placed Charles Leclerc, was just enough to stop the Monegasque and team mate Carlos Sainz, who scored a Ferrari one-two in last week's Bahrain season-opener, from sweeping to a front-row lockout for the resurgent Italian team.
Red Bull's Sergio Perez will eye just his third Formula 1 Grand Prix win when he starts on pole position during the Saudi Arabian GP at the Jeddah Corniche Circuit on Sunday. Perez, who has won just two GP's during his career -- Bahrain GP 2020 and Azerbaijan GP 2021 -- finished ahead of Ferrari drivers Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz Jr, who finished 2nd and 3rd, respectively, during the qualifying on Saturday. Leclerc will join Perez in the front row, while Sainz will be joined by the other Red Bull driver and reigning F1 champion Max Verstappen. Red Bull will now be hoping for better luck in Jeddah after both Perez and Verstappen had failed to finish the race in Bahrain last week.
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Haas driver Mick Schumacher suffered a horrible, high-speed crash during Saudi Arabian Grand Prix qualifying on Saturday. An ambulance rushed to the scene after Schumacher span and suffered a heavy collision with barricades on either side of the track in the first sector.
The bosses of Formula 1 and the local authorities managed to talk the drivers into racing at this weekend's Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, but there is a lot more work to do to convince some people in the sport that the race should be on the calendar at all.