F1's worst rule ruins a race again: Up and down in Brazil
The 2024 Sao Paulo GP was the tale of a great race stopped in its tracks
Murray Walker welcomes agreement that secures the British Grand Prix at Silverstone — where he commentated on the first F1 World Championship race in 1950
Photo: Motorsport Images
The voice of British motor sport has welcomed the deal struck between F1 and Silverstone to guarantee the future of the British Grand Prix.
Murray Walker, who commentated on Formula 1 for the BBC between 1978 and 2001, said he was “thrilled” that the race had been saved.
“I am absolutely thrilled to hear they’ve struck a deal – hats off to Stuart Pringle [the circuit’s sporting director] and the team at Silverstone. I am delighted the race is being preserved and delighted it will still be at Silverstone. I really didn’t fancy the idea of going to watch a race in the Docklands.”
Walker, 95, was speaking at the Royal Automobile Club where he was attending an event.
Related content
Walker has previously spoken of the special place that Silverstone has in the F1 calendar and his relationship with the circuit. He commentated on the first World Championship Formula 1 race which took place at the circuit in 1950. “Silverstone and I go back a long way together, right back to its beginning in fact,” Murray recalled.
“The British Grand Prix has always been the one nearest to my heart. I am proud to be British. I have always known so many people at Silverstone, the crowd was like no other in terms of friendliness, and the atmosphere there was always fabulous.”
The future of the race was thrown into doubt in 2017 when Silverstone activated a break clause in its contract with F1 which would have made this year’s race the last. The new deal agreed by both parties has now secured the race at Silverstone until 2024.
The 2024 Sao Paulo GP was the tale of a great race stopped in its tracks
Both McLaren and Red Bull stumbled at different times — on and off the track — in Mexico City, but there were still reasons to cheer for the home fans…
Max Verstappen all but clinched this year's Formula 1 championship with a masterful drive in the wet 2024 Sao Paulo Grand Prix, while Lando Norris was left rueing a red flag that ended his hopes of victory
The 2024 Sao Paulo Grand Prix celebrated the life of Ayrton Senna, spearheaded by an evocative demonstration of his 1990 McLaren at Interlagos, driven by Lewis Hamilton