2025 US Grand Prix: F1 sprint race start time and Saturday qualifying schedule
Start time for the F1 sprint race and qualifying ahead of the 2025 United States Grand Prix: Saturday schedule, including how to watch and stream
Former Williams F1 driver Sergey Sirotkin joins McLaren as reserve driver for remaining Formula 1 season
Sergey Sirotkin has been appointed McLaren’s Formula 1 reserve driver for the rest of the season ahead of the French Grand Prix.
The Russian competed for SMP Racing at the Le Mans 24 Hours but his car was retired after 222 laps.
Last season, he raced for Williams F1 and ended up 20th in the drivers’ standings with a single point, moving to SMP for the World Endurance Championship and testing a Mahindra Formula E car.
He called McLaren a “legendary team” and thanked his personal backers SMP Racing and McLaren engine supplier Renault for their support.
Sirotkin will continue to be a Renault reserve driver.
McLaren team principal Andreas Seidl explained: “This is an expedient solution for McLaren in 2019.
“Sergey is a known quantity, has the necessary superlicence points and is formally aligned to our engine provider, Renault, so he is the obvious candidate.”
Sirotkin will, as SMP Bank founder Boris Rotenberg adds, retain his role at SMP for the WEC.
“I’m happy that Sergey is highly rated in Formula 1 and that he was invited to be a reserve driver not only for Renault [from 2016-17], but also for McLaren,” said Rotenberg.
“Together with this role in Formula 1 Sergey will continue driving for SMP Racing in the next season of the FIA WEC in LMP1 category.”
Start time for the F1 sprint race and qualifying ahead of the 2025 United States Grand Prix: Saturday schedule, including how to watch and stream
Max Verstappen will start on pole for the 2025 US Grand Prix sprint race, ahead of both McLarens and Nico Hülkenberg in fourth. Here's the starting grid for Saturday's sprint at Circuit of the Americas
Neither of Ben Sulayem's opponents have been able to meet the new requirements introduced by the FIA president earlier this year
Apple will replace ESPN as Formula 1’s exclusive US broadcaster from 2026 in a deal worth around $700 million