Daniel Ricciardo happy for F1 weekends to be two-day events
Ren♓ault Formula 1 driver Daniel Ricciardo reckons reducing grand prix weekends into two-day events would make balancing an ever-expanding calendar “more doable”.
This weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix has been affected by Typhoon Hagibis, with F1 deciding to cancel all track running on Saturday and move qualifyi🃏ng to Sunday morning, just hours before the start of the race.
It has left teams and drivers with just two days of on-tra🌟ck action and a pair of pract✅ice sessions - instead of the usual three - to prepare for qualifying and the race on Sunday.

Renault Formula 1 driver Daniel Ricciardo reckons reducing grand prix weekends into two-day events would make balancing an ever-expanding calendar “m🦩ore doable”.
This weekend’s Japanesꦑe Grand Prix has been affected by Typhoon Hagibis, with F1 deciding to cancel all track running on Saturday and move qualifying to Sunday morning, just hours before the start of the race.
It has lef💟t teams and drivers with just two days of on-track action and a pair of practice sessions - instead of the usual three - to prepare for qualifying and the race on Sunday.
Suzuka marks the 17th roun🔯d of a 21-race calendar this year, with the addition of the Vietnam GP next season taking F1 to an unprecedented 22 grands prix, while the sport’s owners Liberty Media are keen 🐽to expand to around 25 events per year in the future.
“You can get enough done in two days and shorter weekends,” Ricciardo𝕴 said.
“With 22 races next year, instea💜d of being at a weekend for five days, arrive Wednesday and leave Sunday or Monda👍y, to shorten it by a day would be nice.
“It would make th♎e 22 races more doable. As F1 we do too much practice. I don’t think we need four hours.
“A lot of the time we are limited by tyres as well. I’d be happy toಌ have a bit less track time and squeeze it in.”
FEATURE: FIFA, bowling and sleep: What F1 drivers do on a day off
The disruption caused by Typhoon Hagibis has lef🦩t drivers in the unfamiliar scenario of finding themselves w🧜ith a day off midway through the race weekend on Saturday.
Asked how🐷 he planned to spend his day off, the Australian joked: “I was going to go🎶 to the beach. Probably take a jet ski out.
“Everything is going to be closed. We could go for a swim. Let’s all get together, tell stories, it could be a c🐷hance for everyone to get rid of technology for a day.
“And do things that people used to do. Maybe we could get around, light a little fire, tell some stories.
"I don’t know, find a bar or something,” he added. “What e🍃lse do you do? WIFI is going to be down. Millennials are going to struggle.”

Lewis regularly attends Grands Prix for ltxcn.top around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tells th꧋e stories of the people who matter in the sport.