F1 fans enjoy start of Saudi Arabian GP weekend at fan zone

F1 fans enjoy start of Saudi Arabian GP weekend at fan zone
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Many fans who spoke with Arab News said they had traveled from places such as Riyadh, Dammam, Hail, Taif, Madina and Jizan to experience the race in Jeddah. (AN photo)
F1 fans enjoy start of Saudi Arabian GP weekend at fan zone
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Many fans who spoke with Arab News said they had traveled from places such as Riyadh, Dammam, Hail, Taif, Madina and Jizan to experience the race in Jeddah. (AN photo)
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Updated 19 April 2025
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F1 fans enjoy start of Saudi Arabian GP weekend at fan zone

F1 fans enjoy start of Saudi Arabian GP weekend at fan zone

JEDDAH: Fans from around the world enjoyed the first day of the F1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix race weekend on Friday at the Jeddah Corniche Circuit fan zone.

The site, next to the racetrack, offered a range of experiences including F1 interactive simulators, sim racing, a pit stop challenge, an F1 show car, driver selfies in augmented reality and a virtual pit tour, all designed to bring fans closer to the sport.

There were also food trucks, live music, cutting-edge driving simulators, virtual racing games and several F1 cars for photo opportunities.

Many fans who spoke with Arab News said they had traveled from places such as Riyadh, Dammam, Hail, Taif, Madina and Jizan to experience the race in Jeddah.

“It is an amazing event and as a family we are really enjoying every bit of it. I was really looking forward to seeing a racing car close up, and this is what Formula 1 is all about,” said local Saudi businessman Fahad Al-Malki, there with his family from Jeddah.

He added: “It is an amazing experience from the moment you start arriving around the road. It is so organized. I love the way everyone is so cooperative while you walk in, people are smiling and everyone is welcoming you, I enjoy that. My family is here and you get different ages of groups and families are sitting together and they are enjoying it. It is an amazing experience.”

Meanwhile, Jimmy from Glasgow, Scotland, described the Formula 1 weekend as “amazing.”

“This is my first time to attend the F1 race and I am glad to see it here in Jeddah,” he said. “Besides watching the (racing) I also had the chance to explore the fan zone. It is incredible and the food court is fantastic. Simply, my friend and I are just having fun and enjoying everything here.”

Laisly, from the Philippines, said: “I am very surprised. I was really looking forward to seeing a racing car from close up, it is really an interesting event. I’m really excited to see the race and at the same time enjoy the atmosphere of the fan zone.”

She added: “For us as Filipinos who are working here in Saudi Arabia, it is really one of a kind and hopefully these kinds of events will continue and recently there are many opportunities to see a race like this.”


England cricket captain Ben Stokes defends his team’s lack of matches ahead of the Ashes

England cricket captain Ben Stokes defends his team’s lack of matches ahead of the Ashes
Updated 59 min 21 sec ago
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England cricket captain Ben Stokes defends his team’s lack of matches ahead of the Ashes

England cricket captain Ben Stokes defends his team’s lack of matches ahead of the Ashes
  • England cricket captain Ben Stokes has defended his side’s lack of warm-up matches as the team prepares for the first Ashes test against Australia in Perth beginning Nov. 21
  • England is looking to break a 14-year winless run in Australia. Stokes and fellow veteran batter Joe Root have never won a test in Australia

PERTH: England cricket captain Ben Stokes has defended his side’s lack of warm-up matches as the team prepares for the first Ashes test against Australia in Perth beginning Nov. 21.
England is looking to break a 14-year winless run in Australia. Stokes and fellow veteran batter Joe Root have never won a test in Australia, with no survivors left from the 2010-11 series win.
Australia has won 5-0, 4-0, and 4-0 the last three times England has traveled Down Under for the most anticipated series in world cricket.
England’s only preparation for the first test is a three-day match against the England Lions, essentially an England A team, starting on Thursday at Lilac Hill in Perth.
That decision has drawn criticism from Ashes greats on both sides such as Ian Healy, Ian Botham and Geoffrey Boycott.
But Stokes believes England’s preparation will be more than sufficient to win a test in Australia for the first time since it last won an away Ashes series.
“There’s obviously state (domestic first-class) cricket going on at the moment,” Stokes said Wednesday. “Time has got to be taken into consideration as well. Some of our squad members were playing the (white-ball) series in New Zealand.”
Most of Australia’s Ashes test players are tuning up in those same first-class matches this week and early next.
Stokes also said cricket’s “jam-packed” schedule makes it more difficult to prepare than “10, 15, 20, 30 years ago.”
“We put a lot of time and effort into how we prepare for every series, and that hasn’t changed with this one,’ Stokes added. “Come the 21st of this month, we know that we would have done everything possible that we could have done.”
Root has not scored a century in 14 tests in Australia.
“He’s the greatest English batter that the nation’s seen,” Stokes said. “He’s been a phenomenal form over the last two, three years. He’s not come out here to score a 100 in Australia, he’s come out here to contribute to the team.”
Stokes said his team should not be overwhelmed playing in Australia.
“Coming to Australia for the Ashes is a lot different than anything else when you’re playing,” he said. “There’s a lot more that goes on away from the cricket itself.”
The Perth test will be followed by four more in Brisbane, Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney.