LONDON: Next year’s inaugural Grand Prix of America in New Jersey will be postponed to 2014 because local organisers need more time to prepare, Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone said yesterday.
“They’ve run out of time,” said Ecclestone. “There’s all sorts of things...and they didn’t quite think it all through. They’ve had a wake-up call but the wake-up call came too late.
“The couldn’t get everything ready in time,” added the 81-year-old. “That’s the bottom line.”
He said the plan now was for a race in 2014, when the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi is also due to make its debut on the calendar after that year’s Winter Olympics there.
The waterfront Grand Prix of America, with the New York skyline as a backdrop, had been pencilled in for June 16 next year with an asterisk against it. It would have followed a weekend after the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal as a North American double-header. Ecclestone had raised doubts about the Jersey race in September when he said organisers had not complied with the terms and conditions of the contract, which he added had subsequently lapsed. The local Jersey Journal reported late on Thursday that there would be an official announcement about the postponement yesterday. It said that, according to two local mayors familiar with the situation, the promoters were behind with road repairs and obtaining permits for the course on public roads at Port Imperial, Weehawken and West New York. REUTERS