According to Benson the only difference is that Korea and Japan have swapped. So I think both of you are right![]()
Oh yeah

According to Benson the only difference is that Korea and Japan have swapped. So I think both of you are right![]()


Thailand would be really interesting. Dunno how feasible it'd be though.
Being an American, I have to say, I find it funny that the new street circuit is called the Grand Prix of Jersey. Yes! The great nation of Jersey! With their guidos and obnoxious people! I dunno what you'd call it though since the one in Austin will be called the The Grand Prix of USA, but the name just seems silly to me.
Also, yay no Valencia! Was never a huge fan, always been a bit bored by that race. Wish they'd bring back some of the older tracks I always drove on in my old F1 game. I get them trying to have tracks all over the world though, at least from a marketing perspective.
Paul Ricard can't see the Belgium/France/Italy trio though. Far too many European races for Bernie's liking.
Paul Ricard is so close to Monaco that if they were adjacent on F1's calendar, Jenson Button would probably choose his bicycle for the journey.But it would make brilliant sense logistically
Don't take Wikipedia as a credible source, however I'm sure F1 will return there sooner rather than later.
Ah, sorry.. wasn't using that as the source of where I heard it.. just using that as a source of what the track looks like..
I always liked that track, track seems to flow nicely, great final banked curve, I for one would like to see a return there, who knows, if Perez starts to win races and becomes a genuine contender, a return may be on the cards?
Don't forget F1 is going back to Argentina, France, and South Africa. Possibly. Allegedly. Maybe.
Don't forget F1 is going back to Argentina, France, and South Africa. Possibly. Allegedly. Maybe.
We might not have a German GP next year:
http://www.yallaf1.com/2012/11/15/german-grand-prix-may-not-happen-in-2013/
Which would be a huge shame, as the recent German GP's have been good.
