Grand PrixExternal linksWebsiteChannel 4 F1, commonly abbreviated to C4F1, is a British television programme dedicated to the coverage of Formula One motor racing and has been aired by the British broadcaster Channel 4 since 2016. Prior to 2019, half of the season's practice, qualifying sessions and races were shown live, with all other events covered in an extended qualifying and race highlights format. Here is the TV schedule for the Saturday sessions which includes the third practice session and all three qualifying sessions. Skys qualifying coverage starts at 12pm on Saturday on Sky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports F1 with Channel 4 qualifying highlights at 655pm.
Channel 4 will continue to broadcast free-to-air highlights of every qualifying session and race throughout the 2021 Formula 1 season, plus live coverage of the British Grand Prix weekend on July. Hamilton and title rival Max Verstappen enter the final race of the season tied on points, making it a winner-takes-all finale at the Yas Marina Circuit. The two drivers have enjoyed the closest title fight between rivals teams since 2012, and it marks the first final race decider since 2016.
Going into the final grand prix of the year at Abu Dhabi's Yas Marina circuit, Max Verstappen and Sir Lewis Hamilton are tied on 369.5 points each. The last time where the two leading Formula 1 drivers in the championship went into the final race tied on points was in 1974. Formula 1 is broadcast live and exclusively on Sky Sports in the UK, with Sky providing a dedicated Formula 1 channel that covers every practice session, qualifying and race over a weekend. Our guide explains how to catch this weekend's British Grand Prix action, including channels and UK times for practice races, qualifying and, of course, the main event. Channel 4, who normally only have rights for a highlights show in the evening after a race, have struck a deal for live coverage in Abu Dhabi, with the race starting at 1pm UK time on Sunday afternoon.
Sky Sports F1 and Channel 4, who belatedly struck a deal for the season finale, will have live coverage for Sunday's race. All five sessions – practices, quali, and the race – will be shown live on Sky Sports F1, while Channel 4 airs highlights of qualifying and live coverage of the race. Beginning 2019, Sky Sports hold exclusive rights to all races excluding the British Grand Prix. In September 2018, it was announced that Channel 4 had agreed to a sub-licensing agreement with Sky, under which it broadcasts free-to-air highlights of all races, and live coverage of the British Grand Prix. As part of the arrangement, Sky will have rights to carry full series of Channel 4 dramas on-demand, while Channel 4 also acquired free-to-air rights to the Sky drama Tin Star. Under the current contract subscription service Sky Sports broadcasts all sessions exclusively live, typically on its dedicated channel Sky Sports F1, with FTA Channel 4 showing qualifying and race highlights later in the day.
Sky's race day coverage of this weekend's Abu Dhabi grand prix will also simulcast on Channel 4, as mentioned above. All Sky customers will have access to qualifying on Saturday and the race via Sky Showcase. However, Sky Sports F1 will be the only place where you can watch every session, including free practice, as well as the Formula 2 finale. Channel 4 has free-to-air Formula 1 qualifying and race highlights which usually start airing a few hours after the chequered flag has been waved. It also has live free-to-air coverage of the British grand prix every year, and is home of the all-women's W Series.
F1 is back for a new season in 2021, with the first race taking place this weekend - the Bahrain Grand Prix. Lewis Hamilton, Max Verstappen, and Valtteri Bottas will be battling to start the season with a win on Sunday. Express Sport explains how to watch F1 this year, including TV channel and live stream information.
Steve Jones and David Coulthard present highlights of Sprint Qualifying action from the Autódromo José Carlos Pace in São Paulo. Last year's race here was one of those cancelled due to Covid, so the drivers haven't had a chance to test their mettle on the hilly, physically demanding circuit for two years. Back in 2019 it was Max Verstappen who secured pole ahead of Vettel and Hamilton. The Red Bull driver has also secured his place at the front of the grid both of the previous times that the new Sprint Qualifying format has been used this season.
With that in mind, he'll be confident of producing a repeat performance this time out. The session will be broadcast live on Sky Sports F1 in the UK with coverage beginning at 4pm. Qualifying for the United States GP starts at 4pm local time 10pm BST using the regular Q1 Q2 and Q3 knockout session format. On 21 December 2015, the BBC announced that it would end its deal with Formula One three years early due to budget cuts and would transfer the remaining three years to Channel 4.
Channel 4 would be showing ten selected races live without advertisements and every race were to be shown as highlights. Channel 4 was the first free-to-air station that ran without commercial breaks during its ten live races. Sky Sports F1 will show every aspect of the build up, including practice and qualifying as both drivers aim to gain a crucial advantage before the chequered flag. Additionally, every Sky TV customer will be able to watch everything from qualifying on Saturday to the race on Sunday, with the broadcast shared across Sky Sports and Sky Showcase. All the action from this iconic head-to-head will also be available to NOW members with either a NOW Entertainment or NOW Sports membership. Qualifying for the Italian Grand Prix will begin at 1800 local time 2 GMT at Monza.
Extended highlights of the race and qualifying will be shown a few hours after the events finish. Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen are locked on 369.5 points at the top of the drivers' standings heading to Sunday's race at the Yas Marina Circuit. Now their winner-takes-all battle will be shown live on Channel 4, as well as on Sky Sports, who host all F1 races through their subscription services, having reportedly paid over £1bn for a five-year deal back in 2019. Coverage of the 2020 and 2021 seasons is sponsored by Bristol Street Motors and Macklin Motors.
He has also worked for BBC Radio 5 Live in a similar role at the occasional race. Also it was later announced that 'pen interviews' would be taken from F1TV with Lawrence Barretto joining the team as paddock reporter. Hamilton stands on the brink of history - victory in Abu Dhabi would clinch an eighth world title and confirm him as the greatest F1 driver ever.
This unique final race will go lights out with the two leading drivers on equal points, the Yas Marina track providing a 'winner takes all' close to an epic season. Sky has announced a partnership with Channel 4 that will see Sky Sports' live coverage of the thrilling Formula 1 season finale shared with the whole country right before Christmas, on what could be an historic occasion for Sir Lewis Hamilton. The most thrilling Formula One season in years has come down to the final race. A straight shootout between Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix will decide the destination of the 2021 drivers' championship. Alpine are due to give new Formula 2 champion Oscar Piastri some track time, while both Ferrari and Haas will test another Formula 2 driver, Robert Shwartzman.
Mercedes welcomes Formula E champion Nyck de Vries, and Formula 2's Logan Sargeant makes his debut in a Williams. All teams will be obliged to run rookies in free practice sessions from 2022, so expect to see a lot more of them during grands prix weekends. What does all this mean for the championship after a close, dramatic and often controversial season? Will Max win his first ever drivers' title, or will Lewis add an eighth to his record-equalling haul?
All will be revealed this weekend – and here's how to keep in tune with the action. ESPN broadcasts the services of Formula 1 in the USA with a huge fanbase available of the sport in the North American country. Weve included the full schedule for the rest of the weekend including practice and qualifying times below. In the United Kingdom Channel 4 is broadcasting highlights of qualifying for the Abu Dhabi GP at 655pm GMT on Saturday. Skysports.com/f1 – has all the latest news, interviews, features and video content, including previews and race highlights.
Verstappen has the potential to clinch his first F1 drivers' championship, while the British appeal for fans undoubtedly lies with Hamilton and his bid to win a Michael Schumacher-beating eighth world title as the pair currently sit tied on seven. Steve Jones, David Coulthard and Mark Webber present highlights of the final race of the 2021 F1 season in Abu Dhabi, as the drivers make one last grab for all-important points. For the 2020 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, programmes for races 1-3 were presented from The Silverstone Experience as F1 limited the number of broadcasters on site. Clarkson, who works primarily for F1 TV served as Channel 4's paddock reporter, when they were unable to access the paddock. During coverage of the Hungarian Grand Prix, it was confirmed that they would have access to the paddock for at least the British and 70th Anniversary weekends. For the first time since 1974, the title contenders go into the final race level on points.
Seven-time world champion Hamilton, having been 19 points behind Verstappen four races ago, has drawn level after a trio of dominant performances in Brazil, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. For the entire 2021 F1 season, Channel 4 will broadcast highlights of every qualifying and race of each event. The highlights will also be available on Channel 4's on demand catch up services. In the United Kingdom every F1 practice, qualifying and race is broadcast live on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Sports Main Event, with Abu Dhabi GP qualifying coverage starting at 4pm GMT. The previous deal, which ran from 2012 through 2018, and which Channel 4 took over from the BBC in 2016, enabled the terrestrial broadcaster to show half of the events live – including the season finale. The Silverstone weekend was Channel 4's only live action of the season, the broadcaster sharing live coverage with Sky Sports.
Sky have seemingly reacted to Channel 4's qualifying conundrum by opting to simulcast their live coverage on their new Sky Showcase channel, enabling more viewers to watch qualifying across Sky, Virgin Media and BT TV. Sky's schedules show that the broadcaster will simulcast their race day offering across Sky Sports F1 and Sky Sports Main Event, but not via Sky Showcase, as they did last month for coverage of the US Grand Prix qualifying session. If Verstappen does not clinch the championship at the next round in Saudi Arabia, it will be the first time since 2016 that the championship has gone to the final race of the season.
That growing archive includes past grands prix and highlights packages, season reviews going back to the 1970s, plus documentaries about drivers, teams and the sport's tech. In the event of one of these relatively unlikely outcomes leading to a tie on points, the driver who has claimed the most wins of the season would take the title. This season, Max has won nine grands prix while Lewis has won eight, which would therefore make Max the drivers' champion if they were tied on points. In the event two drivers had the same number of points and grand prix victories, the countback continues through the highest number of second places, highest number of third places and so on.
Full practice, qualifying and race coverage will be broadcast across the weekend. Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen are level in points going into the final race of the season, with both men knowing they will claim the world title if they better their rival. Sky Sports will be the only place to watch every practice, qualifying and race day throughout the 2021 Formula 1 season on its dedicated channel. Channel 4's team of Steve Jones, David Coulthard, Mark Webber and Lee McKenzie will provide build-up to the race for 15 minutes from midday on Sunday before handing over to Sky for their pre-race coverage and live coverage of the race itself. "We are excited that Sky will make the grand prix on Sunday available to Channel 4 viewers so everyone can tune in live for the thrilling finale to this epic season," he said.
Since 2019 Sky Sports F1 has had exclusive live rights, with only one event – the British Grand Prix – available free to air on Channel 4. The latter does show delayed highlight programmes of qualifying and the race from the other events on the calendar throughout the year. But a deal has been reached to show the Abu Dhabi decider on terrestrial television, which will include each channels showing their own pre and post-race coverage with Sky's race commentary used by both.
The race was originally due to be shown on Sky Sports, who hold exclusive rights to live F1 races with Channel 4 broadcasting only the British GP live alongside a highlights show for each weekend. Channel 4, who show delayed highlights of qualifying and races from all other rounds of the calendar, have reached an arrangement with Sky to bring the decider to free-to-air TV. This scenario is a concern for Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff who, having watched Hamilton crash into the back of Verstappen last time out, said he thought the quicker car with the quicker driver should win the championship. The task for both men is simple – finish ahead of their title rival – but advantage is still with Verstappen.
Should neither finish in the points then the Red Bull driver will be awarded his maiden championship on account of having won more races than Hamilton this season. F1 fans in the UK will also now be able to watch the gripping conclusion for free after Sky Sports announced a deal with Channel 4 to show the final race on terrestrial TV. It seems likely therefore that, a fan watching Drive to Survive is more likely to jump either to highlights on YouTube or live coverage on Sky, bypassing Channel 4's extended highlights package altogether. The figures bring together those that watched Channel 4's highlights package and those who watched the races live on Sky, excluding pre- and post-race analysis for the latter.
While the championship battle between Hamilton and Verstappen is bringing additional viewers to Sky's live offering, Channel 4's highlights offering is not seeing any positive impact. Airing live in an early evening time slot, an average of 1.94 million viewers watched the opener across Sky Sports F1 and Sky Sports Main Event, peaking with over 2 million viewers. With a 52-point advantage, Fabio Quartararo is odds on favourite to win his first MotoGP World Championship.
As always, live coverage of every session airs on BT Sport 2, with highlights airing on ITV4. The 2021 championship fight is going down to the wire, in one of the most intense Formula 1 seasons in years, as both drivers go into the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix level on 369.5 points. You can expect to see a couple of Formula 2 drivers from Red Bull's long-running academy programme in action, including Juri Vips and Liam Lawson . McLaren will welcome IndyCar star Pato O'Ward, after he fulfilled a bet with team boss Zak Brown by winning his first race in the series earlier this year (he's spent some time in the simulator and been for a seat fitting already).
You used to be able watch races live on RTL Germany but Sky Germany now has exclusive rights to show live races in Germany as well. Unlike BBC iPlayer, you can't join a live broadcast and you may have to wait hours for the race highlights to appear in the app. That was certainly the case last year, with the programme appearing over four hours after broadcast on some occasions. If you're happy to pay a subscription fee so you can watch entire races live, then Sky is the only option in the UK. While Liberty operates an online streaming service – F1 TV Pro – you can't watch it in the UK because of Sky's exclusive deal. Verstappen will have to beat Hamilton in Abu Dhabi to claim the drivers' title, so it should be a thrilling showdown.
Of course, you're here because you want to know when the race starts and how to watch it. So without further ado, here's everything you need to know about watching the action on TV and online in the UK. But - spoiler alert - the result, with Lewis Hamilton winning and Max Verstappen coming second , means the pair will go to the final race in Abu Dhabi pretty much as the season started, level on points. Channel 4 also offers a free alternative that provides highlights of qualifying and the races each weekend evening. Channel 4 will be showing extended highlights of races and qualifying each weekend.
The free-to-air coverage will begin at 12.30pm on Saturday on Channel 4, with highlights of qualifying on the same channel at 6.55pm on Saturday. As well as all of the live F1 action this season, Sky Sports will also screen live coverage of all the support race action, including Formula 2, Formula 3 and the Porsche Super Cup. Sky's coverage this season sees the return of The F1 Show which will preview each race in a new Thursday evening slot, plus Ted Kravitz will return with his regular qualifying and race Notebooks.
As well as being shown on Channel 4, the race will be available via a live simulcast on All4 - Channel 4's on-demand channel. Viewers will be able to watch Channel 4's highlights programme on demand after it airs on Sunday evening. Under the terms of the deal, Channel 4 will broadcast Sky's production of the live race coverage with its presenting team of Nico Rosberg, Jenson Button, Martin Brundle, Nat Pinkham, David Croft, Karun Chandhok, Simon Lazenby and Ted Kravitz. Hamilton's win in Jeddah means the bitter rivals are level on points with one race remaining, creating unprecedented interest as the English driver seeks a victory that would give him a record eighth championship. As first reported by The Times, the two companies have reached an agreement to allow Channel 4 to show the race live as Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen duel for the drivers' championship.
Formula 1 Qualifying Highlights Channel 4 The Formula One world championship showdown will be broadcast on free-to-air television after Channel 4 announced they will screen the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix live. Sky Sports' race coverage starts at 11.30am on Sunday, while Channel 4 begin their coverage at 12pm, with highlights running at 5.30pm. Steve Jones and David Coulthard present highlights of Qualifying for the second round of the 2021 Formula 1 season. Following a 14-year break, Imola returned to the calendar last year, when Valtteri Bottas claimed pole. Red Bull's Max Verstappen will be keen to stop that happening again - at the first race this year, in Bahrain, he secured only his fourth ever pole position, and he'll definitely want more. The final round of the 2021 Formula One season takes place this weekend with live coverage on Sky Sports and Channel 4.
Sky Sports F1 will carry live build up on Sunday from 11.30am in UHD with the 'Sports Recap' function available throughout the race, which is due to start at 1pm. The live race will then see Sky Sports' coverage aired across Sky channels and Channel 4, including the Sky commentary team and expert analysis. Hamilton is already one of the greatest drivers the sport has ever seen, but victory would move him above Michael Schumacher's seven titles and into unprecedented territory. For Verstappen it would be a first title for the exciting 24-year-old Red Bull driver. Either way it will be a magical occasion, with the Sky Sports F1 team of experts analysing every single lap of a race the whole country can now experience. "The brilliant Sky Sports Formula 1 team will give viewers on Channel 4 and Sky Sports the best insight, commentary and analysis of every twist and turn of this most eagerly anticipated final race of the season.
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