Published
3 hours agoon
By
zaghrah
For decades, South African motorsport fans have waited for the roar of Formula 1 engines to return to local soil. Now, according to Sports, Arts and Culture Minister Gayton McKenzie, that long-running dream may be edging closer to reality.
Speaking this week, McKenzie suggested that instability in parts of the Middle East could create an unexpected opening on the global racing calendar, potentially giving South Africa a chance to host a Grand Prix again.
His message was simple and confident: Formula 1 will happen in South Africa.
The global schedule for Formula One currently includes several races in the Middle East, including the Bahrain Grand Prix, Abu Dhabi Grand Prix and Qatar Grand Prix.
But regional tensions have raised questions about the long-term certainty of some of those events. According to McKenzie, discussions with Formula 1 officials have already touched on how the global calendar could shift if disruptions occur.
“Formula 1 is going to happen,” he said. “There have also been questions about what will happen with Bahrain, Abu Dhabi and Qatar because there is war. We will only know when we meet with F1 again maybe the calendar has opened up.”
For South Africa, which has been lobbying for a race for years, any change to the tightly packed F1 calendar could be a rare opportunity.
One of the biggest challenges for hosting a Grand Prix is funding. But McKenzie says that hurdle is already being addressed.
Major South African brands including Betway, Discovery Limited, MTN Group and SuperSport have stepped forward to support the country’s bid.
In another sign that the project is gaining credibility, the championship-winning team Red Bull Racing has reportedly requested a meeting to assist the initiative.
For motorsport supporters, that development has sparked excitement online. On South African social media, fans have been sharing nostalgic clips of past races and calling for the return of the famous South African Grand Prix.
South Africa is not new to Formula 1 history.
The country last hosted a Grand Prix in 1993 at the legendary Kyalami Grand Prix Circuit near Johannesburg. Before that, Kyalami was a regular fixture on the championship calendar and a beloved venue among drivers.
Despite strong fan support and multiple attempts to revive the race in the decades since, financial and political hurdles repeatedly stalled the effort.
But momentum has been building again in recent years, as F1 expands into new markets and looks to strengthen its presence in Africa the only inhabited continent without a race on the current calendar.
McKenzie pointed to another major sporting event as proof that South Africa can deliver global spectacles.
The upcoming event from LIV Golf is already attracting massive interest. According to the minister, around 83,000 tickets have been sold ahead of the tournament.
Organisers have even released an additional 5,000 tickets, aiming to surpass the current attendance record of 90,000 set in Australia.
Beyond the sport itself, the event promises a broader festival atmosphere with culture, music and fashion elements included. Officials believe the tournament could generate around R1 billion through tourism, hospitality, and local spending.
For government officials pushing the Formula 1 bid, that success strengthens the argument that South Africa can host world-class sporting events.
During the same briefing, McKenzie also addressed calls from some quarters to boycott the 2026 FIFA World Cup in the United States.
The minister rejected the idea outright, saying football should remain separate from political disputes.
The tournament will be particularly significant for South African fans, as Bafana Bafana have qualified for the competition for the first time since 2002.
McKenzie encouraged supporters to travel and back the national team when the tournament runs from June to July 2026.
For South Africa, hosting Formula 1 would go far beyond motorsport.
A race would draw tens of thousands of international visitors, showcase the country to a global television audience of hundreds of millions, and potentially revive a motorsport culture that once thrived in the country.
If calendar space does open up, South Africa could find itself in the right place at the right time.
And after more than three decades away from the grid, the sound of Formula 1 engines at Kyalami might no longer be just a nostalgic memory, but a comeback waiting to happen.
{Source: The Citizen}
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