'Not a chance' Australian Grand Prix will go ahead without fans amid coronavirus concerns

The Shanghai race in April has been postponed, while the Bahrain Grand Prix will go ahead without spectators

epa07444069 Finnish Formula One driver Valtteri Bottas of Mercedes AMG GP in action during the 2019 Formula One Grand Prix of Australia at the Albert Park Grand Prix Circuit in Melbourne, Australia, 17 March 2019.  EPA/DIEGO AZUBEL
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One of the leading organisers for the Formula One Australian Grand Prix has said there is "not a chance" the race will go ahead without fans over coronavirus fears.

The fourth round of the championship in Shanghai in April has been postponed, while organisers of the Bahrain Grand Prix said on Sunday that their race would go ahead without spectators on March 22.

Australian Grand Prix Corporation chief Andrew Westacott, however, said there was no prospect at all of Australia following suit with Sunday's race at Albert Park, especially after a record crowd packed into Melbourne Cricket Ground for Sunday's Women's T20 World Cup final.

"Not a chance," Westacott told SEN radio in Melbourne on Monday. "When you look at 86,000 at the MCG last night ... we’ve got to go around things sensibly and keep moving on through life while taking the necessary precautions."

More than 107,000 people around the world have been infected by the virus and 3,600 have died, according to a Reuters tally of government announcements. Several international sporting events have been affected.

Most Formula One teams are based in England but Ferrari and Honda-powered Alpha Tauri (formerly Toro Rosso) are located in Italy, which has seen a recent surge in coronavirus cases.

"The interesting thing is the Italian freight," Westacott said. "The Alpha Tauri cars and the Ferrari cars are on their way from [the airport] as we speak, so it's really good. The key personnel are on their planes ... we're expecting them in the next 12 to 24 hours."

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Sporting fixtures across the world played out to empty arenas

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Professor Brendan Murphy, the chief medical officer for the Australian government, said on Monday that he did not see the Formula One race, which attracts around 300,000 people a year to Albert Park, as a risk to public health.

"There's no evidence of community transmission in Victoria at the moment," he told reporters in Melbourne. "I'm not feeling at all concerned going to mass gatherings or walking down the streets in Victoria. So I don't think that there's a risk at the Grand Prix."