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Rally legend Carlos Sainz decides not to run for the presidency of motorsport's governing body the FIA in December's election.
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PlanetF1 on MSNFIA issue Carlos Sainz verdict after British Grand Prix incidentWilliams driver Carlos Sainz has been warned by the FIA after an incident during FP2 at the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Sainz suffered a spin at the exit of Luffield corner in the early stages ...
Carlos Sainz Sr had been considering whether to become a candidate against incumbent Mohammed Ben Sulayem in the FIA presidential election later this year; Sainz, the father of Williams F1 driver ...
Carlos Sainz Sr's withdrawal from the FIA presidential race earlier this week didn't come as much of a surprise, with Carlos Sainz Jr disappointed to see him withdraw from the challenge. "As his ...
Williams driver Carlos Sainz denied the suggestion that there would be any conflict of interest if his father, Carlos Sainz Sr., ran for the presidency of the FIA. Mohammed Ben Sulayem is up for ...
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Sainz foresees no conflict of interest in Sainz Sr's mooted FIA ...Carlos Sainz has explained some of the rationale behind his father and two-time world rally champion Carlos Sainz Sr considering running for FIA president - while also believing there would be no ...
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Autosport on MSNWhat are Tim Mayer’s chances of winning the FIA presidency?Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of Tim Mayer’s manifesto as an FIA presidential candidate is how closely it echoes that ...
The FIA has dismissed Ferrari’s bid to overturn Carlos Sainz’s time penalty from the Australian Grand Prix for a collision with Fernando Alonso.
As exclusively reported by Motorsport.com, Carlos Sainz Sr is seriously considering whether to launch a bid to challenge incumbent FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem's campaign for a second term ...
Carlos Sainz Sr is considering running against Mohammed Ben Sulayem to be the next FIA president. Sources close to the former World Rally champion and Dakar winner said that several key figures ...
Williams driver Carlos Sainz says the FIA's clampdown on swearing is "too much" and thinks it would be bad for Formula 1 if drivers were no longer allowed to show emotion inside the car. Last ...
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