- iRacing.com Announces iRacing 2.020,175
- Dave Kaemmer Comes Clean on Dirt13,057
- iRacing.com to create virtual McLaren MP4-12C GT312,065
- Release Notes for 2012 Season 311,408
- Scanning What’s in Store for iRacing with Tony Gardner10,527
- The iRacing.com Protest System – May, 201210,322
- Building the iRacing System 1018,990
- Improving the Sound of iRacing7,616
- iRacing.com to Build Digital Honda for New Super GT Series7,374
- Two New Cars and Two New Tracks Coming to iRacing Soon6,752
- Towler, Wood Suspended from Upcoming iWCRR Events 67
- Dave Kaemmer Comes Clean on Dirt 44
- iRacing.com Announces iRacing 2.0 41
- The iRacing.com Protest System - May, 2012 33
- Bathurst Coming to iRacing! 30
- Scanning What’s in Store for iRacing with Tony Gardner 22
- iRacing Poll on Possible Championship Points Structure Changes 17
- Tips from a Human Sim-Racer 12
- iRacing.com to Build Digital Honda for New Super GT Series 12
- How to Survive a Legends Race 11
-
iRacing.com
3066
-
Motorcycles
2471
-
NASCAR
2299
-
Formula Cars
2080
-
WRC
1830
-
IndyCar
1601
-
Touring Cars
1213
-
Other Racing
500
-
Sports Cars
310
Sakhir boss: GP can help Bahrainis
April 7th, 2012
Bahrain’s circuit boss thinks it vital that the Gulf state’s Formula 1 race goes ahead, because he believes the nation as a whole will benefit.
Despite an increasingly tense political situation in the country, Bahrain International Circuit chairman Zayed R Alzayani is adamant that holding the grand prix would actually be a help to the population in its move for reform.
“It is very sad what has happened; but we cannot go back and change history, we have to learn from it and move on,” he told BBC Radio 4. “I think the grand prix is required for Bahrain because we need to get started back on track. The country has suffered, the economy has suffered.”
Alzayani has also hit back at claims that the Bahrain GP is being used as a political tool by the government to show that the state has returned to normality.
“I don’t think so, I disagree,” he said. “The race is not taking place for the authorities, the race is taking place because Bahrain has been the home of motorsport in the Middle East. We have hosted seven previous grands prix and a majority of the attendance is not the authorities or the royal family, it is fans of F1 and motorsport in general.
“We have a regional event, so quite a few spectators come from neighbouring countries, and it would not be right to deprive them of this event.”
He added: “I don’t know why we are being dragged into the politics of the event. We are a social event, we are a sports event and we would like it to stay that way.”
Motor racing’s governing body, the FIA, said on Friday that it was monitoring events closely, but had been assured by the Bahrain authorities that there were no safety concerns.
“The FIA is constantly monitoring and evaluating the situation in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” an FIA spokesman was quoted as saying by Reuters.
“We are in daily touch with the highest authorities, the main European embassies and of course the local promoters at BIC (Bahrain International Circuit) as well as the international promoter.
“The FIA is the guarantor of the safety at the race event and relies, as it does in every other country, on the local authorities to guarantee security. In this respect we have been repeatedly assured by the highest authorities in Bahrain that all security matters are under control.”









David Phillips
Chris Hall
Jameson Spies
Jason Lofing
David Ifeguni
Katier Scott
Dylan Sharman
Nathan Aljoe
Austin Hartenfels
Jordan Hightower
Scott Kelly
Kenneth O'Keefe
Chris Owens
George Wood