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Edmundson stars in Minis as the BTCC supports entertain at Brands Hatch

National
Edmundson stars in Minis as the BTCC supports entertain at Brands Hatch

How a rules rumbling and full-course caution call added edge to the IndyCar title fight

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IndyCar
Indianapolis Road Course
How a rules rumbling and full-course caution call added edge to the IndyCar title fight

Red Bull aims to hit F1 weight limit by Austrian GP

Formula 1
Miami GP
Red Bull aims to hit F1 weight limit by Austrian GP

Five things we learned at the MotoGP French Grand Prix

Feature
MotoGP
French GP
Five things we learned at the MotoGP French Grand Prix

Ogier: Portugal WRC loss “hard to accept” after late puncture

WRC
Rally Portugal
Ogier: Portugal WRC loss “hard to accept” after late puncture

IndyCar Indianapolis GP: Lundgaard stuns Malukas to snatch win

IndyCar
Indianapolis Road Course
IndyCar Indianapolis GP: Lundgaard stuns Malukas to snatch win

BTCC Brands Hatch: Ingram takes first win of 2026 in race three

BTCC
Brands Hatch (Indy Circuit)
BTCC Brands Hatch: Ingram takes first win of 2026 in race three

"It's only going to get better" - How Audi is responding to rocky start to F1 2026

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Formula 1
Miami GP
"It's only going to get better" - How Audi is responding to rocky start to F1 2026

From the archive: When Niki Lauda led an F1 driver strike in 1982

Kevin Turner and Maurice Hamilton revisit the F1 driver strike of the 1982 South African GP

Autosport Editor-in-Chief Kevin Turner sits down with renowned motorsport writer Maurice Hamilton to revisit one of Formula 1’s most extraordinary flashpoints - the drivers’ strike at the 1982 South African Grand Prix.

As tensions simmered between the drivers and the FIA, the introduction of controversial superlicence terms by president Jean-Marie Balestre prompted a united response from the grid.

Led by Niki Lauda, the drivers took a stand that would see them barricade themselves in protest, exposing deep fractures in F1's governance and a breakdown in communication that defined the standoff.

Hamilton and Turner explore how the dispute unfolded, the hastily brokered agreement that followed, and why confusion lingered over what had actually been resolved.

The episode also reflects on the wider context of a tumultuous 1982 season, one overshadowed by tragedy. The deaths of Gilles Villeneuve and Riccardo Paletti, along with the career-ending injuries sustained by Didier Pironi, underscored the dangers of the era and left an indelible mark on F1 history.

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