New all-female series aims to get women to Formula One

W Series organisers hope to provide springboard but some see it as a ‘regressive step’

David Coulthard said women tended to reach a “glass ceiling” at Formula Three level and needed help. Photograph: Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty Images
David Coulthard said women tended to reach a “glass ceiling” at Formula Three level and needed help. Photograph: Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty Images

A new all-female racing series was launched on Wednesday, supported by former Grand Prix driver David Coulthard and top designer Adrian Newey, with the aim of helping female racers get to Formula One.

No woman has competed in Formula One since 1976, but organisers of the W Series hope to provide a platform for them to develop skills before taking on the men further up the motorsport ladder.

With a planned start in May 2019, the series said it would offer a prize fund of $1.5 million and free entry for 18-20 competitors, who will be selected purely on merit after tests and appraisals.

The overall winner will collect $500,000, with prize money down to 18th place.

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Organisers said they aimed to stage six 30-minute races at top circuits in Europe, most of which were past Formula One venues, with identical 1.8-litre Formula Three cars.

Future seasons would see the series expand to the US, Asia and Australia.

“At the heart of W Series’ DNA is the firm belief that women can compete equally with men in motorsport. However, an all-female series is essential in order to force greater female participation,” organisers said in a statement.

Coulthard, winner of 13 Grands Prix between 1995 and 2003, is on the advisory board along with Red Bull’s technical head Newey, and both will be involved in the driver-training programme.

Controversial

Former McLaren team manager Dave Ryan has been appointed racing director, while the chief executive is lawyer and corporate finance banker Catherine Bond Muir.

The idea of an all-female series is not new but has been controversial in the past, with top female racers adamant they want to compete against the men rather than be separated.

Spaniard Carmen Jorda caused a storm last year when she advocated such a series on the grounds that women had a physical disadvantage and could not compete equally with men at top level.

Claire Williams, deputy principal of the Williams Formula One team, said this year that an all-female championship would be a "regressive step".

British racer Pippa Mann, a winner in the US Indy Lights series and who has competed six times in the Indianapolis 500, declared the latest move "a sad day for motorsport".

“Those with funding to help female racers are choosing to segregate them as opposed to supporting them,” she said on Twitter on Wednesday.

“I am deeply disappointed to see such a historic step backwards take place in my lifetime.”

Glass ceiling

Coulthard said, however, that women tended to reach a “glass ceiling” at Formula Three level, often due to a lack of funding, and needed help.

Newey hoped W Series would create “a platform on which women drivers can improve by racing one another and from which they may then springboard their careers forward and ... ultimately race successfully in F1”.

Some Formula One drivers, past and present, expressed support.

Damon Hill, the 1996 champion, saw "a great opportunity for female aspiring racing drivers" while Haas driver Kevin Magnussen hoped it would help progress their careers.

No woman has scored a point in Formula One, although Italian Lella Lombardi scored a half point in the shortened 1975 Spanish Grand Prix, and only two have started races since the championship began in 1950.

Lombardi started 12 races between 1974 and 1976. The last to attempt to enter a race was Italian Giovanna Amati, who failed to qualify in 1992. (Editing by Greg Stutchbury/Sudipto Ganguly)