Lando Norris, Oscar Piastri and F1
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Formula One has confirmed that the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal will remain on the race calendar for the next ten years.
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Autosport on MSNF1 confirms plans to race in Canada until 2035Montreal will continue to host the Canadian Grand Prix for another 10 years after Formula 1 confirmed an extension of the circuit's contract until 2035
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GPblog on MSNFormula 1 to stay in Montreal until 2035 following multi-million dollar Investment in Canadian GPThe Canadian Grand Prix will remain on the Formula 1 calendar until 2035. This was confirmed after a new deal between F1, promoter Octane Racing Group, and the governments of Canada and Québec. The broadcasting rights with Canadian Bell Media were also extended for a long term.
Formula 1 has confirmed a four-year extension with Montreal, ensuring the Canadian GP's presence on the sport's calendar until 2035.
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“One thing that stands out here in Montreal is the fans,” says Naomi Schiff, F1 analyst and ambassador, speaking from the American Express Elite Suite at the Canadian Grand Prix. “They bring great energy to the track—you can really tell it’s a dedicated audience.”
Sunday's Canadian GP was the first podium in 2025 that didn't feature a McLaren. Is the tide about to turn on F1's runaway leader?
Yesterday's race in Montreal will not be remembered as one of the all-time great Canadian F1 races. Well, perhaps it will by the Mercedes team, which scored its first win of the year with George Russell,
The Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal will stay on the calendar through 2035 after agreeing a four-year extension to the existing deal, Formula One said on Tuesday.
The Formula 1 racing series is in Montreal this weekend, at Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve. Start time for the Canadian Grand Prix is 2 p.m. EDT Sunday, and you can watch on ABC and ESPN Deportes or livestream on fubo TV (FREE trial) or DIRECTV (FREE trial and discount).