Formula One returns to Dutch shores
Formula One returns to the Netherlands after 36 years this weekend, thrilling Max Verstappen fans who hope to see their local hero claim victory, but fierce opposition outside the race community still clouds the prospects for the years to come.
Max-mania will reach fever pitch in the small beach resort west of Amsterdam as a sell-out crowd of around 70,000 orange-clad fans per day will roar Verstappen on as he aims to become the first Dutchman to win a home Grand Prix.
“We could have sold over a million tickets,” circuit director Robert van Overdijk said on the eve of the event.
Sensational rise
The sensational rise of Max Verstappen, the youngest Grand Prix winner and the first Dutch contender for the championship, has already painted the stands at races in Belgium and Austria orange, and his welcome promises to be even warmer on home soil.
However, many Dutch are not so thrilled by the return of racing’s top class, which they say endangers Zandvoort’s precious dune reserve and runs counter to efforts to fight climate change.
Over the past two years, environmentalists and animal rights groups have launched a range of lawsuits in a bid to block the race.
All cases so far were lost, but this has not deterred the activists, who are still seeking ways to block future races.
A last effort was dismissed by a court this week, but only on procedural grounds as the activists’ claim that organisers have underestimated the air pollution caused by the race is already being dealt with by a higher court.
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