Apr.24 - Nikita Mazepin is taking his fight for the right to return to Formula 1 to Canada.

Recently, having been ousted by Haas and then restricted by the FIA at the outset of the Ukraine conflict, the Russian driver took his case to Europe's court of justice - and won.

The court said Mazepin, whose father and backer Dmitry was directly named in western sanctions, can now return to Europe to "negotiate his employment as a professional Formula 1 driver".

CTV News now reports that the 24-year-old driver is taking the Canadian government to Federal Court so that foreign affairs minister Melanie Joly removes him from the sanctions list.

Nikita himself is named on the Canadian sanctions list and therefore he cannot race in the country.

On the court's notice of application filing, Mazepin is described as a "young sportsman and professional motorsport driver who is in no way involved in the aggression suffered by Ukraine".

However, it is claimed the sanctions "catastrophically reduce" his ability to be considered by F1 teams as the sport races each year in Montreal.

The filings say that if Mazepin is blocked from racing in Formula 1 in 2024, it will then be "extremely difficult, if not impossible, for him to be recruited again as an F1 driver or as a driver in other motorsport championships".


✅ Check out more posts with related topics:

3 F1 Fan comments on “Nikita Mazepin's fight to return to F1 takes him to Canada

  1. smokey

    " it will then be "extremely difficult, if not impossible, for him to be recruited again as an F1 driver or as a driver in other motorsport championships"." Does anybody really care?
    A most underwhelming driver who doesn't deserve a place in F1. The only reason he got a start in the first place was because of his father's injection of money into the Haas team.
    There is too much good talent making the grade from the lower formulae for this non-performer to get another start.

    Reply
  2. shroppyfly

    I was a magistrate for many years and the highlight of the day was listening to defence solicitors explaining why there client did this , or that, honestly some were masterpieces, and said with such conviction (excuse the pun) and straight face, always made a boring day in court more bearable

    Reply
  3. Jere Jyrälä

    Does he honestly think a country-specific government could do anything about him racing in an international racing series, or would care?
    He should take the matter to the relevant party, i.e., FIA, but anyway, he won't get re-recruited as a full-time F1 driver because no team wants him, so pointless fight.

    Reply

  4. ✅ Checkout the latest 50 F1 Fans comments.

What's your F1 fan opinion?

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please follow our commenting guidelines.