Autolinking test: What's new in Formula 1 2023: drivers, team bosses and rules
All the refreshed driver pairings, team principal changes, and subtle regulation tweaks that could shake up the 2023 F1 season

This week in motor sport, Gunnar Nilsson – a talented Swede who lost his battle with cancer aged just 30 – was born 67 years ago. Friend Chris Witty remembered his ‘free spirit’ in the November issue of 2008.
Born on the same day nine years later was Stefan Bellof, a spectacular, fearless driver, as Mark Hughes explained with the help of Gerhard Berger, Martin Brundle and many others in 2000.
‘Happy Jacques’, one of Formula 1’s more relaxed characters, turns 72 on November 21. From forgetting his race suit, fishing rod in hand, to ‘being a prominent player in one of F1’s great eras’, David Malsher covered it all 13 years ago.
The greatest racing driver the world has known, according to Bill Boddy in 1955, Tazio Nuvolari was also born this week 123 years ago. Sixteen years earlier, the only man to set a land speed world record in England was born, Victor Hémery. Andrew Frankel drove a Blitzen Benz in 2013, similar to the car in which Hémery set the record.

Sebastian Vettel set a new record of his own in 2014, winning his eighth race in a row that led one lady to ask Nigel Roebuck whether anyone else was ever going to win a Grand Prix. Vettel’s victory was the perfect day-late birthday present for Christian Horner, who lunched with Simon Taylor in 2012.
The Circuit of the Americas made its Formula 1 debut three years ago to bring grand prix racing back to the USA for the first time since 2007. Also in America, Ford’s latest GT incarnation hit Daytona in preparation for next year’s sports car return. It coincides with the 50th anniversary of the GT40, which was reviewed by DSJ in the September issue of 1965.
And finally, Kimi Räikkönen announced his Formula 1 sabbatical and headed to the World Rally Championship in a Citroën; it was certainly a memorable debut.
All the refreshed driver pairings, team principal changes, and subtle regulation tweaks that could shake up the 2023 F1 season
Mercedes is rumoured to have an engine innovation promising a significant advantage over other Formula 1 power units. It could mean rivals are allowed extra benefits to catch up, explains Mark Hughes
The death last week of Hans Herrmann leaves just four living drivers who raced in 1950s world championship grands prix. The first decade of Formula 1 will soon slip beyond living memory
As Formula 1 prepares for its most complex regulation reset in decades, the 2026 launch season may be shaped less by ambition than by a collective determination not to get it wrong