At the start of the year, Matt Prior suggested you might want to give Formula E a chance. Good advice. The fifth season of the all-electric single-seater series has offered, well, some electrifying action in each of its five rounds so far. Is it perfect? No. But the series has come of age.
Now, for anyone who loved 1970s Formula 5000, bombastic ’80s Formula 1 or ’90s-era screaming V10s, Formula E takes some warming to. For starters, the cars’ whine is more grating than an overtired three-year-old at bedtime. But comparisons are pointless. Best just open your mind, put aside what you know and take it for what it is: something different, created in the true spirit of the pioneer (which actually couldn’t be more traditional).
I admit I struggled with Formula E at first, particularly the mid-race car swaps. But the march of technology has banished such compromise: the new second-generation Spark single-seater features the battery range to complete a 45-minute race without interruption. Power is up too, from the first-gen’s 190Kw to 250, but that still only means a top speed of around 170mph. Eat your heart out, er, Formula 3.

But actually it doesn’t matter. Formula E’s street circuits are so tight and narrow, the lack of speed is irrelevant (and conveniently shrouded). Those tracks are both the series’ calling card and weakness. Pop-up one-day race meetings close to city centres in exotic global locations just wouldn’t be possible in 2019 with noisy combustion engines. But it means tracks are often created on roads barely suited to racing.
Inevitably, overtaking is tough and contact inevitable. Even reigning champion and F1 exile Jean-Éric Vergne has blasted that Formula E is “not motorsport” because of the high amount of punting. Last time out in Hong Kong, it culminated in Brit Sam Bird being stripped of victory after puncturing long-time leader André Lotterer’s right-rear Michelin – but only after BBC Two’s live coverage had gone off air. Not great.
But there’s a reason why car makers such as Audi, BMW, Nissan and Jaguar, plus some of the world’s best racing drivers, have flocked to Formula E. It makes sense for the here and now.

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Too much biff and bang
Far too much biff an bang for it to be taken seriously and the hour long garbage build up with oft repeated past sequences is so tedious as to make turning off before the race even begins, an inviting option.
Been watching from the start
The main reason for me is simply that the racing is better than in F1 and it is easy to view for free. The atmosphere in the paddock also seems much happier than F1 and people actually seem to be having fun.
Makes me wonder
Formula E makes me excited for the future of motor racing, despite the lack of noise. Fan boost needs to be removed IMO, but on the whole I find it entertaining.
And I hope Williams will join - Still my favourite team. :-)
Future of Motorsport
If the stats are to be believed, the younger generation are not interested in cars at all. So Motorsport could cease to be viable at all just to cater for the few remaining Petrolheads/Voltheads.