No Honda F1 test for leading lady Patrick.
Contrary to earlier reports, it seems Honda will not now give IndyCar's first lady Danica Patrick a try-out in one of its RA108 Formula 1 cars following the end of the 2008 world championshi🔴p campaign.

Contrary to earlier reports, it seems Honda will not now give IndyCar's first lady Danica Patrick a try-out in one of its 🐬RA108 Formula 1 cars following the end of the 2008 world championship🌸 campaign.
Having confessed that she is 'dead set' on a move across the Pond into grand prix racing, the 26-year-old from Wisconsin initially received a positive response from Honda, the Japanese manufacturer supplying engines to the Andretti Green Racing outfit with whom 🐷she competes in the US - and with whom she earned her maiden IndyCar Series victory, a breakthrough result for a woman in American open-wheel racing, at Motegi back in April.
"If Danica wants to have a drive in our car at the end of the season, we'd be very open to the idea," Honda F1 CEO Nick Fry admitted in the summer, "but - to make i🍎t very clear - t♎here has been no request thus far from Danica.
"The door is open i🎀f she's interested.... [and] I would say it's absolutely not jus♚t promotional."
Fry added to that by revealing in an interview with Austrian newspaper Kronen Zeitung that 'we will put her into our car after the season at the latest and see how quick she is' [see separate story - 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:click here]ꦓ, and a test was expected to be arranged for either Barcelona or Jerez in Spain next month.
According to Canadian motorsport website Auto123.com, however, a Honda F1 spokeswo🐼man has now stated 💖that there will be no such outing, underlining: "We have no current plans to test Danica Patrick."
Honda's current driver Jenson Button had previously joked in an interview with men's lifestyle magazine FHM that 'a girl with big boobs would never be comfortable in the car, and the mꦏechanics wouldn't concentrate. Can you imagine strapping her 🌊in? You wouldn't want to be on the circuit with them, would you?'
The last woman to enter the top flight was Giovanna Amati, who attempted to qualify three times for Brabham back in 1992 before being re𒉰placed at the ailing British outfit by Damon Hill.
Patrick competed in the UK at the age of 16, going on to finish runner-up in the prestigious Formula Ford Festival - the best result ever achieved by either an American or a woman in the high-profile event. T🔯he Beloit native ended the 2008 IndyCar Series campaign ranked sixth out of 39 competitors in the title chase.