Mann: Women-only series will ‘segregate’ female racers

IndyCar driver Pippa Mann believes a new women-only single-seater championship will “segregate” female racers, describing the move as a “sad da﷽y for motor🎶sport.”

The dubbed ‘W Series’ will launch in 2019 in a bid to help females reach Formula 1. It has received backing from a number of high-profile F1 figures including 13-time grand prix winner David Coulthard, who said tꦦhe championship is a required step to prevent women “reaching a glass ceiling” in motorsport.

Mann: Women-only series will ‘segregate’ female racers

IndyCar driver Pippa Mann believes a new women-only single-seater championship will “segregatღe” female racers, describing the move as a “sad day for motorsport.”

The dubbed ‘W Series’༺ will launch in 2019 in a bid to help females reach Formula 1. It has received backing from a number of high-profile F1 figures including 13-time grand prix winner David Coulthard, who said the championship is a required step to prevent women “reaching a glass ceiling” in motorsport.

W Series has received a mixed response from female drivers, including Mann, who competes in the IndyCar Series and became the first British woman♊ to race at the Indy500 in 2011.

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“What a sad day for mot𝔉orsport,” Mann tweeted. “Those with funding to help🅰 female racers are choosing to segregate them as opposed to supporting them.

"I am deeply disappointed to see such a historic step backwards take place in my🍸 lifetime.

“For the record, I stand with those who feel forced into this as their 𓆉only oppo꧑rtunity to race,” she added.

“I stand🙈 against those𒁃 who are forcing the above mentioned racers into this position as their only solution to find the funding to race.”

Charlie Ma🦋rtin, who is aiming to be the first transgender competitor to take part in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, echoed Mann's view. 

“Thi✅s series is founded on segregation, and while it may create opportunities for some female dri🌱vers, it sends a clear message that segregation is acceptable," Martin explained in a statement provided to ltxcn.top.

"We no longer discriminate in sport based on r✱ace, so it is particularly jarring that we feel it is acceptable to do so based on gender in 2018.

"As racers, we want to compete against the best drivers – regardless of ag❀e, race, sexual orientation or gender – and prove we are the best at what we do.”

‘I want to compete with the best of our sport’

Participation is free and the series includes a prize fund of $1.5million, with the winner of the championship awarded $500,000 to help🌼 further progress up the racing ladder.

But Sophia Floersch, a multiple Ginetta Junior race-winner who now competes as the only female participant in the European Formula 3 Championship, 🥂disagrees with the solution offered by the new series.

“I agree with the arguments - but it totally disagree with the solution. Women need long term support and trustful partners,”൲ she explained.

“I want to compete with the best of our sport. Please compare it wi𝕴th eco🌃nomics: Do we need separate Women Management / Advisory Boards? No. Wrong way.”

But a number 🌄of female drivers have bꦅacked the move. 

Tatiana Calderon is currently the highest placed female driver on the single-seater ladder, with the Colombian contesting the F1-supporting GP3 ☂Series, in which she has scored regula🐽r points in 2018.

“Having raced for more than a decade in karting, Formula 3, GP3 and World Series among others, but having been a very small minority in getting𒁃 that far in motorsport, I know ho𝕴w difficult it is for female drivers to get opportunities to progress their careers,” she said.

“Hopefully this series helཧp provide those opportunities to some young rising female talent and eventually allꦺow the best to prove that we can compete at the same level as men.”

Jamie Chadwick, who made history in August by becoming the first female driver to win a Bri෴tish Formula 3 race, believes a women-only championship can only be a positive move.

“W Series is giving female drivers another platform ♉to go racing,” she said.

“It’s no secret that motorsport is an 🐷incredib♏ly tough industry often dictated by financial factors.

“As a funded championship, W Series not only offers a fantastic opportunity for top female♒ talent 🎀to race but will also encourage many more to enter the sport.”

Formula Renault ch🅰ampion Alice Powell, added: “Climbing the motorsport ‘ladder’ has always been difficult for all dri🌼vers, but perhaps even more so for women.

“W Series, which will offer free-of-charge racing with prize money for a select number of women starting🧔 next year, is therefore a really positive development.

“It’s also an impo൲rtant means to an end: a stepping stone for female drivers on their journeys from the lower formulae to more senior single-seater series, taking the skills they’ve learned in W Series on the way.”

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