Saturday, July 4, 2026
Privacy-First Edition
Back to NNN
World

Malaysia’s young drivers race for success abroad in a post-F1 world

Younger drivers like Hayden Haikal and Alister Yoong are forging a path for themselves overseas, but not without a dose of realism

4-MIN READ4-MIN ListenUshar DanielePublished: 10:00am, 4 Jul 2026For 19 seasons, the Malaysian Grand Prix made Sepang International Circuit one of Asia’s premier racing venues.Sepang opened in 1999 as an emblem of a Southeast Asian nation that was on the up at the time. But the government ended its support for the Formula One (F1) race in 2017, closing a high-speed era that brought the eyes of tens of millions of people across the world to Malaysia.

For home-grown drivers, however, their motorsport dreams have not reached a chequered flag since F1 left Malaysia, which happened as the country’s economy slowed and the government cut the multimillion-dollar annual spend.

Instead, the country’s young stars are turning to the cheaper GT format, endurance racing and overseas championships as the cost of reaching F1 without the domestic infrastructure steeples.

For drivers like Hayden Haikal and Alister Yoong – son of Malaysia’s only F1 driver Alex Yoong – Sepang’s F1 heyday is already a distant memory.

Hayden was a child when F1 last roared in Sepang, but the 21-year-old Grand Touring (GT) racer is now making his name abroad.

Read original at South China Morning Post

The Perspectives

0 verified voices · Three viewpoints · Real discourse

Left
0
Be the first to share a left perspective
Center
0
Be the first to share a center perspective
Right
0
Be the first to share a right perspective

Related Stories