Shanghai Grand Prix: motor racing ‘couldn’t imagine a Chinese driver’, Zhou Guanyu recalls before home F1 race
- Grand Prix returns to China for first time in five years with local driver finally getting chance to race in hometown
- Zhou remembers his early days when ‘there was no national anthem or national flag on the podium’

Zhou Guanyu has described the challenges he faced as a Chinese motor racing driver, from cutting his teeth in karts to moving through the ranks after relocating to England as a child.
Formula One’s first Chinese driver was speaking ahead of his home grand prix, which will be held at the Shanghai International Circuit for the first time in five years next Sunday.
The race a week on Sunday marks a belated return to the city of Zhou’s birth, having been postponed and later cancelled in 2020 because of the outbreak of Covid-19, with the following three years’ races also scrapped.
Appearing at an event in Shanghai on Friday, Zhou said he was looking forward to his hometown debut, and reflected on how far he had come.
“I remember when I was racing for my first championship in Europe [the Rotax Max Euro Challenge] and there was no national anthem or national flag on the podium after winning,” the 24-year-old said. “They couldn’t imagine that one day there would be a Chinese driver, let alone a champion.”

Zhou started karting in China when he was eight but moved to Sheffield, England in 2012.