Major incidents Edoardo Mortara suffered a brake failure in his
Venturi-
Mercedes car while making practice starts after the end of Saturday's free practice 3, causing him to crash heavily into the barriers at turn one. He was taken to hospital for precautionary checks. Mortara was permitted to race, despite not taking part in qualifying. However, he did not take the start as his mechanics could not repair the damage to his car in time. Later on in the day, race two ended early following an accident – not shown on the international broadcast, but on one of the track's
CCTV cameras – involving
Mitch Evans and
Alex Lynn in which the latter's car flipped over. It came shortly after
Sébastien Buemi had come to a halt and
Maximilian Günther and
Tom Blomqvist had made contact further up ahead on the same lap. Immediately after Lynn's car stopped, Evans jumped out of his car to check on the Briton. The
safety car was called out, and eventually the race was concluded with a
red flag. Lynn was taken to hospital for examination, and later the
Mahindra team announced on Twitter that he had been cleared from the hospital, and would thus be allowed to take part in the Rome ePrix. The way the crash unfolded looked similar to that of Formula One driver
Mark Webber at the
2010 European Grand Prix, with the exception that Lynn's car landed upside down rather than Webber's right side up.
Other During the award ceremony, the government of
Saudi Arabia, with a
Patriot missile, neutralized a missile over
Riyadh, near the town of
Diriyah, allegedly fired by
Yemen's
Houthi rebels. There were no injuries, but flights were diverted or cancelled, making some participants go back to their hotels, and a house was damaged. This also raised concerns about the then-upcoming
Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, with regards to safety for the staff, teams, and drivers; such a missile attack did occur during the 2022 running of the Formula One event. ==Notes==