Formula One The
2012 season started on 16 March (live practice) from the
Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit,
Australia. Sky Sports broadcast every practice session, qualifying session and race live. The season passed 19 countries on the way. Formula One visited places as diverse as China,
Bahrain, Belgium, Italy, and also United States for a Grand Prix taking place in
Austin, Texas at the brand new
Circuit of the Americas. The season came to an end at the
2012 Brazilian Grand Prix on 25 November 2012. On 7 March 2012, Sky Sports F1 revealed its theme tune for the 2012 season, "
Just Drive" by
Alistair Griffin, which has been re-recorded with the
Prague Philharmonic Orchestra and
Rodolfus Choir. The 43-second opening credits feature archive footage of former world champions and memorable F1 moments from 32 Grands Prix between 1950 and 2011. The theme tune was also used on
The F1 Show and for
Classic F1. 2014 saw a rearrangement of the theme to go with updated titles. Sky's original arrangement is still of Griffins' song utilised for its coverage of Classic F1 races. From the 2019 season onwards "Just Drive" was replaced by
Outlands by
Daft Punk, which had previously been featured in the film
Tron: Legacy (2010). This theme would be retained by Sky F1 as its main theme during race coverage until the end of the 2025 season. For the 2026 season, after seven seasons of use by Sky F1,
Outlands was replaced as the title track for Sky F1's coverage by
Just Keep Watching by
Tate McRae , a song featured on the pop music soundtrack for the film
F1 (2025). During the 2012 season,
Santander UK was the official sponsor of Formula One coverage on Sky Sports F1 in a deal that was estimated to be worth £3 million. The coverage was sponsored by Shell in 2014. From the
2015 Malaysian Grand Prix, FairFX sponsored coverage on Sky Sports F1. The season opening
2012 Australian Grand Prix, the first to be broadcast exclusively by Sky, had an average audience of 526,000 viewers between 4:30 am and 9 am on 18 March, with a five-minute peak of 1.02 million as
Jenson Button won the race. The BBC's live coverage of the
same race last season averaged 2.13 million viewers, a 51.1% share of the audience. Sky Sports won "Best TV Broadcast Award for Outstanding Coverage" at both the 2012 FIA Prize Giving Ceremony (following Sky Sports F1's debut season presenting Formula One) and again in 2013. From 2019, Sky Sports held exclusive rights to all races excluding the British Grand Prix. In September 2018, it was announced that Channel 4 had agreed to a sub-licensing agreement with Sky, under which it would broadcast free-to-air highlights of all races, and live coverage of the British Grand Prix. As a condition of the deal, Channel 4 agreed to give Sky the right to carry full series of its drama programming (including its curated foreign dramas collection
Walter Presents) on its on-demand platforms. In the
2021 season, Sky also sublicensed the season-ending
Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, amid
Lewis Hamilton and
Max Verstappen being tied on points for the drivers' championship going into the final race.
Presentation and commentary team The presentation team currently (as of March 2026) consists of: During testing, commentary is normally shared between Sky Sports and Channel 4/F1TV, with main commentator
Alex Jacques and co-commentators
Alex Brundle and
Jolyon Palmer, with strategy analyst
Ruth Buscombe, pit lane reporters Ariana Bravo and Lawrence Barretto.
Support races In February 2012, it was announced that Sky Sports F1 would also broadcast the
GP2 and
GP3 series live. These series were eventually rebranded as the
FIA Formula 2 Championship and the
FIA Formula 3 Championship respectively •
Formula 2 – Formula 1's feeder series •
Formula 3 – Feeder series for Formula 2 •
F1 Academy •
Porsche Supercup Sky Sports takes the FOM-provided world feed commentary for Formula 2 and Formula 3. Commentators include
Alex Jacques,
Alex Brundle and
Harry Benjamin. Previously, Jacques has been joined by 2012 GP2 champion
Davide Valsecchi for F2 events.
Johnny Herbert,
Rosanna Tennant and
Alice Powell have also previously reported or commentated on Formula 2 and Formula 3.
Other racing series broadcast on Sky Sports F1 IndyCar Sky Sports F1 aired the opening round of the
2012 IndyCar Series. The
IndyCar Series moved to
BT Sport in 2013, but returned to Sky Sports F1 in
2019 under a new contract by Sky's new owner
Comcast, which held the U.S. domestic rights to the series via
NBC Sports until 2024. Sky Sports F1 has shown live every race in the IndyCar calendar since 2019, with a combination of original American broadcast commentary and additional UK-based commentary. IndyCar coverage continued on Sky Sports F1 for 2025, including the IndyNXT support series.
Ferrari Challenge Europe Ferrari's various series under the
Challenge brand have been aired by the UK Sky Sports F1 channel since 2020.
GT World Challenge Some rounds of the Fanatec GT World Challenge Europe series are aired on the channel, as part of a pan-European expanded agreement with Comcast/Sky Sports, in place since 2022.
Programming The F1 Show The first programme to air on Sky Sports F1 was its weekly magazine show;
The F1 Show. Initially presented by
Georgie Thompson and
Ted Kravitz (apart from the launch show, which was presented by
Simon Lazenby), then by Kravitz and
Natalie Pinkham, as of the 2014 season, it is presented by Natalie Pinkham or Rachel Brookes with contributions from David Croft, Paul di Resta/Anthony Davidson, Johnny Herbert/Damon Hill. The programme has not featured in the 2020 schedule.
The F1 Show returned for the 2021 season, replacing
F1 Report, broadcast live on Sky Sports F1 and YouTube. It is presented by members of the coverage team at the track, usually fronted by
Natalie Pinkham or Rachel Brookes. It features interviews with drivers, analysis and challenges. In 2021, it was broadcast on Thursday evening but moved to Friday evening after Formula 1 rescheduled its weekend layout.
Paddock Uncut A Thursday evening pre-race weekend round-up from media day broadcast on Sky Sports F1 and YouTube. It is presented by members of the coverage team at the track, usually fronted by
Ted Kravitz or Rachel Brookes.
F1 Report (discontinued) The F1 Report was presented by Natalie Pinkham or Rachel Brookes and regular analyst Marc Priestley. In the week before or after a race, the programme looked in further depth at some of the stories and incidents that featured or may feature in race weekends. The show was replaced by Welcome to the Weekend, a Thursday race weekend show with a similar format, no longer featuring Marc Priestley.
Welcome to the Weekend (discontinued) Welcome to the Weekend, from the start of the 2020 season, was broadcast directly before the First Practice session on Fridays. The programme did not feature in the 2021 schedule, replaced by a relaunched
The F1 Show and
Paddock Uncut, as well as an extended build-up to first practice.
Classic F1 Coverage of an F1 race from the archive, often corresponding to the current race that weekend. • ''Ted's Notebook'' A topical show presented by
Ted Kravitz. It was retitled
The Notebook for 2020 and followed the race programme on Sunday only. Since 2021, it has followed most qualifying, sprint and race programmes, and is sometimes referred to as ''Ted's Notebook'' on the
EPG and when uploaded onto
YouTube in the evening after being aired.
Features Sky Sports have a system dubbed the 'Sky Pad', used primarily by Anthony Davidson, Karun Chandhok and Ted Kravitz during race weekend coverage. It is used to show highlights, multiple angles or comparison footage, allowing a presenter to control the playback speed and add overlaid graphics to explain key moments in greater detail.
Sky Sports Darts pop-up In 2016 and 2025, Sky Sports F1 was temporarily rebranded as the pop-up channel "Sky Sports Darts", for Sky's coverage of the
PDC World Darts Championship.
The F1 Show Podcast ==Sky Sports News==