Industries in Depth

Virtual world races to fill sporting void left by coronavirus

Formula One F1 - Australian Grand Prix - Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit, Melbourne, Australia - March 12, 2020   Red Bull's Max Verstappen  arriving to the Circuit  REUTERS/Loren Elliott - RC2ZHF95PMIY

Participants in an online race included F1 driver Max Verstappen Image: REUTERS/Loren Elliott

Alan Baldwin
Formula One Correspondent, Reuters
  • The coronavirus outbreak has seen sporting events cancelled around the world.
  • Esports and online gaming are helping fill the void, with demand and viewing figures soaring.

The coronavirus has brought sport to a standstill but the virtual world is seizing the opportunity to fill the void, with athletes rushing to join online gamers as demand and viewing figures soar.

Darren Cox, President and CEO of Torque Esports and founder of http://www.the-race.com that organised an all-star race last Sunday after the Australian Formula One Grand Prix was cancelled, has never seen anything like it.

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“It feels like I’ve done two Le Mans weeks, back to back. We haven’t slept,” he told Reuters.

“We’re back on to the next one, we’re doing it next weekend and at the moment we’re changing our format because we’ve got too many real drivers. I think we’re up to 30 real drivers that are confirmed that want in.”

Sunday’s race, with Red Bull F1 driver Max Verstappen and Indianapolis 500 winner Simon Pagenaud among the entrants, reported a combined 12.1 million minutes watched on The Race’s YouTube channel.

Cox said there were more than a million views of that feed, with 515,000 people watching live.

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“We’ve sold out of simulators,” added the Briton, whose listed Toronto-based company has a range of esports assets including tournament platform UMG and gaming hardware.

“I just had (2004 Indianapolis 500 winner) Tony Kanaan on literally begging me saying ‘How much do you want for one of these simulators’? We’ve got people around the world wanting simulators.

“People that I’ve spoken to over years that have had no interest at all in gaming suddenly want to be involved. It’s insane. I’ve never seen anything like it.

“When you’ve got people who never showed any interest in sim racing suddenly trying to buy rigs and practice... then you know that something’s changed.”

A ‘Not the Aus GP’ organised by Veloce Esports, which counts ex-F1 racer and Formula E champion Jean-Eric Vergne as a co-founder, on Sunday featured Real Madrid soccer goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois alongside McLaren’s Lando Norris.

Veloce reported more than two million total views on Twitch.TV and YouTube and six million social media impressions. It said Norris’ Twitch stream was the most-watched in the world that day, attracting 70,000 live viewers.

A $1 billion industry, esports can command the sort of audiences and interaction that many real sports can only dream of.

esports gaming market global
North America is the world's leading esports market Image: Statista

Big money

Some 44 million viewers “consumed” content from the League of Legends World Championship last December, according to GlobalData’s Sportcal.

There is also big money to be made from sponsors, particularly at a time when live sport has dried up on television.

According to the Sportcal Intelligence Centre, Intel spend more than $10 million a year on sponsoring the Overwatch League and Nike $8m to supply kit to League of Legends Pro League teams.

“We’ve got inbound enquiries that we literally can’t handle,” said Cox. “We’ve got to take more people on. ESPN. “What are they showing (as far as live sports action is concerned)? Nothing. What are BET365 gambling on? Everybody needs something.”

Virtual racecars and tracks can be branded while races, free to watch, can feature real-time advertising.

Fans are also getting to see their real-life heroes in a different light.

“We sent out a note to the drivers ‘take a selfie of yourself on the rig’,” said Cox.

“Normally these guys are preening themselves, they’ve got their hat at the right angle and the sunglasses. And they’re sitting there in their pyjamas, some of them. These are real drivers paid hundreds of thousands of dollars.

“It’s a tipping point I couldn’t have even imagined four weeks ago.

“We always said we were blurring the boundaries between virtual and real. They’re blurred, they’re gone, they’re done. Forever.”

Formula One, which has its own esports world series, is also adapting to the new reality. The sport hopes to renew racing at the end of May but accepts it could be a longer wait.

Julian Tan, F1’s head of esports, told Reuters a plan had been formulated to accelerate the virtual side since February when the Chinese GP was postponed, and that had been reworked since Friday.

“In times like this I think there is a huge potential for us to be able to leverage our newly-developed product around esports to see how we can plug the gap we now have in the F1 calendar,” he said.

“Over the next few days or so there will be an announcement around this.”

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