Race winner Lewis Hamilton (left) and third-placed Daniel Ricciardo celebrate on the podium during the F1 Eifel Grand Prix on October 11 in Nuerburg, Germany. Photo: VCG
Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes seek to continue their record-making progress as Formula One escapes in search of some autumnal sunshine at this weekend's Portuguese Grand Prix at the Algarve International Circuit.
Two weeks after shivering at the Nurburgring where the six-time champion drew level with Michael Schumacher on 91 wins, the travelling circus hopes also to avoid any contact with the growing second wave of COVID-19 across Europe.
The local organizers of the race, which marks Portugal's return to the calendar for the first time in 24 years since Jacques Villeneuve's stirring victory at Estoril in 1996 and Portimao's debut as an F1 race circuit, said there will be 27,500 spectators at the track each day under strictly controlled conditions.
Little more than a week after Racing Point's Canadian driver Lance Stroll was revealed to have tested positive for coronavirus after falling ill and missing the Eifel Grand Prix, there is understandable concern at so many attending.
The lure of seeing Hamilton win a record 92nd race and Mercedes take an unprecedented seventh constructors' championship is a major attraction, though the team's triumph and celebrations are likely to be delayed by at least a week to the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix at Imola.
Hamilton has a simple goal to claim his record win, but Mercedes need to outscore Red Bull by 40 points, a feat that would require a near perfect showing and a flop from Max Verstappen.
If Hamilton triumphs, he would be the second driver to claim the record for winning most Grand Prix races in Portugal - four-time champion Frenchman Alain Prost having surpassed three-time champion Jackie Stewart's total of 27 wins at Estoril in 1987.
A Mercedes team success would also need Valtteri Bottas to be at his best and enjoy better fortune than he had in Germany where a power unit failure dimmed his title hopes.
Team boss Toto Wolff, who this week rejected suggestions that he is planning his own F1 outfit, said Mercedes had identified a "failed electrical component" as the problem.
Few of the current field of F1 drivers have raced at the undulating Portimao track apart from some in junior formula events, but Hamilton has normally impressed with his ability to learn and shine on new circuits.
Stroll's likely return has been supported by his Racing Point boss Otmar Szafnauer as he, along with all team members, has tested negative ahead of this weekend's contest.
Stroll became the second Racing Point driver to have contracted COVID-19 this year, Sergio Perez having missed both Silverstone races in July.
In a statement about the attendance, the Portuguese government said the circuit had a capacity for 90,000 and fans would be seated with "safe spacing" in sectors of about 800.