NASCAR & Auto Racing

See Cadillac Formula 1’s special livery for its U.S. debut, the Miami Grand Prix

The Cadillac Formula 1 Team Miami Special Livery for the Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix.
The Cadillac Formula 1 Team Miami Special Livery for the Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix. Cadillac Formula 1 Team

For its first race in the United States, Sunday’s Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix in Miami Gardens, the Cadillac Formula 1 team created one-off special livery that adds red and blue touches to the car’s basic black and white.

Indeed, as the photos unveiled by Cadillac F1 and primary partner TWG AI Tuesday show, they are touches — red and blue around white on the back of the rear wing, red spokes on wheels and sponsor Tommy Hilfiger’s logo in its normal colors.

The red in the wheels in the Cadillac Formula 1 Team Miami Special Livery
The red in the wheels in the Cadillac Formula 1 Team Miami Special Livery Cadillac Formula 1 Team Cadillac Formula 1 Team
The rear wing of the Cadillac Formula 1 Team Miami Special Livery
The rear wing of the Cadillac Formula 1 Team Miami Special Livery Cadillac Formula 1 Team Cadillac Formula 1 Team

“The Cadillac Formula 1 Team’s special Miami Grand Prix livery is a natural extension and speaks without excess. It’s deliberate and confident,” said Cassidy Towriss, Chief Brand Advisor, Cadillac Formula 1 Team. “This is our first home race, and it mattered to us that fans still recognize what they’ve come to know. I can’t wait for the crowd to see it on track for the first time. There’s no place like home.”

Sunday’s a home race not just for Cadillac F1, which eventually will have an operation making its own engines in Charlotte and designing and building cars in the Indianapolis suburb of Fishers. CEO Dan Towriss, Cassidy’s husband and CEO of Cadillac Formula 1 owner TWG Motorsports, spends part of the year at his Fort Lauderdale home.

In January, TWG chose Miami E-Prix Week to unveil its new livery for Andretti Autosport’s Formula E team.

David J. Neal
Miami Herald
Since 1989, David J. Neal’s domain at the Miami Herald has expanded to include writing about Panthers (NHL and FIU), Dolphins, old school animation, food safety, fraud, naughty lawyers, bad doctors and all manner of breaking news. He drinks coladas whole. He does not work Indianapolis 500 Race Day.
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