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Four weeks of quarantine to race at the Macau Grand Prix: ‘It’s a sacrifice I’m willing to make,’ says Darryl O’Young

  • Hong Kong driver will return to the Guia circuit for the first time in two years for November’s Macau GT Cup
  • O’Young became a father for the second time in July after baby daughter Emerson was born

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Darryl O'Young will return to action this month at the Macau GT Cup. Photo: Craft-Bamboo Racing

Veteran Hong Kong racing driver Darryl O’Young will be making personal sacrifices in his attempt to make the starting grid for this month’s Macau GT Cup but it’s an assignment he’s looking forward to having not raced for a year.

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The 40-year-old must spend time away from his family while he undergoes four weeks of quarantine, a sacrifice he is willing to make as he returns to Macau for the first since he competed in a Porsche GT3 at the FIA GT World Cup in 2018.

O’Young will need to do two weeks quarantine in Macau before the weekend of November 21-22, and then two more weeks of quarantine in Hong Kong before he can return to his family. In total, he will be away from his family for five weeks, including the one week of racing and testing in Macau. It’s a sacrifice made more difficult since O’Young became a father again last summer when baby daughter, Emerson, was born in July. His oldest daughter, Dylan, has just turned three.

Darryl O'Young will be behind the wheel of the Mercedes-AMG GT3. Photo: Craft-Bamboo Racing
Darryl O'Young will be behind the wheel of the Mercedes-AMG GT3. Photo: Craft-Bamboo Racing

“I think it’s a big sacrifice for sure having this time away [from the family] but the sport is sometimes bigger than just my personal sacrifice,” said O’Young, who won the inaugural Macau GT Cup in 2008 and has been a winner on the Macau Grand Prix weekend no less than five times over the years on the 6.2-km Guia circuit.

  • “If you look at most sports around the world, there have been a lot of sacrifices being made. This is our career and it’s not something I do for fun. I do it quite seriously. It’s important that we compete. It’s in the best interest of the sport to be competing,” said the racer, who is racing for the first time this year.

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