Category: Formula E

  • Mahindra Racing’s Futuristic All-New M5Electro Race Car Makes Its India Debut

    Mumbai, 10 Dec 2018: Mahindra Racing’s M5Electro race car made its India debut today, in full race livery, days ahead of the start of the 2018/19 ABB FIA Formula E Championship– Season 5.

    The first race is scheduled on December 15 in Ad Diriyah, Saudi Arabia with a total of 13 races across various cities in the world (it will be broadcasted live on Sony ESPN SD/HD– qualifying at 1:00pm and race at 5:00pm IST). Shell, with a heritage of more than 100 years in motorsports, has also come onboard as the latest sponsor for Mahindra Racing. The Shell logo is part of the new race car livery of the M5Electro which was displayed in India in its race-ready avatar.In addition, Mahindra Racing and Shell will work on the joint development of lubricants and fluids for electric vehicles.

    The M5Electro is based on generation two of the Formula E race car, featuring cutting edge EV powertrain technology that has been aggressively developed through the rigour of four seasons of top level Formula E racing. It will be able to touch 100km/h in just 2.8 seconds and go on to a top speed of 280km/h.The design sees an evolution of the team’s iconic and unique red, white and blue colour scheme, updated and created to reflect the exhilarating new design of the Gen2 car. The new team kit draws inspiration from iconic Indian symbols, the Bengal tiger and the Lotus flower.

    DR. PAWAN GOENKA | Managing Director, Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. and Chairman, Mahindra Racing

    “Formula E represents the cutting edge of EV technology and plays a strategic role in realizing Mahindra’s vision of the Future of Mobility through our ‘Race to Road strategy. Racing is at the pinnacle of global EV motorsport, it puts Mahindra on the fast track toward the development of an entirely new generation of EVs that offer clean, exciting yet affordable mobility to our customers.We are geared up to begin racing in Season 5 of Formula E in the next few days and will push hard toward victory. We look forward to growing interest and support from our Indian fans for a championship that is helping to develop sustainable mobility solutions for the future.”

    DILBAGH GILL | CEO and Team Principal, Mahindra Racing

    “We have set a razor-sharp focus to build on our base from the last few seasons and continue to be one of the top teams in season 5 of Formula E. The ultimate objective, is to claim the championship title. Our team coupled with our strong pool of partners, will enable us to achieve this aspiration. We are thrilled to have Shell onboard as it will help us explore powerful opportunities in the area of lubricant technology and engineering, the results of which will be visible on and off the race track.”

    PATRICK CARRE | Vice President, Shell Global Lubricants

    “We see great opportunities from the association between Mahindra Racing, a founding Formula E team with a powerful brand and credibility in India, and Shell Lubricants with our deep global automotive expertise and technology capabilities. We are pleased to join forces to develop lubricants and fluids that will make electric vehicles more efficient and unlock great opportunities for continued growth in the Indian market.”

    Mahindra Racing team is also supported by Renesas, Lear Corporation, AVIS, Umicore, Pininfarina, Voxdale, Errea, Bahco, Nippon, Alpinestars and Greenhills as sponsors for the upcoming championship.

    EVOLUTION OF E-PRIX RULES IN SEASON 5

    The race will now last for 45-minutes and an extra lap without any pit stops. Drivers can use the ‘Attack Mode’, which lets them pick up an extra hit of power and to arm this they will need to drive their cars off the racing line, through the Activation Zone. As a reward for taking a slower line through the corner, they will be able to collect an extra 25 kW of power. In another groundbreaking Formula E initiative, the five drivers who receive the highly-acclaimed FANBOOST from fan voting ahead of the race, are awarded a significant burst of power, which they can deploy in a five-second window during the second half of the race.

    MAHINDRA RACING

    Mahindra Racing is one of ten founding teams – and the only Indian team – to compete in the ABB FIA Formula E Championship, the world’s first all-electric racing series. Mahindra Racing has impressive credentials; after scoring it’s breakthrough win at the Berlin E-Prix in 2017, the squad now has three race victories to it’s name in addition to 15 podiums, six pole positions and 516 points from 45 starts. After four seasons with the first generation race car, all eyes now turn to season five. Mahindra Racing has high ambitions with the Gen2 M5Electro, a technical innovation that will see the car last the duration of a race as Formula E continues to push the limits of technology and electrification.

    MAHINDRA GROUP

    The Mahindra Group is a USD 20.7 billion federation of companies that enables people to rise through innovative mobility solutions, driving rural prosperity,enhancing urban living, nurturing new businesses and fostering communities.It has a leadership position in utility vehicles, information technology, financial services and vacation ownership in India and is the world’s largest tractor company, by volume. It also enjoys a strong presence in agribusiness,components, commercial vehicles, speedboats, consulting services, energy,industrial equipment, logistics, real estate, steel, aerospace, defence and two wheelers. Headquartered in India, Mahindra employs over 240,000 people across 100 countries. Learn more about Mahindra at www.mahindra.com

    Supporting Mahindra Racing is Tech Mahindra which was recently ranked in 15th on the Forbes’ Digital 100 list-the highest-ranked non-US company to feature. After receiving previous accolades for its sustainability vision, Tech Mahindra was honoured for the fourth consecutive year as a leader in the 2018 Dow Jones Sustainability Indices (DJSI).

  • Flash: Hamilton crowned World Champ for the fifth time: Verstappen wins Mexican GP

    Mexico City, 28 Oct 2018: Britain’s 33-year old Lewis Hamilton won the FIA Formula One world championship for the fifth time at the Hermanos Rodriguez circuit here on Sunday to equal Argentine Juan Manuel Fangio and now the sights are set on Michael Schumacher’s seven.

    Hamilton finished fourth in the race today after losing the battle with Verstappen to take the lead at the start, but that was enough for the Briton to clinch the 2018 Championship with two races to spare. Max Verstappen won the Mexican race for the second successive year ahead of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen. Polesitter Daniel Riccardo of Red Bull Racing had to retire, his 8th this season.

    After finishing the race, Hamilton got a congratulatory message from Wilbur Smith, in his typical cowboy style and did a couple of donuts. Then he sported the Union Jack proudly before filming the huge crowd and in the Mercedes garage, he hugged each and everyone.

    “A big thank you to my team. Bono said it wasn’t won here, it was won with a lot of hard work across a lot of races. It is an incredible feeling, and very, very surreal,” said Hamilton.

     

     

     

     

  • Lloyd is Formula E’s first innovation manager

    London, 15 Aug 2018: Barnee Lloyd, is the newly-appointed Innovation Manager at Formula E, and the 25-year old will join the internship at the Technology department of Formula E next month. He was selected after a process of selection for aspiring innovators, a press release said on Tuesday.

    The ABB FIA Formula E Championship and Modis announced the name of the first-ever Modis Formula E Innovation Manager – Lloyd, who will join the electric street racing series on a six-month internship ahead of the upcoming season.

    Modis – official partner for professional solutions in IT and engineering – launched the global search for aspiring innovators to join Formula E in May earlier this year. The Innovation Manager Challenge drew nearly 2,000 applications from over 60 countries with the ambition of helping implement and deliver a brand-new software platform for the opening round of season five – under the experienced mentorship of Eric Ernst, Head of Technology at Formula E.

    The competition consisted of a demanding four-stage selection process that involved psychometric tests on a dedicated Modis online platform, face-to-face interviews with Modis consultants and complex problem-solving.

    The top-five candidates were met by a panel of experts at Formula E’s headquarters in London for the interview stage and were put through their paces in a range of exercises. In a bid to test their ability to work in a fast-paced and ever-changing environments such as Formula E and the e-mobility industry, they were given scenarios designed to measure logical thinking, behavioural traits, and numerical aptitude.

    Lloyd, a British software engineer and Cambridge University graduate – who has previously worked for other automotive brands such as Tesla and Aston Martin – impressed the judges with top scores in the combined ‘innovator profile’ and ‘aptitude’ test.

    The judges from Formula E and Modis were also full of praise for the other four finalists – and would like to thank them for their time and dedication throughout the process.

    The 25-year-old will begin his internship on September 17 in the technology department and will be fully-immersed within the series and collaborate with regional workforces for a hands-on experience at events, including pre-season testing and the opening rounds of the 2018/19 ABB FIA Formula E Championship in December and January.

    Barnee Lloyd, the newly-appointed Innovation Manager at Formula E, said: “I want to work in something where I can have a direct contribution to the growth of the company and how it’s going to develop in the future.”

    Alejandro Agag, Founder & CEO of Formula E, said: “I’d like to officially welcome Barnee to the Formula E family and thank Modis for creating a brilliant initiative, which looks for the brightest sparks to work within the e-mobility sector. It’s an industry growing exponentially, with the ABB FIA Formula E Championship at the forefront. I look forward to seeing Barnee quickly finding his feet and developing his understanding and implementing new ideas on what surely is the start of a long and successful career in this field.”

    Alain Dehaze, CEO of the Adecco Group, said: “We’re delighted for Barnee as he begins what promises to be a fantastic career in e-mobility and electric racing. I’m sure he will perform at the highest level and produce excellent results during his internship. The Innovation Manager Challenge is all about promoting careers in this fast-growing, hi-tech sector and giving young talent the chance they deserve and the needs to shine. This first year has surpassed our expectations, and we look forward to connecting with and supporting many more talented young men and women in the years ahead through this innovation programme.”

    eom/db

  • ABT and Audi unbeatable in Berlin: Formula E

    ABT and Audi unbeatable in Berlin: Formula E

    Daniel Abt celebrates after winning on Saturday. An FIA image

    Berlin, 19 May 2018: For the second race in succession, the 2017/18 ABB FIA Formula E Championship provided a hometown hero, as Daniel Abt scored a hugely popular victory in front of the packed grandstands at the Berlin E-Prix on Saturday.

    Abt was closely followed by his Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler team-mate Lucas di Grassi, who extends his run of consecutive podiums to four, and rounds out a perfect day for the German team at its home race. Di Grassi quickly picked off his rivals from fifth on the grid but despite getting close following the pit stop phase couldn’t chase down the #66 car ahead.

    While Audi looked unbeatable out in front, it was a fierce battle for third place at Tempelhof Airport between Oliver Turvey for NIO, Sebastien Buemi for Renault e.dams and Jean-Eric Vergne for TECHEETAH. Off the line, Turvey held his second-placed grid position and after losing out to Di Grassi on lap 13 was soon under pressure again.

    Using more energy than his rivals, Turvey pitted a lap earlier for the mandatory car swap, and as a result in the latter stages began to fall back into the clutches of the drivers behind.

    Buemi and Vergne, who had been battling amongst themselves for most of the race, made it past Turvey with ten laps to go and continued their battle for the final podium place. Vergne made his move into turn one and, despite slight contact, managed to take the position.

    Despite pressure from Buemi for the remainder of the contest, there was nothing the Swiss driver could do to get by the championship leader, and Vergne now has a 40-point advantage at the top of the table.

    Buemi will be hoping that the home advantage extends for another round of the championship as Formula E brings circuit racing back to Switzerland for the first time in 55 years on 10 June.

    With Turvey holding onto fifth place, Mitch Evans rounded out the top six with another strong drive for Panasonic Jaguar Racing making up three places from ninth on the grid. Sam Bird, who still sits second in the standings, followed Evans home in seventh, but with Vergne now capable of clinching the title in the next race, the pressure is definitely on the British driver to score big in Zurich.

    There was more to cheer about for the German fans as the chequered flag fell, as the final three positions in the top ten were occupied by Engel, Lotterer and Heidfeld, meaning all four German drivers scored points today. It was an especially impressive drive from Lotterer – the TECHEETAH driver came through from last on the grid to score two points.

    It was a busy day of action off the track as well as on it, as 2016 FIA Formula One World Champion Nico Rosberg gave the first on-track public demonstration of the FIA Formula E Gen2 Car ahead of its racing debut in season five, and another glimpse of the future in the form of the Jaguar IPACE eTROPHY car which will race in support of Formula E next season.

    As part of the FIA’s Volunteers Weekend which is currently taking place, a number of special activities took place at the Tempelhof track, including a family photo with FIA President Jean Todt, some high-speed VIP laps, and the chance to take the Formula E drivers for a ride around the track during the drivers parade.

    Click here to view a gallery of FIA Volunteers Weekend activities from around the world, and join the conversation on social media using #FIAVolunteersWeekend

    Daniel Abt, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, said: “It’s super special. I keep saying I have these weeks where I just feel like good stuff is going to happen and I had this feeling here in my home round. There is so much positive energy from everyone around, from the fans to the staff. I felt confident today all of a sudden, in qualifying there was not much more in it and was spot on and from then on, I knew we could win it. To get a one-two with Lucas was so special for Audi, for everyone and the team.”

    Lucas di Grassi, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, said: “First, congratulations to Daniel – I think he deserved the win today, he drove fantastically with no mistakes. Second, I think the Audi car today had a good advantage over the others. We were super-fast, and we could only challenge each other. In the first stint, I managed to pass Jerome, Turvey and JEV and then opened up the gap to them before the pit stop. After that we were very close and my second car had some problem that I have to analyse, but I was just happy to bring it home. The one-two is a dream come true for Audi after we started the year so badly and now we’ve recovered and are second in the team championship, and it was my fourth straight podium in a row – I can only be happy!”

    Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH, said: “Well done to the Audi guys and Daniel, I know how it feels at home – it’s pretty amazing so I’m happy for him. I think I’m going to change my nationality at every race because it seems at every home race a driver wins, so in Zurich I’m going to be Swiss and in New York, American! The race went very well, I took it easy, I knew from this morning the Audi guys were out of reach. When Lucas was behind I didn’t even look, I let him by. Then I passed Buemi and he was quite aggressive in closing the door sometimes. The pit stop wasn’t bad, I lost a position to Buemi so I had to pass him again. Overall I’m extremely happy, last year this was our worst track performance-wise and I’m very happy with the job the team has done.”

    2018 Berlin E-Prix (Rd 9)

    1 – Daniel Abt, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, 55:35.546s (29)
    2 – Lucas di Grassi, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, +6.758s (18)
    3 – Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH, +12.894s (15)
    4 – Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams, +17.282s (12)
    5 – Oliver Turvey, NIO Formula E Team, +19.620s (10)
    6 – Mitch Evans, Panasonic Jaguar Racing, +24.586s (8)
    7 – Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing, +34.610s (6)
    8 – Maro Engel, Venturi Formula E Team, +37.814s (4)
    9 – Andre Lotterer, TECHEETAH, +44.359s (2)
    10 – Nick Heidfeld, Mahindra Racing, +45.931s (1)
    11 – Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing, +46.381s
    12 – Nelson Piquet Jr, Panasonic Jaguar Racing, +49.087s
    13 – Tom Dillmann, Venturi Formula E Team, +50.150s
    14 – Nico Prost, Renault e.dams, +50.381s
    15 – Antonio Felix da Costa, Andretti Formula E, +52.715s
    16 – Alex Lynn, DS Virgin Racing, +53.000s
    17 – Luca Filippi, NIO Formula E Team, +53.302s
    18 – Jose Maria Lopez, DRAGON, +53.611s
    19 – Jerome D’Ambrosio, DRAGON, +54.289s
    20 – Stephane Sarrazin, Andretti Formula E, +1:06:954s

    Driver standings
    Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH – 162
    Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing – 122
    Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing – 86
    Daniel Abt, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler – 85
    Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams – 82

    Team standings
    TECHEETAH – 205
    Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler – 161
    DS Virgin Racing – 139
    Mahindra Racing – 108
    Panasonic Jaguar Racing – 96
    Renault e.dams – 89
    Venturi Formula E Team – 56
    NIO Formula E Team – 45
    DRAGON – 26
    Andretti Formula E – 20.

    eom/david/FIA release

  • Sharing the record with Pedro is a massive reward to my career: Sergio Perez

    Sharing the record with Pedro is a massive reward to my career: Sergio Perez

    Barcelone, 10 May 2018: After four rounds, the Formula 1 teams start the European leg and are no strangers to the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya (formerly known as the Circuit de Catalunya); not only have they raced there every year since 1991, they also conduct extensive testing at the venue.

    Familiarity does not, however, lessen the challenge for car or driver. Barcelona’s mix of high- and low-speed corners, plus its abrasive and rather bumpy track surface, makes for a physically and mechanically taxing race.

    Tyre wear is particularly high and the varying winds that cut across the circuit mean an optimum set-up can be hard to find.

    The drivers present for the Thursday Press Conference are: Brendon Hartley (Toro Rosso), Carlos Sainz (Renault), Fernando Alonso (McLaren) and Sergio Perez (Force India).

    Q: Brendon, you scored your first World Championship point in Baku, last time out, how good did that feel?

    Brendon Hartley: Yeah, it was maybe a bit of a relief, in a way because I’d had a couple of opportunities already and didn’t capitalise. Bahrain was the most obvious one where we had a very competitive car. So, it’s nice to finally get that first point. Had a bit of pressure on the last lap from Marcus, closing in the Sauber. Happy I kept it clean, kept it on the road and got my first point.

    Q: And what can we expect from both you and Toro Rosso in the coming races, because, end of last season you did four races in Formula One but you were dovetailing a WEC programme at the same time. Now you’re focussing on Formula One, how do you feel it’s all coming together?

    BH: I felt strong, especially starting the season after all that preparation. Like I say, I felt quite disappointed after Bahrain, having such a competitive car that Toro Rosso brought to the table, almost getting through to Q3 then having the penalty and not scoring a point there. The last couple of races have actually been quite challenging for us as a team, with nowhere near the pace we had in Bahrain. But yeah, I’m feeling a lot more comfortable than I did last year – but still waiting to piece together the perfect weekend.

    Q: Sergio, coming to you, your podium in Azerbaijan was the eighth of your career, surpassing the Mexican record of Pedro Rodríguez. What did that mean to you?

    Sergio Perez: Yeah, it was an amazing result, especially for us this year, it’s been so difficult at the start of the season. So, having… actually, they were my first points of the year so it was a massive boost for the team, we’re certainly improving. That podium meant a lot to me. As you say, it’s my eighth podium in my career, but now I’m the most Mexican driver with podiums, so it means a lot. Obviously Pedro… Pedro Rodríguez is a big name in our country, so to share that with him, it’s a massive reward to my career.

    Big news back home?

    SP: Definitely.

    Q: Did that result in Baku flatter the car? How confident are you of repeating, for example, your fourth place here last year?

    SP: Well, that fourth place came in… very much, we had a couple of retirements in the race but the most important thing, and where our challenge is, certainly in Baku we were the fourth fastest team and that’s the target for us here. Everyone is bringing upgrades. We’re bringing also our bit so we’re certainly closing up the gap. The midfield pack, the group is so close anything can happen. For us it will be very important to be on top of that group.

    Q: Carlos, coming to you now, fifth last time out in Baku, you’re now racing in your home grand prix for a works team for the first time. What does that mean to you can what can we expect this weekend?

    Carlos Sainz: It means a big boost. It has been a good start of the season but that result in Baku definitely has made it a lot better. From now on is keep pushing, keep learning, keep improving the car in the right direction to keep scoring that kind of result again. Like Checo said, the fifth place is helped a bit by the accident for the Red Bulls and all that – but we need to make sure we keep being the fourth fastest team. The Force India looks like it’s catching up a bit.

    Q: And are you comfortable with the car now?

    CS: No. No, definitely not. It’s not one hundred per cent confident yet. There’s still things to test, things to adapt to, things to make the car be well-suited to me and it’s something that I’m taking a lot of care of, a lot of effort and a lot of timing and it’s coming little by little and sooner or later it will be one hundred per cent.

    Q: Carlos, tell us a little about qualifying, if you would because you’ve been out-qualified by your team-mate Nico Hülkenberg so far this year, that’s a new experience for you, because you’ve always been a very good qualifier. Do you feel under pressure from your team-mate – particularly here in Spain this weekend?

    CS: No, not at all – because in the end, if I don’t have full confidence in the car, and don’t have the car well-suited for the qualifying lap time, there’s always going to be tenths around. That’s what I was talking about before. As soon as I will get the balance I like, the car better suited to me, it will just come automatically and I’m definitely not worried.

    Q: Fernando, let’s start by talking about last weekend. Congratulations on your victory at Spa in the FIA World Endurance Championship. How did it feel to be back on the top step of the podium?

    Fernando Alonso: Well, definitely felt good. It felt a long time not being on the podium and it has been a good preparation, a fast preparation into the WEC programme as well and a lot of testing, a lot of simulator, a lot of preparation, even going to Baku and from Baku, I had to keep studying, and watching onboard videos from previous years and things like that. It was nice for the team to get this result, one-two in qualifying, one-two in the race, and yeah, definitely quite a very good moment for the whole team and for me as well after a long time not being in the podium.

    Q: Was there a sense of relief to kick off your sportscar career with a victory?

    FA:  Well, obviously, those races are quite long, quite difficult to predict. Even if you are quite confident in the first two hours then suddenly everything changes. We had a little bit of drama with an extra pitstop and things like that. Yeah, it was nice, definitely to start with a nice result, even if it was second or third, just finishing the race, get the experience and warming up for the big one, Le Mans in a couple of weeks’ time.

    Q: And turning to Formula One now, can you give us a progress report on McLaren. How far behind the curve do you feel the team is, and how crucial is this weekend in terms of upgrades?

    FA: Well, I think we are behind. Definitely we are not in the position we wanted or expected at the beginning of the winter. At the same time, I think it has been a very positive start to the season. We are the only team completing the full four races with both cars. We did score points in every single race and we are fourth in the Constructors’ Championship. Three months ago we were here testing and we did the least laps of every single team and we had a lot of issues. Reliability seems a concern into Australia for the first race and now we are quite happy with the results and the standards – but competitive-wise, we are not in the Q3, we are not in the top ten yet and that’s something we want to change, if we can, this weekend. Obviously, it’s a different circuit layout compared to the last couple of races and with upgrades everyone brings here, the same as us, hopefully we can pick up the pace a little bit. But let’s see. The most important thing is to keep scoring points on Sundays and keep helping the team to secure this fourth place in the Championship.

    Drivers attending the FIA Press Conference on Thursday. An FIA image

    Q: Question for Fernando and Carlos. After a good fight and good points between you in Baku, you are here in a special Derby – Oviedo-Madrid – in front of your fans. What do you expect, the both of you have a stand here in the circuit? What does it mean for you?

    FA: Well, obviously, we expect a close fight again. I think the mid-part of the field, as Checo said, is quite tight. In two or three-tenths there are seven or eight cars and I think in those cars are the Renault and McLaren normally, so I guess it’s going to be a close fight again. Hopefully, we put on a good show for our fans. As you said, a lot of people will come here to support us and a grandstand for Carlos, another grandstand will be for me as well, and, as I said, if everyone enjoys the race on Sunday and we both can finish and score points and put on a good show, that’s the thing I wish for Sunday.

    Carlos, your thoughts.

    CS: Yeah, I think it’s an exciting battle, what we have now in the midfield actually. There are many times in the Drivers’ Parade, us three together chatting about what’s going to happen today: who’s going to be fastest: is it going to be Renault? Is it going to be McLaren? Is it going to be Force India? So, we are obviously… it’s obviously quite exciting back there in the field and there are a lot of battles together with Fernando, with Checo, even the Toro Rossos sometimes are there. It just makes for very good, exciting racing and it’s something that I’m enjoying a lot this year. Hopefully, we can keep them behind, because I think up until now Renault has had a bit the upper hand and it looks like these two guys here are coming with big upgrades here in this part of the season and we need to keep pushing.

    Q: Fernando, question for you. You mentioned the limitations McLaren has at the moment, performance-wise, how far off do you think McLaren is of it’s stated position of challenging for podiums and wins again? And are you prepared to wait as long as you think it’s going to take?

    FA: I think it’s difficult to say, and to be precise on how far behind we are – but if you take the first qualifyings over the year so far in Q2 times, that we are eliminated in all four races. We were 1.8-2.0 seconds behind. That’s my estimation. I don’t know how much they push in Q2, so maybe it is a little bit more or a little bit less, depends on the circuit. We have been in power-sensitive circuits so far in the first four races to I think here, Monaco, we see a different picture of different teams. They’re moving around, so hopefully McLaren is one of those that picks up a little bit of pace. And, as I said, Spain brings a lot of updates for all of the teams. Some of them they work better, some of them, they need a little bit more time. So, hopefully on that we can benefit somehow as well.

    Still a long way to go for us – but at the same time we were here last year with zero points. We are sixth in the World Championship and fourth in the Constructors’ Championship, so it has been a very good start, in a way. Let’s keep the momentum.

    Q: Fernando, this weekend it will be five last since your last victory in Formula 1. What have you done to keep the motivation all this time? Secondly, after your last victory, in Spa, can it help to achieve a victory again?

    FA: I kept the motivation because I’m a competitive man. I love to win. In 2013, we won here… I think the tyres were degrading a lot that year and we make an extra stop and we managed to win the race. Not with the quickest car, Nico was on pole by six tenths or something like that. That was a good call by the team at that time. In 2014 we had quite a difficult season, and then the last three years you know that we struggled a lot and that the project was always getting a bit difficult and we tried to give hope for the following year. It’s the same this year. As I said, I think the start has been not too bad, in terms of results especially and the number of points. The win last weekend in Spa will not change anything. I think it’s two different series and two different worlds. It will not change anything for me. Every time that I will have a car that is close to victory, I will go for it. I did some better races in the last five years, even if the last victory was five years ago. Here, in the last five year, I did much better races than previously, even if I was not able to win the race. The Baku race is one of… I will never probably do a race as I did in Baku, and I finished seventh. It’s difficult to see from the outside but extremely proud and motivated every time you do a one-off performance.

    Q: A question for Fernando and Carlos. If you had to choose, which victory would mean more to you: the Spanish Grand Prix or the 24 Hours of Le Mans?

    CA: Ah to win in this time sounds very good to me. I think it’s something that I look forward to and I would never forget, to win in your home grand prix. It’s what I’m working for at the moment. Every time I go training, every time I go to bed, I have one dream in mind and that is to win a race in Formula 1 and to win a world championship. Maybe in 10 or 15 years’ time that dream will change and it will go towards Le Mans, because I don’t want to be anymore in Formula 1. I doubt that will happen but in life everything can change. But at the moment, Formula 1 and winning is in my mind all the time.

    FA: Difficult to comment, you know. A couple of years ago I would say the Spanish Grand Prix. Winning a race in Formula 1 is obviously something that we dream for a long time, when you are a go-kart driver and you dream for Formula 1. Now that I have won a couple of times here in Spain, obviously for me it would be winning the 24 Hours of Le Mans, because it’s the biggest race in the world. But I think everyone will have different answers in different parts of his career.

    Q: Given how well you did on your WEC debut and given the troubles McLaren are going through it seems impossible that you will be able to challenge for victories with McLaren, do you think your future lies away from Formula 1 next year?

    FA: It doesn’t matter, I think, the results that we are achieving in one or other championships, you know I am attempting two world championships at the same time. I am happy with the progress we did here at McLaren and with the direction that everything is going for the future. I am happy on the endurance attempt as well. It’s quite demanding, especially the F1 calendar. The biggest thing here is how predictable everything is. We can put on a paper now what will be the qualifying here on Saturday, what will be in Monaco, in Canada and in Silverstone, so that’s something you need to take into account for future decisions. This is sad, in a way, for Formula 1, the direction in which everything went.

    Q:  Fernando, in the WEC car are you closer or further away from your personal limits than in Formula 1? Did driving the WEC car give you any apprehension about the possibility that you would have to re-adjust and waster time getting back to driving the Formula 1 car?

    FA: I struggle a little bit more when I go from Formula 1 to the WEC car, just because the driving styles are so different. I think when I come back here I don’t need any adaptation. I’m straight away comfortable with everything. It’s what I learned and my driving style developed for Formula 1 driving, so I expect no problem on the comeback. I think I am closer to the limit here in an F1 car. You need to maximise, you need to make perfection every lap and repeat that perfection over and over the laps. That’s Formula 1’s style. In WEC, you have to be super-flexible, and super-open-minded on everything. You will not repeat the same lap in six hours. You will find traffic in different places, you will have different conditions, you will have different tyres age, you will have everything. So, that flexibility in terms of driving, I think it’s quite good for me. That adaptation you need to make, you have to do it really quickly. Brendon has even more experience than me, but it’s part of what’s special about WEC: how you need to adapt, every single, every single laps, about different driving styles and how unpredictable will be the race until the chequered flag. That’s lovely, in terms of sport, driving and the spectators.

    Q: Brendon, at the end of last year, you were doing what Fernando is doing: dovetailing WEC and Formula One. How do you compare the two?

    BH: I think Fernando summed it up pretty well. Yeah, there’s a lot more variability in endurance racing, like Fernando mentioned, with the traffic. It was a bit the opposite for me last year; I felt so comfortable in the WEC car with the Michelin tyres, four wheel drive, everything else that goes along with LMP1 hybrid, so I was feeling a lot more confused coming back into the Formula One, which is exactly why, when I had this opportunity to be in Formula One this year, that there was no question mark that I would try and compete Le Mans and WEC at the same time. Obviously I’m at a different stage in my career than Fernando but it takes a lot of focus and hard work to put a perfect Formula One Grand Prix weekend together. I think both are equally complicated but in quite different ways. Definitely the driving style is a little bit different. I guess my only argument with Fernando is the fact that I feel that in WEC you are all so equally on the limit every lap, but like he said, there are these variables that you don’t have the same in Formula One. Different, but a lot of similarities too.

    Q: Carlos, you say you’re not comfortable in the car. Do you feel it’s because you weren’t involved in the design last year when it was set up or do you think there’s something else needed? Is it more suited to Nico’s style of driving or was it something totally different?

    CS: I think it’s a bit of a combination of both but that at the same time I’m very confident that as soon as I correct a couple of things that I need… we’re talking about very small margins. In Formula One, those very small margins in one qualifying lap they can easily fall for you, so that’s why I’m not worried because it’s very very small, what I need to adapt and what I need from the car. As soon as this comes, every piece will fall in, you know. Responding to your question, I think it’s a bit of both but mainly the car to me.

    Q: Fernando, last week we were with you in Spa. Thank you very much for a good race and thank you for your first place. First, do you like this system without control, open door in the paddock in WEC. And the second question, what do you think for the future in Formula One: it will be possible or not, open door in the paddock for all people with tickets?

    FA: I think I prefer this system in F1, it’s a little bit more under control, the paddock passes. In WEC, especially until Sunday (Saturday) or even Sunday (Saturday), being free access to the paddock, it was a little bit too much, a little bit of stress a couple of times. I think here is quite under control and I think if you open free entrance to the paddock here we will not even be able to walk and we will hide even more, we will close ourselves even more in our motorhomes and things like that because you cannot do normal things. Then it will probably not be in the direction we want. We want to open the paddock and like these fans, they see the drivers and they can communicate a little bit more, maybe it has the opposite reaction so I think it’s good as it is and I think every championship has its own philosophy and I think it’s working quite OK for each category, so I think it’s good as it is.

    Q: Carlos, it may be true that you’re maybe having problems with the car but at the same time, it looks like your bosses are hinting about the possibility of extending your relationship with Renault in the future. How do you feel about those nice words?

    CS: It’s not bad. It means that it must not be as bad as it looks like maybe! Importantly, though, I’m working very hard. I think Formula One bosses appreciate the hard effort, the travelling to Enstone, everything involved and they see that I am very very close and at any moment it can fall for me and because of that, I am very very calm, very confident and they are giving me that confidence that I enjoy and that I’m willing to give back with results like I did in Baku. As soon as the opportunity was presented to me I went for it and scored the best results for the team since I came back, so as you said, it’s going pretty well.

    Q: Brendon, we’ve had some power sensitive tracks now, what do you feel about the Honda engine so far and do you think they can supply a top team in the near future?

    BH: Yeah, I don’t think it’s my place to comment on supplying different teams in the future but yeah, I was asked a lot of questions after China and Baku, because we were lacking pace and a lot of the questions were directed towards Honda but actually Bahrain was similar on power sensitivity and we were very competitive there. So yeah, Honda have been working very hard and I know that there’s updates to come during the season. I would say everyone in Toro Rosso is only positive about being solely supplied by an engine manufacturer. I think that there’s more or less only positivity coming out of this partnership and I think there’s more performance to come during the year.

    Q: For all of you: does this circuit still have any secrets for you, or can you drive it with your eyes closed? Is it a challenge or not?

    SP: Well, it’s probably the circuit that we all know the most. We do all our winter testing here and I feel that this circuit is so much related to your car performance. It’s not like Monaco, Baku or other circuits where the driver can make something special. I think here’s it so much more down to what the car can do. If there is a circuit where the driver can influence the least I feel that it’s Barcelona.

    FA: Yeah, not many secrets any more but still always challenging. This year, for example, the track, they put new asphalt last winter so it’s still a challenge for all of us to understand the best set-up and how you get around this new track. The same with the wind direction, the temperature. You know we come here over the winter with very cold temperatures and then in May you need to re-adapt a little bit so it’s always challenging. Yes, it’s a shame for Carlos or me or young Spanish drivers that we grew up in this circuit, we race in many smaller categories and then you arrive to F1 and you are the driver with the least laps at your home Grand Prix; you know, everyone has done more laps than you in Barcelona. You lose all the home advantage.

    CS: Yeah, well at least we have the crowd which for sure helps a bit. I think there’s two points: I think there’s the tarmac that is going to make things a bit different this year, at least me I found personally in winter that the track has nothing to do with last year, the balance is very different. It is faster than it was last year, it has more grip, but it is a bit more difficult to find the right balance round here; at least, that was my impression. And then the second point: I think if you put this track in China, in Bahrain and you don’t visit it as much as we do because of being in Europe, close to all the team bases, I think drivers would love this track because to go new into Barcelona, it’s always the first two, three, four laps they are always fun, it’s a fun track, I enjoy driving it. It’s just that we do a lot of laps and because of that it takes away a bit the excitement, no? But I really enjoy it and this track somewhere else would be good.

    Q: Well Brendon, you’ve probably done the fewest laps of the four guys in the room, how do you….?

    BH: I’ve done a few actually, yeah. Yes, similar comments. A lot of winter testing here. During my time as a simulator driver nine times out of ten we were driving Barcelona so I think the whole grid knows this track so well which in a way also makes it very difficult to get any time or edge over your teammate or fellow competitors. In the end, we know the midfield can be extremely tight. It’s not only the drivers who know it very well, the teams know it well too. But it is a fun track and the surface has changed, which is nothing new for me, so in some ways it’s not really a disadvantage for me, maybe an advantage. The rain? If it rains, it will be extremely challenging. What we saw in winter testing was the new surface  was very low grip and very few areas for the water to run off so that could be challenging. I think tyre management is interesting here because it’s not just about degradation through the whole race, at least from what I’ve studied over the last years but also managing temperatures in the last sector, so even in qualifying how you approach the first sector can heavily influence the last sector. Even though it’s all familiar for all of us there’s still a few things to manage and definitely still some areas to maybe get an advantage. The only tricky thing here is overtaking, doesn’t offer so many opportunities.

    Q: Fernando, I guess you already tested the new updates in the simulator. What do you expect according to those this weekend?

    FA: Faster car.

    Q: Can you elaborate any more?

    FA: You wish.

    Q: What do you think about the probability of rain in qualifying?

    CS: Personally my rain radar says Saturday afternoon/night, let’s put it like that, so I’m not too worried about it.

    SP: I wish we can have some rain to mix up the grid a bit on Saturday. As Carlos said, we are expecting it later than qualifying. Hopefully it will get to us earlier.

    Q: And Checo, do you agree with Brendon about the slippery conditions on the new asphalt if it does rain?

    SP: Yeah. Do you remember in winter testing actually Fernando did a lap in the snow which is even more difficult. It will be very tricky, on this new asphalt with the rain. Looking forward to it if that happens.

    Q: Fernando and Carlos: we know that you are both introducing new parts this weekend. If the results are great, do you think we could see a double Spanish podium someday?

    FA: Ooof.

    CS: It’s coming, it’s coming.

    FA: Easy.

    CS: One day, one day. This year maybe a bit difficult, no? But who knows? All of a sudden, Checo did a podium in Baku and I think no one expected it so it’s a good sign that strange things can still happen in Formula One sometimes but I think at the moment it’s extremely difficult. Both teams would need more than half a second – nearly one second of performance boost to start to fight with the top teams but that’s what we’re here for, to improve and make it happen, so we will push for it.

    Q: Carlos, what would it mean to you to stand on a podium with Fernando Alonso?

    CS: It would be great. I think I’ve said it many times already but it would be a dream come true. If it’s at the home Grand Prix even better but anywhere in world also. It’s one of my dreams, what I’m working for and as long as I’m in front, always better but… no seriously speaking, it would be great.

    Q: Fernando and Carlos: what’s your bet for the final of the championship? Who will win the Spanish cup for Formula One, Fernando or Carlos? Who will win in the championship between you and Fernando? Who will finish ahead?

    FA: I think it’s difficult to predict. It depends a little bit on our teams. If I have to bet my money, I will put it on McLaren and myself.

    CS: I feel like…

    FA: How many points do you have?

    CS: I don’t know.

    FA: How many points do we have now?

    Off: 28 for Fernando.

    FA: And you?

    CS: I think I have 13, something like that. Ooof, I have some work to do.

    FA: Bet even more now.

    CS: But Renault is the team that has developed the most last year, so be careful. I just give it that it could happen the same this year and I’m going to develop also.

     

    Ends

  • Jean-Eric Vergne scores an impressive victory: Formula E Round 6

    Jean-Eric Vergne scores an impressive victory: Formula E Round 6

    Jean-Eric Vergne scored an impressive lights-to-flag victory today, 17 March, in the Punta del Este E-Prix – round six of the 2017/18 ABB FIA Formula E Championship. The TECHEETAH driver had to work hard for his second win of the season, as he was chased right from the start by reigning champion Lucas di Grassi in his Audi Sport Abt Schaeffler machine.

    Earlier in the day, fans were treated to a flat-out qualifying session, although as the intensity rose in Superpole, a number of drivers exceeded track limits resulting in a shuffling of the order before the grid formed up. This resulted in Vergne and di Grassi on the front row, with DS Virgin Racing’s Alex Lynn and NIO Formula E Team’s Oliver Turvey on the second row.

    As the lights went out, the front runngers made it through the first few corners in grid order, but the race was quickly neutralised by a safety car period to recover the stricken car of Nick Heidfeld, whose Mahindra stopped on track with a technical problem.

    After racing resumed, Renault e.dams’ Sebastien Buemi, who had made it back through on Vergne’s team-mate Andre Lotterer after being passed early on, saw his streak of two wins in Punta del Este come to an end as he clipped the wall on lap 11. This damaged the rear of the car and forcing him to retire.

    Back at the front, the Brazilian driver di Grassi was right under the rear wing of the leader, and as the two entered the pit lane for their mandatory car change there was nothing between them. They exited the pits as they entered them, and on the out-lap di Grassi drew alongside Vergne but he was unable to make the move stick. Despite losing time in the attempted move, it wasn’t long before he was putting pressure on Vergne once again, and this was to be the story of the remainder of the race. Di Grassi repeatedly came within inches of the lead, but ultimately the Frenchman in front held on to take the chequered flag in first place.

    Behind the lead pair there was another tight battle, this time between the DS Virgin Racing team-mates Alex Lynn and Sam Bird. Bird started the race in ninth, but quickly made up positions and ended up leap-frogging his stable-mate who faded in the latter stages. Bird latched onto the back of the fighting front two, but while he was ready to make the most of any incidents ahead, ultimately he secured a well-earned return to the podium in third place.

    Despite falling back, Lynn still took his best finish of the season so far in sixth.

    One of the stand-out performances of the day came from Panasonic Jaguar Racing’s Mitch Evans, who had qualified on the front row but was penalised as the weight distribution did not conform to the technical regulations. This meant he had to fight through from 16th place to an impressive fourth, with a sensational pass on Alex Lynn one of the highlights of the race.

    Mahindra’s Felix Rosenqvist finished in fifth place and, like Evans, had a strong fight through the field after a difficult morning for the team, which has been in strong form since the start of the year.

    Englishman Oliver Turvey couldn’t replicate his maiden podium last time out in Mexico for the NIO team and collected a handful of points a place further back in seventh.

    Another storming drive to finish in the points came from Argentinean Jose Maria Lopez. The DRAGON driver sat on the penultimate row of the grid as the lights went out and fought his way through to finish in a valiant eighth position. Lopez also took the honour of setting fastest lap and earning an extra point.

    Jerome D’Ambrosio jumped up a couple of place in ninth and Maro Engel rounded-out the top-10 with the final point for Venturi.

    The next round of the 2017/18 ABB FIA Formula E Championship will see the all-electric series race on the streets of Rome for the first time on 14 April.

    Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH, said“I’m obviously very happy. I’m not focussing on the championship, but I’m focussing on each race. Obviously winning the race today in those conditions is to me one of the best drives. Racing against Lucas, who is the current title holder, was really tough. I don’t think I’ve won that many races but it was one of the ones I’m most happy with in terms of my driving. Today winning races proves that hard work pays off. We’re the only private team and for us to beat the other guys, we have to work twice as hard as them.”

    Lucas di Grassi, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, said“First of all, congratulations to Jean-Eric and Sam. For Jean-Eric on the win, but for Sam to come from ninth on the grid. It was a really tough race for me, and to be honest JEV didn’t make many mistakes, I tried very hard – and I had the fastest car today. Starting second, on the dirty side, I tried very hard at the end to overtake him. I’m very satisfied with the car that I have but today we could’ve got 20 points and we only got 18. We know that in Formula E, when you get the chance you have to grab it. JEV defended very well so there was very little margin for me to attack, I think he did a small mistake coming into the last sector – we ended up touching a little bit and got super close. I tried my best, the car was super competitive – that won’t be the last time the team will fight for victories.”

    Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing, said“We were a little bit fortunate with Buemi having an issue, getting damage. I don’t know what happened to Daniel in the second stint, but that was again another position gifted to me. The pace was good today to be fair, I just wanted these two to fight a little bit more. I ran out of laps but a very strong race, it was nice to get another podium and we needed it from where we started. It was damage limitation in the championship as JEV is streaking away as he did an amazing job, and it’s great to see Lucas back on it too. One thing I would like to say is last week, Britain lost an amazing journalist – a great man who brought so much energy to others. It’s not a win, it’s the best I could do, but I would like to dedicate this to Henry Hope-Frost.”

    2018 CBMM Niobium Punta del Este E-Prix (Rd 6)

    1 – Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH, 50:43.809s (28)
    2 – Lucas di Grassi, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, +0.447s (18)
    3 – Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing, +2.611s (15)
    4 – Mitch Evans, Panasonic Jaguar Racing, +4.075s (12)
    5 – Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing, +4.224s (10)
    6 – Alex Lynn, DS Virgin Racing, +7.672s (8)
    7 – Oliver Turvey, NIO Formula E Team, +11.818s (6)
    8 – Jose Maria Lopez, DRAGON, +12.612s (5)
    9 – Jerome D’Ambrosio, DRAGON, +22.242s (2)
    10 – Maro Engel, Venturi Formula E Team, +26.293s (1)
    11 – Antonio Felix da Costa, Andretti Formula E, +27.335s
    12 –  Andre Lotterer, TECHEETAH, +38.731s
    13 – Luca Filippi, NIO Formula E Team, +39.926s
    14 – Daniel Abt, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, +43.139s
    15 – Nico Prost, Renault e.dams, +47.194s
    16 – Tom Blomqvist, Andretti Formula E, +59.299s
    17 – Edoardo Mortara, Venturi Formula E Team, +1 L

    Action from Formula E race on Saturday. An FIA image

    ap

    DNF – Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams, 29 Laps
    DNF – Nelson Piquet Jr, Panasonic Jaguar Racing, 25 Laps
    DNF – Nick Heidfeld, Mahindra Racing, 1 Lap

    Driver standings
    Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH – 109
    Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing – 79
    Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing – 76
    Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams – 52
    Nelson Piquet Jr, Panasonic Jaguar Racing – 45

    Team standings
    TECHEETAH – 127
    Mahindra Racing – 100
    DS Virgin Racing – 93
    Panasonic Jaguar Racing – 86
    Renault e.dams – 59
    Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler – 58
    Venturi Formula E Team – 35
    NIO Formula E Team – 33
    Andretti Formula E – 20
    DRAGON – 19

    Source: FIA press release

  • F1 to promote FIA F3 Championship from 2019

    The Formula One, (F1) group of companies has been selected by the FIA as the promoter for the new FIA Formula 3 Championship, which will begin from 2019. The decision has been confirmed by the World Motor Sport Council at the meeting held on Friday in Geneva. Indian Federation head Akbar Ebrahim, represented FMSCI in the meeting.

    The international championship will be hosted on the FIA Formula One World Championship platform and feature an all-new car, with a single supplier for chassis, engines, and tyres to be selected by the FIA in collaboration with Formula 1.

    The introduction of this new FIA Formula 3 Championship will benefit both competitors and fans, providing the unparalleled platform of F1 for young drivers working their way up the FIA’s single-seater pyramid, which now spans the full spectrum of the discipline from Formula 3 to Formula 2 and Formula 1.

    Having the top three tiers of FIA single-seater competition together at the same events will make it easier than ever for fans to follow the careers of aspiring young drivers and see the dramatic journey towards Formula 1 unfold.

    A maximum grid of 30 cars will be accepted, with the championship planned to run between nine and ten events, with two races per event.

    The new car will integrate the latest FIA safety technologies, making it the benchmark in safety standards for the F3 category. It will feature increased chassis strength, increased cockpit rim height and strength that will be the same standard as in F1, the Halo frontal impact protection device, and will be the first car to feature a frontal anti-intrusion panel.

    FIA press release

  • Sebastiean Vettel quickest on Day 2; Ocon 9th: Formula 1 Test in Barcelona

    Sebastiean Vettel quickest on Day 2; Ocon 9th: Formula 1 Test in Barcelona

    Vettel quickest on Day 2 of the Formula One Barcelona test on 27 feb 2018. An FIA image

    Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel set the quickest time of day two of the first pre-season Formula 1 test in Barcelona, outpacing Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas by three-tenths of a second. McLaren’s Stoffel Vandoorne finished third on the timesheet a further three tenths back.

    The day began in muted fashion as overnight snow and rain meant conditions were tricky early on and many teams avoided significant running before the halfway point of running. One of those was Red Bull Racing, with the Milton Keynes team being restricted to the garage for most of the morning after a fuel leak resulted in a lengthy delay to Dutchman Max Verstappen’s first real taste of team’s RB14 challenger.

    The track slowly improved across the morning and by midday Bottas was on track and making the running climbing to the top of the order on the soft tyre.

    His time stood until mid-afternoon when Vettel also appeared on the soft tyre. The German chipped away his lap time over the course of the run and eventually nudged his Ferrari to a day’s best time 1:19.673s.

    Bottas wasn’t done, however, and a switch to medium tyres saw him edge close to the Ferrari driver and set a personal best for the day of 1:19976.

    Verstappen’s day began in earnest at around 2 pm and over the following four hours, he posted 67 laps to get to the best time of 1:20.326, set on medium tyres. That was just 0.001s behind third-placed Vandoorne who had set his time on Pirelli’s new hypersoft compound. However, after a decent return from Vandoorne’s morning efforts, McLaren opted out of afternoon running.

    Fifth place on the timesheet went to Renault’s Carlos Sainz, with Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly in sixth. It was another solid day for the Italian team as Gasly logged a total 82 laps in the team’s new Honda-powered car.

    Robert Kubica got his first taste of F1’s 2018-spec cars in the afternoon as he fulfilled his testing duties for Williams for the first time. The Pole put in 48 laps for the best time of 1:21.495 to sit over three-tenths of a second clear of Williams race driver Sergey Sirotkin who drove in the morning.

    Over at Alfa-Romeo Sauber, 2017 FIA Formula 2 champion Charles Leclerc made his debut as a Formula 1 driver, with the Monegasque claiming 10th position. Leclerc’s outing wasn’t without mishap as a morning spin into the gravel traps at Turn 4 brought out the red flags for a brief period.

    Formula 1 Pre-season Test 1, Barcelona – Day 2
    1. Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:19.673 98
    2. Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:19.976 +0.303 94
    3. Stoffel Vandoorne McLaren 1:20.325 +0.652 37
    4. Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:20.326 +0.653 67
    5. Carlos Sainz Renault 1:21.212 +1.539 65
    6. Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso 1:21.318 +1.645 82
    7. Robert Kubica Williams 1:21.495 +1.822 48
    8. Sergey Sirotkin Williams 1:21.822 +2.149 52
    9. Esteban Ocon Force India 1:21.841 +2.168 79
    10. Charles Leclerc Sauber 1:22.721 +3.048 81
    11. Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:22.727 +3.054 36

    eom/FIA release

  • Second win for Jean-Eric Vergne in a nail-biting finish: Formula E

    Jean-Eric Vergne fended off his team-mate Andre Lotterer in a tense fight around the streets of Santiago to claim his second victory in Formula E and the first one-two in the history of the electric street racing series.

    The pair exchanged blows in the closing stages of the race with a gaggle of cars waiting behind to pounce, ensuring a nail-biting finish to the inaugural E-Prix in the Chilean capital.

    Vergne led away from Julius Baer pole position with a number of cars making moves behind. Lotterer jumped Sebastien Buemi off the line to move into second place, but Panasonic Jaguar Racing driver Nelson Piquet Jr. caught them both unaware with a bold late-braking move around the outside of the first corner.

    As the field streamed through the opening section, the squeeze came in the mid-field with Jose Maria Lopez running out of road in close proximity with Sam Bird and hitting the wall on the outside of Turn 2.

    The safety car was deployed to clear both Lopez and the stricken Venturi of Maro Engel who went into the barriers at Turn 7.  Piquet looked to have lost out on the restart, but piled the pressure on Vergne with a move for the lead only a few corners later.

    Vergne placed his car well and held off a fast-charging Piquet despite a bump from behind, which wouldn’t be the only close-call in his wing mirrors for the remainder of the race.

    Approaching the pit-stop phase, Vergne started to extend his lead to over three seconds as Piquet fell into the grasps of Lotterer. The German scythed his way into second place past Piquet and set his sights on his team-mate.

    Lotterer slowly reeled in Vergne moving into his slipstream and drew alongside into the main overtaking point at Turn 1. Both drivers came perilously close to exchanging paintwork, but Vergne held his nerve and forced Lotterer to retreat.

    However, Lotterer hadn’t thrown in the towel yet and tried to mirror the move again but misjudged his braking and hit the back of Vergne. Smoke poured from Vergne’s wheels as his team-mate was pushing him from behind.

    Despite the helping hand from Lotterer, both cars managed to avoid the wall and the threat of other cars behind to deliver maximum points for TECHEETAH and vault the team to the top of the standings. It marks the first victory for Vergne since the season-finale in Montreal last year, which was also his first in Formula E.

    Joining the two TECHEETAH drivers on the podium was Sebastien Buemi, showing once again that the form of Renault e.dams in Hong Kong was merely a blip. Buemi slipped backwards on the long run down into the first corner and struggled to match the pace of his rivals in the early phase of the race.

    Buemi and Bird re-enacted their close duel in Marrakesh in the battle for fourth place, with the DS Virgin Racing driver hounding the back of his gearbox. The group held station until the mid-race car swaps, which saw Rosenqvist leap up the order ahead of Bird – allowing Buemi to focus on Piquet and surpass his fellow champion to secure a spot on the podium.

    Rosenqvist – who entered Santiago as the points leader and the winner of the past two races – started way back in 14th after a dismal qualifying session, but salvaged points in fourth place.

    Bird picked-up the additional point for fastest lap and took the chequered flag in fifth after a slow pit-stop and benefitting from Piquet’s late lunge on Buemi into Turn 1. Piquet looked to re-take the position he lost earlier but locked his brakes and ended up losing time reversing out of the run-off area.

    Piquet’s team-mate Mitch Evans followed close behind in seventh, with Jerome D’Ambrosio, Antonio Felix da Costa and Nico Prost rounding out the top 10 points-paying positions.

    The next stop on the Formula E calendar sees the series return to Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez for the third edition of the Mexico City E-Prix for round five of the FIA Formula E Championship on March 3.

    Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH, saidThe race has been great for me today, I qualified first and won the race, it cannot get any better. I think the first stint was really good and then after a few laps in the second car my lap trigger activated one extra lap. I have no idea how it happened but, basically I was doing the race one lap longer – that’s why I had a huge amount of pushing from my team-mate Andre who was then on a different strategy. It was fair racing – at one point we did collide but there was nothing really we could do, I decided to go on the inside and he went differently so we just collided. I think we had eight wheels locked actually, so I’m extremely lucky. It’s the first one-two in the history of Formula E!”

    Andre Lotterer, TECHEETAH, said: “I’m extremely happy about this – the first two races probably looked worse than they were but it was promising on pace in the race, and I only tested three days in Valencia, so it takes time. These guys have a lot of experience, and there are no bad drivers. I’ve been working hard, the team has helped me a lot to do some work in the simulator, I’m really happy to be JEV’s team-mate as he’s helped me a lot as well. I’ve had pace all weekend, in qualifying it went well, I may have hit the wall a bit but I went for it, so that’s what matters! I’m still finding my way in the car, the race and to overtake – it’s a different world. At one stage we lost radio, so I didn’t know what the game was so I tried overtaking him and got so close and nearly didn’t make the corner, but that’s what I’m still learning – how to calculate everything.”

    Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams, said: “First of all, I have to say congratulations to TECHEETAH as they are the customer team and they were faster than us today – well done to them, they’ve done a great job. For us, I think we could’ve done a bit better, but I lost two places at the start, and then I had massive wheel-spin. At the pit stops I thought I could’ve overtaken the Jaguar, but we were scared of an unsafe release, so we stayed in the garage to avoid that. Towards the end it was difficult because I was very quick, but Rosenqvist tried to overtake me – but not today, which was important!”

    2018 Santiago E-Prix (Rd 4)

    1 – Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH, 1:01:24.514s (28)
    2 – Andre Lotterer, TECHEETAH, +1.154s (18)
    3 – Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams, +1.959s (15)
    4 – Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing, +2.793s (12)
    5 – Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing, +4.490s (11)
    6 – Nelson Piquet Jr, Panasonic Jaguar Racing, +6.364s (8)
    7 – Mitch Evans, Panasonic Jaguar Racing, +7.099s (6)
    8 – Jerome D’Ambrosio, DRAGON, +13.308s (4)
    9 – Antonio Felix da Costa, Andretti Formula E, +14.811s (2)
    10 – Nico Prost, Renault e.dams, +21.092s (1)
    11 – Tom Blomqvist, Andretti Formula E, +32.924s
    12 – Luca Filippi, NIO Formula E Team, +44.127s
    13 – Edoardo Mortara, Venturi Formula E Team, +49.398s
    14 – Oliver Turvey, NIO Formula E Team, +1:12.282s

    DNF – Alex Lynn, DS Virgin Racing, 26 Laps
    DNF – Nick Heidfeld, Mahindra Racing, 23 Laps
    DNF – Lucas di Grassi, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, 21 Laps
    DNF – Daniel Abt, Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler, 11 Laps
    DNF – Jose Maria Lopez, DRAGON
    DNF – Maro Engel, Venturi Formula E Team

    Driver standings

    Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH – 71
    Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing – 66
    Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing – 61
    Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams – 37
    Nelson Piquet Jr, Panasonic Jaguar Racing – 33

    Team standings

    TECHEETAH – 89
    Mahindra Racing – 87
    DS Virgin Racing – 69
    Panasonic Jaguar Racing – 54
    Renault e.dams – 44
    Venturi Formula E Team – 30
    Andretti Formula E – 14
    Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler – 12
    DRAGON – 12
    NIO Formula E Team – 9

    eom/FIA release

  • Mahindra’s Felix Rosenqvist wins again: Formula E Marrakesh e-prix

    Mahindra’s Felix Rosenqvist wins again: Formula E Marrakesh e-prix

    Felix Rosenqvist has won for the second time in the first three races of the 2017/18 FIA Formula E Championship with victory in a closely-fought Marrakesh E-Prix. The Mahindra driver started the race from third but eventually overcame pole-man Sebastien Buemi in the closing stages to secure the win and take the lead in the championship standings for the first time in his Formula E career.

    Buemi made a strong getaway in his Renault e.dams machine, leading second-placed starter Sam Bird in the DS Virgin Racing car with Rosenqvist third. The top trio was undoubtedly the class of the field, pulling out a healthy margin to the chasing pack, although Bird was struggling with a car issue in the first half of the race and was passed by the Mahindra on lap 16.

    Reigning champion Lucas di Grassi was also having technical difficulties and endured a difficult day despite showing strong pace. After getting into the super-pole shootout, he began experiencing issues with his Audi Sport Abt Schaeffler car which meant that, despite starting the race well, he would eventually be forced to retire with the issues from qualifying appearing to recur.

    As the top three broke away and Di Grassi dropped out of the running, Panasonic Jaguar Racing’s Nelson Piquet Jr had another strong showing to finish fourth for the second time this year. He had dropped behind Lopez in the early laps but got past during the mid-race car swaps and stayed there for the remainder of the laps

    With the front three having broken away there was intense racing further back from fifth to tenth place. The TECHEETAH of Jean-Eric Vergne would take the chequered flag in fifth to continue his consistent run of strong scores, while Lopez ended up an impressive sixth on his Dragon debut.

    The battle for seventh was perhaps the most heated of all, with several drivers clashing in the latter stages in a bid to make a pass stick. Ultimately a robust defence from winner Rosenqvist’s team-mate Heidfeld netted him the position, while the two Venturi cars made contact with each other and then the Mahindra, resulting in Edoardo Mortara dropping back with damage and Maro Engel receiving a penalty for causing the collision that put him down to 12th.

    This late drama meant that Tom Blomqvist was able to impress on his Formula E debut for Andretti in eighth, while Alex Lynn and Daniel Abt completed the top ten for DS Virgin Racing and Audi Sport Abt Schaeffler respectively.

    This third round of the 2017/18 FIA Formula E Championship has left an intriguing championship order, with Rosenqvist leading Bird by four points ahead of Vergne, Piquet Jr and Mortara. The next round takes place for the first time in Santiago de Chile on 3 February.

    Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing, said: “At one point of the day I was going to be settling somewhere in the middle of the mid-field after free practice as we were struggling a lot. We then made some analysis and in qualifying we found out how to work the tyres properly, so that was a really good comeback before the race. Before the race, Spark told me I had to change my battery thirty-minutes before jumping in the car before the grid, so I was praying that my second car would be ready. Big thanks to the Mahindra guys. I think I was a little bit lucky with Lucas dropping out of the race quite early on, and obviously Sam had a problem with his car on the main straight as well. I tried to keep calm and look at my energy, because this race wasn’t really about the temperature but more about energy, and when the moment was right I went for it – super happy!”

    Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams, said: “I had an issue with the water pump and it wouldn’t start so we had to switch cars, so the car I started with was supposed to be the second one. Because of this we didn’t get FANBOOST sorted properly, so I think Felix had a bit more pace in the second stint, not much, but then I was overtaken at the end and I thought I would leave it to the last minute to use FANBOOST, but it didn’t work. I was annoyed, I didn’t properly move over to the inside and he managed to pass me, otherwise I would’ve closed the door a bit better, so I don’t know what happened. He had a little more pace and he deserved the win, so I don’t really think second is bad, but a big disappointment when you lead for most of the race.”

    Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing, said: “We’ve had an issue since Hong Kong which you wouldn’t have noticed from the outside. We had tried to address it but it came back, and it came back big time in the race. We actually noticed it a lot in FP2, during a 200kW lap attempt – I noticed some difficulties with the rear of the car and I came in early from my run. We thought ‘do we change it, do we not’, and anyway we said no, let’s not change the component and unfortunately it’s come to bite us a little bit in the race. But still, third place is strong points and it’s a third place with a big issue! I didn’t think I was going to finish the race in the first car, I thought I was going to be pulling over and retiring so actually we were quite relieved with the full course yellow came and saved my bacon a little bit.”

    2017/18 FIA Formula E Championship Round 3 – Marrakesh

    1 – Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing, 48:04.751s (25)
    2 – Sebastien Buemi, Renault e.dams, +0.945s (21)
    3 – Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing, +5.762s (15)
    4 – Nelson Piquet Jr, Panasonic Jaguar Racing, +6.554s (13)
    5 – Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH, +12.238s (10)
    6 – Jose Maria Lopez, DRAGON, +16.491s (8)
    7 – Nick Heidfeld, Mahindra Racing, +28.381s (6)
    8 – Tom Blomqvist, Andretti Formula E, +32.380s (4)
    9 – Alex Lynn, DS Virgin Racing, +33.520s (2)
    10 – Daniel Abt, ABT Schaeffler Audi Sport, +40.951s (1)
    11 – Mitch Evans, Panasonic Jaguar Racing, +46.278s
    12 – Maro Engel, Venturi Formula E Team, +46.915s
    13 – Nico Prost, Renault e.dams, +53.099s
    14 – Antonio Felix da Costa, Andretti Formula E, +1:01.116s
    15 – Jerome D’Ambrosio, DRAGON, +1:13.805s
    16 – Luca Filippi, NIO Formula E Team, +1 Lap
    17 – Edoardo Mortara, Venturi Formula E Team, +3 Laps

    DNF – Oliver Turvey, NIO Formula E Team, 17 Laps
    DNF – Andre Lotterer, TECHEETAH, 14 Laps
    DNF – Lucas di Grassi, ABT Schaeffler Audi Sport, 7 Laps

    Driver standings

    Felix Rosenqvist, Mahindra Racing – 54
    Sam Bird, DS Virgin Racing – 50
    Jean-Eric Vergne, TECHEETAH – 43
    Nelson Piquet Jr, Panasonic Jaguar Racing – 25
    Edoardo Mortara, Venturi Formula E – 24

    Team standings

    Mahindra Racing – 75
    DS Virgin Racing – 58
    TECHEETAH – 43
    Panasonic Jaguar Racing – 40
    Venturi Formula E Team – 30
    Renault e.dams – 28
    Audi Sport ABT Schaeffler – 12
    Andretti Formula E – 12
    NIO Formula E Team – 9
    DRAGON – 8

    eom/FIA press release

    Felix Rosenqvist celebrates after winning the e-prix on Saturday, 13 Jan 2018. An FIA image