Tag: Formula 2

  • Jak Crawford claims maiden F2 win; Maini 12th, Daruvala DNF

    Jak Crawford claims maiden F2 win; Maini 12th, Daruvala DNF

    Jak Crawford claimed his first FIA Formula 2 victory in the Spielberg Sprint Race. Starting on the slick tyres in changeable conditions, the Hitech Pulse-Eight driver lost out at the start but looked untroubled once he returned to the front of the field on Lap 6.

    Victor Martins made his way through the pack from 10th on the grid to take second, as Clément Novalak turned a P20 start into his first podium of the 2023 season.

    Indian driver Kush Maini of Campos Racing finished outside the points in 12th while Jehan Daruvala, the other Indian had a DNF. “The race result is irrelevant today. Absolutely gutted to hear about the tragic passing of Dilano, one of our own at MP. My thoughts are with his family, friends, and everyone at Spa. #RIP,” said Daruvala, as MP Motorsports, his team paid condolences to Dilano.

    “MP Motorsport is deeply saddened to confirm that our driver, Dilano van ’t Hoff has passed away as a result of a crash during the second race of the Formula Regional European Championship by Alpine at Spa Francorchamps.”

    “Formula Regional European Championship by Alpine sadly announces the death of MP Motorsport driver Dilano Van ‘t Hoff,” a statement from the championship read.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    Light rain ahead of the race meant half the field opted to start on the wet tyres. Utilising the dry soft tyres, reverse polesitter Crawford held the lead through the opening corners but it was Arthur Leclerc who made the most of his choice to start on wets. The DAMS driver went from third to the lead of the race by Turn 4 after the Hitech Pulse-Eight ran wide.

    Jehan Daruvala spinning off into the gravel at Turn 7 brought out an early Safety Car at the start of Lap 2. This gave the wet tyre runners a chance to switch to slicks, with Théo Pourchaire, Frederik Vesti and Dennis Hauger all stopping, having run inside the top five.

    Out front, Leclerc opted to stay out held the lead at the restart on Lap 4. Second-place Richard Verschoor dropped a wheel over the sausage kerb and spun off at the exit of Turn 1, necessitating another Safety Car. Leclerc chose to pit, handing the lead back to Crawford ahead of Juan Manuel Correa.

    Back to racing on Lap 8, Kush Maini, Zane Maloney and Enzo Fittipaldi went three-wide up the hill into Turn 3. Diving to the inside, Maloney was through on both, but soon dropped down the order as the track dried and softs became the tyre of choice.

    Their battle allowed Martins through into third and he quickly closed on Correa. Late on the brakes, the ART Grand Prix driver went up the inside of Turn 3 to pass the #23 Van Amersfoort Racing car.

    Another beneficiary of the soft tyres, Novalak had already made up 16 places after dispatching Isack Hadjar for fourth and soon caught Correa. On Lap 18, the Trident driver was through on the inside to take third, allowing Hadjar the room to follow his compatriot through to take fourth.

    A spin for Fittipaldi between Turns 3 and 4 after catching the grass led to the Virtual Safety Car being deployed for two laps.

    Having fought his way back up into the points, Oliver Bearman couldn’t hold onto a scoring finish. After overtaking Hauger earlier in the race, the MP Motorsport driver repaid the favour to take eighth. With the benefit of the switchback, the Norwegian was then able to get the run on Jack Doohan to take seventh on the final lap.

  • Kush Maini misses podium: Baku F2 race; Daruvala 14th

    Kush Maini misses podium: Baku F2 race; Daruvala 14th

    Baku, 29 April 2023: Kush Maini, the Indian racing star, a rookie in the F2, finished just outside the podium taking fourth place in the FIA Formula 2 Sprint here on Saturday.

    Meanwhile, the other Indian veteran in F2, Jehan Daruvala, who was running third at one point after starting from P5 ended up 14th in the Sprint race.

    Oliver Bearman demonstrated that to finish first in Baku – first, you have to finish, as the British rookie claimed his first Formula 2 victory in a dramatic Sprint Race.

    Off the back of his maiden pole position, he lined up 9th on the grid and carved his way through the field to snatch the win from Prema Racingteammate Frederik Vesti.

    A late restart with only three laps to go brought drama, as race leader Dennis Hauger and second-placed Victor Martins crashed out. The PREMA pair were there to pick up the pieces as the race concluded behind the third and final Safety Car. Hitech Pulse-Eight’s Jak Crawford also kept himself out of trouble to take his second podium in third.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    As the five lights went out, Victor Martins attempted to split the front-row starters, Richard Verschoor and Zane Maloney. However, there was no room for the ART Grand Prix driver as he banged wheels with Maloney.

    Reverse pole-sitter Verschoor didn’t hold the lead for long. Contact with the wall at Turn 1 left the Van Amersfoort Racing driver with damage and forced his early retirement. Maloney momentarily assumed the front of the field, but the contact with Martins had caused a right rear puncture. Hauger capitalised to seize the lead from sixth on the grid.

  • Jehan Daruvala begins the season on right note, shows enough pace in season opener

    Jehan Daruvala begins the season on right note, shows enough pace in season opener

    Sakhir (Bahrain), 4 March 2023: Indian hope Jehan Daruvala began the season on a promising note as his MP Motorsport machine showed enough pace as he makes a last-ditch effort in perhaps his final season in Formula 2 World Championship to get noticed by the F1 team.

    Mumbai’s Daruvala, who began as one of the favourites last season faded out due to many factors including lack of pace and some unfortunate incidents which were beyond his control. However, the Indian was let down by his own mistakes too in a few of the races.

    On Saturday, in the reverse grid, he came through the pack to achieve a P6 finish having started the first Formula 2 Sprint Race of 2023 from 11th on the grid. The MP Motorsport driver was pressuring Théo Pourchaire in the closing stages of the race and threatening a top five finish.

    After reflecting on the race and assessing the data, Daruvala says that the result was well earned and a good first step with his new team.

    “Today’s result was ok. I think I had a good start, then I had some good battles at the end with Théo. I’d say there was still a little bit to work on for tomorrow, a bit more pace to come. “Honestly, I think we can finish on the podium tomorrow. Let’s see if we can make some improvements for tomorrow. If we have another good start, a good first lap then there’s no reason why we cannot have a top-five (finish) or even a podium.”

    His battle with the ART Grand Prix driver ultimately ended in favour of the Frenchman, keeping Daruvala outside the top five. He says that fight was good fun, but that with the tyres already past their best, passing him was just out of reach. “Théo and I were both really struggling at the end with our tyres. I gave it everything, but I just had nothing left. It was a good fight, we were close but never made contact so that was good.”

    Looking ahead to tomorrow’s Feature Race further, set to commence as temperatures peak in the early afternoon, the MP driver believes everyone is in for another tough afternoon. Having trailed Pourchaire in the closing stages after saving his tyres earlier in the race, Daruvala already has an idea of what to expect. Even with this knowledge though, the Indian driver says nobody will have an easy time as even he ran into trouble with the tyres by the end of the Sprint.

    “I did an okay job at saving the tyres. I could have done better but it was very tricky. I assume tomorrow with the heat, it’s gonna be even hotter and it’s gonna be even tougher. I’m not gonna let any secrets out by saying this but it’s gonna be difficult for everyone and everyone knows that.

  • Hard-fought podium for Kush Maini: F3 Sprint

    Hard-fought podium for Kush Maini: F3 Sprint

    Budapest (Hungary), 30 July 2022: Indian racing ace Kush Maini earned a hard-fought podium as he took the third place in the FIA Formula3 Round 6 Sprint race here on Saturday. His MP Motorsport teammate won the race.

    Caio Collet brought home his first win in Formula 3 in an impressive fashion, mastering the wet to drying conditions in a race of attrition that caught several of the title contenders out. Starting fourth, the MP Motorsport driver made his presence known, slicing his way through the field and up into the lead before driving off into the distance to finish 8.7s clear of second place Franco Colapinto, who fought hard to hold off the charging Brazilian until the third Safety Car appearance.

    There would be plenty of celebrations for MP, as Kush Maini made it a double podium for the Dutch team having carved his way up from P7 to P3 at the chequered flag. Isack Hadjar couldn’t quite cling on to the podium, but fourth place was enough to see him usurp Victor Martins at the top of the Drivers’ Championship.

    Oliver Bearman was the biggest beneficiary of a late squabble between his teammates Jak Crawford and Arthur Leclerc to seal fifth, ahead of Martins. Grégoire Saucy secured his first points since the opening round of the season in seventh, as Oliver Goethe kept himself out of trouble to achieve points on his debut. Trident added more points to their tally as Roman Stanek and Zane Maloney rounded out the top 10.

    Kush Maini, left, celebrates with MP Motorsport team for the double podium.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    Heavily predicted going into the Budapest weekend, the downpours finally began in the lead up to the race. If leading the pack on debut wasn’t enough of a challenge, Goethe faced a rolling start around a soaked Hungaroring. Bunching up the field, the white, black and orange Campos car couldn’t quite keep his car on the racing line and went wide into the final corner.

    Not one to let an opportunity pass by, Goethe’s mistake allowed Colapinto to sit on his rear wing, slipstreaming along the pit straight and diving up the inside of the Monégasque driver. Experience paid dividends as Hadjar and Collet also swooped their way past him and up into second and third, as Crawford got the better of Martins up the inside of Turn 5 to move up into fifth.

    No sooner had the racing started than it would swiftly ground to a halt, as David Vidales found the barriers between Turns 2 and 3 and the Safety Car was deployed at the end of the opening lap. Colapinto caught Hadjar napping on the restart, dropping the Hitech Grand Prix back into Collet’s clutches and the MP Motorsport driver wasted no time in diving around the outside of the silver car at Turn 1.

    While Colapinto had the advantage of being out front, the pace appeared to be with the MP Motorsport car behind. Corner after corner, Collet tried to squeeze his way past the VAR driver, running out of grip into Turn 13 and despite selling the Argentinian the dummy down the inside of Turn 2, Colapinto’s valiant defence held firm as Collet failed to find a way through.

    Although the track temperature continued to rise and the rain began to ease off, conditions were still a challenge for the field to overcome. Brad Benavides locked his brakes into Turn 1, running into the side of Jenzer Motorsport’s Ido Cohen to necessitate the return of the Safety Car on Lap 5.

    Learning from his mistake earlier on, Hadjar was immediately alert on the restart, attempting to charge his way around the outside of both Colapinto and Collet. While he couldn’t move up into the lead, he did manage to repay the favour on the MP driver, recreating his overtake into Turn 1 to snatch second momentarily. The pair continued to swap and change positions when Colapinto closed the door on Hadjar, enabling Collet to swoop into second from under him.

    In the fight for fourth, Maini was a man on a mission in the second MP Motorsport car, diving down the inside of Martins and then setting about putting Hadjar under pressure, while the leading duo began to pull away from the pack.

    Martins’ morning got increasingly challenging and wet conditions led the Frenchman to make a run of errors. Going wide into the final corner left him vulnerable to the PREMAs behind, as Crawford squeezed past him along the main straight and forced him to go side-by-side with title rival Leclerc. Another wide moment on to the slippery run-off area proved costly as the Ferrari Driver Academy member sailed past him and up into fifth.

    Out front, Colapinto continued to prove impossible for Collet to pass. However, a small mistake at Turn 2 gave the Alpine Academy junior the moment he had been waiting for to snatch the race lead on Lap 10. Now with a clear track up front, Collet put his foot to the floor and didn’t look back, giving himself plenty of breathing room with the gap up to 2.7s after only a single lap.

    As the spray faded and the tyres waned, the race turned into survival of the fittest as the field attempted to conserve their wet Pirelli compounds to the chequered flag with five laps remaining. Nobody seemed to be immune – Leclerc’s moment of oversteer saw him take a hefty whack over the red and white kerbs at Turn 4, while Hadjar’s overly wide line off on to the run-off at Turn 13 gave Maini a chance to pounce.

    The Indian driver had no hesitation in breezing past him at Turn 4 and forcing Hadjar to go on the defensive from fellow Red Bull junior Crawford. It was clear that the Frenchman’s tyres had fallen off their cliff as he slowly started to slip down the order behind Crawford and Leclerc and straight into Martins’ eyeline.

    With his heart set on a maiden Formula 3 podium Maini refused to give up the fight, going side-by-side with Crawford on the penultimate lap as the MP Motorsport driver attempted to break the tow. Thankfully for him, the move paid off and the American driver dropped back, ultimately getting caught out in late drama and coming together with his teammate Leclerc.

    Although he was able to continue, the damage was already done, and Leclerc found himself unable to turn left into Turn 13, drifting into Martins’ path.

    While all the chaos unfolded behind, Collet cruised to his first victory in the third tier ahead of Colapinto and Maini. Hadjar hung on to fourth, as his teammates’ troubles benefited Oliver Bearman, who claimed fifth. Despite the contact, Martins crossed the line in sixth ahead of ART teammate Grégoire Saucy and newcomer Goethe. Trident’s Roman Stanek and Zane Maloney held off Reece Ushijima to take the final points in ninth and 10th, respectively.

    KEY QUOTE – Caio Collet, MP Motorsport

    “Really good day today! My first win in F3, I’m really, really happy. I think after yesterday the team deserved that one. Thanks a lot to them for the support this year, it’s been tough, but we got a win. We celebrate today and recover tomorrow.”

    THE CHAMPIONSHIP VIEW

    The pendulum has swung and for the first time this season, Isack Hadjar leads the Drivers’ Championship by one point to Victor Martins as 104 points play 103. The late incident has proved costly for Arthur Leclerc who drops back off the two Frenchmen in third on 91. Jak Crawford remains fourth, one point ahead of Roman Stanek.

    PREMA Racing continue to lead the way in the Teams’ Championship on 226 points. The top three teams remain the same as ART Grand Prix hold firm in second ahead of Hitech Grand Prix. A 1-3 finish has allowed MP Motorsport to leapfrog Trident into fourth on 113 points.

    WHAT’S NEXT?

    It’s all to play for in the final Formula 3 race before the summer break and MP will have the chance at doing the double with Alexander Smolyar starting on pole – the lights go out for the Budapest Feature Race at 10:05 local time.

  • Mahaveer Raghunathan puts in 53 laps on Day 1 of Second Test: Formula 2

    Mahaveer Raghunathan puts in 53 laps on Day 1 of Second Test: Formula 2

    Nyck Vries tops Day 1 on 6th March 2019. An F2 image

    Barcelona, 6 March 2019: Nyck de Vries set the quickest laptime on the opening day of the second FIA Formula 2 pre-season testing at Barcelona. The Dutchman from ART Grand Prix set a time of 1:28.655 in the afternoon session to lead the way ahead of DAMS’ Sérgio Sette Câmara and rookie Nikita Mazepin.

    The only Indian racer Mahaveer Raghunathan of MP Motorsport was 18th fastest in the morning and improved to 16th in the afternoon session. He did 26 laps in the morning and added 27 more in the post-lunch session to gain some useful information for the team.
    The pit lane opened at 9.30 local time under grey skies. Both Trident cars hit the track first with Giuliano Alesi leading Ralph Boschung. There was an early red flag a few minutes into the session after MP Motorsport’s Mahaveer Raghunathan stopped on track at Turn 7. The proceedings were halted once more shortly after the re-start so that the marshals could clean the pit lane.
    One hour into the session, Raghunathan was the only driver who had set a laptime until his teammate Jordan King found some pace to dip under 1m30s. Carlin’s Louis Delétraz went top in a 1:28.919, heading teammate Nobuharu Matsushita by +0.804s, but de Vries went quickest just before the two-hour mark in a 1:28.821 as Luca Ghiotto slotted in P2 (+0.048s).
    At the chequered flag de Vries sat pretty at the top of the standings ahead of Ghiotto and Delétraz. Jack Aitken was fourth ahead of Mazepin, Nicholas Latifi, Matsushita , Alesi, Sette Câmara and Guanyu Zhou.
    After a two-hour lunch break, the action resumed under blue skies. The ART pair of de Vries and Mazepin were the first to take to the track, but it was Ghiotto who set the early pace in a 1:29.176. The afternoon session was dedicated to race simulations and pit stop practice. Campos’ Roberto Merhi brought out a first red flag on the one-hour mark after he stopped at Turn 2.
    At the re-start, Juan Manuel Correa placed his Sauber Junior Team by Charouz car on P2 but de Vries bettered the American’s time by three tenths. On his next effort, the Dutchman was able to go top whilst teammate Mazepin also set a personal best to move up to second.
    In the opening of the final hour, Mick Schumacher claimed the top spot in a 1:28.866 and remained unchallenged until fifteen minutes before the end of the session: de Vries reclaimed P1 as Sette Câmara moved up to P2 to edge Schumacher. Mazepin also improved to take third in the closing stages.
    Five minutes before the chequered flag Raghunathan stopped at Turn 8 bringing out one final Red Flag. The session was not restarted. Behind the top three, Schumacher, Ghiotto, Zhou, Sean Gelael, Boschung, Correa and Aitken completed the top ten.
    Day 2 will kick off tomorrow at 9.00 local time.
    FIA Formula 2 Barcelona Test – Day 1 Morning Session
    DRIVER
    TEAM
    LAPTIME
    LAPS
    1
    Nyck de Vries
    ART Grand Prix
    1:28.821
    18
    2
    Luca Ghiotto
    UNI Virtuosi
    1:28.869
    16
    3
    Louis Delétraz
    Carlin
    1:28.875
    31
    4
    Jack Aitken
    Campos Racing
    1:28.928
    21
    5
    Nikita Mazepin
    ART Grand Prix
    1:29.107
    17
    6
    Nicholas Latifi
    DAMS
    1:29.343
    30
    7
    Nobuharu Matsushita
    Carlin
    1:29.413
    32
    8
    Giuliano Alesi
    Trident
    1:29.492
    23
    9
    Sérgio Sette Câmara
    DAMS
    1:29.555
    20
    10
    Guanyu Zhou
    UNI Virtuosi
    1:29.589
    13
    11
    Ralph Boschung
    Trident
    1:29.708
    26
    12
    Anthoine Hubert
    BWT Arden
    1:29.709
    18
    13
    Jordan King
    MP Motorsport
    1:29.743
    23
    14
    Roberto Merhi
    Campos Racing
    1:29.752
    35
    15
    Callum Ilott
    Sauber Junior Team by Charouz
    1:29.796
    15
    16
    Juan Manuel Correa
    Sauber Junior Team by Charouz
    1:30.000
    16
    17
    Tatiana Calderon
    BWT Arden
    1:30.773
    22
    18
    Mahaveer Raghunathan
    MP Motorsport
    1:34.373
    26
    19
    Mick Schumacher
    PREMA Racing
    30
    20
    Sean Gelael
    PREMA Racing
    32
    FIA Formula 2 Barcelona Test – Day 1 Afternoon Session
    DRIVER
    TEAM
    LAPTIME
    LAPS
    1
    Nyck de Vries
    ART Grand Prix
    1:28.655
    37
    2
    Sérgio Sette Câmara
    DAMS
    1:28.772
    31
    3
    Nikita Mazepin
    ART Grand Prix
    1:28.829
    43
    4
    Mick Schumacher
    PREMA Racing
    1:28.886
    29
    5
    Luca Ghiotto
    UNI Virtuosi
    1:28.993
    33
    6
    Guanyu Zhou
    UNI Virtuosi
    1:29.070
    27
    7
    Sean Gelael
    PREMA Racing
    1:29.180
    28
    8
    Ralph Boschung
    Trident
    1:29.249
    32
    9
    Juan Manuel Correa
    Sauber Junior Team by Charouz
    1:29.391
    27
    10
    Jack Aitken
    Campos Racing
    1:29.459
    63
    11
    Callum Ilott
    Sauber Junior Team by Charouz
    1:29.776
    29
    12
    Anthoine Hubert
    BWT Arden
    1:29.848
    37
    13
    Jordan King
    MP Motorsport
    1:29.952
    19
    14
    Giuliano Alesi
    Trident
    1:30.169
    34
    15
    Tatiana Calderon
    BWT Arden
    1:30.185
    31
    16
    Mahaveer Raghunathan
    MP Motorsport
    1:31.639
    27
    17
    Louis Delétraz
    Carlin
    1:34.850
    43
    18
    Nobuharu Matsushita
    Carlin
    1:35.235
    34
    19
    Nicholas Latifi
    DAMS
    1:35.290
    36
    20
    Roberto Merhi
    Campos Racing
    1:35.664
    23
  • George Russell wins final race, clinches F2 title; Arjun Maini suffers DNF in opening chaos

    Briton slices through hectic feature for win and title

    Abu Dhabi, 24 Nov 2018: George Russell claimed the 2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship drivers’ title with his seventh victory of the season in an eventful feature race tonight at the Yas Marina Circuit, losing and then regaining the lead while turmoil reigned behind as he sailed to victory by three seconds over Artem Markelov and Luca Ghiotto.

    It was the first night start of the season for the grid, bringing with it pressure of starting in the unknown: Russell made a poor getaway from pole, allowing a fast starting Nyck de Vries to grab the lead at turn one from the championship leader and Markelov, but there was chaos behind as DAMS duo Alexander Albon and Nicholas Latifi stalled, along with Sergio Sette Câmara.

    Arjun Maini was unable to get around the Canadian and the pair had an enormous impact, with Nirei Fukuzumi being tagged as he went around the stricken cars: with 5 vehicles in various states of undress on the front straight there was no choice but to release the safety car, with the remainder of the field coming through the pits each time around, including the restarted Albon and Sette Câmara, for 5 laps as the marshals cleared a path for them.

    When the race went live Russell was pushing de Vries all around the circuit, with Markelov in hot pursuit: both drivers ran heavily over the kerbs in their efforts to gain ground on the man ahead until the Briton headed into the pits on lap 9: an incredible out lap allowed him to blow past de Vries as he exited the pits, and a record-equalling victory was on the cards.

    Markelov came in next time around, slotting in right behind de Vries on his return, handing the lead on the road to Ghiotto, one of the few to risk the alternate tyre strategy from P16 on the grid. The Italian had a 24-second lead but the rest of the field was closing, cutting 5 seconds in 6 laps before the gap started to reverse, stretch back out to 24 seconds over the next 6 laps and handing Ghiotto an unexpected opportunity at victory.

    Unfortunately for the Italian, he ran too deep at the marina chicane just before his stop, picking up a 5 second time penalty for gaining an advantage and undoing his good work: he served it before his team swapped tyres on lap 26, and re-emerged in P5 on fresh rubber. He made short work of Lando Norris and was soon storming after de Vries, who had been unable to contain a charging Markelov a few laps earlier.

    On the penultimate lap Ghiotto blew past de Vries at the marina, but ran out of time to improve his podium position: Russell cruised to the win, equalling the F1 feeder record of 7 wins held jointly by Stoffel Vandoorne and Charles Leclerc, by 3s ahead of Markelov, who was almost 5s to the good over Ghiotto at the flag. De Vries was disappointed with P4 ahead of Norris, with Louis Deletraz a second ahead of teammate Antonio Fuoco after he mugged Roberto Merhi for 7th on the final lap, and Tadasuke Makino and Jack Aitken rounding out the points in the final feature race of the season.

    Provisional Feature Race Classification

    Position Driver Team Gap
    1 George Russell ART Grand Prix
    2 Artem Markelov RUSSIAN TIME 3.301
    3 Luca Ghiotto Campos Vexatec Racing 8.283
    4 Nyck de Vries PERTAMINA PREMA Theodore Racing 12.046
    5 Lando Norris Carlin 19.050
    6 Louis Delétraz Charouz Racing System 21.964
    7 Antonio Fuoco Charouz Racing System 23.633
    8 Roberto Merhi Campos Vexatec Racing 27.375
    9 Tadasuke Makino RUSSIAN TIME 27.840
    10 Jack Aitken ART Grand Prix 32.786
    11 Daniel Ticktum BWT Arden 42.485
    12 Dorian Boccolacci MP Motorsport 46.303
    13 Alessio Lorandi Trident 47.809
    14 Alexander Albon DAMS 55.571
    15 Niko Kari MP Motorsport 70.190
    16 Sergio Sette Câmara Carlin 70.766
    17 Sean Gelael PERTAMINA PREMA Theodore Racing 89.971
    Not Classified
    Nicholas Latifi DAMS DNF
    Nirei Fukuzumi BWT Arden DNF
    Arjun Maini Trident DNF
  • McLaren picking up Lando is good for me says, 2018 F2 winner George Russell

    Abu Dhabi, 24 Nov 2018: ART driver who started on pole in the final race, the only night race of the season and despite losing position at the start won the race to edge out Alexander Albon and won the F2 Championship. Excerpts from an interview:
    Q: How does it feel?
    George Russell: It’s a huge sigh of relief, to be honest! It’s been a very long and tough year for myself and ART, and we’ve worked really hard and probably from Baku we’ve been one of the quickest on track every single time. We’ve had a number of issues that have been hugely frustrating, but others have as well and it’s been a little difficult to get this across the line. But that pole yesterday you saw the emotions there, and obviously, we knew what we had to do today: to win it in style, and that’s what we did.
    What does this win mean for the team?
    They’re absolutely delighted because they’ve had 2 difficult years in F2/GP2 prior to this. We’ve had 2 years together because I was with them last year in GP3, and it’s been a real journey working with each other, and you probably saw the emotion at the podium from the mechanics and engineers: they’re absolutely buzzing!
    What have been your highlights of the year?
    I’d say a stand out highlight was Baku Race 2: after Race 1 we were comfortably in the lead when the safety car came out and we had a bit of an incident with Nyck de Vries at the restart and I lost the win and finished 12th, so I started Race 2 from there and came through to win, so that was redemption for the previous day. And as a whole the triple-headers are incredible: it’s a driver’s dream to go race after race after race, and it was very tough on the team and we were away from home a lot, but we had three fantastic weeks where we entered about 30 points back in the championship and came out 37 points or so ahead, so that was fantastic!
    Where there any moments you’d rather forget?
    Probably Baku Race 1, which was really disappointing because although it was the guy in P2 who had a lock up and took me out of the race I felt there was possibly something I could have done to avoid that situation, and even though everyone had my back and were telling me I wasn’t in the wrong I still had a voice telling me something slightly different, maybe I could have compromised and gone down to 2nd or 3rd and come back later. And as an overall weekend Monaco was a horrible one for me: my engine let go on my out lap for free practice, and I’d never been to Monaco before and already only had half the time, so I finished up a second from pole because I was learning the track as I was going! I crashed in both races, and the worst bit was I wasn’t even pushing when I crashed, I was stuck between a line of cars and there was no point risking anything so I was cooling off and not focusing when I hit the kerb and crashed! So that was terrible, but it was good to turn it around in the following races.
    Has this season taught you how to turn it around and to keep believing it can be better?
    What it’s certainly taught me is that there’s no negative race, because any poor race you have you learn something from it and take it forward, and I think that’s something looking back that I’m glad that our first race in Bahrain was so poor, because we had bad race pace, the car wasn’t good and I was driving the wrong way to get the most out of the tyres, and we came away from that race learning so much that we put into good use in the following races, whereas if I’d had a better race we might have thought we’re almost there and not learnt as much. So if it’s a good or a bad weekend, there’s always something to take out of it.
    We know now where you’re going next year, but was it frustrating that Lando Norris was announced at McLaren when you were ahead of him in the championship?
    Not at all actually: Lando’s announcement so early helped me to push Williams for my drive because if I was ahead of him in the championship and McLaren believed he was worthy of a Formula 1 seat it showed there were some great signs for myself, and it probably added more pressure for Williams to say we’ve got to go with George because he’s the guy who is winning F2.
    You were fighting for the championship up until now with Alex Albon: what was it like to fight with someone you’ve grown up with?
    It was great: I have a huge amount of respect for Alex, we’re great friends, and on the track we’re rivals but we’ve always had great respect for each other in Formula Renault, Formula 3 or this year. Going into this he was always the dark horse: there was always a lot of focus on me and Lando for the championship, but Alex was always there and I kept reminding journalists about this. Even in Sochi, we were doing a photoshoot with Lando and myself, and I said we need Alex here because he’s right there, and as it turned out it was Alex who was the only one who could fight me coming here! It was great, and I really hope he secures the drive that the media are speculating about for next year.
  • Russell flies to pole in dramatic qualifying; Arjun Maini to start at the back of the grid

    Championship leader grabs pole in Abu Dhabi
    Abu Dhabi, 23 Nov 2018: George Russell has put one hand on the trophy by claiming a fifth pole position at this evening’s FIA Formula 2 Championship qualifying session to extend his lead over title rival Alexander Albon to 41 points with just 44 left to claim this weekend, with the Briton flying on his second run to grab the top spot ahead of Nyck de Vries and Nicholas Latifi.
    The Briton stopped the clocks with a lap of 1:49.251 with a minute remaining in the session, while Albon had a wide ride over the kerbs in the final sector of the lap, destroying any chance he had of getting one over his rival ahead of tomorrow’s feature race.
    The temperatures remained up as the sun dropped down ahead of the session, and with the lights blazing overhead the teams concentrated on making the final preparations until the circuit opened for business. Russell was the 2nd driver on track and was clearly keen to stamp his authority on the session: Carlin pair Lando Norris and Sergio Sette Câmara briefly alternated the lead before Russell claimed the top spot for himself, with Albon and Artem Markelov slotting onto the timesheets just behind him.
    Nyck de Vries and Latifi emerged for their first runs just as their rivals were returning to the pits, and both men put the clear track to good use, with first the Canadian and then the Dutchman annexing the top spot, although de Vries made it clear to his team that he didn’t think his lap was good enough to hold on as he returned for fresh tyres. It was a point that was soon to be proven correct.
    With six minutes remaining everyone was back on track and looking to find the time they left on track last time around: Russell’s sectors went green and then purple before holding on the final sector to claim provisional pole, with de Vries and Latifi improving as well but both being unable to usurp the ART driver, and when Albon had a ragged final sector after a trip across the kerbs Russell’s pole was secure.
    Behind the top three Artem Markelov made a tremendous improvement on free practice to claim a second row start ahead of Jack Aitken, Louis Deletraz, Norris, Albon, Tadasuke Makino and Sette Câmara: tomorrow’s feature race promises even more fireworks with the title potentially to be secured.
    Provisional Qualifying Classification
    Position
    Driver
    Team
    Time
    Laps
    1
    George Russell
    ART Grand Prix
    1:49.251
    10
    2
    Nyck de Vries
    PERTAMINA PREMA Theodore Racing
    1:49.541
    8
    3
    Nicholas Latifi
    DAMS
    1:49.647
    9
    4
    Artem Markelov
    RUSSIAN TIME
    1:49.869
    9
    5
    Jack Aitken
    ART Grand Prix
    1:49.946
    10
    6
    Louis Delétraz
    Charouz Racing System
    1:50.038
    9
    7
    Lando Norris
    Carlin
    1:50.059
    10
    8
    Alexander Albon
    DAMS
    1:50.155
    10
    9
    Tadasuke Makino
    RUSSIAN TIME
    1:50.180
    9
    10
    Sergio Sette Câmara
    Carlin
    1:50.187
    10
    11
    Niko Kari
    MP Motorsport
    1:50.375
    10
    12
    Roberto Merhi
    Campos Vexatec Racing
    1:50.513
    10
    13
    Antonio Fuoco
    Charouz Racing System
    1:50.522
    9
    14
    Daniel Ticktum
    BWT Arden
    1:50.580
    10
    15
    Sean Gelael
    PERTAMINA PREMA Theodore Racing
    1:50.812
    10
    16
    Alessio Lorandi
    Trident
    1:50.855
    10
    17
    Luca Ghiotto
    Campos Vexatec Racing
    1:50.892
    10
    18
    Dorian Boccolacci
    MP Motorsport
    1:51.037
    10
    19
    Nirei Fukuzumi
    BWT Arden
    1:51.048
    9
    20
    Arjun Maini
    Trident
    1:51.597
    10
  • Arjun Maini 16th as Russell sets the pace in FP1: FIA Formula 2

    Russell sets the pace in Abu Dhabi
    Abu Dhabi, 23 Nov 2018: Top Indian driver Arjun Maini suffered a set back as he could clock only 16th fastest in the Free Practice 1 even as George Russell got his championship-deciding weekend under way in fine style by topping this afternoon’s FIA Formula 2 Championship free practice with a lap of 1:51.720, grabbing P1 by over a tenth from Antonio Fuoco and Luca Ghiotto, while title rival Alexander Albon kept his powder dry by coming home in P9, almost a second behind the 2019 Williams F1 driver.
    The Indian driver who is returning to top competition after a long break put in 17 laps on Friday.
    The session got underway with the expected blue skies and soaring temperatures, with Lando Norris and Fuoco the first drivers to set representative times to top the timesheets. The Italian held P1 for the first quarter hour before being usurped by Russell, who looked unruffled as he grabbed the top spot while further back Albon had a slightly wayward moment at the marina complex and decided that discretion was the better part of valour, returning to the pitlane soon afterwards.
    And with that, the grid concentrated on their long run pace ahead of the penultimate race tomorrow, with little to concern the timekeepers: Roberto Merhi had a small moment over the kerbs while Artem Markelov explored the limits of tyre adhesion all around the circuit in an otherwise quiet session.
    Nirei Fukuzumi was best of the rest behind the top 3 but ahead of Nyck De Vries, Merhi, Louis Deletraz, Norris, Albon and Markelov as they returned to the paddock to scour the data in an effort to go faster still in this evening’s qualifying session.
    Free Practice Times
    Driver
    Team
    Laptime
    Laps
    1
    George Russell
    ART Grand Prix
    1:51.720
    19
    2
    Antonio Fuoco
    Charouz Racing System
    1:51.884
    18
    3
    Luca Ghiotto
    Campos Vexatec Racing
    1:52.315
    20
    4
    Nirei Fukuzumi
    BWT Arden
    1:52.323
    15
    5
    Nyck De Vries
    PERTAMINA PREMA Theodore Racing
    1:52.386
    16
    6
    Roberto Merhi
    Campos Vexatec Racing
    1:52.395
    19
    7
    Louis Delétraz
    Charouz Racing System
    1:52.518
    17
    8
    Lando Norris
    Carlin
    1:52.611
    18
    9
    Alexander Albon
    DAMS
    1:52.655
    17
    10
    Artem Markelov
    RUSSIAN TIME
    1:52.940
    16
    11
    Jack Aitken
    ART Grand Prix
    1:53.012
    18
    12
    Sergio Sette Camara
    Carlin
    1:53.037
    18
    13
    Alessio Lorandi
    Trident
    1:53.216
    18
    14
    Tadasuke Makino
    RUSSIAN TIME
    1:53.360
    17
    15
    Sean Gelael
    PERTAMINA PREMA Theodore Racing
    1:53.398
    16
    16
    Arjun Maini
    Trident
    1:53.483
    17
    17
    Nicholas Latifi
    DAMS
    1:53.507
    18
    18
    Niko Kari
    MP Motorsport
    1:53.605
    18
    19
    Dorian Boccolacci
    MP Motorsport
    1:53.875
    17
    20
    Daniel Ticktum
    BWT Arden
    1:54.317
    18
  • Russell holds off Markelov for Monza Sprint Race win; Trident’s Arjun Maini 9th

     Russel, the British driver extends championship advantage with Italy triumph
    George Russell secured victory in the FIA Formula 2 Championship Sprint Race at Monza, Italy, capitalising on an Artem Markelov lock-up into turn 1 to bag his first race win since Austria. Markelov followed the ART Grand Prix driver home, albeit one second adrift to collect a successive second place finishes. Sergio Sette Camara factored in the battle for the win, and the Carlin driver ended the race in third position.
    After a slow getaway, polesitter Ralph Boschung immediately trickled back through the order as Nicholas Latifi – starting from the second row – surged into the lead with Russell and Markelov falling into order behind him. Sette Camara and Carlin teammate Lando Norris also enjoyed strong starts, but were unable to capitalise early on; the Brazilian dropped behind Alexander Albon, while Norris made contact in the opening corners and fell behind Luca Ghiotto and Feature Race winner Tadasuke Makino.
    The order over the opening laps was relatively stagnant, and Markelov was given the order to close in on Russell to take advantage of DRS. Meanwhile, Norris moved up the order after Makino endured a large lock-up into turn 1 after just two laps, prompting the Japanese driver to pit for new tyres on the following tour of the circuit.
    Russell had caught Latifi on the fourth lap, and looked to pass the Canadian with DRS on their next visit to the start/finish straight. Cruising past with apparent ease, Russell snatched at his brakes and let Latifi back past, while Markelov seized the opportunity to steal through into second place. The Russian then took the lead on the following lap, barrelling past on the straight to give his RUSSIAN TIME team the chance of securing back-to-back wins.
    Having failed to come back at Markelov, Latifi was now under attack from Russell, who had Sette Camara for company after the Brazilian had dispatched Albon earlier on. Russell launched his attack on Latifi on lap 9, while Sette Camara found it far tougher to dispatch the DAMS driver, eventually making his way past as Albon came under attack from Norris behind them.
    No sooner had Sette Camara steamed through into third place, Markelov ahead of them had locked up at the first chicane, taking the escape road which allowed Russell to streak past to assume control of the race. However, the lock-up hadn’t compromised Markelov’s pace and he immediately began to put Russell under pressure – with Sette Camara catching up to the pair to challenge for the lead. At the same time, Albon fell victim to Norris’ pass at Curva Grande, before dropping back with reported technical issues.
    Markelov was a constant presence in Russell’s mirrors, but was unable to capitalise on his position with DRS to launch a serious assault on the British driver. A number of opportunities after the median point of the race came to nothing, and Markelov instead elected to drop back to preserve the life in his tyres. This left him under fire from Sette Camara, but the Carlin driver was also unable to find a way past.
    With some breathing space, Russell was able to start managing the gap to the cars behind him, especially as Markelov was now occupied by Sette Camara’s advances. Further down the road, Latifi was embattled by Norris, but was inch-perfect in his defense of fourth and refused to concede a further position.
    Into the closing stages, Markelov was able to manage the gap to Sette Camara, but was unable to launch a late effort on Russell in a final play for the lead; the championship leader had opened the gap to beyond DRS range, cruising home to clinch victory and extending his championship advantage over Norris to 22 points. Markelov held onto second ahead of Sette Camara, while Latifi absorbed pressure from Norris to secure fourth. Ghiotto took sixth to grab double-points finishes from his home round, while Dorian Boccolacci took his first F2 points with seventh – as Jack Aitken beat Arjun Maini to eighth.
    Russell stands at the top of the championship with renewed vigour, his 219 points shading Norris’ haul of 197. Albon remains third with 176. Carlin have 339 points in the teams’ standings, with ART on 281 and DAMS on 249 ahead of the next round in Sochi from the 28-30 September.
    2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship Round 10 – Monza, Italy – Sprint Race Provisional Classification
    Driver
    Team
    1
    George Russell
    ART Grand Prix
    2
    Artem Markelov
    RUSSIAN TIME
    3
    Sergio Sette Camara
    Carlin
    4
    Nicholas Latifi
    DAMS
    5
    Lando Norris
    Carlin
    6
    Luca Ghiotto
    Campos Vexatec Racing
    7
    Dorian Boccolacci
    MP Motorsport
    8
    Jack Aitken
    ART Grand Prix
    9
    Arjun Maini
    Trident
    10
    Antonio Fuoco
    Charouz Racing System
    11
    Louis Deletraz
    Charouz Racing System
    12
    Alessio Lorandi
    Trident
    13
    Nirei Fukuzumi
    BWT Arden
    14
    Tadasuke Makino
    RUSSIAN TIME
    15
    Roy Nissany
    Campos Vexatec Racing
    16
    Maximilian Gunther
    BWT Arden
    17
    Nyck de Vries
    PERTAMINA PREMA Theodore Racing
    Not Classified
    Alexander Albon
    DAMS
    Ralph Boschung
    MP Motorsport
    Sean Gelael
    PERTAMINA PREMA Theodore Racing
    Fastest Lap: Sergio Sette Camara (Carlin) – 1:34.896