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Tag: Jehan Daruvala
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Championship lead is a big boost, but I want to win races, says Daruvala
THOUGHTS FROM VIPS, DARUVALA AND ARMSTRONG

Jehan Daruvala (left) at the FIA post-race F3 press meet on Saturday. An FIA image FIA Formula 3: Hello and welcome to today’s FIA Formula 3 press conference following Race 1 here at Silverstone. Joining us today we have our top three finishers from the opening race – our race winner Jüri Vips from Hitech Grand Prix, in second place Jehan Daruvala from PREMA Racing and in third place Marcus Armstrong from PREMA Racing. Jüri congratulations. A magnificent lights to flag victory out there today, highlighted by a really intense fight with Jehan at the front of the field. Could you talk us through that battle with him and some of the defensive moves?
Jüri Vips: I think I was struggling with my rear tyres a bit more than them through the whole race so first of all it was almost impossible to break the DRS without safety cars and everything. It was tough in the corners, very tough, and I really had to defend and fight for the victory but in the end I’m really happy that I got it. I’m really happy at the progress we’re all making, myself and Hitech, to start putting these weekends together and really have a clear direction on how to close the gap to the PREMA drivers. I’m really happy.
FIA Formula 3: The safety car towards the end of the race cooled the battle down a little bit but it set things up for a final sprint to the flag. How did you deal with that? I guess it was quite an intense pressure towards the end?
Jüri: Yeah. I think I did a better job with warming up the tyres and I think the safety car also kind of saved me because I got to cool down my rear tyres which were much hotter than the PREMA drivers behind me. I think that helped me to win and the tyres were a bit more ready, especially the front tyres at the safety car restart. I managed to pull a little gap in the last few laps and I don’t think Jehan got to attack after the safety car so that was good.
FIA Formula 3: Congratulations. Jehan moving on to you now. Another podium finish and a hard fought race. Could we get your view of the fight with Jüri out there?
Jehan Daruvala: It was a good battle. All race long I was close but just not close enough when I was catching him right at the end of the straight with the DRS. The virtual safety car was disappointing because that was the closest I was all race when coming out of Maggotts and Becketts. I thought that would be my best opportunity to overtake him but in the end, after the virtual safety car, I could stay within his DRS but I think he was pretty clever when he was in Maggotts and Becketts making sure he was always fast on the exit. Then we’d come close in the middle but I didn’t really have enough downforce on the last part of the circuit. He drove well. He didn’t really make any mistakes apart from one on the opening lap where he went off in Maggotts Becketts but he had a safe gap at that point. To be honest the car was great, I could follow him a bit better than I thought in all the corners except the most crucial corner.
FIA Formula 3: Another podium though, and that puts you into the lead of the Drivers’ Championship now. How much of a boost has this recent run of podiums and high finishes been for you?
Jehan: It is a boost, but like I said yesterday my main focus was to win the race. I wasn’t thinking at any time that I wanted to finish second even though I knew Robert was sixth at one point. Obviously, I’m fighting Jüri and Marcus for the championship as well so my goal was to try and take the lead. I tried a couple of times but his defence was quite strong.
FIA Formula 3: Well done today. Marcus moving on to you now. You recovered after dropping off the front row at the start to get into that fight for the lead at one point, how much did that safety car stump your charge? You were so close but did it pull you back a little bit?
Marcus Armstrong: Yeah. As a whole it’s a bit of a disappointing race. The start was strange. I sort of had a shocking launch and everyone just went past me. To be honest I wasn’t too worried at the time because I knew that we had the pace. Obviously quali was quite strong so it wasn’t the end of the world. Once I got past [Christian] Lundgaard quite early in the race it was clear that the car was good and the pace was strong. Then I think there was a VSC straight after that just as I was starting to get on the back of these guys. I think the two, the virtual safety car and the safety car, was not ideal for me just because it kept, as you say, stunting the momentum that I had. In saying that it is difficult to overtake once you arrive to the front two. As Jehan said, Jüri’s not making many mistakes and obviously Jehan’s not making many mistakes, so it was never going to be an easy fight to get past.
FIA Formula 3: We spoke yesterday about it possibly being a race of management out there, how did that match up with your expectations?
Marcus: It wasn’t mental. It’s pretty cold outside so it wasn’t dramatic. In the end I don’t think I’d do anything differently. It was quite a predictable race which is not what I expected yesterday.
FIA Formula 3: Well done on your result. Jüri back to you now. You received high praise from both of your fellow drivers here, how much are you enjoying this fight against PREMA? It’s a really intense battle that we’re seeing at the front of the championship right now.
Jüri: The first few races not so much because the battle for the championship didn’t look so good then, but I’m really happy with how things went at the Red Bull Ring. We put a very strong weekend together and I know we still have Race 2 to go but this is also looking like a very strong weekend, or maybe even better because we got pole position as well. There’s still little things to improve, the pace wasn’t as good as I wanted, but I need to check the data and improve for Race 2 because tomorrow will also be very crucial to make up as many positions as possible and gain as many points on these two as possible to close the gap in the championship. That’s my aim.
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Jehan Daruvala settles for second after a daring drive: F3 Race 1

Jehan Daruvala (PREMA Racing), Juri Vips (Hitech Grand Prix), Marcus Armstrong (PREMA Racing) at the F3 podium on Saturday. An F3 image Silverstone, 13 July 2019: Ace Indian driver Jehan Daruvala of Prema Racing, made a valiant attempt to force a win, but superb defending by Red Bull Junior Juri Vips of Hitech Grand Prix team saw him take a well-deserved win ahead of the Prema duo of Daruvala and championship leader Marcus Armstrong in the FIA Formula 3 Race 1, a support event at the British Grand Prix weekend at the iconic Silverstone circuit here on Saturday. Daruvala, thus gained his fifth podium of the season and has now taken the championship lead with 102 points. He will start on P7 for the shorter Sprint race on Sunday at 1.05 IST
Jüri Vips produced a defensive masterclass at Silverstone to keep the relentless Jehan Daruvala behind him and drive a lights-to-flag victory in the FIA Formula 3 Race 1. The Hitech Grand Prix man survived several overtake attempts from the pacey PREMA to retain the position come the chequered flag. The duo were followed by the second PREMA of Marcus Armstrong in third.
Courtesy Twitter @DaruvalaJehan There was a frantic start when the lights went out, as Vips dashed in front of Armstrong to hold onto pole and race ahead. In his attempts to take first, the Kiwi dropped between both Daruvala and Christian Lundgaard, who took advantage of his focus on Vips.
Armstrong managed to regain the place from Lundgaard at the second corner, who was thrust into a battle with Leonardo Pulcini. The Italian initially cut around the right of the ART man, who dropped back and sprinted around his left to regain fourth.Meanwhile, the third PREMA of Robert Shwartzman had fallen as far as 13th after a slow start, but wrestled his way back to his starting position of sixth within the first tour of Silverstone.Armstrong and Lundgaard were still locked in wall-to-wall combat for third around the tight twists of the circuit, before the Kiwi was given some respite when debutant Federico Malvestiti stopped on track and brought out a virtual safety car.Back out in front, Daruvala attempted a daring lunge on the race leader when action resumed, but Vips defended gallantly going into the corner to hold onto P1. The Indian driver made a second attempt just a few minutes later, but once again fell foul to the defensive abilities of the Hitech racer, who held on, despite nearly kissing tyres.The battle was far from over and the gap remained under a second, but Vips refused to waver. His persistent change of racing line was breaking Daruvala’s tow and keeping him in behind. The PREMA man’s third attempt was his closest as the duo went wheel-to-wheel, but Vips edged him around the corner and once again, they nearly kissed tyres as the PREMA man was forced to ease off.Having fought so hard for first, the Indian was suddenly plunged into a fight for P2 after he wobbled around a corner and briefly cruised off track. Armstrong dove down the side and the pair went wheel-to-wheel. Still within a second of Vips, Daruvala was aided by DRS and managed to cling on.Further back, Raoul Hyman was flung off track and bumped the barriers. His attempts to get restarted were in vein and eventually he was forced out of his car, bringing out a safety car.Five laps remained when the safety car dove back into the pits and Vips made a superb getaway, while Daruvala made a poor one. The Estonian quickly built up a 1s gap and was out of DRS range, with Daruvala now concentrating on the Kiwi teammate in his shadow.The safety car had bridged the gap between Piquet and Shwartzman, but traffic was crushing his efforts to overtake. Spotting the Trident in his rear view, the PREMA picked up pace and made a move on Lundgaard, slickly sweeping down his left.Vips had put air between himself and Daruvala, who was now locked in a three-way battle with Armstrong and Pulcini for the final podium places. They would all hold on come the chequered flag, as Vips ran ahead of Daruvala and Armstrong, with Pulcini in fourth, for the first lights-to-flag victory of the campaign.Shwartzman completed the top five following his move on Lundgaard, while Piquet stole sixth at the death. The ART man was forced to settle for seventh, ahead of Liam Lawson, Jake Hughes and Alex Peroni.Daruvala’s P2 finish was enough to haul him into the Championship lead on 100 points, two ahead of teammate Shwartzman. Vips is third on 92, followed by Armstrong on 69 and Piquet on 43. PREMA lead the team’s standings with 226 points, ahead of ART Grand Prix on 76. Hitech Grand Prix are third with 71 points, followed by Trident on 50 and HWA RACELAB on 35.The grid’s youngest driver Liam Lawson will start on reverse pole in Race 2 tomorrow, which takes place at 1.05pm IST, 8.35am local time.2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship – Round 4 Race 1 classificationDRIVERTEAM1Juri VipsHitech Grand Prix2Jehan DaruvalaPREMA Racing3Marcus ArmstrongPREMA Racing4Leonardo PulciniHitech Grand Prix5Robert ShwartzmanPREMA Racing6Pedro PiquetTrident7Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix8Liam LawsonMP Motorsport9Jake HughesHWA RACELAB10Alex PeroniCampos Racing11David BeckmannART Grand Prix12Ye YifeiHitech Grand Prix13Felipe DrugovichCarlin Buzz Racing14Yuki TsunodaJenzer Motorsport15Lirim ZendeliSauber Junior Team by Charouz16Fabio SchererSauber Junior Team by Charouz17Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport18Niko KariTrident19Max FewtrellART Grand Prix20Sebastian FernandezCampos Racing21Keyvan AndresHWA RACELAB22Bent ViscaalHWA RACELAB23Andreas EstnerJenzer Motorsport24Simo LaaksonenMP Motorsport25Teppei NatoriCarlin Buzz Racing26Logan SargeantCarlin Buzz Racing27Devlin DeFrancescoTridentNOT CLASSIFIEDRaoul HymanSauber Junior Team by CharouzFederico MalvestitiJenzer MotorsportAlessio DeleddaCampos RacingOVERALL FASTEST LAPLogan Sargeant (Carlin Buzz Racing) – 1:45.692 on Lap 16FASTEST LAP ELIGIBLE FOR POINTSJehan Daruvala (PREMA Racing) – 1:45.698 on Lap 17 -

Jehan Daruvala claims P3 for Race 1, looks forward to a good fight: F3

Jehan Daruvala after qualifying P3 on Friday at Silverstone. Photos: Twitter @DaruvalaJehan Silverstone, 12 July 2019: Indian race driver Jehan Daruvala missed the pole by a whisker after a late charge by Jüri Vips in his last lap put the Hitech Grand Prix team on top and he fetched his first F3 pole position, during an intense final few minutes of FIA Formula 3 Qualifying here on Friday.
No fewer than five drivers held first in the final 90 seconds of the session, but Vips came out on top ahead of PREMA duo Marcus Armstrong and Jehan Daruvala.The Championship leaders were the ones to beat at the start of the session, with Armstrong and Daruvala comfortably lapping quickest early on. Vips and Max Fewtrell soon got up to speed and were able to usurp the in-form pair.Armstrong was on the hunt for his second pole this season in as many rounds and reclaimed P1 as the cars began to feed back into the pit lane at the halfway stage. Liam Lawson nipped out ahead of everyone and pocketed P2 with the track to himself, but the Kiwi was pushed back down the order when the track filled up again.
Vips exchanged fastest laps with Niko Kari heading into the final minutes of the session, before Qualifying quickly heated up. Pedro Piquet stole P1 from the clutches of Vips with 90 seconds left on the clock, but was soon usurped by Robert Shwartzman and then Armstrong.The Estonian had enough in the tank to return the favour and jumped back ahead to seal first, followed by Armstrong and Daruvala. Christian Lundgaard and Leonardo Pulcini completed the top five, ahead of Shwartzman, Lawson, Piquet, Fabio Scherer and Ye Yifei.Jehan will be aiming for a podium finish if not a win and looking forward for a good fight in Race 1 tomorrow, at 2.05iST. Local time: 9.25amFIA Formula 3 Championship – Round 4 Qualifying classificationDRIVERTEAMLAPTIMELAPS1Jüri VipsHitech Grand Prix1:43.902132Marcus ArmstrongPREMA Racing1:43.998113Jehan DaruvalaPREMA Racing1:44.014114Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix1:44.073125Leonardo PulciniHitech Grand Prix1:44.139126Robert ShwartzmanPREMA Racing1:44.218117Liam LawsonMP Motorsport1:44.360128Pedro PiquetTrident1:44.403139Fabio SchererSauber Junior Team by Charouz1:44.4331310Ye YifeiHitech Grand Prix1:44.4611211Jake HughesHWA RACELAB1:44.4621312Niko KariTrident1:44.4761413David BeckmannART Grand Prix1:44.5811214Max FewtrellART Grand Prix1:44.5841215Raoul HymanSauber Junior Team by Charouz1:44.6471216Logan SargeantCarlin Buzz Racing1:44.7461217Lirim ZendeliSauber Junior Team by Charouz1:44.7561318Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport1:44.9671119Sebastian FernandezCampos Racing1:44.9841320Felipe DrugovichCarlin Buzz Racing1:45.0201221Alex PeroniCampos Racing1:45.0881322Devlin DeFrancescoTrident1:45.1091323Keyvan AndresHWA RACELAB1:45.1101324Simo LaaksonenMP Motorsport1:45.1421225Bent ViscaalHWA RACELAB1:45.2291426Yuki TsunodaJenzer Motorsport1:45.3011327Andreas EstnerJenzer Motorsport1:45.4351328Teppei NatoriCarlin Buzz Racing1:45.5901329Federico MalvestitiJenzer Motorsport1:46.1031330Alessio DeleddaCampos Racing1:47.06813 -
Jehan Daruvala clocks 10th fastest time in Friday morning practice: F3
Silverstone, 12 July 2019: Indian racing sensation Jehan Daruvala of Prema Racing, who is running second in the F3 Championship table, finished 10th on the timesheets in Friday practice even as Max Fewtrell ensured the British race weekend got underway with a countryman on top, lapping quickest around the freshly laid Silverstone circuit to top the times in this morning’s FIA Formula 3 Free Practice.The ART Grand Prix man ran ahead of Trident’s Devlin DeFrancesco and teammate David Beckmann, who both secured their highest practice positions of the campaign to date.It was the third ART machine which got the session underway, as Christian Lundgaard set the early pace in cool 17-degree temperatures. Fellow Englishman Jake Hughes and Leonardo Pulcini then exchanged places at the top, as the grid warmed up their tyres.There was plenty of traffic on track in the opening minutes as the cars got a taste of the new tarmac and PREMA soon took control of the session with Championship leaders Robert Shwartzman and Jehan Daruvala leading the times.That was as good as it got for the PREMA duo who quickly dropped down the order. Pulcini and Beckmann began to battle it out in first, but Fewtrell then emerged as the frontrunner in front of his home crowd.Ye Yifei briefly claimed first ahead of the ART man, but the latter bounced back by breaking the 1m 46s barrier with just two minutes on the clock. DeFrancesco was able to set a time good enough for second, while Beckmann couldn’t improve on his teammate’s time and nestled in at third ahead of Yifei and Lirim Zendeli. Yuki Tsunoda, Lundgaard, Raoul Hyman, Pulcini and Daruvala completed the top ten.Fewtrell will look to keep up his early weekend pace when the cars return to the track for Qualifying at 4.50pm (local time).FIA Formula 3 – Silverstone Free Practice classificationDRIVERTEAMLAPTIMELAPS1Max FewtrellART Grand Prix1:45.264182Devlin DeFrancescoTrident1:45.487183David BeckmannART Grand Prix1:45.583194Ye YifeiHitech Grand Prix1:45.606205Lirim ZendeliSauber Junior Team by Charouz1:45.672196Yuki TsunodaJenzer Motorsport1:45.779207Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix1:45.998198Raoul HymanSauber Junior Team by Charouz1:46.185199Leonardo PulciniHitech Grand Prix1:46.2221510Jehan DaruvalaPREMA Racing1:46.2641511Fabio SchererSauber Junior Team by Charouz1:46.2702012Robert ShwartzmanPREMA Racing1:46.3961613Felipe DrugovichCarlin Buzz Racing1:46.4281714Juri VipsHitech Grand Prix1:46.5531715Niko KariTrident1:46.5781616Pedro PiquetTrident1:46.6811617Sebastian FernandezCampos Racing1:46.7431818Logan SargeantCarlin Buzz Racing1:46.7671719Andreas EstnerJenzer Motorsport1:46.8432120Marcus ArmstrongPREMA Racing1:46.8501421Alex PeroniCampos Racing1:47.0961722Liam LawsonMP Motorsport1:47.2011723Simo LaaksonenMP Motorsport1:47.2201624Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport1:47.2351625Teppei NatoriCarlin Buzz Racing1:47.4771826Jake HughesHWA RACELAB1:47.6371827Federico MalvestitiJenzer Motorsport1:47.8762128Keyvan AndresHWA RACELAB1:48.3151929Bent ViscaalHWA RACELAB1:48.9461930Alessio DeleddaCampos Racing1:49.12420 -

Ace Indian driver Jehan Daruvala raring to go: F3
All of the vital information ahead of F3’s fourth round of 2019
File photo of Jehan Daruvala, Prema Racing. FIA Formula 3 Championship, at the Austria round in June. Credit: Team Daruvala Silverstone, 11 July 2019: Ace Indian driver Jehan Daruvala, touted as the next best chance of an Indian in F1, will begin the Round 4 after his triple podium in a positive manner. Daruvala (82) is just eight points behind his Prema Racing teammate Marcus Armstrong (90) in the championship standings and is raring to go.
Daruvala came second in the Sprint race and his strong performance in both races of the Austrian Grand Prix weekend, the Round 3, saw him close the gap to 8 points, remaining second in the FIA F3 Championship behind Schwartzman from Russia. This weekend at the famed Silverstone circuit will be a support event to the iconic British Grand Prix, which will remain in the calendar for another six years and agreement paved the way for meaningful financial dealings for the race hosts.
Another Indian Arjun Maini will also be seen in action at the Silverstone F1 weekend as he will race in the F2 along with compatriot Mahaveer Raghunathan, who returns after being kept out for one event.
The StakesTwo weeks after the amazing action in Austria’s mountains, the F3 paddock rolls into the Northamptonshire and Buckinghamshire countryside for Round 4 of the FIA Formula 3 Championship at Silverstone.PREMA Racing’s Marcus Armstrong had the early pace at the Red Bull Ring, going fastest in practice and then nabbing pole position in qualifying, but it was Hitech Grand Prix’s Jüri Vips who took the win in Race 1 after a measured drive to stand on the top step of the podium for the first time this season. Armstrong and Championship leader Robert Shwartzman looked on course to return PREMA to winning ways in Race 2, only for the teammates to break the golden rule of racing and collide on the final lap. The New Zealander suffered a puncture and ended up P19, while the Russian was relegated to third after a time penalty meaning Jake Hughes landed his and HWA RACELAB’s first F3 win.Shwartzman (90 points) still leads the way in the Drivers’ Championship, though his lead has been cut to just eight points by teammate Jehan Daruvala (82) in second place. Vips (63) leaps up to third after bagging 31 points in Austria, more than any other driver. PREMA (226) are still sitting pretty at the top of Teams’ Championship, 150 points in front of second-placed ART Grand Prix (76). Hitech (71) are just five points behind in third.Silverstone Circuit is the venue for the fourth round of the championship. Famed for its high speeds, fast corners and long straights, the drivers will look to fly around the former airfield on Pirelli’s hard compound tyre. With 30 cars ducking and diving around the track, they’ll have to remain grounded if they are to come out on top during another incredible weekend of racing.Warm Up // Jüri Vips – Hitech Grand Prix
“Silverstone is one of my favourite circuits on the calendar. I really love the fast sections of corners and everything is combined so it’s very fast but very technical at the same time. That fits me just perfectly. It’s one of the rounds that I look forward to the most.“Every corner is a challenge, some more than others, but it probably has the most challenging section of corners on the calendar. Out of the first four corners, Maggotts and Becketts are some of the hardest of the season. You have to drive perfectly. It’s the easiest place to make a big time difference in that sense, which I like a lot.“Silverstone is definitely a driver’s track. Last year, overtaking was very difficult but I think this year it will be easier because after Maggotts/Becketts it’s not that difficult to follow a car and we have a DRS zone there.“If you get hot temperatures and your car has oversteer and slides a lot you can get quite tired, not physically but mentally, because you’re fighting the car quite a lot. It’s not that your muscles get overloaded, it’s just that you have to think about what the car is going to do a lot more so it’s harder.“Tyre degradation is probably going to be quite high, especially on the front tyres, so we’ll have to set up the car for that and take care of that during the race. It’s an interesting new set of skills that we have to learn in F3.“I can’t wait, I’m really looking forward to it. I’m going to get pole position and win both races, or at least that’s what I’m planning for!”Mario Isola, Pirelli Head of F1 and Car Racing“Silverstone is known as the ‘home of British motorsport’ so it’s a very significant race for many teams and drivers in the F3 championship. The biggest question mark will be the new asphalt, which nobody has had a chance to drive on yet, while the weather in England at this time of year is also often variable. The 30 Formula 3 drivers will all be fighting on the hard tyre and will need to manage them to the end on this demanding circuit.”Season Stats
8 The gap between Robert Shwartzman and PREMA Racing teammate Jehan Daruvala at the top of the Drivers’ Championship.31 The number of points Jüri Vips took from Round 3, the most of any driver.7 The number of different drivers who have led races so far this season.235 The total race distance in kilometres a driver will cover at Silverstone in Round 4.NoteworthyHitech Grand Prix’s Jüri Vips became the first non-PREMA Racing driver to win a race this season when he was victorious in Race 1 in AustriaVips, Lirim Zendeli and Marcus Armstrong all led an FIA Formula 3 race for the first time at the Red Bull RingSix drivers from five different teams have earned a bonus point for setting the fastest lap so far; PREMA’s Armstrong and Jehan Daruvala, Vips of Hitech, Jenzer Motorsport’s Yuki Tsunoda, Jake Hughes of HWA RACELAB and ART Grand Prix’s Christian LundgaardJust eight points separate Robert Shwartzman and Daruvala at the top of the Driver’s Championship19-year-old Italian racer Federico Malvestiti will make his F3 debut when he drives Jenzer Motorsport’s number 15 car at SilverstoneNine different drivers have stood on the podium in the opening three roundsSeven different drivers scored points in both races of Round 3 – Shwartzman and Daruvala of PREMA, Vips and Leonardo Pulcini of Hitech Grand Prix, ART Grand Prix’s Max Fewtrell, Jake Hughes of HWA RACELAB and Zendeli of Sauber Junior Team by CharouzData (GMT+1)Friday
Free Practice: 08.35 – 09.20
Qualifying: 16.50 – 17.20
Press conference: 18.30Saturday
Race 1: 09.25 (20 laps)
Press conference: 10.25Sunday
Race 2: 1.05pm Indian Standard Time (20 laps)Local time: 08.35 amFollowing are the Indian Times
QUALIFYINGFRI 12 JUL 2019, 21:20 (GMT+5.5)
RACE 1SAT 13 JUL 2019, 13:55 (GMT+5.5)
RACE 2SUN 14 JUL 2019, 13:05 (GMT+5.5)
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Jehan Daruvala takes second place after penalty for teammate Shwartzman: F3

Jehan Daruvala (left- in red) takes 2nd place in the F3 race on Sunday. An FIA image Assen, 30 June 2019: Talented Indian racer, dubbed as the next F1 prospect from India, continued his successful run in the Formula 3, albeit in a lucky fashion when his teammates collided late in the race and Jehan Daruvala, who won a race last weekend, garnered important points after he was promoted to second place behind surprise winner Huges.
Jake Hughes claimed his first ever FIA Formula 3 win in controversial circumstances after leader Robert Shwartzman caused a collision with teammate Marcus Armstrong on the final lap of Race 2 in Austria. The Russian had been unwavering for the majority of the morning but lost his nerve when his teammate scampered past him in the dying embers and inadvertently cut the Kiwi’s rear tyre in an attempt to reclaim first.
Despite suffering damage to his front wing, the Russian managed to complete his final tour of the Red Bull Ring in first but was demoted to third after a five-second time penalty was added for causing the collision. This saw Hughes promoted to the top of the podium for his first ever win in the category, ahead of Jehan Daruvala.
The HWA RACELAB man begun the morning in second and failed in his initial efforts to pass reverse poleman Lirim Zendeli who wasn’t prepared to let the position go and toughed it out around the outside of the Brit at Turn 1 to retain the lead. Pedro Piquet suffered heartbreak at the start when he lost control of his Trident and rotated at the first turn, chucking him back to P29 and ending his hopes of a first F3 win.
The front seven positions proved interchangeable in the first lap and Armstrong managed to force his way to third behind Zendeli and Hughes. Shwartzman perched up behind him in fourth, while Jüri Vips and Richard Verschoor clambered ahead of Daruvala for fifth and sixth.
The next few laps played out in a calmer manner until Armstrong took aim at first place going three wide with Zendeli and Hughes around the corner with no room for error. Shwartzman added a fourth car to the mix as Hughes emerged ahead of them all for first, with the Russian claiming P2 in a shrewd manoeuvre.
His time at the front didn’t last long as Shwartzman beat him at the top of the hill, with the Brit’s car unable to match the Russian’s speed. Armstrong followed his teammate through a lap later and handed their team the prospect of a tasty one-two finish.
The Third PREMA machine was running down in sixth, ahead of Vips and Verschoor. The Indian was harrowing poleman Zendeli, but slipped in his pursuit and was punched back to seventh by Leonardo Pulcini who capitalised on his mistake. Daruvala reacted with haste and recovered to pass both Zendeli and Pulcini for fifth and close in on Max Fewtrell. The fourth was soon his after a delicious lunge on the Englishman.
All wasn’t well out in front as Armstrong refused to sit behind his teammate and rattled on in his pursuit of first. Hughes was perched comfortable in behind the combatting PREMA duo when his team foreshadowed future events and told him to wait patiently for one of them to make a mistake.
A virtual safety car brought a brief break in racing when Alex Peroni lost his rear under breaking and ran into the back of his Campos teammate Sebastian Fernandez. Action resumed with two laps to go and Armstrong’s pursuit of his teammate began once more.
The fight went down to the last lap and Armstrong was finally able to muster up the speed to dart down the side of Shwartzman. The Russian was forced to the rear right of his teammate, but swerved too close and nicked the Kiwi’s back tyre. Armstrong was sent dizzily onto the gravel and shunted down the grid.
Shwartzman maintained control of his vehicle to regain the lead and soldiered towards the finish line despite a battered front wing to finish narrowly ahead of Hughes. News soon broke of a penalty for the Russian, due to the collision, which forced him back to third, behind teammate Daruvala and first placed Hughes. The Briton was surprised to be asked to stop by the number 1 panel in the parc fermé before celebrating with his team their good fortune.
Shwartzman maintains his control of the Championship with 90 points, eight points ahead of teammate Daruvala. Juri Vips is third with 63 points, ahead of Armstrong on 54 and Fewtrell on 37. In the Teams’ standings, PREMA Racing dominate with 226, ahead of ART Grand Prix on 76 and Hitech Grand Prix on 71. Trident are fourth with 50 points, ahead of HWA RACELAB on 35.
The Championship will travel to Silverstone in two weeks’ time when the teams will continue their attempts to bridge the gap between themselves and PREMA.
2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship – Round 3 Race 2
DRIVER TEAM 1 Jake Hughes HWA RACELAB 2 Jehan Daruvala PREMA Racing 3 Robert Shwartzman PREMA Racing 4 Max Fewtrell ART Grand Prix 5 Leonardo Pulcini Hitech Grand Prix 6 Juri Vips Hitech Grand Prix 7 Lirim Zendeli Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 8 Niko Kari Trident 9 Devlin DeFrancesco Trident 10 David Beckmann ART Grand Prix 11 Yuki Tsunoda Jenzer Motorsport 12 Richard Verschoor MP Motorsport 13 Keyvan Andres HWA RACELAB 14 Felipe Drugovich Carlin Buzz Racing 15 Pedro Piquet Trident 16 Raoul Hyman Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 17 Christian Lundgaard ART Grand Prix 18 Simo Laaksonen MP Motorsport 19 Marcus Armstrong PREMA Racing 20 Andreas Estner Jenzer Motorsport 21 Giorgio Carrara Jenzer Motorsport 22 Teppei Natori Carlin Buzz Racing 23 Fabio Scherer Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 24 Alessio Deledda Campos Racing 25 Liam Lawson MP Motorsport 26 Logan Sargeant Carlin Buzz Racing NOT CLASSIFIED Sebastian Fernandez Campos Racing Alex Peroni Campos Racing Bent Viscaal HWA RACELAB Ye Yifei Hitech Grand Prix OVERALL FASTEST LAP Christian Lundgaard (ART Grand Prix) – 1:21.234 on Lap 20 FASTEST LAP ELIGIBLE FOR POINTS Jake Hughes (HWA RACELAB) – 1:21.458 on Lap 10 -
Vips claims first F3 race win in Spielberg; Jehan Daruvala finishes P4
Jüri Vips achieved his first FIA Formula 3 win in style in today’s Race 1 at the Red Bull Ring, leaping two positons from third to become the first non-PREMA winner of the campaign. The Hitech Grand Prix racer finished ahead of ART Grand Prix’s Max Fewtrell and PREMA Racing’s Marcus Armstrong, muscling his way past the both of them in the early stages.The Estonian overcame a frantic start and clung onto P3 despite an initial overtake attempt from Indian racing star Jehan Daruvala when the lights went out. Armstrong also came under threat at the start and initially lost first to Fewtrell who was quick off the line from P2. The Brit dashed in-front of the Kiwi and took the racing line, but Armstrong fought back and reclaimed the position down the inside of Turn 2.Having seen such a promising start unravel, Fewtrell was soon fighting off Vips’ Hitech machine, who was having to attack and defend simultaneously thanks to Daruvala’s pace in-behind. The Estonian came out on top of the three-man dice and left Fewtrell to battle off the PREMA man racing in-front, fast catching Armstrong.Vips followed up his move on the ART driver with a searing sweep on the Kiwi racer, soaring down the inside of Turn 3 and into the lead. Fewtrell took a tow and followed him, as the former race leader lost two positions in one move. The poleman looked to react, but a poor exit on Turn 2 gave Fewtrell breathing space and broke up the brawl.Further back, a three-man tussle between Jake Hughes, Pedro Piquet and Robert Shwartzman had begun, with the latter making his way from ninth on the grid showing that there was no hangover from Friday when he had suffered technical issues in Qualifying.The Russian driver further emphasised this with the race’s fastest lap, but couldn’t capitalise on a mistake from Piquet, who had temporarily lost his back end at Turn 1. The Brazilian reacted by setting a new fastest lap himself and confidently took fifth from Hughes who thus dropped to sixth.The Briton battled back and reclaimed fifth at the corner, but soon faced another jaunt on the place as Shwartzman went three-wide with the two drivers and emerged ahead of them both at Turn 3.The race entered its final lap and Daruvala was becoming frustrated with him inability to pass teammate Armstrong for the final podium place. Sensing a now-or-never moment, he took a stab down the inside of the Kiwi on Turn 4, but got too close and intelligently backed off as the duo came within an inch of Fewtrell’s rear wing.Richard Verschoor managed to squeeze into the final points’ paying position ahead of Bent Viscaal prior to the chequered flag, while Lirim Zendelli snuck ahead of Leonardo Pulcini to give the order one final shake up.Leaving those behind him to battle, Vips ran through the chequered flag in first, with Fewtrell second and Armstrong holding onto third. Daruvala and Shwartzman settled for fourth and fifth, followed by Piquet, Hughes, Zendeli, Pulcini and Verschoor.The top two in the drivers’ standings remains unchanged, with Shwartzman leading Daruvala by 10 points. Vips holds third on 59 points, ahead of Armstrong and Piquet. In the Teams’ Championship, PREMA Racing lead the way with 204 points, ahead of ART Grand Prix on 68. Hitech Grand Prix are third on 61 points, Trident fourth on 49 and HWA RACELAB fifth on 22.Zendeli will start on reverse grid pole in Race 2 ahead of the experienced Hughes, as the teams’ look to continue their charge down of PREMA tomorrow at 9.35am local time.2019 FIA Formula 3 – Round 3 Race 1 ClassificationDRIVERTEAM1Juri VipsHitech Grand Prix2Max FewtrellART Grand Prix3Marcus ArmstrongPREMA Racing4Jehan DaruvalaPREMA Racing5Robert ShwartzmanPREMA Racing6Pedro PiquetTrident7Jake HughesHWA RACELAB8Lirim ZendeliSauber Junior Team by Charouz9Leonardo PulciniHitech Grand Prix10Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport11Niko KariTrident12Felipe DrugovichCarlin Buzz Racing13Bent ViscaalHWA RACELAB14Liam LawsonMP Motorsport15David BeckmannART Grand Prix16Yuki TsunodaJenzer Motorsport17Devlin DeFrancescoTrident18Simo LaaksonenMP Motorsport19Raoul HymanSauber Junior Team by Charouz20Ye YifeiHitech Grand Prix21Alex PeroniCampos Racing22Logan SargeantCarlin Buzz Racing23Andreas EstnerJenzer Motorsport24Sebastian FernandezCampos Racing25Alessio DeleddaCampos Racing26Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix27Keyvan AndresHWA RACELAB28Giorgio CarraraJenzer MotorsportNOT CLASSIFIEDFabio SchererSauber Junior Team by CharouzTeppei NatoriCarlin Buzz RacingOVERALL FASTEST LAPJuri Vips (Hitech Grand Prix) – 1:21.042 on Lap 23FASTEST LAP ELIGIBLE FOR POINTSJuri Vips (Hitech Grand Prix) -
Jehan Daruvala is raring to go ahead of F3’s third round
The StakesWith the dust barely settled on last weekend’s blistering action in France, the Red Bull Ring in Austria welcomes the F3 paddock for Round 3 of the 2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship and the Indian racer Jehan Daruvala, who is running second in the championship with a win and a podium in the last round is raring to go.PREMA Racing put in another mightily impressive display at Le Castellet, but they didn’t have everything their own way as Trident’s Niko Kari went fastest during Friday’s practice. The PREMA pair of Jehan Daruvala and Robert Shwartzman then thought they’d done enough to secure a front row lock-out during qualifying, only to be denied at the death by a fantastic last-ditch effort from HWA RACELAB’s Jake Hughes to snatch pole position. Ultimately, the Italian team were not to be denied however as Daruvala and Shwartzman finished first and second in an enthralling Race 1 with Pedro Piquet bringing home his Trident machine in third. The Brazilian went one step better in Race 2 after an impressive drive, finishing P2 to split Shwartzman and Daruvala who now have two wins each this season.Shwartzman (70 pts) leads Daruvala (58 pts) at the top of the Drivers’ standings, with fellow PREMA man Marcus Armstrong (35 pts) 23 points further back in third; PREMA are dominating the Teams’ Championship at this early stage with 163 points but there’s plenty of points still available. ART Grand Prix (50 pts) are in second, with third-placed Trident (41 pts) nine points behind.The Red Bull Ring plays host to F3 for the third round of the championship, with the drivers battling hard on the smooth Austrian surface. There weather is expected to be glorious and Pirelli are providing Soft compound tyres for the weekend. With no mandatory pit stops and 30 cars fighting wheel-to-wheel up, down and around the short, scenic track in the mountains, it’s sure to make for fantastic viewing once again!Warm Up // Fabio Scherer – Sauber Junior Team by Charouz“For me it’s a lovely track. It’s up and downhill, so it’s quite nice. The difficult thing is to always get the exit right for the first three corners and then the track changes a bit with high-speed parts so you need to adapt quite well in one lap. The first three corners are also great places to overtake for sure. I guess, when it works, you can maybe overtake in front of Turn 6 as well. For a seven-corner track that’s quite a lot of overtaking opportunities!“It’s actually nice because you can race quite well, so it makes it interesting. There’s plenty of action and plenty of racing. Normally the races there are really good so I’m really looking forward to it. I think it will be fun!“Normally we don’t have to worry that much about tyre degradation because the surface is quite smooth tarmac. The tyres don’t tend to overheat too much and the good thing with the long straights is that the tyres can cool down if they do. That means that it should be a good track to push on as well.“I’ve had some good races there in the past, and a few bad moments too including one where I flipped the car, but the race pace and speed was always there.”Mario Isola, Pirelli Head of F1 and Car Racing“Austria presents a marked contrast to the last round at Paul Ricard a few days ago, but we can expect similarly warm, or perhaps even hotter conditions. Drivers will have to pay particular attention to thermal degradation. In F3, we’re using our third type of tyre in three races, so there will be plenty for the drivers to get used to at this spectacular venue.”Season Stats82 The total number of points PREMA Racing earned in Round 2, after taking 81 points from Round 1.7 The number of times (from a possible 12) a PREMA driver has stood on the podium.12 The points gap between Robert Shwartzman and teammate Jehan Daruvala at the top of the Drivers’ Championship.1 Jake Hughes grabbed HWA RACELAB’s first ever F3 pole position in France.NoteworthyBetween them, PREMA Racing teammates Robert Shwartzman and Jehan Daruvala have won all four races of the FIA Formula 3 Championship, with each having a Race 1 and a Race 2 winJust 12 points separate Shwartzman and Daruvala at the top of the Driver’s ChampionshipDaruvala has led more laps than any other driver in the championship so far with 34PREMA were the only team to see all three of their drivers score points in both races at Circuit Paul Ricard, and they are 113 points ahead of second-placed ART Grand Prix in the Teams’ Championship. Sauber Junior Team by Charouz are the only team yet to score a point13 different drivers scored points in Round 2 – Shwartzman, Daruvala and Marcus Armstrong of PREMA, Jüri Vips of Hitech Grand Prix, Pedro Piquet from Trident, ART’s David Beckmann, Bent Viscaal and Jake Hughes of HWA RACELAB, Alex Peroni of Campos Racing, Logan Sargeant of Carlin Buzz Racing, MP Motorsport’s Liam Lawson and Richard Verschoor and Jenzer Motorsport’s Yuki TsunodaArgentina-born racer Giorgio Carrara will join Tsunoda and Andreas Estner to take the empty seat at Jenzer Motorsport vacated by Artem Petrov. -

Jehan Daruvala takes a fighting 3rd from 8th on the grid in F3 Sprint race

Jehan Daruvala on way to podium in the Sprint race on Saturday. Rayo Racing images Le Castellet (France), 23 June 2019: Jehan Daruvala completed a hat-trick of podiums after he stormed up the grid from eighth to second, before settling for third. Jehan’s emphatic victory yesterday in the feature race, meant he had to start from eighth today, due to the regulations which dictate that the top eight finishers are reversed, for the start of the sprint race. This was the multiple International Karting Champion’s third consecutive podium in four races, in the FIA Formula 3 Championship, which runs as a support event to the main F1 Grand Prix.
Jehan started well but fell to tenth on lap one, once the lights went out at the F1 circuit in Le Castellet. Jehan then battled hard with Logan Sargeant and Juri Vips before overtaking both racers. He was then much quicker than the racers ahead of him and began to pass them one by one, to steadily move up the order.
Alex Peroni from Australia, meanwhile continued to lead the race, taking advantage of the battles behind him. Jehan was soon up to fifth, but faced quite a task, with a gap of over 2.4 seconds to the pack of cars ahead. He pushed hard and managed to successfully close the gap and move into fourth.

Jehan Daruvala (right) on the podium. Jehan’s Prema Racing teammate Robert Shwartzman, had in the meantime grabbed the race lead, with Brazilian Pedro Piquet in second. Jehan had closed the gap, overtaking Red Bull Racing Junior, Yuki Tsunoda from Japan, to move up into third and soon made an excellent move to overtake Piquet for second. Not content with second Jehan tried to close the gap to Shwartzman, but in the process of pushing extremely hard right through the entire race and the numerous battles he had along the way, Jehan’s tyres were beginning to degrade. He lost a bit of pace and was re passed by Piquet, who was also able to use the DRS to his advantage.
Jehan comfortably held onto third, crossing the finish line behind Shwartzman and Piquet and 5.4 seconds ahead of Verschoor, of MP Motorsport.
“It’s been a good weekend for the team and for me as well. This race was fun actually. At the start, I was a bit surprised by how quick the lights went out and then I was playing it a bit too safe for the first couple of laps. We knew we had the pace and the race was long, but maybe I took a bit too much time. When I got up to P6 the leading group of five cars was quite a long way ahead, and maybe my mistake at that stage was to push too hard to catch them instead of just chipping away. I caught them and passed all of them except Robert. My main goal was to win the race and I was pushing a lot, but Robert was doing the same and I started to struggle with the tires. Pedro did well, he stayed with me using the DRS, and when I started to struggle he passed me for second place. Two podiums in one weekend are good, now we have to see where we can do better. For me, just the start and the first lap, while the car has been good all weekend. Hopefully, we will have the same result next weekend.” said Jehan after his hat-trick of podiums.
Jehan’s continuing impressive performances in front of the Formula 1 teams at the Formula 1 support races ensures that he continues to lie second in the championship with 58 points. His next race will be at the RedBull Ring Circuit in Spielberg along with the Austrian Grand Prix the coming weekend.
2019 FIA Formula 3 – Round 2 Race 2 classificationDRIVERTEAM1Robert ShwartzmanPREMA Racing2Pedro PiquetTrident3Jehan DaruvalaPREMA Racing4Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport5Marcus ArmstrongPREMA Racing6Liam LawsonMP Motorsport7Jake HughesHWA RACELAB8Logan SargeantCarlin Buzz Racing9Yuki TsunodaJenzer Motorsport10Felipe DrugovichCarlin Buzz Racing11Andreas EstnerJenzer Motorsport12Leonardo PulciniHitech Grand Prix13Raoul HymanSauber Junior Team by Charouz14Alex PeroniCampos Racing15Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix16Lirim ZendeliSauber Junior Team by Charouz17Juri VipsHitech Grand Prix18Max FewtrellART Grand Prix19Keyvan AndresHWA RACELAB20Bent ViscaalHWA RACELAB21Devlin DeFrancescoTrident22Ye YifeiHitech Grand Prix23Alessio DeleddaCampos Racing24Niko KariTridentNOT CLASSIFIEDSimo LaaksonenMP MotorsportSebastian FernandezCampos RacingFabio SchererSauber Junior Team by CharouzTeppei NatoriCarlin Buzz RacingDavid BeckmannART Grand PrixOVERALL FASTEST LAPMarcus Armstrong (PREMA Racing) – 1:52.171 on Lap 18FASTEST LAP ELIGIBLE FOR POINTSMarcus Armstrong (PREMA Racing)ends
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We have the pace and I’m confident to fight through the field from P8 tomorrow: Jehan

Jehan Daruvala (centre) at the FIA press meet after winning the F3 race 1, the support race at French GP 22jun19. An FIA image FIA Formula 3 post-race Press Conference transcript:
Thoughts from Daruvala, Shwartzman and Piquet, the top-3 today:
FIA Formula 3: Hello and welcome to today’s FIA Formula 3 press conference following Race 1 at Paul Ricard. Joining us today, are the top three finishers from the opening race, in third place Pedro Piquet from Trident, in second place Robert Shwartzman of PREMA Racing, and your race winner Jehan Daruvala of PREMA Racing. Jehan, back-to-back wins for you now in Formula 3 and a really good charge to the front after reeling in Jake Hughes at the beginning. Can you just talk us through that fight with Jake?
Jehan Daruvala: Like I said yesterday, I was pretty happy with how the weekend started. The car’s been good all weekend, so the main aim was to get off the line which actually didn’t go to plan. I lost a position to Pedro and I think I almost hit the back of him in Turn 1, I just missed him so that was lucky. After that it was all about managing the race. The car felt pretty good from the start. I didn’t have to over-push, I just tried to stay in the DRS of Pedro because he was not in the DRS of Jake [Hughes]. That was a big help for me. I got the pass done straight away on the first lap with DRS so I could go hunting for Jake. To be fair in the first few laps I was just chipping away a bit, a couple of tenths here and there, but wasn’t really making too many inroads. I just tried to keep the same pace and not try to push too much and I could see that started to show a little bit, especially in Sector 3. I was quite strong there compared to him. I just tried to stay there in Sector 1 and 2, and when the gap got to 1.4 seconds I knew that if I did a good Sector 3 I could get within the DRS. That’s what happened and I managed to do him before the last corner and then have the DRS on the main straight as well so that went to plan. I tried to break the DRS as fast as possible and after that the car was as good as it could be and I was just managing the pace until the end of the race.
FIA Formula 3: We saw lots of drivers keeping within that DRS range and a lot of wheel-to-wheel fights, but you were one of the few who seemed able to pull clear quite quickly. Did you feel the pressure easing as you pulled further and further ahead?
Jehan: I think throughout the weekend so far I’ve been really strong in Sector 3, so I knew that if I just held him off until the chicane and really push for one final sector then I break the DRS. That went to plan, and after I was in the lead by about two seconds I was just trying to manage the gap just in case of a safety car or something, I still had tyres to go for the end.
FIA Formula 3: Congratulations. Robert moving on to you. A decent recovery after a bit of a sluggish start. Could you talk us through your race?
Robert Shwartzman: The start didn’t go well for me, I nearly stalled. It was a really risky moment there because I was really, really close to stalling. At the last second I managed to pull back the clutch and at least move from the position. I lost a lot of places, I’m not sure how many, but I think I was in about eighth or ninth position at that time. There was a big mess and fight coming into Turn 1 and 2 and there was quite a close situation, I don’t remember which driver, but I managed to survive that and gain a few positions in the first lap. I think was P6 if I’m not wrong. Then I caught [Bent] Viscaal, he made a mistake in Turn 5 so I used that to my advantage and overtook straight away so as not to lose any time. Basically then I was trying to catch up with the boys in front. I caught Pedro who was fighting with Marcus [Armstrong] and then at some point I got past Pedro and was behind Marcus, but at that time I started to feel the degradation was coming because I think I’d pushed a bit too much at the beginning. After that I was struggling quite a lot with the tyres and it was a really tough race, but I’m happy because we did quite a good recovery after. We had a good battle between me, Jake and Marcus. Unfortunately they collided right in front of me and then in the last laps Pedro was quite close to me, but I think we were all sliding quite a lot because of tyre degradation. I knew that he could make a move but I would have defended it and try to protect my position. At the end of the day we finished where we did. I’m quite happy, after a really bad start I had quite a good recovery, and generally I’m really happy with how the team worked. They gave me some good advice over the radio and also, even though I made a mistake with the tyre management, the car was still really good. That was really important.
FIA Formula 3: That battle with Jake and Marcus was really exciting, and as you said the two collided. What was your reaction when you saw that happen? Did you feel quite lucky to have avoided being caught up in that?
Robert: Yeah. I was really surprised because when I exited Turn 6 they were not really close to me. The DRS really works here a lot, and basically I started to defend from Jake because I saw him in my left mirror, so I started to protect my position. Then I saw Marcus round the outside so they basically both came past me side-by-side. Then they both braked really late because they knew I was there as well. I knew that three cars would not fit in that corner so I backed off to try to and regain the position later. Then I saw Jake locking up and I knew something was going to happen. When I saw them collide I just backed off, waited, got past them and that’s it.
FIA Formula 3: Well done on your result. Pedro moving on to you now. Really quick start and very far up the order throughout the race. Could you talk us through your race today?
Pedro Piquet: I had a really good start. We were P2 in the beginning, but we were struggling a bit to find the pace. The first few laps I was a bit slow. I tried to fight Jehan, but after that I knew that if I’d tried to defend from everybody I would have finished my tyres. I knew Robert was close, he was in DRS range, so I knew he was going to be a test. After he passed me the car started to improve a bit. I had really good pace throughout the middle of the race, but unfortunately there was always a train of cars and a car with DRS in front of me so it was hard to do something. I tried to do a bit of tyre saving in the middle when I saw all the guys fighting. After Jake and Marcus crashed I tried to follow Robert but the tyres were finished. From my view it was a good race. We were a bit down on the performance level to them, but we’ll work hard to improve the car for the next race and the next event.
FIA Formula 3: You were running fifth before the clash between Marcus and Jake, to obviously then rise up on to the podium. What was your reaction when you saw that unfolding ahead of you?
Pedro: It’s not nice for them. You never want to destroy someone’s race but of course you gain positions in the end. If it happens and it helps you it’s better [laughs]. I saw them spinning, braked early, and just tried to avoid them because I knew that maybe a car was going to have spun in the middle of the chicane. After that [Jüri] Vips was quite fast as well. I think he did the whole race in open air, which helps a lot because when you drive behind someone it’s much worse at the end of the race. You get a lot of dirty air. On the last lap I had to do some defending but in the end it was a pretty decent result.
FIA Formula 3: Well done. Jehan moving back on to you now. We’ve seen lots of fights through the field so far this weekend, Robert proving that. Starting eighth tomorrow on the reverse grid, how are you feeling about your chances of fighting your way up the order?
Jehan: I think the main thing is to get through the first lap and not to do anything stupid. If I have the same pace as today then I’m pretty confident that I can fight through the field, but I expect all the guys in the top eight still to be pretty quick. It’s not going to be easy but like I said, the main thing is to have a clean first lap and then I think if I have good pace it will be a good race just to have some fun as well. Like Pedro said it helped having clean air today so I could manage my tyres quite easily, but if you’re fighting through the field like Robert had to you get to a stage where you run out of tyres. I expect to have good pace but also not for it to be too easy.















