Tag: Jehan Daruvala

  • Regular points-finishes would be more important, says Jehan Daruvala

    Regular points-finishes would be more important, says Jehan Daruvala

    Carlin’s Jehan Daruvala cited Guanyu Zhou’s lead of the Drivers’ Championship as proof the new Formula 2 format works, after the UNI-Virtuosi racer qualified on pole and took the opening Feature Race win. And while it may not have benefited the Red Bull junior as much in Sakhir, he believes it bodes well for his own title bid in the long-term.

    Taking second, fourth and sixth in the opening weekend of the new-look championship, Daruvala departed Round 1 in third place in the Standings, as one of the most consistent drivers in the opener.

    While he didn’t leave with a win for his efforts, the Indian feels that regular points’ finishes will be more important over the course of the season than an extra victory or two.

    “If you qualify at the front, then you have the best chance of scoring the most points. It is pretty simple and Zhou showed that,” Daruvala said. “There’s no need to try and qualify in eighth or ninth or play tactics like that: Zhou qualified at the front, won the Feature Race and left in (first place).

    “Before the weekend, I would have taken this as a good starting point. There are always places where you can improve, and for me, it is all about qualifying – getting into the top five and then scoring points consistently.

    Jehan Daruvala photo by Getty images

    “That isn’t easy in Formula 2 because the level is really, really high. But, if you are consistently in the top five or six, like I was this weekend, then I think in the end you’ll be in the fight for the championship.”

    He may have finished the Feature Race where he started it, but Daruvala had to work for sixth place after a Safety Car ruined his attempts of an undercut.

    Pitting two laps earlier than most on the hard-soft strategy, the Indian came out ahead of everyone except Zhou, before the arrival of the Safety Car gifted Richard Verschoor and Liam Lawson a free pitstop and track position.

    “It was a very eventful race, which to be fair is normal for Formula 2 race. They’re all exciting” he continued. “I started on the hards and then changed to the softs, which seemed better overall. Things were going quite well, and everything was going to plan.

    “I was looking forward to the last 10/12 laps, but the Safety Car hindered me a little bit, and Richard and Liam ended upcoming out ahead of me. I was then left to fight with Théo (Pourchaire) and had a big lock-up on my front right tyre.

    “Still, I am pleased to have finished in P6 after a difficult race. I think it’s positive. We have the test in Barcelona next where we can make improvements before Round 2 in Monaco.”

  • Zhou takes a fighting victory; Jehan Daruvala 6th

    Zhou takes a fighting victory; Jehan Daruvala 6th

    Sakhir, 28 March 2021: UNI-Virtuosi’s Guanyu Zhou used all of his experience to take a hard-earned first Feature Race win from pole in Sakhir, but it wasn’t as simple as lights-to-flag. Initially tumbling down the order at the start, Zhou scythed his way back through the field, beating Carlin’s Dan Ticktum and Hitech Grand Prix’s Liam Lawson.

    Indian racer Jehan Daruvala, who began on P6 managed to score 8 points from his sixth place in the Feature race and is currently in third position at the end of Round 1.

    Starting on the hard tyre, Zhou couldn’t compete with those on the softs around him and fell out of the top 10, before a Safety Car gave the order a shake-up. Ticktum, Lawson and Richard Verschoor all benefitted, but the Chinese driver was imperious and won at a canter.

    Verschoor – who briefly led the race – finished fourth and just missed out on a podium, after the MP Motorsport driver lost a late battle with tyre degradation.

    DAMS’ Marcus Armstrong claimed an impressive eight scalps on his way to fifth, beating Jehan Daruvala and Robert Shwartzman, the latter doing well to fight back after an early drive-through penalty.

    Théo Pourchaire and Felipe Drugovich finished eighth and ninth, ahead of HWA RACELAB’s Matteo Nannini, who took his first points in F2.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    After an intense late battle in Sprint Race 2, Zhou and Lundgaard reignited their fight at the start from the front row. Pounding off into a whirlwind of sand, Lundgaard got the better of his Alpine Academy rival at Turn 1, fighting against the gust and taking the inside line to come out in first place.

    Having already lost P1, Zhou – who started on the hard compound – was then in a scrap for second with his Virtuosi teammate Drugovich, who eventually hauled himself ahead of the Chinese driver.

    An early Safety Car brought a halt to the action after Roy Nissany was clipped by Shwarztman and forced to retire. Shwartzman survived the scrap but was handed a drive-through penalty.

    Zhou lost another place at the restart and fell to fourth behind the in-form Oscar Piastri, who was still buoyant from his debut win in Sprint Race 2. The PREMA racer was far from finished, continuing his sparkling debut weekend with a fifth overtake, this time on Drugovich, braking late to take P2 at Turn 1.

    Lundgaard complained of a “strange balance” on team radio, as Piastri started to reel him in too. Drugovich joined the battle and the trio went three-wide at the first corner, with the PREMA eventually coming out in P1.

    Having lost first, Lundgaard opted to ditch the soft Pirellis on Lap 14 and jumped into the pits for a set of hards, returning 13th. Drugovich decided his softs had had enough as well one lap later, pitting for fresh boots and returning further back in 12th.

    Piastri opted against a change, before his team sensed an opportunity when Gianluca Petecof retired. PREMA called in the Australian for fresh rubber just ahead of a Virtual Safety Car, and returned him in fourth place, with track position.

    In the end, a full Safety Car was required and this shook up the order, with Armstrong leading Piastri and Verschoor. Though, the Kiwi dropped right down at the restart, with Verschoor dramatically taking the lead on the soft compound.

    Also on the soft, Zhou had tussled his way back through and managed to nip past Piastri on the first corner of Lap 23 to put just one place between him and his first Feature Race win. In the background, Ticktum fired ahead of Lawson for fourth.

    Lundgaard had lucked out in the Safety Car period, getting stuck down in 10th at the restart, before being handed a 5s time penalty for a SC infringement, along with a handful of drivers, including Drugovich, who was running seventh.

    Verschoor was desperately trying to defend the lead from Zhou, but the Virtuosi man used all of his experience to take the better track position and drag himself in front.

    The Dutchman’s attention switched straight to the dazzling red PREMA of Piastri in third, but thankfully for him, the Australian was busy defending from Ticktum. Their battle came to a heart-breaking conclusion, with the two coming together at Turn 2, spinning Piastri off the road and out of the race. Ticktum got away unscathed and a VSC brought the drama to a stop.

    Racing resumed with two laps to go and Ticktum jumped Verschoor, who also lost third to Lawson and fell off the podium. Meanwhile, Zhou kept it calm out in front to run home as the winner.

    Zhou now leads the Drivers’ Championship with 41 points, ahead of Lawson on 30 and Daruvala on 28. Piastri is fourth with 21 and Ticktum fifth with 19. In the Teams’ title fight, Carlin are first with 47 points, ahead of Virtuosi on 43 and PREMA on 37. Hitech are fourth on 30 points, ahead of ART on 24.

    KEY QUOTE – GUANYU ZHOU (UNI-VIRTUOSI)

    “My first Feature Race win and a great comeback from yesterday. Amazing. Today was a bit messy, especially towards the end. I saw the Safety Car coming out and thought ‘no, not again.’

    “Richard (Verschoor) had a clean pit stop and I had to do everything on track. It felt good to come through the field – congrats to the whole team, we fully deserved it.”

  • Piastri takes superb maiden win; Jehan Daruvala misses podium

    Piastri takes superb maiden win; Jehan Daruvala misses podium

    Sakhir, 26 March 2021: Reigning Formula 3 champion Oscar Piastri became the second rookie winner in as many races this season, completing a superb last-lap overtake on UNI-Virtuosi’s Guanyu Zhou, to win a frenetic Sprint Race 2 in Sakhir. The Chinese driver also fell foul to a last gasp move from Christian Lundgaard, dropping to third on an all-Alpine Academy podium. Jehan Daruvala finished P4. He will now start the Feature Race at P6 on Sunday at 16.20hours.

    It initially looked as though Zhou was set to pull off his second win in Formula 2, after boldly starting on softs, before two late Safety Cars turned the race on its head and allowed a number of the field to switch to soft Pirellis themselves. Zhou was then left to struggle to the line on heavily degraded tyres, just about holding on to third.

    Piastri and Lundgaard were amongst those to change rubber, taking advantage of a late problem for Jüri Vips, who dropped out of contention, having previously looked to be Zhou’s biggest threat. Meanwhile, Red Bull junior Jehan Daruvala just missed out on a second podium of Round 1, taking fourth.

    The superb late battle took away from some incredible performances in behind as Richard Verschoor finished fifth, having started 22nd, and Théo Pourchaire sealed sixth, having started 19th.

    Marino Sato and Matteo Nannini both started out of the top ten but finished in eight and ninth, behind David Beckmann.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    After his Qualifying disqualification, Vips said he just wanted to keep things clean in the second race of the day. Starting from reverse grid pole, the Hitech racer managed to do that at the start, darting into the distance with Lirim Zendeli in tow, as those behind them got tangled up.

    Robert Shwartzman and Dan Ticktum were the unlucky pairing. The duo came to blows in their attempts to rise up the order and were both out of the race by the end of Turn 1.

    All of the excitement brought out a Safety Car, meaning that Vips needed to nail a second getaway. The Hitech racer shrugged off the challenge and scrambled back off into the distance. Zendeli’s restart wasn’t quite as strong and it cost him P2, as Zhou launched down the side of him and into second.

    The Virtuosi racer was on a mission, homing in on Vips and coolly dispatching of the Hitech racer in the same lap to steal first. Meanwhile, things went from bad to worse for Zendeli, as he was clipped by Lundgaard and suffered a puncture. The ART racer was handed a 10s-time penalty for the offence, which he served in the pits in the latter stages of the race.

    Having lost the lead, Vips then found himself in a battle with his race-winning teammate Liam Lawson, who had climbed an incredible seven places to third. Keeping an eye on their battle was Felipe Drugovich, who’d put on a brilliant recovery himself, rising 12 places to fourth.

    Rivalling the Brazilian for most positions gained were Marcus Armstrong and Pourchaire, the Kiwi climbing 13 places to P7 and the Frenchman up to ninth from 19th.

    Lundgaard began to gain on Drugovich in fourth, which prompted the Virtuosi man to step up his chase of Lawson, sparking a three-way brawl that ended with Lawson facing the wrong way and out of the race. The Safety Car returned to clear up the mess, triggering a mass exodus of the track as a handful of drivers all dived into the pits to swap the hard Pirellis for a set of softs.

    Zhou wasn’t amongst those to pit and still held the lead when the Safety Car headed back in, followed by Drugovich, Armstrong and Bent Viscaal, with the latter trio still on the hards. All four had Vips breathing down their necks from P5 on fresh soft.

    All four went on the defensive at the restart and Viscaal very briefly snuck into second, but the Dutchman was too early on the breaks at Turn 1 and fell back down to P5. Vips dove into P2 at the exit and was followed through by Piastri, another who had swapped boots.

    Things didn’t calm down, as a third Safety Car was required when Alessio Deledda stopped on track and retired. Nursing heavily degraded hards, Zhou’s chances of holding onto first seemed slim, yet he just about clung on at the restart, as Vips was too busy defending from Piastri.

    The Australian was handed a straight shot of Zhou when Vips slowed and plummeted out of the top 10 – or so he thought. Lundgaard appeared and threw himself into the all-Alpine junior battle for P1.

    The Alpine trio went three wide on the final lap and Piastri just about edged ahead, before Lundgaard daringly launched down the outside, though the move wouldn’t stick, as ART man over pushed and ran wide.

    Lundgaard recovered and held onto second on track, although he didn’t appear on the podium. He had served his time penalty in the latter stages of the race, and with much happening in the pitlane and on the track, the FIA needed time to confirm whether the Dane had taken his time penalty in a proper manner. The confirmation came after the podium ceremony, and since the ART driver served it correctly, his P2 result was reinstated.

    Piastri now leads the Drivers’ Championship on 21 points, with Daruvala one point behind in second. Lundgaard and Zhou are tied in third on 16 points, with Lawson in fifth. PREMA lead the Teams’ standings on 29 points, ahead of Carlin on 21 and ART on 20. Virtuosi are fourth with 16 and Hitech fifth with 15

    KEY QUOTE – OSCAR PIASTRI (PREMA RACING)

    “The second race in Bahrain and it was a crazy one. We came out on top, so I want to give a massive thanks to PREMA. It was the right strategy call from the team to go onto softs.

    “I am just riding the high at the minute, second race, first win. We struggled a bit at the beginning, but I couldn’t be happier with the result and we will go again tomorrow.”

    WHAT’S NEXT?

    Zhou will line up on pole ahead of Lundgaard in the Feature Race on Sunday at 4.20pm Indian time (13.50am local time).

  • Liam Lawson holds off Jehan Daruvala for maiden F2 win

    Liam Lawson holds off Jehan Daruvala for maiden F2 win

    Sakhir, 27 March 2021: Hitech Grand Prix’s Liam Lawson drove like a seasoned pro on his Formula 2 debut, brushing off a stern challenge from second year Jehan Daruvala to take the opening win of season in Sprint Race 1 at Sakhir. Charouz Racing System rookie David Beckmann hung onto third to complete a youthful podium.

    Scampering ahead of Théo Pourchaire at the start, Lawson spent the majority of the race in a to-and-fro with his former Formula 3 rival, before seeing the ART Grand Prix driver retire. This handed the Kiwi a more experienced challenger, as Daruvala – up from fifth – lined up behind him. However, the Carlin driver had no answer to his Red Bull academy teammates’ defensive masterclass and was forced to settle for second.

    Impressively leaping from 11th to fifth at the start, Robert Shwarztman had a podium in his sights when Pourchaire retired and handed him fourth, but the PREMA’s attack was stalled by his teammate, Oscar Piastri. The reigning F3 champion had jumped ahead of Christian Lundgaard and kept Shwartzman occupied in the closing laps, before eventually settling for fifth.

    UNI-Virtuosi’s Guanyu Zhou – who will begin Sunday’s Feature Race on pole – got his weekend off to a solid start, rising to seventh, ahead of Dan Ticktum. MP Motorsport’s Lirim Zendeli and Lawson’s Hitech teammate, Jüri Vips, completed the top 10.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    Lawson nailed his first race start in F2, launching from third to first off the line and making the most of a sluggish getaway from Pourchaire. The reverse polesitter briefly dropped down to third at the first corner, but managed to claw his way back ahead of Beckmann and into P2.

    Title-favourite Shwarztman endured a difficult return to the track on Friday, as mechanical troubles left him unable to set a laptime in the second run of Qualifying and had him starting back in 11th. Determined to make amends, the Russian gallantly flung his PREMA up to fifth inside of the opening lap.

    A daring move from Ticktum failed to come off in the opening lap as the Carlin driver attempted a double overtake down the inside of Felipe Drugovich and Richard Verschoor, but clipped the back of the MP Motorsport and spun it backwards.

    Ticktum somehow got away unscathed, but Drugovich was caught up in the collision and suffered damage. The Brazilian was forced into the pits for repairs and plummeted to last. Ticktum was later handed a 5s penalty for his troubles and fell to P8.

    Two further retirements in the opening five laps decreased the field to 19, as Marcus Armstrong pulled over onto the gravel with mechanical issues. The Kiwi’s retirement also spelled the end for Ralph Boschung, who tagged the back of the slowing DAMS and spun off.

    Pourchaire was keeping up with Lawson at the front, remaining within 2s of the Hitech driver, but Beckmann was struggling to hold on to third behind him. He locked up and momentarily went skidding off track, flinging dirt into the pathway of those immediately behind him.

    The Charouz managed to return to the track, but the mistake cost him precious grip and handed an opportunity to Daruvala behind him. The Carlin took a hit of DRS and passed the German around the outside of Turn 4.

    The Red Bull junior was then handed another position as Pourchaire lost power and fell out of the points. The Frenchman attempted to keep his ART going, but eventually conceded his race was run and pulled over.

    Daruvala’s experience was beginning to show. The Carlin racer’s tyres were in better shape than Lawson’s and he had eaten into the gap between the two of them. With two laps to go, Lawson was just about clinging on. Their battle continued into the final lap, but Daruvala just couldn’t find any way past and crossed the line in second.

    There was little change behind them, though Piastri had managed to tussle ahead of Lundgaard for fifth place, directly behind his teammate Shwartzman. The Australian started to harry the back of the PREMA and chanced his arm with a brave move down the left, but was forced to back off as he ran out of space, allowing Shwartzman to hold onto fourth. The duo’s battle allowed Beckmann to retain the final podium spot.

    THE KEY QUOTE – LIAM LAWSON (HITECH GRAND PRIX)

    “That was pretty awesome. Starting third, I had a pretty good start and led from that moment onwards. I had massive pressure from Jehan (Daruvala) towards the end of the race and learned a lot. I’m excited to get into the night race later today.”

    WHAT’S NEXT?

    Lawson’s Hitech teammate Vips will start from reverse grid pole, ahead of MP’s Zendeli later today in Sprint Race 2 at 10.40pm IST (7.40pm local time).

  • Flash: Jehan Daruvala begins the F2 season with a podium

    Flash: Jehan Daruvala begins the F2 season with a podium

    Sakhir, 27 March 2021: Red Bull Junior and ace Indian racer Jehan Daruvala began the season with a podium winning the second place in the inaugural Sprint Race at the Bahrain International Circuit at Sakhir here on Saturday.

    The fifth FIA F2 season will comprise a total of eight rounds, all support events of the Formula 1 World Championship.

    The 22-year-old, Jehan Daruvala started on P5 and did some consistent laps before making a move to take P3 on Lap 11. Daruvala puts pressure on Beckmann, going all the way around the outside of the Charouz driver in Turn 4 and claimed P3. Later, at the halfway mark rookie Lawson was on P1 followed by another rookie Pourchaire, who started on pole. Beckman was behind Daruvala.

    By Lap 16, Daruvala was pushing Lawson and by Lap 18 the Indian closed the gap to 0.7 seconds and the rookie was fighting to mainain his P1 and the Carling driver had to be content with a P2. Even on the Lap 20, both the Red Bull drivers posted 1:59.9s battling for P1 but Liam Lawson held on to take a creditable win on his debut. The Indian who is doing another season of F2, neverthless began the season on a bright note unlike last year, where despite good qualifying results he had to battle his own car and had a terrible season. Only after the change of engine, did he find the fortunes, and he closed the season with his first F2 victory.

    Following a change to the Sporting Regulations, the new season will see three races per round – the previous total was two – forming a 24-race season. There will be no changes to the Friday sessions, with one Free Practice session of 45 minutes and one Qualifying session of 30 minutes.

    Two sprint races will take place on Saturday and will both consist of 120 kilometres or 45 minutes,  whichever comes first.

    The Feature Race will now take place on Sunday morning ahead of the Formula 1 Grand Prix. It will be still be one hour long or 170 kilometres (whichever comes first) and will keep a compulsory pit stop, in which all four tyres must be changed. Unless the driver has used wet-weather tyres during the Feature Race, they must use at least one set of each specification of dry-weather tyres during the Feature Race.

    The Feature race will be on Sunday.

  • Zhou takes pole; Jehan Daruvala to start on P7

    Zhou takes pole; Jehan Daruvala to start on P7

    Sakhir, 26 March 2021: Guanyu Zhou took the first pole position of the season for the second year in a row, going fastest in Sakhir to take the first points of the new campaign during a dramatic final few minutes of the Formula 2 World Championship Race 1 qualifying session. The UNI-Virtuosi man stole first from ART Grand Prix’s Christian Lundgaard by 0.003s on his final tour of the Bahrain International Circuit, with his teammate Felipe Drugovich finishing third.

    Lundgaard didn’t make the top 10 in Free Practice, but was straight on the pace in Qualifying, putting in two purple first sectors to leap to the top of the time screen with an early benchmark of 1:43.628.

    A late wobble in the final sector meant the Dane’s benchmark was beatable, and Drugovich managed to find the extra bit of time to do just that. The UNI-Virtuosi racer was fastest in Free Practice on the hard tyre and appeared equally as comfortable on the softer compound, stealing P1 by three tenths.

    Drugovich’s teammate Zhou started 2020 on pole and was looking for the same outcome one season on. The Alpine junior was the only driver without a time on the board when the field fed back into the pits for a change of rubber, having boldly requested to run in the gap. He didn’t disappoint, bettering his teammate’s lap by 0.022s to replace him in first place.

    No sooner had the cars returned to the track, were they having to head back into the pits. The field had just completed their preparation lap when Robert Shwarztman came to a halt down the pit straight and brought out a red flag. The stranded PREMA was swiftly cleared off the track, but just five minutes remained to get a time on the board.

    Knowing time was of the essence, Lundgaard flew back out of the traps and got to work regaining control of the session. The Dane gave posted three purple laps, and the nailed the tricky final corner that let him down before, to take first from Zhou.

    Amongst the first to get another time on the board, Lundgaard headed back into the pits to await his fate, knowing his tyres were cooked. The ART Man watched on as Ticktum failed and ended up in fourth. The Briton set two green sectors, but got stuck in traffic around the final corner. Jüri Vips and Richard Verschoor both missed out as well, settling for fifth and sixth.

    Zhou and Drugovich both beat the chequered flag to give themselves one last shot at beating Lundgaard’s provisional pole time of 1:42.851.

    Setting a personal best first sector and a fastest overall second sector, Zhou’s final laptime was better than Lundgaard’s by the finest of margins, knocking off his Alpine academy teammate by three thousandths of a second. Meanwhile, Drugovich’s final tour wasn’t quite as strong and the Brazilian ended up in third, behind Lundgaard.

    Further back, Jehan Daruvala managed to take seventh, ahead of reigning Formula 3 champion Oscar Piastri, with Liam Lawson in ninth.

    Finishing 10th on his debut, David Beckmann will start Sprint Race 1 from reverse grid pole on Saturday at 1.25pm (local time).

  • Jehan Daruvala post second fastest time in the afternoon

    Jehan Daruvala post second fastest time in the afternoon

    Sakhir, 9 March 2021: Red Bull Junior driver and ace Indian star Jehan Daruvala of Carlin team finished in the top-two in the afternoon session clocking the second fastest time on the second day of the F2 test here on Tuesday. He put in a very useful 71 laps in both the sessions together to get mileage in the 2021 car.

    ART Grand Prix’s Christian Lundgaard continued his strong start to pre-season testing, following up second place on Day 1 with the fastest time on Day 2. The Alpine junior set the quickest lap of the tests so far in the morning session, his time of 1:41.697 more than three tenths faster than Trident rookie Bent Viscaal in second.

    MORNING

    Lundgaard’s name was a familiar presence at the top of the timesheets in the morning as the ART ace kicked into gear and swiftly set the fastest of the opening laps. The Dane’s time of 1:43.514 was just the start as he later cemented his position in P1 with the only sub-1m 42s lap of the morning.

    There was a brief stoppage between those two laps as Alessio Deledda was forced to pull over at the final corner with mechanical issues. When things got back underway, Théo Pourchaire managed to climb as high as third, before falling to seventh as he begun a programme of long runs.

    Fellow rookie Viscaal managed one better than his former Formula 3 rival, sneaking into second behind Lundgaard towards the midway point of the session. The Dutchman is desperate to impress those at Trident, in the hope of extending his current one-round deal at the Italian side, and did his chances no harm with a solid stint, lapping at 1:42.697.

    Marcus Armstrong was looking more at home with DAMS on the second morning, bettering his P9 finish on Monday morning by breaking into the top three, just one hundredth off the marker for P2. The Kiwi’s Ferrari junior rival Robert Shwarztman was in and amongst it himself, breaking into the top five for the first time this pre-season.

    Two of Red Bull’s hopes for the 2021 season, Liam Lawson and Jüri Vips, both made the top 10 with Hitech Grand Prix, sandwiching Shwarztman in fourth and sixth. Roy Nissany, Oscar Piastri and Marino Sato completed the top 10 as the drivers headed in for lunch.

    AFTERNOON

    With a number of teams getting in a qualifying simulation during the morning session, attention was focused on longer-runs and data gathering in the afternoon. Just 13 cars headed out when the lights went green, with Guilherme Samaia running the fastest of these.

    A red flag disrupted the running after Gianluca Petecof stopped at Turn 13, before action resumed and the remainder of the field headed out for a taste of the track. Times were still well below the morning, as Richard Verschoor set the standard at 1:45.018. The Dutchman did manage to improve with a lap of 1:44.051, before dropping down to seventh.

    There were two further red flags during the afternoon, with Lawson and Guanyu Zhou both stopping on track. Both managed to get back out there, with Zhou recovering to finish third.

    A flurry of final laps when saw Dan Ticktum take control of the timesheet, breaking the 1m 44s barrier to go first. His Carlin teammate Jehan Daruvala followed suit, but couldn’t quite match the Briton’s effort, missing out on by just 0.003s.

    Samaia found the time for a late lap to take him as high as fourth, ahead of Felipe Drugovich and Ralph Boschung. Petecof recovered from his earlier struggles to break into the top 10 and finish the afternoon in eighth, despite lapping just 10 times. Day 1’s top driver, David Beckmann finished ninth, as Bent Viscaal completed the top 10.

    We’ll be back for Day 3 on Wednesday at 9am (local time).

    2021 FIA FORMULA 2 CHAMPIONSHIP – PRE-SEASON TESTS, DAY 2, MORNING SESSION

    DRIVERTEAMLAPTIMELAPS
    1Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix1:41.69739
    2Bent ViscaalTrident1:42.02828
    3Marcus ArmstrongDAMS1:42.03826
    4Liam LawsonHitech Grand Prix1:42.25628
    5Robert ShwartzmanPREMA Racing1:42.25727
    6Jüri VipsHitech Grand Prix1:42.29922
    7Théo PourchaireART Grand Prix1:42.34742
    8Roy NissanyDAMS1:42.41931
    9Oscar PiastriPREMA Racing1:42.46232
    10Marino SatoTrident1:42.99727
    11Dan TicktumCarlin1:43.15835
    12Ralph BoschungCampos Racing1:43.20640
    13Jehan DaruvalaCarlin1:43.61635
    14David BeckmannCharouz Racing System1:43.95448
    15Guanyu ZhouUNI-Virtuosi1:43.99738
    16Lirim ZendeliMP Motorsport1:44.34631
    17Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport1:44.48531
    18Guilherme SamaiaCharouz Racing System1:44.57550
    19Gianluca PetecofCampos Racing1:45.41933
    20Felipe DrugovichUNI-Virtuosi1:45.86546
    21Matteo NanniniHWA RACELAB1:45.86520
    22Alessio DeleddaHWA RACELAB1:46.41313

    2021 FIA FORMULA 2 CHAMPIONSHIP – PRE-SEASON TESTS, DAY 2, AFTERNOON SESSION

    DRIVERTEAMLAPTIMELAPS
    1Dan TicktumCarlin1:42.18536
    2Jehan DaruvalaCarlin1:42.61936
    3Guanyu ZhouUNI-Virtuosi1:43.11430
    4Guilherme SamaiaCharouz Racing System1:43.12940
    5Felipe DrugovichUNI-Virtuosi1:43.19434
    6Ralph BoschungCampos Racing1:44.32025
    7Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport1:44.33520
    8Gianluca PetecofCampos Racing1:44.56910
    9David BeckmannCharouz Racing System1:44.64019
    10Bent ViscaalTrident1:44.87942
    11Lirim ZendeliMP Motorsport1:45.05221
    12Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix1:46.91345
    13Théo PourchaireART Grand Prix1:47.42947
    14Jüri VipsHitech Grand Prix1:47.49747
    15Robert ShwartzmanPREMA Racing1:47.61433
    16Marcus ArmstrongDAMS1:47.90044
    17Alessio DeleddaHWA RACELAB1:47.90430
    18Liam LawsonHitech Grand Prix1:48.81439
    19Roy NissanyDAMS1:48.97442
    20Marino SatoTrident1:49.50130
    21Oscar PiastriPREMA Racing1:49.82432
    22Matteo NanniniHWA RACELAB1:50.44518
  • Jehan Daruvala begins with F2 pre-season test in third

    Jehan Daruvala begins with F2 pre-season test in third

    Sakhir, 8 March 2021: Charouz Racing System rookie David Beckmann was a surprise name at the top of the standings on the opening day of the Formula 2 pre-season tests in Sakhir, beating out the more experience Christian Lundgaard in the afternoon session to top the table with a time of 1:42.844.

    The two-time 2020 Formula 3 race winner looked right at home in the more powerful F2 machinery, also going faster than the morning’s top driver, Dan Ticktum.

    MORNING

    The grid were quick to set off onto the track for their first miles of 2021, but for the majority, it was only an installation lap as they headed back into the garage for further work on their cars. 10 did brave the windy and dusty conditions of the Bahrain International Circuit, led out by Ticktum.

    There was an early red flag as Richard Verschoor came to a halt down the back straight in the leadup to Turn 14. The Dutchman’s stricken MP Motorsport machine was hauled back into the garage for a check-up, while his teammate, Lirim Zendeli, got to work setting the fastest time.

    The 2020 F3 race winner got off to a sterling start, flashing round in 1:44.451 to top the opening laps of the season. The German’s time in P1 was short-lived, but he did manage to cap off a solid morning with a place in the top five, finishing fourth.

    Zendeli’s 2020 rival, Liam Lawson, was another of the rookies to impress in the early stages, setting the first sub 1m 44s time of the day, which would end up being good enough for P2.

    Experience did eventually come to the fore as Ticktum switched on the style towards the back end of the morning, beating Lawson’s time by sixth tenths to finish top, lapping at 1:43.021.

    Ticktum’s Carlin teammate Jehan Daruvala picked up where he left off last season, running towards the front of the field, though his time wasn’t quite good enough for first, as he settled for P3, seven tenths off the pace.

    Three more rookies caught the eye in the morning, as Oscar Piastri, Bent Viscaal and Beckmann all earned themselves places in the top 10, finishing seventh, eighth and 10th. The familiar names of Guilherme Samaia and Marcus Armstrong also appeared towards the front, taking sixth and ninth.

    AFTERNOON

    MP were straight back on it when action resumed in the afternoon, Zendeli taking back his place at the top of the timesheets with a time of 1:45.010. Backed up by his teammate for the tests, Verschoor, the duo got their fast laps out of the way early doors before focusing on longer runs and dropping out of the top ten.

    Reigning F3 champion Piastri made his first appearance at the top of the charts towards the halfway point of the afternoon. Like Zendeli, his attention then switched to race simulations and this saw him drop to P6.

    Last season’s surprise package Felipe Drugovich had swapped MP Motorsport for 2020 title challengers UNI-Virtuosi and looked to be quickly getting used to his new machinery, briefly setting the quickest time, before falling to fourth.

    Fresh from a two-round stint with HWA RACELAB at the end of last season, Théo Pourchaire was back with his F3 team, ART Grand Prix, and managed third in the afternoon. The Frenchman was beaten by his teammate Lundgaard, who showed his experience and went 0.063s quicker.

    None of them could match Beckmann’s Charouz, with the German rookie roaring to first in the closing stages of the afternoon as the only driver to break the 1m 43s barrier on Day 1.

    Hitech duo Jüri Vips and Liam Lawson both managed to break into the top ten in the afternoon, going fifth and eighth. Marino Sato snuck into seventh with Trident, while Viscaal and Guanyu Zhou completed the top ten, in ninth and tenth.

    We’ll be back for Day 2 on Tuesday at 11.30 am IST (9am -local time).

    2020 FIA FORMULA 2 CHAMPIONSHIP – PRE-SEASON TESTS, DAY 1, MORNING SESSION

    DRIVERTEAMLAPTIMELAPS
    1Dan TicktumCarlin1:43.02114
    2Liam LawsonHitech Grand Prix1:43.62117
    3Jehan DaruvalaCarlin1:43.76115
    4Lirim ZendeliMP Motorsport1:44.09535
    5Jüri VipsHitech Grand Prix1:44.14316
    6Guilherme SamaiaCharouz Racing System1:44.33231
    7Oscar PiastriPREMA Racing1:44.3468
    8Bent ViscaalTrident1:44.40819
    9Marcus ArmstrongDAMS1:44.48013
    10David BeckmannCharouz Racing System1:44.52931
    11Marino SatoTrident1:44.62015
    12Felipe DrugovichUNI-Virtuosi1:44.70625
    13Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport1:44.85938
    14Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix1:44.88021
    15Théo PourchaireART Grand Prix1:45.03819
    16Guanyu ZhouUNI-Virtuosi1:45.06018
    17Roy NissanyDAMS1:45.47118
    18Matteo NanniniHWA RACELAB1:45.48626
    19Ralph BoschungCampos Racing1:45.49624
    20Gianluca PetecofCampos Racing1:46.36227
    21Alessio DeleddaHWA RACELAB1:48.81628
    22Robert ShwartzmanPREMA Racing1:58.5467

    2020 FIA FORMULA 2 CHAMPIONSHIP – PRE-SEASON TESTS, DAY 1, AFTERNOON SESSION

    DRIVERTEAMLAPTIMELAPS
    1David BeckmannCharouz Racing System1:42.84419
    2Christian LundgaardART Grand Prix1:43.53432
    3Théo PourchaireART Grand Prix1:43.57036
    4Felipe DrugovichUNI-Virtuosi1:43.87128
    5Jüri VipsHitech1:44.07918
    6Oscar PiastriPREMA Racing.21
    7Marino SatoTrident1:44.27938
    8Liam LawsonHitech1:44.28024
    9Bent ViscaalTrident1:44.31440
    10Guanyu ZhouUNI-Virtuosi1:44.32228
    11Marcus ArmstrongDAMS1:44.33134
    12Roy NissanyDAMS1:44.58123
    13Robert SwhartzmanPREMA Racing1:44.67818
    14Lirim ZendeliMP Motorsport1:45.01036
    15Richard VerschoorMP Motorsport1:45.13439
    16Guilherme SamaiaCharouz Racing System1:45.18916
    17Matteo NanniniHWA RACELAB1:45.31627
    18Ralph BoschungCampos Racing1:45.56117
    19Gianluca PetecofCampos Racing1:46.23833
    20Dan TicktumCarlin1:48.88524
    21Alessio DeleddaHWA RACELAB1:48.99019
    22Jehan DaruvalaCarlin1:49.63726
  • Chovet favourite as Asia F3 closes; Outside chance for Jehan

    Chovet favourite as Asia F3 closes; Outside chance for Jehan

    Abu Dhabi (UAE), 17 Feb 2021: Eighteen-year-old Frenchman Pierre-Louis Chovet is the hot favourite to clinch the 2021 F3 Asian Championship Certified by FIA title as the series prepares for the season-closing triple-header at Abu Dhabi’s Yas Marina Circuit from February 18-20. The Pinnacle Motorsport driver has so far won six of the 12 races, three from pole position giving him a 100% conversion rate.

    Guaranteed to give the young pretender a run for his money though is China’s Zhou Guanyu with Abu Dhabi Racing by Prema. The 21-year-old 2021 Alpine Academy driver won the opening two races of the season before a DNF in Race 3 dealt a blow to his title aspirations. Since then, however, nine consecutive double-digit points scores put him just 32 points adrift of Chovet in the driver classification.

    Mumbai Falcons India Racing Ltd.’s Jehan Daruvala has endured a season of mixed fortunes so far, but remains in mathematical title contention ahead of the final round. The 22-year-old won three of the six races in Rounds 2 and 3 at the Yas Marina track, all from pole, so is expected to be a force to be reckoned with when the championship returns there this week.

    Along with the championship title comes 18 coveted FIA Super Licence points, with the runner-up taking 14, and the final point awarded to the ninth-place finisher in the Driver Classification. That means there is plenty to fight for even for those no longer in championship contention.

    Currently fourth and fifth respectively in the Driver Classification are 3Y Evans GP’s Isack Hadjar, who took five podiums in nine races, and Ferrari Driver Academy Swede Dino Beganovic, who notched up four podiums in the first three rounds with Abu Dhabi Racing by Prema. Having completed their championship stints as planned, both drivers bowed out ahead of Round 4, so will drop down the leaderboard by the end of the season. Beganovic was replaced by Spaniard David Vidales in Round 4, and the 18-year-old immediately impressed with a second-place finish in Race 12.

    3Y Evans GP’s Patrik Pasma, currently sixth in the standings, is definitely a driver to watch after a strong performance in Round 4, which saw the 20-year-old Finn take victory in Race 11 and a podium finish in Race 12.

    Hitech Grand Prix Red Bull Junior Driver Ayumu Iwasa sits seventh in the overall driver standings ahead of team mate Roy Nissany, and leads the Rookie Cup having scored his maiden class win in Race 10 after seven podium finishes. The reigning French F4 champion leads team mate Reece Ushijima by 14 points in the Rookie Cup standings, but both drivers should watch out for Turkish esports ace Cem Bolukbasi. The BlackArts Racing driver has taken six Rookie Cup podiums so far this year and trails Iwasa by just 26 points ahead of the final round.

    The fourth season of the F3 Asian Championship Certified by FIA has exceeded all expectations, pitching new talent just emerging from the ranks of karting and F4 against experienced FIA F2 drivers, potentially on the brink of F1 breakthroughs, with intriguing results. As the series prepares for the final showdown on the stunning F1 Yas Marina Circuit, three more fascinating encounters lie ahead. 

    F3 Asian Championship Certified by FIA

    Drivers’ Championship after Round 4

    PosNoDriverNatTeamPts
    13Pierre-Louis CHOVETFRAPinnacle Motorsport221
    233Guanyu ZHOUCHNAbu Dhabi Racing by Prema189
    319Jehan DARUVALAINDMumbai Falcons India Racing Ltd.156
    46Isack HADJARFRA3Y Evans GP95
    516Dino BEGANOVICSWEAbu Dhabi Racing by Prema88
    64Patrik PASMAFIN3Y Evans GP85
    712Ayumu IWASAJPNHitech Grand Prix74
    814Roy NISSANYISRHitech Grand Prix73
    974Cem BOLUKBASITURBlackArts Racing49
    1011Roman STANEKCZEHitech Grand Prix48
    1113Reece USHIJIMAGBRHitech Grand Prix38
    1228Kush MAINIINDMumbai Falcons India Racing Ltd.24
    1362Lorenzo FLUXAESPBlackArts Racing21
    1416David VIDALESESPAbu Dhabi Racing by Prema20
    1510Alessio DELEDDAITAPinnacle Motorsport9
    165Alex CONNORGBR3Y Evans GP8
    177Roberto FARIABRAMotorscape6
    178Rafael VILLAGOMEZMEXBlackArts Racing6
    1866Zdenek CHOVANECPORBlackArts Racing2
    185Casper STEVENSONGBR3Y Evans GP Team Oloi0
    1925Alexandre BARDINONFRAPinnacle Motorsport0
    1940Matthias LUETHENGERPinnacle Motorsport0
    1951Irina SIDORKOVARUS3Y Evans GP Team Oloi0
    1977Nicola MARINANGELIITAMotorscape0
    1988Amna AL QUBAISIUAEAbu Dhabi Racing by Prema0
    1999Khaled AL QUBAISIUAEAbu Dhabi Racing by Prema0

    F3 Asian Championship Certified by FIA

    Rookie Cup after Round 4

    PosNoDriverNatTeamPts
    112Ayumu IWASAJPNHitech Grand Prix176
    213Reece USHIJIMAGBRHitech Grand Prix162
    36Isack HADJARFRA3Y Evans GP160
    474Cem BOLUKBASITURBlackArts Racing150
    516Dino BEGANOVICSWEAbu Dhabi Racing by Prema147
    662Lorenzo FLUXAESPBlackArts Racing103
    77Roberto FARIABRAMotorscape83
    88Rafael VILLAGOMEZMEXBlackArts Racing71
    95Alex CONNORGBR3Y Evans GP38
    1051Irina SIDORKOVARUS3Y Evans GP Team Oloi33
    1188Amna AL QUBAISIUAEAbu Dhabi Racing by Prema31
    125Casper STEVENSONGBR3Y Evans GP Team Oloi16

    Team Classification after Round 4

    PosNatTeamPts
    1UAEAbu Dhabi Racing by Prema297
    2IRLPinnacle Motorsport221
    3AUSEvans GP188
    4INDMumbai Falcons India Racing Ltd180
    5GBRHitech Grand Prix114
    6HKGBlackArts Racing70
    7JORMotorscape6

    2021 F3 ASIAN CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA PROVISIONAL CALENDAR

    DateVenueEvent
    January 27Dubai AutodromePre-Season Test
    January 29-30Dubai Autodrome, UAERound 1 (Races 1-3)
    February 4-5Yas Marina Circuit, UAERound 2 (Races 4-6)
    February 6-7Yas Marina Circuit, UAERound 3 (Races 7-9)
    February 12-14Dubai Autodrome, UAERound 4 (Races 10-12)
    February 19-20Yas Marina Circuit, UAERound 5 (Races 13-15)
  • Jehan Daruvala wins another race; Kush adds some points: Asia F3

    Jehan Daruvala wins another race; Kush adds some points: Asia F3

    Abu Dhabi, 7 Feb 2021:  Mumbai Falcons’ Jehan Daruvala brought down the curtain on two back-to-back rounds here on a glorious note, winning Race 3 of Round 3 of the Formula 3 Asian Championship from start to finish on Sunday evening.

    His three victories and two second-place finishes over four days elevated him in the points table to second position after he had briefly slipped to third in the morning. Debutant Mumbai Falcons too climb to the second place in the Team Standings, with 2 rounds and 6 races remaining in the Championship.

    “As a new team, we are constantly learning and getting better. For the first time in the championship, we have had both our cars in the points in every race. It’s great to be second in the Team’s Standing, and we hope to get even better,” Moid Tungekar, CEO of Mumbai Falcons, said.

    “I was happy with the pace we had in Race 3. I was able to control my pace the way I wanted. It feels good to be back on the top step of the podium.  The race in the morning was not ideal. I’m looking forward to relaxing for a few days and then focusing on a good Round 4,” Jehan said.

    Every racer is allowed two sets of tyres per weekend and India’s top racing star smartly held back his fresh set of tyres for the last race, to make the most of his pole advantage that he had won during the qualifying rounds on Saturday.

    Jehan Daruvala, car #19, in action before he won the Race 3 in Round 3 of the Asia F3 series at Abu Dhabi on Sunday. Photo by Ishaan Bhataiya / Red Bull Content Pool

    Jehan had an excellent start from pole, and led into the first corner. China’s Guanyu Zhou, starting second, followed Jehan while the two Frenchmen behind them were almost side by side. Isack Hadjar, starting from fourth, however, managed to overtake Championship leader Pierre-Louis Chovet to climb into the third position.

    Zhou soon mounted a challenge on Jehan and came right beside him, but couldn’t get past him. The Indian held his nerve and soon settled into a good rhythm and reeled out a series of quick laps to open up a small gap on Zhou.

    A brief safety car period neutralised Jehan’s lead, though. But once the safety car pulled into the pits, Jehan made an excellent restart and immediately pulled away from Zhou. Jehan posted a couple of fastest laps and cemented his lead to win ahead of Zhou, while Hadjar finished third.

    Mumbai Falcons picked up a few more points, thanks to Kush Maini having another good race. Kush also had a good start and quickly gained two positions. He was involved in a thrilling battle with Lorenzo Fluxa, who tried to overtake him for most of the race. Kush drove a highly intelligent, defensive race to keep Fluxa behind and finished eighth.

    The grid for Race 2, earlier in the day, was based on the fastest lap from Race 1. Kush Maini continued his fine form from Saturday. He started tenth and soon made up a couple of places. He then made an incredible move to dive down the inside of Williams F1 Junior Driver, Roy Nissany.

    Kush somehow made it stick and got ahead of Nissany, who then mounted several overtaking attempts, with the duo banging wheels on more than one occasion. The Indian however held on and eventually Nissany had a separate incident and retired. Kush climbed up to eventually finish seventh, right behind Jehan who had a forgettable race starting and finishing sixth. 

    Round 4 will take place next weekend at the Dubai Autodrome.