Tag: Robert Shwartzman

  • Theo Pourchaire takes pole for Feature Race; Jehan qualifies P6 in group: F2

    Theo Pourchaire takes pole for Feature Race; Jehan qualifies P6 in group: F2

    Monaco, 20 May 2021: Théo Pourchaire will start his first ever Feature Race in Monte Carlo from the front of the grid. The 17-year-old putting on a magnificent drive in Qualifying to become the second tier’s youngest ever polesitter, beating Robert Shwartzman by nearly half a second.

    Indian racer Jehan Daruvala of Carlin Racing has qualified P6 in his group which means he will start P11 in Race 1. “It is not an ideal qualifying session. But I will be pushing hard in the race tomorrow to move up the field from here,” promised Daruvala in a tweet.

    Labelling Monaco as a home race ahead of the weekend, Pourchaire said he only lives around 45 minutes from the historic street circuit, but had never actually raced there before. Not that you’d have known, the Frenchman beating Oscar Piastri – who will start P3 – by 0.458s with a time of 1:20.985 in Group A.

    Despite knowledge of the time to beat, and slightly greater track evolution, Shwartzman wasn’t able to better the ART Grand Prix driver’s time in the second group. Finishing first ahead of Dan Ticktum, the PREMA driver was still 0.418s offPourchaire and will start from second.

    GROUP A

    As is standard for Monte Carlo, qualifying was split into two groups of 16 minutes each, with Group A made up of even-numbered cars.

    Jüri Vips and Felipe Drugovich leapt to first and second as the initial fast laps came in, but there was still more time to be found, with the latter scraping the barriers on his way around.

    Vips improved on his time to retain first on his next tour, but then clipped the barriers on the final push and handed an opportunity to Pourchaire, who responded by going half a second faster than the Red Bull junior, with a lap of 1:20.985.

    Oscar Piastri couldn’t find as much time as Pourchaire, but did better Vips’ effort to jump from sixth to second. Roy Nissany dove into P4, dropping Drugovich down to fifth.

    GROUP B

    With Pourchaire watching on intently from the pitlane, Round 1 polesitter Guanyu Zhou set the fastest time of the first push in Group B, but remained more than a second off the provisional polesitter.

    The UNI-Virtuosi man fell to fourth on the second run with a poor middle sector, as Free Practice leader Shwartzman stole first, ahead of Ticktum and Christian Lundgaard.

    Track temperature was continuing to rise as the last set of push laps began and Ticktum briefly snatched P1 from Shwarztman, but the Russian swiftly stole it back at the chequered flag, with a lap of 1:21.403.

    One of just four drivers with experience of driving an F2 car around Monaco, Ralph Boschung put his Campos in third place, relegating Lundgaard to fourth and Zhou to fifth.

    With the results aggregated, Pourchaire will start the Feature Race from pole, flanked by Shwartzman. Piastri will line up in third, ahead of Ticktum. Vips will start from fifth, with Boschung sixth, Nissany seventh and Lundgaard eighth. Drugovich and Zhou complete the top 10.

    Finishing 10th overall, Zhou will start from reverse grid pole in Sprint Race 1 on Friday at 11.45am local time.

  • Shwartzman tops times in Free Practice; Jehan P15: F2

    Shwartzman tops times in Free Practice; Jehan P15: F2

    Monaco, 20 May 2021: PREMA Racing’s Robert Shwartzman pulled off a storming lap in the final two minutes of a disrupted Free Practice in Monte Carlo, setting 1:22.041 to finish more than half a second ahead of Carlin’s Dan Ticktum and Hitech Grand Prix’s Jüri Vips.

    Indian racer Jehan Daruvala useds the practices to get some crucial data was P15 on the timesheets.

    There were three stoppages in the opening 20 minutes of the session, the first coming with only six laptimes on the board after Marino Sato came to a halt on track and brought out a Red Flag.

    A second was required after Gianluca Petecof’s Campos went up in smoke, but not before a full set of fast laps from the grid, with Felipe Drugovich the quickest of the lot running at 1m 24s.

    Liam Lawson was the first to try out the Super Soft tyres when action resumed, but the Hitech Grand Prix racer wasn’t able to set a fresh time due to a third stoppage. This time only a Virtual Safety Car was required, after Bent Viscaal clipped the wall.

    The field finally got some uninterrupted running in with 17 minutes to go, Vips breaking the 1m 24s barrier to leap to first. The Estonian improved again on his next run, strengthening his place at the top of the table with a tour of 1:22.628.

    The times started to tumble in the final two minutes of the session, with Shwarztman thumping around the streets of Monaco on softs to steal first, beating Vips’ time by nearly six tenths. Ticktum jumped the Hitech as well, but was still half a second off the Russian.

    Vips did hold onto P3, beating out Drugovich by 0.035s. Ralph Boschung – who had briefly held P2 in the final five minutes – finished sixth behind the second PREMA of Oscar Piastri.

    Taking seventh and eighth, Lawson and Marcus Armstrong were more than a second off the leading lap, while Guanyu Zhou and Roy Nissany completed the top 10.

  • Robert Shwartzman leads Prema 1-2; Jehan Daruvala P16

    Robert Shwartzman leads Prema 1-2; Jehan Daruvala P16

    Spa Francorchamps, 30 August 2020: Robert Shwartzman returned to the top of the FIA Formula 2 Championship with his third victory of the season in the Sprint Race at Spa-Francorchamps, finishing nine seconds ahead of his teammate Mick Schumacher in a PREMA one-two.

    Indian racer Jehan Daruvala had a forgettable day once again and finished P16 following a 10-second penalty that was applied after the race.

    Callum Ilott began the day in first place in the standings but suffered an early retirement in the very first lap after a coming together with Yuki Tsunoda.

    With Ilott out of contention, Shwartzman knew that the Championship lead was on offer, but needed to keep the risk low and the points high. The Russian made the most of an early collision between race leaders Roy Nissany and Dan Ticktum to fire into first, and closed out a controlled victory from there.

    Ticktum battled on determinedly after the collision, but couldn’t hold on to a points’ finish, eventually falling back to ninth at the flag, while Nissany’s day ended in retirement.

    Ilott’s teammate Guanyu Zhou had a much better time of things, taking his fifth podium of the year behind the PREMAs in third.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    Mich Schumacher takes a brilliant second during the sprint race of the Formula 2 Championship at Circuit de Spa on Sunday. Photo by Clive Mason via Getty Images

    This was as good as it got for the Charouz Racing System driver, who then started to drop down the order, opening up an intense battle for the final podium spot. Guanyu Zhou was the first to stake his claim, but Schumacher’s own attempt was far more convincing, as he wrestled ahead of the UNI-Virtuosi man for third.

    Shwartzman had scuttled off down the road by this point, building up a 7s lead over Ticktum, who was busy watching those behind him in his rear-view mirrors.

    The DAMS’ driver looked to be standing his ground, but locked up under the pressure of Schumacher’s challenge and opened himself up to a move. The PREMA racer remained patient and eventually got ahead down the Kemmel Straight. Zhou followed through one lap later, taking the final podium spot.

    The top three eased to the chequered flag, with Nikita Mazepin taking fourth and Luca Ghiotto fifth, followed by Delétraz and Christian Lundgaard. Artem Markelov scored his first points of 2020 in P8, while Ticktum fell back in the closing laps and ended the day in ninth, out of the points.

    Shwartzman now leads Ilott in the Drivers’ Championship by exactly 10 points, with 132 in total. Tsunoda remains third on 111, with Schumacher fourth and Mazepin fifth. In the Teams’ Championship, PREMA sit first with 238 points, ahead of UNI-Virtuosi on 214 and Hitech Grand Prix on 152. Carlin are fourth ahead of ART Grand Prix.

    KEY QUOTE – ROBERT SHWARTZMAN (PREMA RACING)

    “I have finally gotten back to first place – it had been a while since Hungary. I am really happy, and I want to say a big thank you to the team. They did a really great job and the car has been good all weekend. Yesterday, I made a mistake which influenced our result a bit.

    “Today, I had a decent start and was P3 out of Turn 1. The guys in front were quite aggressive so I was being a bit cautious with them. They crashed and collided, and I used that opportunity to get past them.

    “After that, I just kept up my pace and I am really happy to have the win and the fastest lap as well.”

    F2 Sprint race, Top-three: 1. Robert Shwartzman, Prema Racing, 42:44.391; 2. Mick Schumacher, Prema Racing, 42:53.416; 3. Guanyu Zhou, UNI-Virtuosi, 42:55.584.

  • Jehan Daruvala finishes P6 for maiden points; Shwartzman takes 2nd win

    Jehan Daruvala finishes P6 for maiden points; Shwartzman takes 2nd win

    Budapest, 18 July 2020: Ace Indian racing driver Jehan Daruvala put in a stunning performance and aided with a superb strategy by Carlin team, the Red Bull Junior finished a noteworthy P6 after starting from P15 in the FIA Formula 2 Feature race being held along the F1 Hungarian GP here on Saturday. The Mumbai-born rookie will start P3 for the Sprint Race on Sunday which Indians can watch on Youtube Formula 1 channel at 2.40 pm.

    “Had some fun out there today with lots of overtaking. After issues (with clutch) at the start, I dropped to the end of the grid and from last have managed to finish 6th. I will start P3 tomorrow which is a good position to get a good result in the Sprint race,” tweeted Jehan Daruvala, tagging his supporters #RedBullJuniorTeam, PAP, Winway and his team #CarlinRacing. His racing guru, Rayomand Banajee responded, “What a race! Lots of impressive moves out there. Good luck for tomorrow.”

    The race was won by Robert Shwartzman, who earlier won Feature Race in Round 1 too. He took the second win in sensational circumstances, at the Hungaroring today. Starting from 11th, the PREMA racer crossed the line with an unassailable lead of 15s over Nikita Mazepin in second.

    This was thanks, in part, to the decision to place him on the Prime/Option strategy, which handed him fresh soft tyres at the end of the race, when the majority of the field were running on heavily degraded mediums.

    Mazepin was another to enjoy the same luxury and took his first podium in F2. The Hitech racer begun the afternoon way back in 16th, but he made light work of charging through the pack in the closing laps, once he switched to the soft tyres.

    Shwartzman’s teammate Mick Schumacher had initially looked set for his first Feature Race win, but he was lucky to cling on to third at the end of the race. The German was the final driver to change from softs to mediums and managed his tyres as best he could to hang on at the end.

    Shwartzman celebrates after winning the Feature Race. An F2 Image

    Polesitter Callum Ilott wasn’t as lucky. The UNI-Virtuosi racer made his change early on, and by the end of the race, had nothing left to give, finishing eighth.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    There were several strong starts when the lights went out. Ilott was one of those, getting away cleanly from first. Behind him, Dan Ticktum darted into second, while Schumacher surged down the middle for third.

    Shwartzman’s getaway was the most eye-catching. The Russian was starting from 11th after a really tough Qualifying session, but he fired up to sixth by the end of the second corner.

    Guanyu Zhou’s start was much more sluggish, and the UNI-Virtuosi racer was swallowed up by the field, falling from third to seventh, while Luca Ghiotto dropped from P2 to fifth, below Christian Lundgaard.

    The safety car made its first appearance of the race early on as Roy Nissany locked up at Turn 1 and collided with his teammate. Marino Sato was forced to retire, and the marshals worked quickly to remove his machine and allow racing to resume.

    Ghiotto attempted to claim fourth from Lundgaard and the duo battled all the way from Turn 1 to Turn 3, with the Hitech racer inching narrowly ahead. In his attempts to fight back, Lundgaard caught the rear wing of Ghiotto and suffered a puncture.

    In his attempts to avoid Lundgaard, Marcus Armstrong clattered into Artem Markelov which ended the BWT HWA RACELAB driver’s race. This brought out another safety car.

    At the re-start, Ticktum immediately dived into the pits to change from the soft tyres and onto the mediums, leaving Schumacher to race with Ilott for P1.

    Ilott pitted himself for a change a lap later, whilst Schumacher was attempting to run longer on the soft Pirellis. When the German did eventually pit, he returned ahead of the UNI-Virtuosi driver and led those who had already changed tyres.

    Behind them, Ticktum was fast losing grip on his tyres, and dropped below Ghiotto, Zhou and Louis Delétraz.

    The DAMS driver wasn’t the only one to struggle. The Feature Race was the first dry session of the weekend and the field were learning on the job, with the medium Pirellis. This boosted the chances of a race win for Shwartzman, who was on the alternative strategy, along with Mazepin, and Felipe Drugovich.

    The Russian opted to pit with 10 laps to go and knew that a solid stop would return him in seventh, with a strong sniff of the podium. The pitstop was flawless, and the PREMA racer re-joined in fourth.

    On cold tyres and maybe a bit too eager, Shwartzman locked up hard which allowed Ghiotto to pass him at the first corner. The PREMA ace quickly warmed up his tyres and got back in-front, and then fired ahead of Ilott. The remainder of the grid pitted for their change and this handed Shwartzman second, with only his teammate Schumacher to beat.

    Also on the alternative strategy, Mazepin was on the charge as well. The Hitech racer had started the day in 16th, but returned from his pitstop in ninth and almost instantly dispatched of Jehan Daruvala and Ticktum for seventh in one cool move.

    Mazepin slid into fifth with two further overtakes on the next lap, and as he did so, Shwartzman thundered into first and began to quickly pull away from Schumacher, whose tyres didn’t have anywhere near enough fight left in them to defend.

    Only five laps remained but there was plenty more action to be played out. Mazepin continued his ascent and flung his Hitech around the side of Ilott, before diving ahead of Schumacher for second. By this point, Shwartzman had increased his lead to a jaw-dropping 15s.

    Felipe Drugovich managed to make the fresher tyres work himself and clawed his way up to fifth, but didn’t have quite enough time for any further overtakes.

    Shwartzman crossed the line with a 15.5s advantage over Mazepin, who had more than 7s on Schumacher in third. Ghiotto managed to retain fourth ahead of Drugovich, with Daruvala sealing sixth, ahead of Delétraz.

    Polesitter Ilott plummeted down the order to eighth in the final few laps, with seriously degraded medium tyres. The Briton will start on reverse pole in the Sprint Race on Sunday. Ticktum and Zhou took the final points’ positions, having struggled with their rubber as well.

    Shwartzman’s second victory increases his Championship lead to 22 points over Ilott. Lundgaard is third with 43, ahead of Ticktum and Armstrong. In the Teams’ Championship, PREMA Racing lead with 102 points, ahead of UNI-Virtuosi on 79 and ART Grand Prix on 77. DAMS are fourth and MP Motorsport fifth.

    KEY QUOTE – ROBERT SHWARTZMAN (PREMA RACING)

    “The win was a little bit unexpected again. I started P11 with a completely different strategy, and to be honest, I was expecting to get some good points, but I did not expect to be first.

    “My start was mega, one of the best starts I have done. The launch was good, and I think that I passed five cars in the first two corners, something like that. It was really impressive, and I was like ‘oh my god, I am in P6 now.’

    “Everyone on the other strategy pitted and I stayed out on track. I was quite surprised because my front left started to degrade: I was losing a lot of time and I felt really slow. But in actual fact, I wasn’t that slow and my pace was more or less the same as them.

    “I tried to stay out as long as possible and the guys gave me a mega pit stop. I went out and had a big lock up, which was a big mistake, because the tyres were really, really cold. After that, I had a lot of vibration, but the tyres were still a lot better than the guys in front of me.

    “In the end, there was a good gap and we finished first, so a big thanks to the team, to SMP racing and the FDA.”