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Spa GP2: Vandoorne stays clear of carnage to seal home win

Stoffel Vandoorne extended his GP2 points advantage with a fifth feature race victory of the season at Spa in an drama-filled encounter characterised by incidents up and down the field.

Winner Stoffel Vandoorne, ART Grand Prix

Winner Stoffel Vandoorne, ART Grand Prix

GP2 Series Media Service

2015 GP2 Series Round 7. Spa-Francorchamps, Spa, Belgium.   Friday 21 August 2015.  Stoffel Vandoorne, ART Grand Prix
Stoffel Vandoorne, ART Grand Prix celebrates his pole position in Parc Ferme
Daniel De Jong, MP Motorsport
Stoffel Vandoorne, ART Grand Prix
Alexander Rossi, Racing Engineering
Arthur Pic, Campos Racing
Mitch Evans, RUSSIAN TIME
Sergey Sirotkin, Rapax
Julian Leal, Carlin
Marlon Stockinger, Status Grand Prix

The most severe of these involved Daniel de Jong, who ploughed straight into the tyre barriers at barely abated speed at Blanchimont as a result of contact with Pierre Gasly on the sixth lap.

Exiting Stavelot, the Dutchman had tried to line up a move around the outside of the high-speed left-hander, but was squeezed to the edge of the circuit by Gasly, who then touched de Jong and caused the terrifying high-speed crash.

After three laps behind the Safety Car, the red flags were shown in order to repair the badly damaged barrier, with de Jong taken to hospital for assessment but seemingly escaping serious injury.

There had already been plenty of action at the start of the race: Vandoorne was overtaken by Sergey Sirotkin as the lights went out, only for the Russian to run wide at La Source, as Nobuharu Matsushita clattered into the rear of a slow-starting Oliver Rowland behind.

On the exit of the hairpin, there was a further clash between Gasly and Norman Nato, which forced the latter to retire.

The result was that Vandoorne held the lead on the opening lap, ahead of Rossi – after a demon start from eighth on the grid – while Mitch Evans, fourth on lap one, was able to breeze past Sirotkin with the help of DRS along the Kemmel straight for third some laps later.

Vandoorne had stretched a lead of almost two seconds over Rossi by the time the Safety Car was deployed on the sixth lap, the Belgian duly pitting under caution to switch from soft to hard tyres.

That left the Belgian ninth in the queue when the action resumed, and though most of the hard-shod drivers ahead swapped to soft tyres during the red flag pause, they were still required to make an additional stop in the remaining laps.

Vandoorne had already moved up to sixth by the time Rossi came in for another set of soft tyres at the end of lap 16, and the points leader was back into the lead by the time the rest of the leading drivers made their stops, with Evans and Sirotkin enjoying brief stints at the front.

Rio Haryanto, after passing Campos teammate Arthur Pic at the final chicane, was up to second when he was hit by a 10-second stop-and-go penalty for a personnel infringement at the restart.

That promoted Pic back to the runner-up position, finishing 10 seconds behind Vandoorne, ahead of fellow one-stoppers Artem Markelov (up from 22nd on the grid) and Julian Leal.

Taking advantage of his fresh tyres, Rossi was able to work his way back up to fifth after his stop, but forced an attacking Evans wide at the final chicane on the final lap. After light contact between the pair, Evans cut the corner to steal the place in a move under investigation by the stewards.

Nathanael Berthon was seventh ahead of Jordan King, who recovered from his late stop to secure reverse grid pole for Sunday’s sprint race, while Sirotkin led a gaggle of cars over the finish line to take ninth ahead of Marlon Stockinger in the final point-paying place.

Race results:

PosDriverTeamTime/Gap
1 Stoffel Vandoorne ART Grand Prix 1h22:18.099 
2 Arthur Pic Campos Racing 9.979
3 Artem Markelov RUSSIAN TIME 12.856
4 Julian Leal Carlin 13.106
5 Mitch Evans RUSSIAN TIME 19.264
6 Alexander Rossi Racing Engineering 19.527
7 Nathanael Berthon Daiko Team Lazarus 23.723
8 Jordan King Racing Engineering 29.267
9 Sergey Sirotkin Rapax 34.144
10 Marlon Stockinger Status Grand Prix 34.859
11 Gustav Malja Trident 35.169
12 Alex Lynn DAMS 35.610
13 Sergio Canamasas Daiko Team Lazarus 35.797
14 Pierre Gasly DAMS 35.857
15 Rio Haryanto Campos Racing 41.571
16 Richie Stanaway Status Grand Prix 43.894
17 Raffaele Marciello Trident 46.546
18 Sean Gelael Carlin 50.840
19 Robert Visoiu Rapax 51.632
20 Andre Negrao Arden International 63.453
  Oliver Rowland MP Motorsport 7 laps
  Nick Yelloly Hilmer Motorsport DNF
  Nobuharu Matsushita ART Grand Prix DNF
  Daniel de Jong MP Motorsport DNF
  Norman Nato Arden International DNF

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