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Berlin E-Prix: Di Grassi wins penultimate round for Audi

Audi’s Lucas di Grassi won the penultimate round of the 2020-21 FIA Formula E World Championship at Berlin’s Tempelhof Airport track on Saturday, setting up a title-deciding final round tomorrow.

Watch: Jaguar Racing | Season 7 Round 14 | Berlin E-Prix Highlights

The Brazilian kicked off the Audi team’s Formula E farewell weekend by holding off his Venturi Racing rival Edoardo Mortara over the line by just 0.141s.

This came as the front row-sitting DS Techeetahs of polesitter Jean-Eric Vergne and Antonio Felix da Costa lost a provisional drivers’ and teams’ points lead as they shipped places.

Vergne had launched his car sound enough from the left-hand side of the grid to keep da Costa at bay at Turn 1. Reigning champion da Costa then settled into a comfortable second, 0.5s behind his team-mate, with di Grassi the same distance behind, as a eventless procession broke out.

After a six-lap stalemate, the safety car was then called into action when New York City victor Sam Bird ground to a halt on the main straight with suspected driveshaft failure after a series of opening lap knocks from Porsche’s Andre Lotterer into Turn 10.

Di Grassi was slow away from third place at the restart that allowed fourth-starting Mortara to massively pile on the pressure before bailing out of his attempted move through Turn 1. Still the DS Techeetahs appeared to reign supreme, albeit with da Costa taking the lead on lap 18 after an instruction from his race engineer to “use energy” to swap positions. 

That switcheroo enabled di Grassi to close to the rear of Vergne, and then the two-time champion appeared to suffer with a lack of grip at the rear and fell down the order. He lost out also to the rapid attack mode-enhanced Audi of Rene Rast and Jake Dennis.

As da Costa moved off-line for his 35kW attack mode boost at Turn 6, it allowed Norman Nato to followed Mortara through for a Venturi Racing 1-2. Di Grassi was able to close back up to Nato and neatly sold the rookie a dummy into Turn 10 to cut back for second place.

He then pounced for first place by using attack mode and carrying massive overspeed down the main straight to sweep by in plenty of time before the stop into Turn 1.

From there di Grassi held firm until Mortara made one last challenge in the final lap, attempting to make a final corner charge come to pass but the Audi driver hung on.

Mortara crossed the line second as Jaguar Racing’s Mitch Evans clambered two places to snare a fifth podium of the season, the best of the field, after a precise sweep across the front of Nato through the Turn 8 high-speed right-hand kink.

Nato, incidentally fighting for his seat amid rumours of a di Grassi move to Venturi Racing, missed out on his maiden podium by 0.09s as Jake Dennis landed fifth for BMW Andretti.

The DS Techeetah duo stemmed the loss of positions entering the final third of the race as da Costa battled a lack of regen braking into Turn 1 before handing back track position. That brought Vergne home in sixth and da Costa seventh as Maximilian Gunther landed eighth ahead of Rast, the Audi declining after an initial storming run to third behind di Grassi with yet another fastest race lap point.

Lotterer emerged from the tussle with Bird largely unscathed to snare 10th as Sebastien Buemi slipped from sixth to 11th for Nissan e.dams.

Mercedes driver Stoffel Vandoorne climbed 10 places but ultimately finished without points in 12th, while Robin Frijns landed 15th and de Vries classified only 22nd after pitting following contact with Alex Lynn.

That means de Vries holds a very slender three-point lead over Mortara ahead of the final race of the season, while DS Techeetah lost its initial teams’ lead to Jaguar Racing.

Cla Driver Team Laps Time Gap
1 Brazil Lucas di Grassi
Germany Team Abt 38 46'22.528
2 Switzerland Edoardo Mortara
Monaco Venturi 38 46'22.669 0.141
3 New Zealand Mitch Evans
United Kingdom Jaguar Racing 38 46'28.027 5.499
4 France Norman Nato
Monaco Venturi 38 46'28.117 5.589
5 United Kingdom Jake Dennis
United States Andretti Autosport 38 46'28.358 5.830
6 France Jean-Eric Vergne
China Techeetah 38 46'28.939 6.411
7 Portugal Antonio Felix da Costa
China Techeetah 38 46'29.305 6.777
8 Germany Maximilian Gunther
United States Andretti Autosport 38 46'30.090 7.562
9 Germany René Rast
Germany Team Abt 38 46'30.326 7.798
10 Germany Andre Lotterer
Germany Porsche Team 38 46'36.652 14.124
11 Switzerland Sébastien Buemi
France DAMS 38 46'38.074 15.546
12 Belgium Stoffel Vandoorne
Germany Mercedes 38 46'38.742 16.214
13 United Kingdom Oliver Rowland
France DAMS 38 46'39.342 16.814
14 New Zealand Nick Cassidy
United Kingdom Virgin Racing 38 46'39.445 16.917
15 Netherlands Robin Frijns
United Kingdom Virgin Racing 38 46'43.806 21.278
16 Sweden Joel Eriksson
United States Dragon Racing 38 46'46.194 23.666
17 United Kingdom Alexander Sims
India Mahindra Racing 38 46'51.547 29.019
18 Brazil Sergio Sette Camara
United States Dragon Racing 38 46'53.490 30.962
19 United Kingdom Oliver Turvey
United Kingdom NIO Formula E Team 38 46'55.727 33.199
20 United Kingdom Alex Lynn
India Mahindra Racing 38 46'55.966 33.438
21 Germany Pascal Wehrlein
Germany Porsche Team 38 46'56.309 33.781
22 Netherlands Nyck de Vries
Germany Mercedes 37 46'40.147 1 Lap
United Kingdom Tom Blomqvist
United Kingdom NIO Formula E Team 32 47'05.116 6 Laps
United Kingdom Sam Bird
United Kingdom Jaguar Racing 8 9'33.037 30 Laps

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