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Marrakesh E-Prix: BMW implosion hands d'Ambrosio victory

Jerome d’Ambrosio won the Marrakesh E-Prix, the second round of the 2018-19 ABB Formula E Championship, after the dominant BMWs of Antonio Felix da Costa and Alexander Sims collided and threw away victory.

Jérôme d'Ambrosio, Mahindra Racing, celebrates on the podium after winning the race

Jérôme d'Ambrosio, Mahindra Racing, celebrates on the podium after winning the race

Alastair Staley / Motorsport Images

Mahindra Racing driver D'Ambrosio prevailed in the shoot-out that followed the late-race safety car ahead of Virgin Racing duo Robin Frijns and Sam Bird.

The drama was started by Sims attacking his BMW Andretti teammate on the outside of the approach to the Turn 7 left-hander at the end of the track’s main straight.

Both locked up and then came together on the edge of the corner, with da Costa going straight into the barrier, while Sims ran wide but carried on to run fourth in the safety car queue.

The safety car took the pack around for three laps, with most of the field taking their final attack mode allowance with just four minutes of the race remaining.

Sims was the only driver in the top four to enter the shoot-out with the higher power available and he attacked Bird as D’Ambrosio’s lead was erased by Frijns.

But the Dutch driver could not find a way by despite D’Ambrosio locking up at the final corner and then shooting to the line to win by just 0.143s, with Bird foiling Sims’ attacks at the Turn 4/5 chicane and Turn 7 to seal third.

At the start, Bird had led away from pole and appeared to have first place sealed on the run into Turn 1, but his fellow front-row starter Jean-Eric Vergne squeezed himself down the inside and the pair touched at the apex.

The contact sent Vergne spinning and the pack had to take urgent action to avoid him, which dropped Sebastien Buemi and Mitch Evans down from third and fourth to 13th and 14th.

There was also contact between Nelson Piquet, Pascal Wehrlein and Lucas di Grassi, while the HWA teammates Stoffel Vandoorne and Gary Paffett also collided – with both retiring a little while later due the damage they sustained.

Bird led the two BMW drivers – Sims taking advantage of the Turn 1 chaos to move up to second – during the early stage, before the duo swapped places and da Costa took up the pursuit of Bird on lap 11 of what would become a 31-lap race.

A leading pack of six formed, with Frijns, D’Ambrosio and di Grassi joining the three leaders, to edge away at the front.

Da Costa stalked Bird before shooting to the inside of the Turn 4/5 chicane – taking the lead after the British driver cut the corner and lost out on the exit, with Sims also getting past his compatriot on the run to Turn 7.

From there, the two BMWs edged clear and Bird fell back and was passed by Frijns, and then D’Ambrosio and di Grassi.

The BMW pair looked to have taken a winning advantage before D’Ambrosio, who had deposed Frijns, led the rest of the top six back up to the leaders shortly before their dramatic collision.

Vergne set a scintillating pace for DS Techeetah to recover from the back of the pack after his spin to finish fifth.

At the end of lap one he was 14 seconds behind then-leader Bird, a gap he closed to four seconds by the time of the safety car’s appearance on lap 27.

Andre Lotterer also carved his way up the order from 21st on the grid to finish behind teammate Vergne in P6, with the pair of them moving past di Grassi before the race was suspended.

Buemi and Evans recovered to eighth and ninth, with Daniel Abt taking 10th in the second Audi.

Piquet ended up 14th after starting ninth, with Felipe Massa bringing up the rear of the field in 18th.

Wehrlein was the final non-finisher as he retired from his FE debut as a result of the damage he sustained at Turn 1.

Race results

Pos Driver Team Laps Time Gap Interval
1 Belgium Jérôme d'Ambrosio India Mahindra Racing 31 46'45.884    
2 Netherlands Robin Frijns United Kingdom Virgin Racing 31 46'46.027 0.143 0.143
3 United Kingdom Sam Bird United Kingdom Virgin Racing 31 46'46.345 0.461 0.318
4 United Kingdom Alexander Sims United States Andretti Autosport 31 46'46.624 0.740 0.279
5 France Jean-Eric Vergne China Techeetah 31 46'47.116 1.232 0.492
6 Germany Andre Lotterer China Techeetah 31 46'47.341 1.457 0.225
7 Brazil Lucas di Grassi Germany Team Abt 31 46'47.517 1.633 0.176
8 Switzerland Sébastien Buemi France DAMS 31 46'48.339 2.455 0.822
9 New Zealand Mitch Evans United Kingdom Jaguar Racing 31 46'48.864 2.980 0.525
10 Germany Daniel Abt Germany Team Abt 31 46'49.898 4.014 1.034
11 Argentina Jose Maria Lopez United States Dragon Racing 31 46'50.412 4.528 0.514
12 Germany Maximilian Gunther United States Dragon Racing 31 46'51.918 6.034 1.506
13 Switzerland Edoardo Mortara Monaco Venturi 31 46'52.674 6.790 0.756
14 Brazil Nelson Piquet Jr. United Kingdom Jaguar Racing 31 46'52.717 6.833 0.043
15 United Kingdom Oliver Rowland France DAMS 31 46'53.413 7.529 0.696
16 United Kingdom Oliver Turvey China NIO Formula E Team 31 46'55.125 9.241 1.712
17 France Tom Dillmann China NIO Formula E Team 31 46'55.549 9.665 0.424
18 Brazil Felipe Massa Monaco Venturi 31 46'56.134 10.250 0.585
R Portugal Antonio Felix da Costa United States Andretti Autosport 25 34'44.633 6 Laps 6 Laps
R United Kingdom Gary Paffett HWA Racelab 3 4'26.160 28 Laps 22 Laps
R Germany Pascal Wehrlein India Mahindra Racing 1 1'44.873 30 Laps 2 Laps
R Belgium Stoffel Vandoorne HWA Racelab 1 2'35.147 30 Laps 50.274

 

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