Motorsport Monday

Circuit: Misano World Circuit Laps: 35 Length: 4.226 km

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with Sacha Fenestraz taking his first points of the year with sixth place, and another surprise result from ERT as Sergio Sette Cámara came in seventh.

Jean-eric Vergne could not provide a challenge for the win, however, finishing down in eighth position, with Max Günther ninth and Maserati MSG Racing team-mate Jehan Daruvala 10th, marking the Indian’s first points of the season. Or so Günther thought, a five-second post race penalty demoted him to 12th, promoting Daruvala to ninth and Sam Bird into the top-10.

After what was a dismal Saturday for both Wehrlein and Cassidy, the two title challenger­s can come away from Italy relieved that their title challenges are back on track.

HOW THE RACE UNFOLDED

Hughes led from pole, with the concertina effect ensuring that the field bunched up from the outset. Müller, starting from fourth, looked racy early on and was very much in the mix, as da Costa made-up three places quickly, looking to prove his class after the heartbreak­ing disqualifi­cation on Saturday that prevented him from a memorable and much-needed win.

Günther kept himself in contention in eighth, as Cassidy held station in fourth before Sam Bird overtook him, a man also looking to bounce back after a missed opportunit­y in race one.

On the fifth lap, Wehrlein took over the lead, with Rowland 10th, and Vergne down to sixth. The reality-bending chaos of the extreme peloton style on Saturday was tempered with racing that, whilst still hectic, provided far more strategic calm.

The middle of the race would provide drama, though, the first casualty of the race being Robin Frijns, who was sandwiched by da Costa and Bird in the final sector, sending him skidding into the gravel. The Safety Car was deployed, which slowed the pack down more than usual, allowing the Envision Racing to be cleared without the need to add more laps to the race. After a brief time on track, the Safety Car did come in and racing would resume.

Both the Andrettis of Norman Nato and Jake Dennis looked considerab­ly strung to race, with the Frenchman and the reigning World Champion overtaking Bird in quick succession. Hughes went back in front and quickly opted for Attack Mode, giving the lead straight to Cassidy, but on Lap 15 would run wide in the midst of battle, costing him time.

Da Costa’s dreadful weekend continued with a puncture, sustained after tagging the back of Vergne’s Penske at the first corner on Lap 12. Nato was to then suffer a picture, blunting what was fantastic progress, handing the Andretti responsibi­lity solely on Dennis’ shoulders.

Evans stopped out on track on Lap 17, before getting going again, but his interest in the race now finished. Buemi then retired on the same lap, compoundin­g a dreadful day for Envision.

On Lap 18 Wehrlein and Rowland battled for position, the German edging his Porsche ahead, with the Briton retaking the lead three laps later. In the latter stages of the race, both drivers pulled clear of Dennis, and with the final lap approachin­g, it was clear one of Rowland or Wehrlein would emerge triumphant. Rowland led with 10 per cent, but Wehrlein had 14, and with Rowland pulling away, it seemed that he had miscalcula­ted his strategy.

On the final lap, the inevitable happened.

Rowland’s battery said ‘no more’ and the Nissan slowed, letting Wehrlein through into the lead. And with the advantage over the cars behind, the German had enough of a buffer to comfortabl­y cruise to a victory, becoming the first man in 2024 to win more than one race.

All eyes quickly switched to Dennis, Müller and Cassidy, the three duelling to the very end, with Dennis claiming second after some intelligen­t defensive driving. Cassidy pipped Müller by just five thousandth­s of a second, leaving those in the ABT garage crestfalle­n.

Whilst Rowland can feel fortunate in the way he was handed victory in race one late on Saturday night, he could feel every right to feel disappoint­ed that a second evaded his grasp.

For Wehrlein, the win helped cement some joy for Porsche after what may have been incredulit­y felt with da Costa’s disqualifi­cation, and firmly re-establishe­s his World Championsh­ip credential­s as he takes over the lead at the top after the Italian double-header.

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