Berlin E-Prix III: Guenther holds off Frijns to secure FE victory by 0.1s
Maximilian Guenther won an incredibly tight Formula E race for BMW Andretti at home in Berlin by just 0.1s over Robin Frijns as polesitter Jean-Eric Vergne slipped to third
The 22-year-old managed his energy expertly to mount a late surge and pass Vergne but was forced to defend from Frijns in the final corners to score his second series win.
A strong getaway for Jerome d'Ambrosio in third meant he passed Guenther into Turn 1, which allowed DS Techeetah driver Vergne to escape by an early 2s advantage.
Guenther returned the favour on d'Ambrosio on lap two, sending his car up the inside of Turn 6 in an opening phase that became processional until a multi-car crash on lap 11.
A huge lunge from Alexander Sims as he fought for 15th place forced Sergio Sette Camara to brake very late into the Turn 9 hairpin. But the Dragon driver ran too deep and span James Calado.
As Sette Camara recovered to exit the corner he suffered a quick drive failure and pulled over to the inside of the track to keep off line.
Here, however, he tagged Calado's Jaguar team-mate Mitch Evans lightly. In turn, that left Porsche driver Neel Jani with nowhere to go and he clattered in to the side of Sette Camara as both retired.
Once the safety car peeled in, Vergne would activate his first of two 35kW attack mode boosts to build a comparatively comfortable 1.7s cushion over Guenther.
When Guenther's second attack mode ran out more than a minute ahead of Vergne's it looked as though he had squandered his chance for the victory.
But a malfunctioning regen paddle for Vergne meant he over-consumed energy while using the higher power mode, which dropped him into the clutches of Guenther.
On lap 30, Guenther - who this season has either won, finished second, or failed to score a point - lined his car up out of the final corner to get a great drive and sail past into Turn 1.
But after a brief wheel bang, Vergne still had the inside line to reclaim his position after the shortest of stints in second place.
That left Guenther to tuck into the DS Techeetah's slipstream and save energy, at the expense of rising battery temperatures.
Vergne defended into Turn 6, which afford Guenther the opportunity to cut back into the next corner and from there he took the lead.
Envision Virgin Racing driver Robin Frijns, meanwhile, had a 1% energy cushion in hand over the top two and demoted Vergne into Turn 1.
Frijns, who started fifth, ran Guenther close and attempted to pass at Turns 9 and 10 on the final lap but missed out by just 0.128s across the line.
That left Vergne to fight off his runaway points-leading team-mate Antonio Felix da Costa to complete the podium.
Da Costa was content to maintain eighth in the first-half of the race but picked off Alex Lynn with a dummy into Turn 10 and then gained another place when nearest title rival Stoffel Vandoorne sustained a puncture.
The late DS Techeetah scrap allowed Andre Lotterer to close, but he would stay behind in fifth ahead of Nissan driver Oliver Rowland and D'Ambrosio.
The Mahindra Racing pilot's early promise was overturned by his poor attack mode timing, which meant as he returned to the racing line he was boxed in and dropped back.
Lucas di Grassi was lucky when the stewards decided it was Felipe Massa at fault in their Turn 1 shunt - which span di Grassi after his heavy defensive swerve across the front of the Venturi - and he finished eighth.
A late string of fastest laps finally delivered the return of Jaguar's pace, enabling Evans to finish in ninth ahead of Sims.
Berlin E-Prix III results - 35 laps
Pos | Driver | Team | Car | Gap |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Maximilian Guenther | BMW | BMW | 46m15.512s |
2 | Robin Frijns | Virgin | Audi | 0.128s |
3 | Jean-Eric Vergne | DS Techeetah | DS | 2.569s |
4 | Antonio Felix da Costa | DS Techeetah | DS | 2.743s |
5 | Andre Lotterer | Porsche | Porsche | 3.136s |
6 | Oliver Rowland | Nissan e.dams | Nissan | 5.547s |
7 | Jerome d'Ambrosio | Mahindra | Mahindra | 7.893s |
8 | Lucas di Grassi | Audi | Audi | 12.672s |
9 | Mitch Evans | Jaguar | Jaguar | 13.511s |
10 | Alexander Sims | BMW | BMW | 19.248s |
11 | Sebastien Buemi | Nissan e.dams | Nissan | 20.240s |
12 | Nico Muller | Dragon | Penske | 20.486s |
13 | Sam Bird | Virgin | Audi | 20.733s |
14 | Edoardo Mortara | Venturi | Mercedes | 20.944s |
15 | Daniel Abt | NIO | NIO | 21.948s |
16 | Oliver Turvey | NIO | NIO | 22.774s |
17 | Alex Lynn | Mahindra | Mahindra | 23.181s |
18 | Nyck de Vries | Mercedes | Mercedes | 32.520s |
19 | Felipe Massa | Venturi | Mercedes | 36.549s |
- | Rene Rast | Audi | Audi | Accident |
- | Stoffel Vandoorne | Mercedes | Mercedes | Puncture |
- | James Calado | Jaguar | Jaguar | Accident damage |
- | Sergio Sette Camara | Dragon | Penske | Accident |
- | Neel Jani | Porsche | Porsche | Accident |
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