As it happened...
Vergne and da Costa led away from the front despite the Portuguese bogging down and having to fend off the attentions of Evans in the Jaguar. Mortara followed in fourth with Dennis fifth and Vandoorne made two spots up on the opening lap to take sixth.
Just a lap into the race, the Safety Car was deployed to deal with Oliver Rowland’s stricken Mahindra Racing car – short of a wheel. On the restart, Evans stuck right with the lead DS’ and with da Costa locking up and running wide at Turn 7, the Jaguar driver made his move to take second spot – an uncharacteristic mistake from da Costa.
On Lap 7, Vergne was the first of the frontrunners to jump for ATTACK MODE, with his teammate da Costa following. Both lost a place, with Evans temporarily taking the lead. The thought behind taking the 30kW boost early being that the batteries would likely be cooler than if taken in late in the race – lower performance loss, and maximum gain from the ATTACK MODE boost while harming usable energy reserves least.
Evans followed on Lap 9 with his first jump through the ATTACK MODE loop, and Vergne retook the lead. Of the front five, Mortara was the last to blink.
Vandoorne was the penultimate top 10 runner to take his first ATTACK MODE, holding sixth in the process while catching a big slide while driving through the activation zone.
Vergne headed Mortara, Evans, da Costa, Dennis, Vandoorne, Wehrlein, di Grassi, Lotterer and Buemi with 25 minutes plus one lap left to run. Second-placed Mortara took his first 30kW ATTACK MODE activation dropping him to fourth, but crucially ahead of da Costa who’d elected to go early on his second mandatory boost.
Vergne’s second dose of ATTACK MODE left him second but right on the tail of leader Evans, with the Jaguar driver still to take his second boost. The Frenchman dispatched the Kiwi into Turn 1 and made use of FANBOOST to draw a small gap. Evans, meanwhile, now had Mortara on his tail – the Venturi driver well placed to take a net second once everything shook out.
Wehrlein was a big mover after a five-place penalty had left him 11th on the grid. The German had worked his Porsche up to eighth early on and right on the back of Vandoorne – before eventually passing the Belgian for a net fifth with Vandoorne missing the ATTACK MODE activation loop on his second visit. The Mercedes-EQ man fought back with the remainder of his 30kW boost, though, leaving Wehrlein back where he’d started.
With 20 laps in the books, Vergne already looked to manage things with a gap of a second to second-placed Evans, Mortara, da Costa, Vandoorne and Wehrlein.
Dennis, having run fourth early on, made it by Wehrlein on Lap 22 and was tasked with holding off the Porsche, Lucas di Grassi (ROKiT Venturi Racing) and Andre Lotterer in the second Porsche.
Mortara hadn’t done enough to hold second spot through his second ATTACK MODE activation – the Venturi falling to fourth but challenging da Costa just ahead. Evans’ final dose of ATTACK MODE on Lap 25 saw him retain second spot by a whisker, however, much to Jaguar Team Principal James Barclay’s delight.
Da Costa couldn’t hold off Mortara for long, though, despite some help from FANBOOST. Mortara made the remnants of his second ATTACK MODE count to pinch third back from the Portuguese on Lap 27.
In the battle for sixth, again on Lap 27, Dennis fended off the attentions of di Grassi in style with a nice switchback on the Brazilian. A strong race for the Brit who looked back on-song.
The lead pair – and title rivals – looked to be fighting amongst themselves heading into the final 10 minutes – Vergne from Evans with the duo within 0.5 seconds of one-another and three clear of Mortara in third.
On Lap 30, contact left Nyck de Vries’ championship charge was left deflated by a left-rear puncture – the Mercedes-EQ driver forced to retire from the race.
Lap 31 saw the defining move of the race – Jaguar’s Evans spying an opportunistic move on leader Vergne at Turn 7. The Kiwi got the pass done on the brakes, catching Vergne unawares and got the car stopped and rotated into the apex to hold on.
From there and inside the last five minutes, it looked good for Jaguar and Evans - a percent to the good on usable energy. However, as the minutes ticked down and the race entered added time, that advantage ebbed away with Mortara also joining the lead duo.
Vergne was all over the diffuser of leader Evans, with Mortara waiting to pounce with two laps to run – the Venturi best-placed on energy.
Into the final three turns and energy became critical, with the lead trio crossing the line Evans from Vergne and Mortara – all together.
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2022-06-04 09:33:07Z
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