Paris Formula E: Robin Frijns comes through chaos for first win
Envision Virgin Racing's Robin Frijns became ABB FIA Formula E's eighth race winner in eight races with a maiden victory on the streets of Paris in a chaotic event
Third-place starter Frijns' victory hopes were given a huge boost early on when the two front-row starting e.dams Nissan drivers' races unravelled.
Polesitter Oliver Rowland was saved from challenges to his lead at the start because the race began under the safety car due to the changeable conditions causing the right-hand side of the grid to remain damp under the shade of the trees.
But Rowland crashed out of the lead at Turn 10 when he locked up and collided with the barriers, while his team-mate Sebastien Buemi charged past to take over at the front.
With Frijns now in second, the Virgin driver pressured Buemi - making contact at Turn 6 as the Nissan driver slowed to pull to the inside and activate attack mode.
The contact on lap six of 32 was enough for Frijns to show concern over the radio, asking if his front wing was still intact as it appeared to be loosened.
Two laps later Buemi locked up at the tight Turn 9 as Frijns' first use of attack mode proved to be in vain in his pursuit of the lead.
But on the next tour Frijns was able to surge into a lead he never lost as Buemi's poor Turn 8 approach and exit allowed the Virgin driver to move past.
Rain soon arrived and led to a wild series of events that included four full-course yellows and a safety car period as drivers grappled in the worsening conditions, although Frijns never came under pressure.
Andre Lotterer was a lonely second for DS Techeetah while Audi's Daniel Abt was a surprise third after benefiting from accidents around him.
Venturi's Felipe Massa had looked the favourite for third but spun out unaided midway through the race and fell into the midfield after earlier losing a potential podium to Abt at one-third distance and being hit by NIO's Oliver Turvey.
Abt's team-mate Lucas di Grassi was embroiled in the tight battle for fourth and came out on top against Dragon Racing's Maximilian Gunther, who secured the team's best finish in the 2018/19 season.
Jean-Eric Vergne was sixth for Techeetah but was angered by what he perceived to be aggressive defending from Edoardo Mortara and then benefited from a series of late clashes throughout the field.
Antonio Felix da Costa was seventh for BMW Andretti ahead of HWA's Gary Paffett, Massa and Pascal Wehrlein.
Original polesitter Wehrlein and his Mahindra Racing team-mate Jerome D'Ambrosio had started on the back row of the grid after a tyre pressure infringement but rose through the field by keeping out of trouble for the majority.
By the 25th lap of 32, D'Ambrosio had made up 13 places to run eighth but he hit the wall at Turn 3 and was classified 17th.
D'Ambrosio led the championship coming into the Paris E-Prix. His title rival Sam Bird was also caught out by contact when Alexander Sims, Alex Lynn and Bird all flew off the track at Turn 3.
Bird quickly rejoined but spun not long after and ended up 11th ahead of Rowland, who was caught up in multiple incidents as he attempted a recovery drive.
Rowland's team-mate Buemi ended the race in 15th ahead of Mitch Evans, who was forced into a front wing change early on after contact.
Multiple incidents are now under investigation, with Mortara's bungled move on Lynn at Turn 13 another late flashpoint.
Race result
Pos | Driver | Team | Car | Laps | Gap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Robin Frijns | Virgin | Audi | 32 | 47m50.510s |
2 | Andre Lotterer | DS Techeetah | DS | 32 | 1.373s |
3 | Daniel Abt | Audi | Audi | 32 | 3.175s |
4 | Lucas di Grassi | Audi | Audi | 32 | 3.666s |
5 | Maximilian Guenther | Dragon | Penske | 32 | 5.456s |
6 | Jean-Eric Vergne | DS Techeetah | DS | 32 | 6.694s |
7 | Antonio Felix da Costa | BMW | BMW | 32 | 7.238s |
8 | Gary Paffett | HWA | Venturi | 32 | 7.901s |
9 | Felipe Massa | Venturi | Venturi | 32 | 10.522s |
10 | Pascal Wehrlein | Mahindra | Mahindra | 32 | 10.998s |
11 | Sam Bird | Virgin | Audi | 32 | 11.488s |
12 | Oliver Rowland | e.dams | Nissan | 32 | 19.451s |
13 | Jose Maria Lopez | Dragon | Penske | 32 | 24.023s |
14 | Oliver Turvey | NIO | NIO | 32 | 1m22.226s |
15 | Sebastien Buemi | e.dams | Nissan | 31 | 1 Lap |
16 | Mitch Evans | Jaguar | Jaguar | 31 | 1 Lap |
17 | Jerome d'Ambrosio | Mahindra | Mahindra | 29 | Not running |
- | Alex Lynn | Jaguar | Jaguar | 23 | Accident damage |
- | Edoardo Mortara | Venturi | Venturi | 23 | Accident damage |
- | Stoffel Vandoorne | HWA | Venturi | 18 | Accident damage |
- | Alexander Sims | BMW | BMW | 18 | Accident damage |
- | Tom Dillmann | NIO | NIO | 17 | Accident damage |
Drivers' standings
Pos | Driver | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Robin Frijns | 81 |
2 | Andre Lotterer | 80 |
3 | Antonio Felix da Costa | 70 |
4 | Lucas di Grassi | 70 |
5 | Jerome d'Ambrosio | 65 |
6 | Jean-Eric Vergne | 62 |
7 | Mitch Evans | 61 |
8 | Daniel Abt | 59 |
9 | Sam Bird | 54 |
10 | Edoardo Mortara | 52 |
11 | Pascal Wehrlein | 38 |
12 | Oliver Rowland | 38 |
13 | Sebastien Buemi | 30 |
14 | Stoffel Vandoorne | 18 |
15 | Alexander Sims | 18 |
16 | Felipe Massa | 17 |
17 | Maximilian Guenther | 10 |
18 | Gary Paffett | 8 |
19 | Oliver Turvey | 6 |
20 | Jose Maria Lopez | 2 |
21 | Nelson Piquet Jr. | 1 |
22 | Tom Dillmann | 0 |
23 | Alex Lynn | 0 |
24 | Felipe Nasr | 0 |
Be part of the Autosport community
Join the conversationShare Or Save This Story
Subscribe and access Autosport.com with your ad-blocker.
From Formula 1 to MotoGP we report straight from the paddock because we love our sport, just like you. In order to keep delivering our expert journalism, our website uses advertising. Still, we want to give you the opportunity to enjoy an ad-free and tracker-free website and to continue using your adblocker.
Top Comments