What a turnaround
this was. Sam Bird won a remarkable final Formula E round of the year from fourth
on the grid as Nelson Piquet Jr. recovered from a nightmare qualifying to take
the title by just one point.
It was a race which
had everything, a fitting finale to the inaugural Formula E season that wasn’t
decided until the very last lap.
Bird was triumphant on home soil after Sarrazin's penalty (RW Photography). |
Starting sixth, having
escaped the worst of the weather in qualifying, Sebastien Buemi was in prime
position to overhaul Piquet’s slender five point margin to become the incumbent
World Endurance Championship and Formula E champion simultaneously. All went to
plan in the opening stages as he passed Bruno Senna off the line to run fifth,
behind the pole-sitting Stephane Sarrazin, the two Dragons of Loic Duval and a
slow-starting Jerome d’Ambrosio and Bird.
Piquet meanwhile
had made an excellent getaway from 16th to run 12th at
the end of the first lap, but sacrificed enormous amounts of time to the
leaders in a bid to save energy. He was ultimately successful in managing to
run a lap longer than everybody else and emerged from the pits in tenth, but was
in dire need of a Safety Car to close the deficit.
But if luck hadn’t
been on his side in qualifying, it certainly was when it most mattered. With
team-mate Oliver Turvey taking fastest lap – and the points which came with it
– away from Buemi, the gap was reduced to three. It was then further reduced to
two when Buemi spun on cold tyres at turn three, losing a spot to Senna and
resuming in sixth, right in front of Lucas di Grassi. Then, crucially, debutant Fabio
Leimer missed his braking point into the Turn 11 chicane, prompting the arrival
of the Safety Car. Piquet’s prayers had been answered, and once Turvey had
relinquished ninth, it was only Amlin’s Salvador Duran standing in his way. With
far more usable energy, Piquet bravely made it stick around the outside of Turn
11.
Buemi's spin at turn three would cost him the title (RW Photography). |
The ball was now firmly
in Buemi’s court, but Senna was proving a tough nut to crack. He was being
sucked along at a frantic pace by the lead group, now headed by Sarrazin, Bird
and d’Ambrosio, as Duval was forced to conserve energy. Sarrazin was in a very
similar position, but defended robustly from Bird, the two making contact with
one lap to go as Sarrazin held on to the flag. In the end, it was academic – crossing
the line with 0% energy remaining, Sarrazin was dealt a 40 second penalty which
relegated him to a miserable 15th and handed victory to an elated Bird, who took fastest lap away from Turvey for good measure.
"It’s been a mixed season for us at Virgin, but what a way to finish. Unbelievable!" he said.
"It’s been a mixed season for us at Virgin, but what a way to finish. Unbelievable!" he said.
Anxious to avoid a similar fate, Duval slowed dramatically
on the final lap, presenting Buemi with his golden opportunity. As Senna tried
to pick his way past the struggling Frenchman - who crossed the line with 1%
remaining - Buemi barged his way alongside into turn 15, but Senna was not to
be denied. Blissfully unaware of the ramifications of the fight, Senna held firm into 16, to score his best result of the year and deliver a grateful Piquet the
title.
"I was determined to defend hard today
and not let our friend overtake, so I didn’t!" he said afterwards. "I was doing my own race, racing for myself. [Buemi] put
himself in that position anyway with the spin after the pitstop, so it’s too
bad for him. You know that you don’t go and brake in the same place you
normally do unless you have something special in your car. We're just happy that we finished the season with the best result we’ve had
so far and hopefully next season we are going to have plenty more of those and
maybe even better."
Piquet was in reflective mood after his championship success (Own photo). |
As Buemi was left to rue
what might have been, Piquet was struggling coming to terms with what he had just accomplished.
" It’s been an amazing year, to think that two weeks before the championship started I didn’t have a contract and when I signed the contract it was only a five-race contract," he said. "This morning pissing down with rain in group three right when I went out, I thought things couldn’t get any worse. But the team said to me ‘Nelson, don’t ask any questions, just drive, we’ll take care of the rest and tell you what to do, when to push, when to save, don’t ask where Lucas is, where Sebastien is, just drive’ and that’s what I did. I only knew I won the championship when the commentator came on the
radio – the team didn’t know!"
"Congratulations to Nelson, in my opinion the most deserving champion," Bird added. "The speed he showed in the middle of the year had us scratching our heads, it was horrible!"
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