Buemi wins chaotic race two

Sebastien Buemi (SUI, Trust Team Arden) celebrates his victory on the podium with Yelmer Buurman (NED, Trust Team Arden) and Luca Filippi (ITA, ART Grand Prix)
Alastair Staley/GP2

Sébastien Buemi has taken a dramatic win in damp conditions at the Circuit Magny-Cours: after starting 21st on slick tires he ignored the chaos all around to him to record a memorable victory ahead of teammate Yelmer Buurman and Luca Filippi.

Rain fell steadily on the French circuit overnight but stopped just prior to the start, handing engineers all along the pitlane a nightmarish decision to make: do you play it safe and run wets, or throw the dice and gamble on slicks? The eventual podium provided an answer, albeit too late for the rest of the grid: the gamble paid off handsomely for all three drivers by the end of the race.

Polesitter Mike Conway led the grid away when the lights went out, with Jerome D'Ambrosio and Vitaly Petrov making strong starts to slot in behind him as the slick shod drivers just tried to hold on in the greasy conditions. The Belgian lost his advantage shortly after when he ran wide and came together with front row starter Karun Chandhok, and a stream of cars flowed by the pair and off after the leaders.

There were battles all around the circuit as the drivers pushed the limits of adhesion to make up places, but further back it was becoming clear that a drier line was emerging and a change of tires was on the cards for most of the field: Buurman was the best placed of the slick shod drivers, and as his rivals dribbled into the pits he steadily rose up the timesheets until he was in P1.

The tricky conditions caught out many drivers: Romain Grosjean retired in the gravel trap just after changing to slicks, with most of the field hitting someone as they struggled to control their cars, including a big impact at the hairpin between Giorgio Pantano and Petrov which put the series leader out of the race shortly after. Meanwhile Buemi was pushing hard to get on terms with his teammate, finally catching and overtaking him on lap 21 after the pair ran wheel to wheel for half a lap until the hairpin.

Further back and Filippi was on a charge too, albeit with more traffic ahead of him: mechanical gremlins eventually put paid to the challenges thrown out by Alvaro Parente and Bruno Senna, handing an overdue podium to the Italian to kick start his season behind the Arden pair. Behind them Lucas di Grassi's conservative approach paid dividends with a fourth place, just ahead of Senna and Conway, while Kamui Kobayashi claimed the point for fastest lap on his last trip around the circuit.

Buemi sprayed the champagne with his teammate and Filippi in celebration of his win, but he had something else to celebrate too: the win pushed the Swiss driver up to third place in the championship on 20 points, behind Pantano on 35 and Senna on 28.

Magny-Cours – Race 2

Pos

Driver

Team

1.

Sébastien Buemi

Trust Team Arden

2

Yelmer Buurman

Trust Team Arden

3.

Luca Filippi

ART Grand Prix

4.

Lucas di Grassi

Barwa Int. Campos Team

5

Bruno Senna

iSport International

6.

Mike Conway

Trident Racing

7

Pastor Maldonado

Piquet Sports

8.

Andreas Zuber

Piquet Sports

9.

Kamui Kobayashi

Dams

10.

Javier Villa

Racing Engineering

11.

Marko Asmer

Fisichella Motor Sport Int.

12.

AdrianValles

BCN Competicion

13.

Carlos Iaconelli

BCN Competicion

14.

Ho-Pin Tung

Trident Racing

15.

Michael Herck

DPR

16.

Roldan Rodriguez

Fisichella Motor Sport Int.

17.

Alberto Valerio

Durango

18.

Vitaly Petrov

Barwa Int. Campos Team

Fastest lap time: Kamui Kobayashi (Dams): 1:23.550 on lap 28

Not Classified

Driver

Team

Alvaro Parente

Super Nova Racing

Ben Hanley

Durango

Diego Nunes

DPR

Giorgio Pantano

Racing Engineering

KarunChandhok

iSport International

Romain Grosjean

ART Grand Prix

Andy Soucek

Super Nova Racing

Jérôme d’Ambrosio

Dams