Latifi wins F2 opener in Bahrain

Nicholas Latifi wins going away
Nicholas Latifi wins going away

Nicholas Latifi claimed the first win of the 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship season with a storming drive in this afternoon’s Race 1 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, making a strong start and overcoming a slow pitstop for victory ahead of Luca Ghiotto and DAMS teammate Sergio Sette Camara.

The groundwork for the Canadian’s victory was laid at the start: polesitter Ghiotto had a poor start, fellow front row starter Louis Deletraz had a better one, while storming starts by Nyck de Vries and Latifi saw the Dutchman move up to P2 at turn 1 but the Canadian blast past him at turn 4, with the top 3 already pulling away from Jack Aitken, Nobuharu Matsushita, Ghiotto, Anthoine Hubert and Nikita Mazepin, while a poor start for Sette Camara saw the Brazilian drop from p7 on the grid to P13 at the end of the first lap.

Sette Camara was soon moving back up through the order, recovering to P8 by lap 5, while out in front the leaders were looking to break the DRS gap to each as well as manage their tires, a tricky balancing act at the hot, dry circuit, with a view to going as long as possible before the stops. Nobody told Ghiotto though, as the Italian looked to reclaim ground lost at the start as he sliced his way by his rivals, claiming P2 from Deletraz on lap 13 as de Vries came into the pits, the first of the leaders to do so.

The Dutchman was now the target as his rivals came in, and emerging in fresh air helped de Vries to move up the order. Race leader Latifi came in on lap 16, but a slow rear tire change saw the Canadian emerge behind Deletraz and with a mountain to climb if he was to return to the front, while Ghiotto spent one more lap out but lost time in the process, coming out P6 of the stoppers behind de Vries, Matsushita, Deletraz, Latifi and Sette Camara.

Schumacher gets pole for Race 2 by finishing 8th
Schumacher gets pole for Race 2 by finishing 8th

Track position is important in Bahrain, but it soon became clear that tire life is even more so: Latifi mugged Deletraz for P3 on lap 20 before blasting past Matsushita and de Vries to regain his lead on successive laps and starting to rebuild his big gap to the battle behind him, while Ghiotto got a double tow to blast by Sette Camara and Deletraz on the front straight on lap 24, with the Brazilian following in his wake; earlier stops saw Matsushita and de Vries unable to stop the train coming for their potential podium positions a lap later.

With the top 3 storming off into the distance all eyes were looking behind them: Latifi ultimately claimed the win by 9s over Ghiotto with Sette Camara a further 6s back, while Hubert did a superb job of managing his tires to push up to P4 in his maiden F2 race ahead of Deletraz and de Vries, with Aitken ending a lonely race in P7 ahead of rookie Mick Schumacher, who mugged Matsushita on spent rubber on the last lap for 8th and tomorrow’s reverse pole, with Guanyu Zhou claiming the final point in P10.

Results – 32 laps

POS DRIVER TEAM GAP
1 Nicholas Latifi DAMS 0.000s
2 Luca Ghiotto UNI-Virtuosi 8.744s
3 Sergio Sette Camara DAMS 14.826s
4 Anthoine Hubert BWT Arden 17.273s
5 Louis Deletraz Carlin 26.686s
6 Nyck de Vries ART Grand Prix 28.497s
7 Jack Aitken Campos Racing 31.545s
8 Mick Schumacher Prema Racing 34.708s
9 Nobuharu Matsushita Carlin 37.395s
10 Guanyu Zhou UNI-Virtuosi 41.131s
11 Ralph Boschung Trident 42.092s
12 Giuliano Alesi Trident 47.711s
13 Tatiana Calderon BWT Arden 55.775s
14 Callum Ilott Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 56.293s
15 Dorian Boccolacci Campos Racing 1m14.247s
16 Juan Manuel Correa Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 1m24.988s
17 Jordan King MP Motorsport 1m26.511s
18 Mahaveer Raghunathan MP Motorsport 1m33.150s
19 Nikita Mazepin ART Grand Prix 1m37.568s
Sean Gelael Prema Racing Retirement