Mortara wins battle, Whittmann the war

Mortara wins final DTM race of 2016
Mortara wins final DTM race of 2016

Fourth place in the Sunday race of the DTM season finale at the Hockenheimring Baden-Wurttemberg was enough for BMW driver Marco Wittmann to be crowned as the 2016 DTM champion. His only remaining opponent in the battle for the title, Edoardo Mortara with his Audi RS 5 DTM, showed another strong performance with a dominant win at Hockenheim on Sunday, but in spite of his eighth DTM career win, the Italo-Swiss ended up four points down on Wittmann as the new champion.

For Marco Wittmann, it is already his second title in the DTM after 2014. BMW won the DTM drivers’ title for the fifth time after 1987, 1989, 2012 and 2014.

This was a turbulent race and Edoardo was very strong," Wittmann summed up the action and praised his opponent. 'Winning the title again after 2014 is an incredible feeling. It is simply fantastic."

In the DTM finale at the Hockenheimring, the DTM showed itself from its best angle in front of 142,000 spectators during the weekend, with entertaining touring car racing and door-to-door duels as the ingredients for a worthy finale. Next to race winner Edoardo Mortara, the two Mercedes-AMG drivers Christian Vietoris and Paul Di Resta go into the winter break with podium finishes as they were classified second and third respectively.

Whittmann was 4th for BMW to wrap up the 2016 DTM title

Edoardo Mortara has done everything to still decide the battle for the title in his favor. Prior to the race, he was 17 points down. After a rather bad start, he battled against numerous BMW drivers and moved up one position after another, finally overtaking Wittmann for the lead on lap six.

After 39 laps, Mortara crossed the finish line as the race winner, 3.040 seconds ahead of Vietoris. For Wittmann, fourth place in the final race of the season was enough to seal the title. Behind him, three further BMW drivers, Timo Glock, Maxime Martin and Tom Blomqvist, made it into the point-scoring positions. These were rounded out by Jamie Green and Robert Wickens in ninth and tenth place.

The battles for the teams’ and manufacturers’ titles also were decided in the final race. In the teams’ standings, the Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline came out on top with 319 points from BMW Team RMG (290 points). In the manufacturers’ standings, Audi clinched the title with 700 points from BMW (647 points) and Mercedes-Benz (471 points).

Results

Pos Driver Team Car Behind
1 Edoardo Mortara Abt Audi 0.000s
2 Christian Vietoris Mucke Mercedes 3.040s
3 Paul Di Resta HWA Mercedes 4.294s
4 Marco Wittmann RMG BMW 5.030s
5 Timo Glock RMG BMW 6.103s
6 Maxime Martin RBM BMW 8.947s
7 Tom Blomqvist RBM BMW 13.857s
8 Jamie Green Rosberg Audi 15.054s
9 Robert Wickens HWA Mercedes 16.012s
10 Martin Tomczyk Schnitzer BMW 21.313s
11 Mike Rockenfeller Abt Audi 21.503s
12 Bruno Spengler MTEK BMW 22.230s
13 Nico Muller Abt Audi 24.962s
14 Miguel Molina Abt Audi 25.979s
15 Gary Paffett ART Mercedes 27.937s
16 Lucas Auer Mucke Mercedes 29.298s
17 Rene Rast Phoenix Audi 36.530s
18 Timo Scheider Phoenix Audi 39.112s
19 Maximilian Gotz HWA Mercedes 55.972s
20 Daniel Juncadella HWA Mercedes Not running
21 Felix Rosenqvist ART Mercedes Not running
22 Augusto Farfus MTEK BMW Not running
Antonio Felix da Costa Schnitzer BMW Retirement
Adrien Tambay Rosberg Audi Retirement

FINAL CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS:

Pos Driver Points
1 Marco Wittmann 206
2 Edoardo Mortara 202
3 Jamie Green 145
4 Robert Wickens 124
5 Paul Di Resta 116
6 Tom Blomqvist 113
7 Mattias Ekstrom 107
8 Maxime Martin 90
9 Nico Muller 88
10 Timo Glock 84
11 Gary Paffett 73
12 Lucas Auer 68
13 Miguel Molina 66
14 Christian Vietoris 60
15 Bruno Spengler 51
16 Augusto Farfus 44
17 Antonio Felix da Costa 43
18 Adrien Tambay 40
19 Mike Rockenfeller 31
20 Maximilian Gotz 17
21 Martin Tomczyk 16
22 Timo Scheider 13
23 Rene Rast 8
24 Daniel Juncadella 6
25 Felix Rosenqvist 5
26 Esteban Ocon 2