Ekstrom wins Sunday DTM race in Budapest (Update)

UPDATE

When you cheat in Europe you lose your you place or are disqualified, in NASCAR if you cheat to win you always keep your win.

Marco Wittmann and Daniel Juncadella had their positions in the Sunday race at the Hungaroring taken away. Following a report from the technical delegate, the stewards of the meeting came to the conclusion on Sunday evening, that both Juncadella’s Mercedes-AMG C 63 DTM and Wittmann’s BMW M4 DTM didn’t comply with the technical regulations. The height of the skid pad (underfloor) of both cars was insufficient (art. 3.22.4 of the technical regulations). After the exclusion, the next drivers move up, so that Antonio Felix da Costa was promoted to third.

Thus, the duel for the title in the DTM finale at the Hockenheimring Baden-Wurttemberg again becomes a three-way fight. After the decision, Wittmann had the twelve points he had scored for finishing fourth on Sunday taken away. Prior to the finale, he now has 176 points to his tally. Edoardo Mortara is second in the drivers’ standings, 14 points down. And now, Jamie Green also remains in contention for the DTM title as he is 39 points down, with 50 points still at stake in Hockenheim.

Both the Mercedes-AMG DTM Team HWA and the BMW Team RMG have announced an appeal against the decision of the stewards. Until the appeal court has drawn a verdict, Juncadella and Wittmann remain excluded. The result of the 16th DTM race of the season as well as the drivers’, teams’ and manufacturers’ standings remain provisional.

From left, #27 Adrien Tambay (FRA, Audi Sport Team Abt, Audi RS 5 DTM), #5 Mattias Ekstrom (SWE, Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline, Audi RS 5 DTM), #12 Daniel Juncadella (ESP, Mercedes-AMG DTM Team HWA, Mercedes-AMG C 63 DTM)
From left, #27 Tambay, #5 Mattias Ekstrom #12 Daniel Juncadella

09/25/16 In the 16th race of the 2016 DTM season, Mattias Ekstrom has shown that he is by no means an oldtimer yet. The Swede, who won the DTM championship titles in 2004 and 2007, scored a dominant win in the race on Sunday from his fellow Audi driver Adrien Tambay. After 36 laps, Ekstrom crossed the finish line 4.350 seconds ahead of the Frenchman and scored his first win of the season, the 22nd victory of his career in the DTM.

"Today, I had a fantastic car and I didn't have to work hard for this win at all," the Swede said at the finish. "Usually, I had to fight really hard this year and I wasn't rewarded at the end. Today, it was different." At Budapest, Mercedes-AMG driver Daniel Juncadella took the checkered flag in third place. For Tambay, second place was his first podium finish since the 2014 season opener. Juncadella was on the podium after a DTM race for the first time ever. In a race with a turbulent start, Marco Wittmann finished fourth and thus extended his points' lead again. Over the race weekend, 39,500 spectators attended the DTM event in Hungary.

While Ekstrom drove an undisputed lights-to-flag victory home, for Edoardo Mortara, Jamie Green and Robert Wickens, the race was almost over before it really got started. Wickens initially lined up at the wrong side of the starting grid and had to start from the back of the grid after an additional formation lap. Pole sitter Mortara had a poor start and had to defend his position from Wittmann on the first few meters. In the process, he damaged his Audi RS 5 DTM. Wittmann and Mortara were given warnings for the collision and an additional pit stop ruined the race for the Italo-Swiss. Jamie Green also became involved in the collision and retired early in the pits.

The start
The start

Prior to the DTM finale at the Hockenheimring, Marco Wittmann is leading the DTM drivers' standings with 188 points from Edoardo Mortara. The latter has 162 points and, 26 points down, is Wittmann's only remaining opponent in the battle for the season trophy. After this weekend, Jamie Green (137 points) and Robert Wickens (121 points) are no longer in contention for the title.

"I didn't have a good start. Subsequently, I was sandwiched between Wittmann and Green. One of the rims broke in the process and I had to take a few more hits on lap one," said Mortara. "That's very disappointing because we could have won again today."

"It was a real shame," Dieter Gass, Head of DTM at Audi Sport, agreed. “It's extremely frustrating not to be able to feel really happy in spite of a one-two result. Today, we could definitely have achieved more. We had fast cars. That was obvious also with Mattias (Ekstrom) and Adrien (Tambay). The situation at the start was extremely unfortunate. You can't really blame anyone either. Edo (Mortara) had a little too much wheel spin. That's what set off this unfortunate chain of events. That, of all people, it resulted in our two drivers with the best points score being taken out of the race is frustrating."

The DTM season finale takes place at the Hockenheimring Baden-Wurttemberg from October 14-16.

Results

POS DRIVER TEAM CAR LAPS GAP
1 Mattias Ekstrom Abt Audi 36 0.000s
2 Adrien Tambay Rosberg Audi 36 4.350s
3 Daniel Juncadella HWA Mercedes 36 15.870s
4 Marco Wittmann RMG BMW 36 23.295s
5 Antonio Felix da Costa Schnitzer BMW 36 24.209s
6 Tom Blomqvist RBM BMW 36 26.067s
7 Timo Glock RMG BMW 36 26.813s
8 Timo Scheider Phoenix Audi 36 31.792s
9 Maxime Martin RBM BMW 36 38.310s
10 Mike Rockenfeller Phoenix Audi 36 38.675s
11 Martin Tomczyk Schnitzer BMW 36 39.966s
12 Robert Wickens HWA Mercedes 36 40.327s
13 Felix Rosenqvist ART Mercedes 36 40.710s
14 Bruno Spengler MTEK BMW 36 41.317s
15 Paul Di Resta HWA Mercedes 36 41.777s
16 Christian Vietoris Mucke Mercedes 36 42.352s
17 Lucas Auer Mucke Mercedes 36 42.755s
18 Gary Paffett ART Mercedes 36 43.015s
19 Maximilian Gotz HWA Mercedes 36 45.388s
20 Miguel Molina Abt Audi 36 1m07.034s
21 Edoardo Mortara Abt Audi 33 3 Laps
Nico Muller Abt Audi 8 Retirement
Augusto Farfus MTEK BMW 2 Retirement
Jamie Green Rosberg Audi 1 Retirement

DRIVERS' STANDINGS

POS DRIVER POINTS
1 Marco Wittmann 188
2 Edoardo Mortara 162
3 Jamie Green 137
4 Robert Wickens 121
5 Mattias Ekstrom 107
6 Tom Blomqvist 101
7 Paul Di Resta 100
8 Nico Muller 88
9 Maxime Martin 78
10 Gary Paffett 73
11 Lucas Auer 68
12 Timo Glock 64
13 Bruno Spengler 51
14 Augusto Farfus 44
15 Christian Vietoris 42
16 Miguel Molina 41
17 Adrien Tambay 40
18 Antonio Felix da Costa 26
19 Daniel Juncadella 21
20 Mike Rockenfeller 18
21 Maximilian Gotz 17
22 Martin Tomczyk 13
23 Timo Scheider 9
24 Felix Rosenqvist 5
25 Esteban Ocon 2
26 Rene Rast 0