2008 Macau Grand Prix

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Race details
Date 16 November 2008
Official name 55th Windsor Arch Macau Grand Prix
Location Guia Circuit, Macau
Course Temporary street circuit
6.120 km (3.803 mi)
Distance Qualifying Race
10 laps, 61.200 km (38.028 mi)
Main Race
15 laps, 91.800 km (57.042 mi)
Weather Qualifying Race: Sunny and dry
Main Race: Sunny and dry
Qualifying Race
Pole
Driver Netherlands Carlo van Dam TOM'S
Time 2:11.846
Fastest Lap
Driver New Zealand Brendon Hartley
Carlin
Time 2:13.169 (on lap 6 of 10)
Podium
First Italy Edoardo Mortara Signature-Plus
Second Japan Keisuke Kunimoto TOM'S
Third Brazil Roberto Streit Räikkönen Robertson Racing
Main Race
Pole
Driver Italy Edoardo Mortara Signature-Plus
Fastest Lap
Driver New Zealand Brendon Hartley
Carlin
Time 2:12.565 (on lap 15 of 15)
Podium
First Japan Keisuke Kunimoto TOM'S
Second Italy Edoardo Mortara Signature-Plus
Third New Zealand Brendon Hartley
Carlin

The 2008 Macau Grand Prix (formally the 55th Windsor Arch Macau Grand Prix) was a Formula Three (F3) car race held on the streets of Macau on 16 November 2008. Unlike other races, such as the Masters of Formula 3, the 2008 Macau Grand Prix was not part of any F3 championship, but was open to entries from any F3 championship. The event consisted of two races: a ten-lap qualifying race that set the starting grid for the fifteen-lap main race. The 2008 race was the 55th Macau Grand Prix and the 26th for F3 cars.

Carlin driver Brendon Hartley
in third.

Background and entry list

The Macau Grand Prix is a Formula Three (F3) race considered to be a stepping stone to higher motor racing categories such as Formula One and has been termed the territory's most prestigious international sporting event.[1][2] The 2008 Macau Grand Prix was the event's 55th running and the 26th time it was held to F3 rules. It took place on the 6.2 km (3.9 mi) 22-turn Guia Circuit on 16 November 2008 with three preceding days of practice and qualifying.[3]

Drivers had to race in a Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA)-regulated championship meeting in 2008, either in the FIA Formula 3 International Trophy or one of the domestic championships, with the highest-placed drivers earning priority in being invited to the race.[4] Two of the four major F3 series were represented on the 30-car grid by their respective champions.[5] Nico Hülkenberg, the Formula 3 Euro Series champion, missed the race because he was entered in a GP2 Series test session at the Circuit Paul Ricard.[6] Thus, Edoardo Mortara was the highest placed Formula 3 Euro Series competitor in Macau, joined by British champion Jaime Alguersuari and Japanese series winner Carlo van Dam.[5] Laurens Vanthoor was the top performing driver in the German championship,[5] and the Australian Drivers' Championship winner James Winslow accepted an invitation to race in Macau from race organisers.[7] The race featured three drivers from outside of F3: Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 racer Roberto Merhi, Roberto Streit of Formula Nippon and Formula V6 Asia driver Michael Ho.[8]

Practice and qualifying

The Sunday race was preceded by two half-hour practice sessions: one on Thursday morning and one on Friday morning.[9] Despite making a minor error on the lap, Mortara was fastest for Signature-Plus at 2 minutes, 14.333 seconds late in the session, seven-tenths of a second faster than anyone else on the circuit. He was followed by Renger van der Zande, Streit, Van Dam, James Jakes, Stefano Coletti, Alguersuari, Merhi and the British duo of Jon Lancaster and Sam Bird.[10] During the session, where the top of the time sheets was shared by multiple drivers, Brendon Hartley missed the second half due to a gearbox problem. Mika Mäki crashed heavily at Fisherman's Bend, requiring red flags before the session's halfway point. Kazuya Oshima and Walter Grubmüller went into the wall separately at Maternity Bend.[10] Mäki was transported to the circuit's medical centre for precautionary checks after complaining of abdominal pains and was advised to rest.[11]

Sam Bird (pictured in 2007) qualified alongside Carlo van Dam on the front row of the grid but was demoted three places because of a grid penalty.

Qualifying was split into two 45-minute sessions, one on Thursday afternoon and one on Friday afternoon. Each driver's fastest time from either session counted toward their final starting place in the qualification race.[4][9] Mortara was fastest in the first qualifying session, held in warm and sunny weather, with a time of 2 minutes, 12.416 seconds, and led throughout.[12] Van Dam in second was three-tenths of a second slower.[13] Streit was second twice but finished third. Hartley recovered from gearbox problems earlier in the day to run strongly for provisional fourth place.[12] Van Der Zande was consistent and took fifth. He was followed by the highest-placed rookie Alguersuari in sixth. Bird was seventh.[13] Jules Bianchi and his teammate Jakes were eighth and tenth, separated by Oliver Turvey.[12] Marcus Ericsson, eleventh, was high as sixth in the session's opening minutes. Following him were Keisuke Kunimoto, Kei Cozzolino, Coletti, the Hitech Racing duo of Max Chilton and Merhi, Winslow, Grubmüller, Oshima and Daniel Campos-Hull, Laurens Vanthoor, Atte Mustonen, Basil Shaaban, Cheng Congfu, Lancaster, Masaki Matsushita, Ho and Nicola de Marco. The only driver to go under the minimum qualification time was Koki Saga.[12] The session was stopped three times.[13] Jakes' car got unsettled on the tarmac entering Fisherman's Bend on a faster lap and hit the outside barriers, littering the track with debris. De Marco struck the Fisherman's Bend barriers and angled across the circuit.[12] Matsushita spun towards the track's centre after hitting the barriers at Police corner with one minute left.[13] Mortara and Vanthoor could not avoid his stranded car and piled into it.[12] For ignoring the red light signal which mandated he enter the weighbridge, the stewards order Matsushita to start last for the qualification race.[14]

Mäki returned to the circuit on the morning of the second 30-minute practice session and was declared fit to compete. He revealed that he had food poisoning which worsened while driving and combated this by sleeping heavily the previous day.[15] The start was delayed by 50 minutes due to multiple crashes in practice for the touring car support races.[16] Mortara concentrated on race setup and set a benchmark time of 2 minutes, 13.054 seconds by slipstreaming another car into Mandarin Bend.[17] Van Dam was 0.117 seconds slower in second and a full second faster than Cozzolino in third. Alguersuari, Turvey, Merhi, Hartley, Ericsson, Van Der Zande ninth and Streit were in positions four to ten.[18] De Marco spun at Fisherman's Bend, stopping practice as he was adjudged to be in a dangerous place. Alguersuari damaged his car's left side and removed his rear wing in an crash against the San Francisco End barriers which halted the session for a second time. The two other incidents during the session were Mäki suffered a puncture and spent most of the session in the pit lane, while Van Dam braked late for Lisboa corner and stopped on the escape road.[17]

Van Dam improved on Mortara's lap from the first qualifying session until Mustonen went off the track at Police corner and the yellow flags flew. Drivers with new tyres had them fitted and adjusted their cars halfway through the second qualifying session. Matsushita then crashed near Police turn, and his car was removed from the track.[16] Mortara then regained provisional pole,[16] until the session was stopped when Bianchi ran wide exiting the Reservoir Bend and hit the tyre barriers at the end of the turn. His left rear wheel flew onto the track's centre.[19] Bird was the first driver all weekend to go under 2 minutes, 11 seconds,[20] before red flags were needed for Cozzolino whose heavy crash at Fisherman's Bend left debris on the track.[16] Van Dam slightly deranged his steering arm at the restart, but used a clear track to beat Bird and take pole position with a 2 minute, 11.846 second lap.[16][19][20] This demoted Bird to second having been delayed by a slow-moving Grubmüller.[16] Kunimoto used the slipstream of another car to take third,[20] while the previous day's provisional pole sitter Mortara was fourth. Streit dropped two spots to fifth, while Merhi climbed nine spots to sixth.[19] Van Der Zande in seventh did not slipstream other cars to avoid being delayed in the track's tight section.[21] Turvey was as high as third but was eighth with Alguersuari ninth and Jakes tenth.[16] The rest of the field lined up as Hartley, Coletti (who crashed at Police turn and blocked the track),[19] Chilton, Mäki, Ericsson, Oshimi, Bianchi, Cozzolino, Grubmüller, Cheng, Campos-Hull, Winslow, Lancaster, Shabban, Saga, Mustonen, Vanthoor (who set no lap time as he crashed on his out-lap), Matsushita, Ho and De Marco.[16] Bird was demoted three positions on the grid after qualifying for failing to signal to enter the weighbridge during second practice.[19]

Qualifying classification

Each of the driver's fastest lap times from the two qualifying sessions are denoted in bold.

Final qualifying classification
Pos No. Driver Team Q1 Time Rank Q2 Time Rank Gap Grid
1 1 Netherlands Carlo van Dam TOM'S 2:12.772 2 2:11.846 1 1
2 21 United Kingdom Sam Bird Manor Motorsport 2:13.722 7 2:11.988 2 +0.142 51
3 2 Japan Keisuke Kunimoto TOM'S 2:14.696 12 2:12.039 3 +0.293 2
4 7 Italy Edoardo Mortara Signature-Plus 2:12.416 1 2:12.044 4 +0.298 3
5 11 Brazil Roberto Streit Räikkönen Robertson Racing 2:13.153 3 2:12.061 5 +0.315 4
6 20 Spain Roberto Merhi Hitech Racing 2:15.574 16 2:12.369 6 +0.618 6
7 16 Netherlands Renger van der Zande Prema Powerteam 2:13.607 5 2:12.402 7 +0.653 7
8 3 United Kingdom Oliver Turvey
Carlin
2:14.208 9 2:12.404 8 +0.655 8
9 4 Spain Jaime Alguersuari
Carlin
2:13.669 6 2:12.412 9 +0.661 9
10 15 United Kingdom James Jakes ART Grand Prix 2:14.459 10 2:12.423 10 +0.672 10
11 5 New Zealand Brendon Hartley
Carlin
2:13.348 4 2:12.573 11 +0.722 11
12 17 Monaco Stefano Coletti Prema Powerteam 2:14.788 14 2:12.835 12 +0.984 12
13 18 United Kingdom Max Chilton Hitech Racing 2:15.007 15 2:12.869 13 +1.018 13
14 9 Finland Mika Mäki Signature-Plus no time DNQ 2:12.942 14 +1.091 14
15 6 Sweden Marcus Ericsson
Carlin
2:14.664 11 2:12.988 15 +1.135 15
16 22 Japan Kazuya Oshima Manor Motorsport 2:15.985 19 2:13.110 16 +1.157 16
17 14 France Jules Bianchi ART Grand Prix 2:13.840 8 2:13.124 17 +1.171 17
18 24 Italy Kei Cozzolino Now Motor Sports 2:14.779 13 2:13.504 18 +1.551 18
19 19 Austria Walter Grubmüller Hitech Racing 2:15.731 18 2:13.710 19 +1.757 19
20 8 China Cheng Congfu Signature-Plus 2:17.050 24 2:13.777 20 +1.844 20
21 28 Spain Daniel Campos-Hull HBR Motorsport 2:16.345 20 2:14.325 21 +2.392 21
22 27 United Kingdom James Winslow Ombra Racing 2:15.638 17 2:14.399 22 +2.466 22
23 23 United Kingdom Jon Lancaster Manor Motorsport 2:17.490 25 2:14.620 23 +2.687 23
24 29 Lebanon Basil Shaaban HBR Motorsport 2:16.939 23 2:15.412 24 +3.479 24
25 25 Japan Koki Saga Le Beausset Motorsports 2:26.492 DNQ 2:15.969 25 +4.036 25
26 10 Finland Atte Mustonen Räikkönen Robertson Racing 2:16.675 22 2:16.029 26 +4.096 26
27 30 Belgium Laurens Vanthoor RC Motorsport 2:16.464 21 no time DNQ +4.531 27
28 26 Japan Masaki Matsushita PTRS by Ombra 2:18.059 26 2:18.667 25 +6.126 302
29 12 Macau Michael Ho Räikkönen Robertson Racing 2:18.415 27 2:18.606 27 +5.078 28
30 31 Italy Nicola de Marco RC Motorsport 2:18.668 28 no time DNQ +5.140 29
110% qualifying time: 2:25.657[22]
Source:[22][23]
Bold time indicates the faster of the two times that determined the grid order.

Notes:

  • ^1  – Sam Bird was penalised three places on the grid for failing to obey a signal to enter the weighbridge during the second practice session.[19]
  • ^2  – Masaki Matsushita was relegated to the back of the grid after ignoring a signal to enter the weighbridge during the first qualifying session.[14]

Qualifying race

The qualifying race to set the starting order for the main race began on 15 November at Macau Standard Time (UTC+08:00).[9][24] The weather was dry and sunny at the start of the qualifying race with an air temperature of 23 °C (73 °F) and a track temperature at 37 °C (99 °F).[25] Van Dam made a slow start and Kunimoto passed him for the lead.[26] Van Dam attempted to reclaim the lead from Kunimoto, but ran wide and punctured his left rear tyre due to contact with the barriers through Mandarin corner.[26][27] Mortara then attempted, but failed, to overtake Kunimoto; the two narrowly avoided a collision.[26] Four more cars overtook Van Dam into Lisboa turn,[27] and he collided with fellow countryman Van Der Zande at San Francisco Bend. Both drivers retired because of the contact.[26] Merhi stalled on the grid and lost several positions.[28] On the second lap, Jakes and Hartley brushed up against each other as they drove towards the Reservoir Bend. Jakes went across Hartley's front and into the wall.[27] Hartley entered the pit lane with suspension damage while Jakes retired.[26]

Edoardo Mortara (pictured in 2014) won the qualifying race and pole position in the Grand Prix itself.

When Bianchi spun entering the Lisboa turn, a multi-car collision occurred. He set off a chain reaction involving Grubmüller, Chilton, and Merhi's Hitech cars. Bianchi's spin triggered a secondary accident, which began when Shaaban ran into the rear of his teammate Campos-Hull and was spun into Cheng. Mustonen was pushed into the track barriers by both drivers.[27] While Merhi and Grubmüller rejoined,[27] Chilton, Bianchi, Cheng and Mustonen retired.[26] Because several cars were in the opposite direction and beached on the kerbs,[26] the safety car was deployed so that marshals could clear the wreckage.[28] Merhi made a pit stop and Oshima retired. The safety car remained on track for three laps and Kunimoto led at the restart with Mortara in second. Shaaban set the fastest lap earlier in the race but retired after crashing at Reservoir turn.[26] Mortara began to attack Kunimoto in an attempt to take the lead, but Kunimoto resisted.[26][28] Streit was close behind the two drivers, defending against Turvey, who was distracted by Bird, who was battling Alguersuari.[26]

At the race's halfway point, Ho lost control of his car at Police corner, but this did not cause a traffic jam because only Matsushita was behind him and easily passed him.[26] Mortara slipstreamed Kunimoto's, steered left onto the outside line,[28][29] and brake later than him for the lead at the start of lap seven.[26][27] Mortara began to pull away from Kunimoto, while Streit gained on the latter while observing Turvey behind him. Mäki's car was damaged at the Reservoir Bend on the ninth lap, and debris littered the track. Despite a rear puncture and a detached rear wing, he continued driving and went off the track twice.[26] Mortara kept the lead for the rest of the race to win pole position for the Grand Prix itself.[28] He was joined on the grid's front row by Kunimoto and Streit completed the podium. Turvey, Bird, Alguersuari, Coletti, Ericsson, Campos-Hull and Cozzolino, Winslow, Vanthoor, Lancaster, Saga, Grubmüller, Mäki, Merhi, Matushita, De Marco and Hartley were the last of the 20 classified finishers.[27]

Qualification Race classification

Final qualifying race classification
Pos No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid
1 7 Italy Edoardo Mortara Signature-Plus 10 29:20.769 3
2 2 Japan Keisuke Kunimoto TOM'S 10 +1.189 2
3 11 Brazil Roberto Streit Räikkönen Robertson Racing 10 +2.904 4
4 3 United Kingdom Oliver Turvey
Carlin
10 +3.364 8
5 21 United Kingdom Sam Bird Manor Motorsport 10 +3.984 5
6 4 Spain Jaime Alguersuari
Carlin
10 +4.623 9
7 17 Monaco Stefano Coletti Prema Powerteam 10 +4.952 12
8 6 Sweden Marcus Ericsson
Carlin
10 +8.799 15
9 28 Spain Daniel Campos-Hull HBR Motorsport 10 +22.448 21
10 24 Italy Kei Cozzolino Now Motor Sports 10 +23.056 18
11 27 United Kingdom James Winslow Ombra Racing 10 +26.786 22
12 30 Belgium Laurens Vanthoor RC Motorsport 10 +28.090 27
13 25 Japan Koki Saga Le Beausset Motorsports 10 +42.871 25
14 19 Austria Walter Grubmüller Hitech Racing 10 +48.578 19
15 20 Spain Roberto Merhi Hitech Racing 10 +49.439 6
16 23 United Kingdom Jon Lancaster Manor Motorsport 10 +57.740 23
17 26 Japan Masaki Matsushita PTRS by Ombra 10 +1:06.943 30
18 31 Italy Nicola de Marco RC Motorsport 10 +1:31.545 29
19 9 Finland Mika Mäki Signature-Plus 10 +1:44.930 14
NC 5 New Zealand Brendon Hartley
Carlin
7 +3 laps 11
Ret 12 Macau Michael Ho Räikkönen Robertson Racing 4 Accident 28
Ret 29 Lebanon Basil Shaaban HBR Motorsport 3 Accident 24
Ret 22 Japan Kazuya Oshima Manor Motorsport 3 Accident 16
Ret 18 United Kingdom Max Chilton Hitech Racing 0 Accident 13
Ret 16 Netherlands Renger van der Zande Prema Powerteam 0 Accident 7
Ret 15 United Kingdom James Jakes ART Grand Prix 0 Accident 10
Ret 10 Finland Atte Mustonen Räikkönen Robertson Racing 0 Accident 26
Ret 8 China Cheng Congfu Signature-Plus 0 Accident 20
Ret 1 Netherlands Carlo van Dam TOM'S 0 Accident 1
Ret 14 France Jules Bianchi ART Grand Prix 0 Accident 17
Fastest lap: Brendon Hartley, 2:13.169, 165.444 km/h (102.802 mph) on lap 6
Source:[25]

Warm-up

A 20-minute warm-up session was held on the morning of the main race.[9] Hartley ran faster than in any previous session, topping the time sheets with a new fastest lap of the weekend of 2 minutes, 11.071 seconds. He was six-tenths of a second faster than Van Dam in second. The two were followed by Coletti, Ericsson, Bird, Mortara, Cozzolino, Streit, Alguersuari and Campos-Hull in positions four through ten.[30]

Main race

The race began on 16 November at 15:30 local time.[9] The weather at the start was dry and sunny with an air temperature of 26 °C (79 °F) and a track temperature of 33 °C (91 °F).[31] When the Grand Prix started, Kunimoto accelerated faster than Mortara off the line and passed him driving towards Lisboa corner.[32] Turvey stalled, causing confusion as drivers swerved to avoid hitting him.[33] Vanthoor yielded six places as his clutch slipped but avoided stalling his engine.[34] Streit defended against Bird and they collided in Mandarin Bend. Streit's car crossed over Bird's and slid into the right-band barriers. Entering the corner, he severely damaged his car before rebounding off the wall and veering left.[32][35] Soon after, Ericsson went off the track into Lisboa corner and several cars piled up behind him or had to negotiate their way past his stricken vehicle. The safety car was immediately deployed to control the race by picking up Kunimoto.[36] The wreckage was cleared in two laps, and Kunimoto led at the restart, followed by Mortara..[32] Saga became the race's fourth retirement when he hit the wall at Lisboa corner.[36] Campos-Hull slipstreamed past Alguersuari for third place into Lisboa corner just as Mortara locked his brakes on the bumpy track.[32]

Keisuke Kunimoto (pictured during the race) took the first win for a Japanese driver in Macau since Takuma Sato seven years previously.

Mortara's brake locking dropped him to fourth behind Campos-Hull and Alguersuari.[32] Meanwhile, Kunimoto began to pull away from every driver.[36] Alguersuari re-passed Campos-Hull for second on the fifth lap, and Mortara passed the latter for third the following lap.[32] As he began gaining on Kunimoto, Alguersuari's chances of winning were diminished when he was deemed to have jumped the start and was told he would incur a drive-through penalty.[32][33] At the end of lap five, Alguersuari took his penalty, and Mortara began reducing Kunimoto's 2.5-second lead.[33] As the race appeared to be settling down, Matsushita crashed into the wall after leaving the Mandarin Bend, temporarily blocking the track. Winslow drifted off the track at Police turn and hit the wall. Lancaster relinquished sixth place to Hartley, while Mäki moved into the top ten.[36] On lap eight, Merhi spun at Reservoir Bend and severely damaged his car, prompting the safety car's deployment.[32] The incident caught the recovering Van Dam off guard who clipped debris and crashed.[33][36] Kunimoto's lead had faded, and he was followed by Mortara, Campos-Hull, Cozzolino, and Hartley.[36]

The race restarted on the tenth lap, with Kunimoto leading. Mortara could not keep up with Kunimoto because the latter had more straightline speed.[33][36] In trying to keep up with Kunimoto, Mortara ran wide at Matsuya corner, bending his right-front suspension from contact with the wall,[32][37] and Campos-Hull challenged him.[36] Further back, Mäki in sixth was holding off Van Der Zande. Shabban was another retiree after crashing off the track and into the barriers at Lisboa corner. Turvey recovered to move into the top ten, while teammate Hartley remained in fifth to observe any of Mortara's, Campos-Hull, and Cozzolino's mistakes. Despite drifting off the track and returning, Coletti crashed into the barriers at Hospital corner and was the race's final retirement.[36] On the 13th lap, Cozzolino tried to overtake Campos-Hull but struck the rear of the latter's car braking for Lisboa corner and dropped out of the top ten.[32][33][36] The crash promoted Hartley to third. Hartley and Turvey traded the fastest lap until Hartley claimed it on the final lap by completing a circuit in 2 minutes, 12.565 seconds.[36]

Turvey passed Grubmüller for seventh on the final lap.[32][33] Kunimoto won on his debut in Macau,[38] achieving the first win for a Japanese driver in Macau since Takuma Sato won the 2001 race, and it was TOM'S second consecutive Macau Grand Prix victory.[33] Mortara finished second, 1.710 seconds later, and Hartley finished third, climbing 17 places from his starting position. Mäki finished fourth, followed by Van Der Zande in fifth, both having been separated from the lead group throughout the race.[32] Vanthoor finished sixth after starting thirteenth, just ahead of seventh-placed Turvey.[36] The top ten was completed by Grubmüller, Bianchi and Alguersuari. Lancaster finished eleventh, two places ahead of his starting position. Jakes Cheng, Chilton. Cozzolino, Oshima, Campos-Hull, Mustonen, De Marco and Ho were the final classified finishers.[32]

Main Race classification

Final main race classification
Pos No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid
1 2 Japan Keisuke Kunimoto TOM'S 15 41:01.864 2
2 7 Italy Edoardo Mortara Signature-Plus 15 +1.710 1
3 5 New Zealand Brendon Hartley
Carlin
15 +4.006 20
4 9 Finland Mika Mäki Signature-Plus 15 +8.442 19
5 16 Netherlands Renger van der Zande Prema Powerteam 15 +10.276 25
6 30 Belgium Laurens Vanthoor RC Motorsport 15 +12.975 12
7 3 United Kingdom Oliver Turvey
Carlin
15 +13.134 4
8 19 Austria Walter Grubmüller Hitech Racing 15 +14.695 14
9 14 France Jules Bianchi ART Grand Prix 15 +18.725 30
10 4 Spain Jaime Alguersuari
Carlin
15 +20.801 6
11 23 United Kingdom Jon Lancaster Manor Motorsport 15 +20.898 16
12 15 United Kingdom James Jakes ART Grand Prix 15 +21.418 26
13 8 China Cheng Congfu Signature-Plus 15 +22.404 28
14 18 United Kingdom Max Chilton Hitech Racing 15 +22.604 27
15 24 Italy Kei Cozzolino Now Motor Sports 15 +23.270 10
16 22 Japan Kazuya Oshima Manor Motorsport 15 +23.930 23
17 28 Spain Daniel Campos-Hull HBR Motorsport 15 +24.997 9
18 10 Finland Atte Mustonen Räikkönen Robertson Racing 15 +33.744 29
19 31 Italy Nicola de Marco RC Motorsport 15 +46.527 18
20 12 Macau Michael Ho Räikkönen Robertson Racing 15 +51.739 21
Ret 17 Monaco Stefano Coletti Prema Powerteam 11 Accident 7
Ret 29 Lebanon Basil Shaaban HBR Motorsport 10 Accident 22
Ret 1 Netherlands Carlo van Dam TOM'S 7 Accident 24
Ret 20 Spain Roberto Merhi Hitech Racing 6 Accident 15
Ret 26 Japan Masaki Matsushita PTRS by Ombra 6 Accident 17
Ret 27 United Kingdom James Winslow Ombra Racing 5 Accident 11
Ret 25 Japan Koki Saga Le Beausset Motorsports 2 Accident 13
Ret 21 United Kingdom Sam Bird Manor Motorsport 0 Accident 5
Ret 11 Brazil Roberto Streit Räikkönen Robertson Racing 0 Accident 3
Ret 6 Sweden Marcus Ericsson
Carlin
0 Accident 8
Fastest lap: Brendon Hartley, 2:12.565, 166.198 km/h (103.271 mph) on lap 15
Source:[31]

References

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