2015 Macau Grand Prix

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Race details
Date 22 November 2015
Official name 62nd Suncity Groupo 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: Cloudy; air 26 °C (79 °F), track 27 °C (81 °F)
Main Race: Cloudy; air 28 °C (82 °F), track 32 °C (90 °F)
Qualifying Race
Pole
Driver Sweden Felix Rosenqvist
Prema
Time 2:10.474
Fastest Lap
Driver Sweden Felix Rosenqvist
Prema
Time 2:10.330 (on lap 9)
Podium
First Sweden Felix Rosenqvist
Prema
Second Monaco Charles Leclerc Van Amersfoort Racing
Third United Kingdom Alexander Sims Double R Racing
Main Race
Pole
Driver Sweden Felix Rosenqvist
Prema
Fastest Lap
Driver Brazil Sérgio Sette Câmara Motopark
Time 2:10.186 (on lap 15)
Podium
First Sweden Felix Rosenqvist
Prema
Second Monaco Charles Leclerc Van Amersfoort Racing
Third United Kingdom Alexander Sims Double R Racing

The 2015 Macau Grand Prix (formally the 62nd Suncity Group Macau Grand Prix - FIA F3 Intercontinental Cup) was a motor race for Formula Three cars that was held on the streets of Macau on 22 November 2015. Unlike other races, such as the Masters of Formula 3, the 2015 Macau Grand Prix was not a part of any Formula Three championship, but was open to entries from all Formula Three championships. The race itself was made up of two races: a ten-lap qualifying race that decided the starting grid for the fifteen-lap main race. The 2015 race was the 62nd running of the Macau Grand Prix and the 33rd for Formula Three cars.

The Grand Prix was won by

Prema driver Felix Rosenqvist from pole position, having won the Qualification Race the previous afternoon after the on the road victor Antonio Giovinazzi was penalised 20 seconds for a first lap crash. Rosenqvist led the majority of the main race to clinch his second consecutive Macau Grand Prix victory, the first time this had happened since Edoardo Mortara won the 2009 and 2010 races. Second place went to the highest placed rookie driver, Charles Leclerc for Van Amersfoort Racing, while the podium was completed by Double R Racing driver Alexander Sims
.

Entry list and background

The Macau Grand Prix is a Formula Three race considered to be a stepping stone to higher motor racing categories such as Formula One and is the territory's most prestigious international sporting event.[1][2] The 2015 Macau Grand Prix was the 62nd running of the event and the 33rd time that the race was held to Formula Three regulations. It took place on the 6.2 km (3.9 mi) 22-turn Guia Circuit on 22 November 2015 with three preceding days of practice and qualifying.[3]

In order to compete in Macau, drivers had to compete in a

Carlin after George Russell was withdrawn from the race.[6]

The Guia Circuit, where the race was held

Three drivers who mainly competed in other series outside of Formula Three in 2015 became eligible for the Macau race: British GT driver Alexander Sims competed in the Formula Three European Championship in the Algarve International Circuit round in order to become eligible.[7] Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters racer Daniel Juncadella had to wait until his main series campaign had concluded before sealing his eligibility; he took part in the Euroformula Open Championship, a second-tier Formula Three series in Europe, in its season-ending round at the Hockenheimring.[8] Super GT participant Yuhi Sekiguchi sealed his eligibility for the Macau Grand Prix by competing in the All-Japan Formula Three round at Twin Ring Motegi.[9]

At the start of 2015, the Macau Grand Prix coordinator Barry Bland discussed the implementation of the virtual safety car (VSC) system with race director Charlie Whiting during the drawing up of the race's sporting regulations. Provision for the system was implemented into the regulations and would help save a large amount of time as well as aiding drivers in blind corners.[10] Thus the Grand Prix was designated a "test race" for the VSC in order for the system to be written into the 2016 Formula Three European Championship regulations.[11]

Practice and qualifying

There were two 45-minute practice sessions preceding the Sunday race: one on Thursday morning and one on Friday morning.

Alexander Albon rounded out the session's top ten drivers.[14] The session was red flagged twice: Jake Dennis crashed into the right-hand wall at the Solitude Esses after sustaining a puncture 20 minutes in, and Callum Ilott struck the barrier at the left-hand turn before Faraway corner with nine minutes left.[14][15] Two other drivers, Sims and Zhi Cong Li, crashed at Lisboa turn but no stoppages were necessitated because both cars were retrieved from the track without difficulty.[13]

Martin Cao, Ryan Tveter, Takaboshi, Matt Solomon, Zhi Cong Li and Wing Chung Chang.[16] The session passed relatively smoothly, with only Sette Câmara crashing and then stopping at San Francisco Hill to prevent further damage en route to the pit lane.[17]

In the second 45-minute practice session, Pommer fought with Rosenqvist and Leclerc for the top spot until the former set a benchmark past the midpoint of the session and the time he set of 2 minutes, 11.102 (which was the fastest of the race meeting at that point) remained fastest until the conclusion of the second practice session.

suspension in an impact with the barrier but entered the pit lane for repairs.[18][19]

The second qualifying session was delayed due to multiple crashes during qualifying for the

Signature car.[21] Rosenqvist continued his strong form from Thursday's qualifying and set the pace again before Leclerc usurped his time halfway through. Rosenqvist had new tyres installed and returned to the top. He later improved with a lap of 2 minutes, 10.474 seconds in response to Juncadella getting close to his pace.[22] The session was abandoned with four minutes remaining when Giovinazzi crashed at the left-hand corner before Maternity Bend. Thus, Rosenqvist took pole position by 0.213 seconds from Juncadella. Leclerc moved from eleventh to start third and was the best placed rookie driver.[21] Giovinazzi fell from third to fourth. Pommer was in the top three for most of the session before finishing fifth.[21] However he incurred a two-place grid penalty for impeding another car during qualifying.[22] MacLeod and Sette Câmara inherited fifth and sixth as a result of Pommer's penalty.[21] Pommer was ahead of a close trio of cars driven by Macau rookies. Maini, Lorandi and Stroll were in positions eight through ten.[20] The sixth row was adorned by the Mücke Motorsport cars of Ferrucci and Jensen. The rest of the grid lined up as the British duo of Sims and Dennis, Albon, Sekiguchi, Tveter, Ilott, the Japanese pair of Kanamaru and Takaboshi, Chang, Cao, Yamashita, Cassidy, Menezes, Boccolacci, Solomon and Zhi.[22]

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 Sweden Felix Rosenqvist
Prema Powerteam
2:11.841 1 2:10.474 1 1
2 21 Spain Daniel Juncadella Fortec Motorsport 2:13.412 5 2:10.687 2 +0.213 2
3 15 Monaco Charles Leclerc Van Amersfoort Racing 2:14.099 11 2:10.796 3 +0.322 3
4 7 Italy Antonio Giovinazzi
Carlin
2:12.824 3 2:11.034 4 +0.560 4
5 19 Germany Markus Pommer Motopark 2:13.741 6 2:11.091 5 +0.617 71
6 29 United Kingdom Sam MacLeod Team West-Tec F3 2:13.109 4 2:11.523 6 +1.049 5
7 20 Brazil Sérgio Sette Câmara Motopark 2:15.206 22 2:11.721 7 +1.247 6
8 27 India Arjun Maini ThreeBond with T-Sport 2:14.281 14 2:11.722 8 +1.248 8
9 16 Italy Alessio Lorandi Van Amersfoort Racing 2:14.314 15 2:11.732 9 +1.249 9
10 3 Canada Lance Stroll
Prema Powerteam
2:14.244 13 2:11.794 10 +1.320 10
11 24 United States Santino Ferrucci Mücke Motorsport 2:14.548 19 2:11.965 11 +1.491 11
12 25 Denmark Mikkel Jensen Mücke Motorsport 2:13.757 8 2:12.026 12 +1.552 12
13 30 United Kingdom Alexander Sims Double R Racing 2:13.950 10 2:12.036 13 +1.562 13
14 2 United Kingdom Jake Dennis
Prema Powerteam
2:14.332 16 2:12.053 14 +1.579 14
15 17
Alexander Albon
Signature
2:15.159 21 2:12.054 15 +1.580 15
16 12 Japan Yuhi Sekiguchi
B-Max Engineering
2:13.744 7 2:12.197 16 +1.723 16
17 28 United States Ryan Tveter Team West-Tec F3 2:15.700 24 2:12.474 27 +2.000 17
18 10 United Kingdom Callum Ilott
Carlin
2:12.663 2 +2.189 18
19 9 Japan Yu Kanamaru
Carlin
2:14.238 12 2:12.723 18 +2.249 19
20 11 Japan Mitsunori Takaboshi
B-Max Engineering
2:16.249 25 2:12.836 19 +2.362 20
21 22 Macau Wing Chung Chang Fortec Motorsport 2:21.501 28 2:12.879 20 +2.405 21
22 23
Martin Cao
Fortec Motorsport 2:15.316 23 2:12.969 21 +2.495 22
23 5 Japan Kenta Yamashita TOM'S 2:14.546 18 2:13.027 22 +2.553 23
24 6 New Zealand Nick Cassidy TOM'S 2:14.631 20 2:13.162 23 +2.688 24
25 8 United States Gustavo Menezes
Carlin
2:13.903 9 2:13.369 24 +2.895 25
26 18 France Dorian Boccolacci
Signature
2:14.463 17 2:13.683 25 +3.209 26
27 31 Hong Kong Matt Solomon Double R Racing 2:16.766 26 2:13.736 28 +3.262 27
28 25 China Zhi Cong Li Jo Zeller Racing 2:18.800 27 2:14.525 26 +4.051 28
110% qualifying time: 2:23.5214
Source:[23]
Bold time indicates the faster of the two times that determined the grid order.

Notes:

Qualifying race

Antonio Giovinazzi (pictured in 2014) finished the qualification race first on the road but was penalised twenty seconds for contact with Daniel Juncadella on the first lap.

The qualifying race to set the grid order for the main race started at 13:45 Macau Standard Time (UTC+08:00) on 21 November.[4][12] The weather at the start was dry and cloudy with the air temperature 26 °C (79 °F) and the track temperature 27 °C (81 °F).[24] On the grid, Rosenqvist made a clean start to lead the field into Lisboa corner with Juncadella slotting behind in second position.[25] Giovinazzi made a similarly good start and passed Leclerc for third and attempted to pass Juncadella.[26] By the time the two reached the turn's braking area, Giovinazzi muscled himself to the inside of Juncadella and his front-right tyre made contact with the latter's left-rear wheel.[25][27] Juncadella was sent spinning across the track and into the inside barrier. Tveter battled Dennis for position but had no room to negotiate and slammed into the stationary Juncadella. Tveter was hit in turn by Ilott which bruised and cut Ilott's hand.[26] Behind the duo, Jensen struck the rear of Albon's car and the resulting pile up partially blocked the circuit and necessitated the safety car's deployment.[25][27]

Under the safety car, Jensen, Kanamaru, Sekiguichi and Chang chose to make pit stops for car repairs. The safety car was withdrawn after one lap and racing resumed on lap three. Giovinazzi

grip,[28] and Rosenqvist reduced his lead to eight-tenths of a second by the start of the final lap.[27] Rosenqvist then slipstreamed up behind Giovinazzi into Lisboa corner.[25]

Rosenqvist moved out of the slipstream but made an error at the Melco hairpin after over-adjusting his brake bias to compensate for brake locking.[26] Leclerc closed to within half a second of Rosenqvist although he could not draw close enough to challenge him. Giovinazzi opened up a 1.9-second lead and maintained it to finish first on the road. Soon after Giovinazzi incurred a drive-through penalty for his role in the Juncadella clash on the first lap. This subsequently increased to a 20-second time penalty and Giovnazzi was demoted to tenth. After the race, his team discussed the penalty with the stewards who decided no change was needed.[25] Thus, Rosenqvist took the qualifying race victory and pole position for the Grand Prix itself. He was joined on the grid's front row by Leclerc, while Sims completed the podium. Behind him, MacLeod finished fourth, ahead of a close up consisting of Pommer, Sette Câmara, Ferrucci, Lorandi and Maini. Outside the top ten, Dennis took 11th ahead of Boccolacci. Stroll, Cao, Yamashita, Sekiguchi, Cassidy, Chang, Menezes, Kanamaru, Solomon and Jensen rounded out the top 22 classified finishers.[24]

Qualifying race classification

Final qualification race classification
Pos No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid
1 1 Sweden Felix Rosenqvist
Prema Powerteam
10 24:52.619 1
2 15 Monaco Charles Leclerc Van Amersfoort Racing 10 +0.503 3
3 30 United Kingdom Alexander Sims Double R Racing 10 +2.701 13
4 29 United Kingdom Sam MacLeod Team West-Tec F3 10 +8.399 6
5 19 Germany Markus Pommer Motopark 10 +9.412 5
6 20 Brazil Sérgio Sette Câmara Motopark 10 +13.993 7
7 24 United States Santino Ferrucci Mücke Motorsport 10 +15.538 11
8 16 Italy Alessio Lorandi Van Amersfoort Racing 10 +16.627 9
9 27 India Arjun Maini ThreeBond with T-Sport 10 +17.360 8
10 7 Italy Antonio Giovinazzi
Carlin
10 +17.871 42
11 2 United Kingdom Jake Dennis
Prema Powerteam
10 +18.131 14
12 18 France Dorian Boccolacci
Signature
10 +20.682 26
13 3 Canada Lance Stroll
Prema Powerteam
10 +21.872 13
14 23
Martin Cao
Fortec Motorsport 10 +25.606 14
15 5 Japan Kenta Yamashita TOM'S 10 +26.323 23
16 12 Japan Yuhi Sekiguchi
B-Max Engineering
10 +29.468 16
17 6 New Zealand Nick Cassidy TOM'S 10 +29.931 24
18 22 Macau Wing Chung Chang Fortec Motorsport 10 +36.386 25
19 8 United States Gustavo Menezes
Carlin
10 +41.342 27
20 9 Japan Yu Kanamaru
Carlin
10 +1:31.509 19
21 31 Hong Kong Matt Solomon Double R Racing 10 +1:41.666 27
22 25 Denmark Mikkel Jensen Mücke Motorsport 10 +2:00.925 12
Ret 11 Japan Mitsunori Takaboshi
B-Max Engineering
6 Retired 20
Ret 32 China Zhi Cong Li Jo Zeller Racing 3 Retired 28
Ret 21 Spain Daniel Juncadella Fortec Motorsport 0 Retired 2
Ret 17
Alexander Albon
Signature
0 Retired 15
Ret 28 United States Ryan Tveter Team West-Tec F3 0 Retired 17
Ret 10 United Kingdom Callum Ilott
Carlin
0 Retired 18
Fastest lap: Felix Rosenqvist, 2:10.330, 169.05 km/h (105.04 mph) on lap 9[24]
Source:[24]

Note

Main race

The race started at 15:30 local time on 22 November.[12] The weather at the beginning was dry and sunny with an air temperature of 28 °C (82 °F) and a track temperature at 32 °C (90 °F).[29] Juncadella failed to start the event after his crash during the qualification race damaged the tub of his car.[30] When the race began from its standing start, Rosenqvist led the field into Lisboa corner and Leclerc challenged him.[31] Leclerc steered onto the outside and overtook Rosenqvist braking at Lisboa corner for the lead.[30][32] A slow exit from Leclerc leaving the final turn as he was completing the first lap allowed Rosenqvist to run in his slipstream and turned onto the inside to reclaim first place.[32][33] Leclerc then moved into Rosenqvist's slipstream and executed an identical move from the first lap to overtake him around the outside for the lead.[33] Soon after a large crash involving Menezes and Tveter and Takaboshi at Fisherman's Bend stopped the race since debris was littered across the track.[32] All three were unhurt.[34]

Felix Rosenqvist (pictured in 2016) became the first driver since Edoardo Mortara to win two consecutive editions of the Macau Grand Prix.

All cars were ordered to park in the pit lane while marshals cleared the track of debris.[31] 20 minutes later, the race was restarted behind the safety car.[34] Racing resumed on lap four,[34] with Leclerc leading the field back up to speed.[33] He could not hold off Rosenqvist who retook the lead through the Mandarin Bend while MacLeod used this to pass Leclerc braking for Lisboa turn for third.[32] On the following lap, Sims attempted to line up a pass on Leclerc but could not successfully take third place from him.[34] As Rosenqvist opened up a two-second lead,[30] Leclerc overtook MacLeod on the outside for second at Lisboa corner on lap seven. MacLeod fell out of the top three as he slid his car at Moorish corner and made contact with the wall. MacLeod was forced to limp back to the pit lane to replace a punctured right-rear tyre.[32][34] At that point in the race, Rosenqvist led Leclerc, Sims, Giovinazzi, Pommer, Ferrucci, Stroll and Lorandi.[34] Soon after, Ilott became the race's final retiree after crashing at Police corner and stopped on the escape road.[30][32]

The record for the fastest ever lap around the Guia Circuit was surpassed several times with Sette Câmara lowering it to a time of 2 minutes, 10.186 seconds on the final lap.[34] Leclerc reduced Rosenqvist's lead over the rest of the field from about two to 1.1 seconds but he could not get close enough to mount a serious challenge for the win.[32] Thus, Rosenqvist held the lead to claim his second Macau Grand Prix victory, becoming the first driver to win it consecutively since Edoardo Mortara won the 2009 and 2010 races.[35] Lelcerc finished second once again, 1.168 seconds behind, while Sims completed the podium in a repeat of Saturday's top three placings.[33] Off the podium, Giovinazzi gained six places from tenth to finish fourth but could not overtake Sims.[31] Pommer secured fifth with Ferrucci a further five seconds adrift in sixth and Lorandi took seventh. The top ten was rounded out by Prema teammates Stroll and Dennis along with Maini.[32] Outside the top ten, Boccolacci finished 11th and Cassidy closely followed him. Albon, Chang, Yamashita, Sekiguchi, Cao, Solomon, Jensen, MacLeod, Zhi and Sette Câmara were the final classified finishers.[29]

Main race classification

Final main race classification
Pos No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid
1 1 Sweden Felix Rosenqvist
Prema Powerteam
15 36:25.280 1
2 15 Monaco Charles Leclerc Van Amersfoort Racing 15 +1.168 2
3 30 United Kingdom Alexander Sims Double R Racing 15 +5.075 3
4 7 Italy Antonio Giovinazzi
Carlin
15 +5.948 10
5 19 Germany Markus Pommer Motopark 15 +11.703 5
6 24 United States Santino Ferrucci Mücke Motorsport 15 +16.863 7
7 16 Italy Alessio Lorandi Van Amersfoort Racing 15 +18.775 8
8 3 Canada Lance Stroll
Prema Powerteam
15 +22.546 13
9 2 United Kingdom Jake Dennis
Prema Powerteam
15 +24.355 11
10 27 India Arjun Maini ThreeBond with T-Sport 15 +24.863 9
11 18 France Dorian Boccolacci
Signature
15 +28.259 12
12 6 New Zealand Nick Cassidy TOM'S 15 +28.871 17
13 17
Alexander Albon
Signature
15 +30.255 26
14 22 Macau Wing Chung Chang Fortec Motorsport 15 +32.791 18
15 5 Japan Kenta Yamashita TOM'S 15 +33.546 15
16 12 Japan Yuhi Sekiguchi
B-Max Engineering
15 +34.154 16
17 23
Martin Cao
Fortec Motorsport 15 +47.075 14
18 31 Hong Kong Matt Solomon Double R Racing 15 +47.369 21
19 25 Denmark Mikkel Jensen Mücke Motorsport 15 +49.240 22
20 29 United Kingdom Sam MacLeod Team West-Tec F3 15 +57.064 4
21 32 China Zhi Cong Li Jo Zeller Racing 15 +1:16.973 28
22 20 Brazil Sérgio Sette Câmara Motopark 15 +2:00.679 6
Ret 10 United Kingdom Callum Ilott
Carlin
9 Retired 28
Ret 9 Japan Yu Kanamaru
Carlin
8 Retired 20
Ret 8 United States Gustavo Menezes
Carlin
0 Retired 19
Ret 11 Japan Mitsunori Takaboshi
B-Max Engineering
0 Retired 23
Ret 28 United States Ryan Tveter Team West-Tec F3 0 Retired 27
DNS 21 Spain Daniel Juncadella Fortec Motorsport Did Not Start 3
Fastest lap: Brazil Sérgio Sette Câmara, 2:10.186, 169.23 km/h (105.15 mph) on lap 15[29]
Source:[29]

Note

See also

References

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External links