2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round Contents Report Classification Standings after the race References External...

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2013 GP2 Series rounds2013 in Bahraini sportAuto races in Bahrain


Bahrain International CircuitSakhirBahrainGP2 Series2013 GP2 Seriessupport2013 Bahrain Grand PrixRacing EngineeringFabio Leimerpole positionStefano ColettiRapaxCaterham RacingAlexander RossiSam BirdRussian TimeCarlinFelipe NasrAdrian Quaife-Hobbspit stopTom DillmannISport InternationalJames CaladoBahrain International CircuitSakhirrun in support2013 Bahrain Grand PrixPirelliRapaxStefano ColettiFabio LeimerFelipe NasrJames CaladoStéphane RichelmiRacing EngineeringCarlinART Grand PrixArden InternationalSepangMitch EvansCaterham RacingMa QinghuaFormula Renaullt 3.5 SeriesAlexander RossiRobin FrijnsFormula Renault 3.5 SeriesSauberHilmer MotorsportConor DalySam BirdRussian TimeMarcus EricssonDAMSTom DillmannJohnny Cecotto Jr.Daniel AbtJulián Lealstalledpit lanepole positionSimon Trummergrid'previous year's raceAdrian Quaife-HobbsMP MotorsportSergio CanamasasKevin CecconKevin GiovesiLazarusMitch Evansrun-off areasRené BinderJake RosenzweigAddaxNathanaël BerthonTridentPål VarhaugRio HaryantoDaniël de Jongfastest lapArabia Standard Timeformation lapstraightradiatorsidepodturning vaneflat-spottedwheelspinslipstreamISport InternationalBarcelona









































































































Bahrain    2013 Bahrain GP2 round
Round details

Round 2 of 11 rounds in the
2013 GP2 Series


Layout of the Bahrain International Circuit
Layout of the Bahrain International Circuit
Location
Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain
Course
Permanent racing facility
5.406 km (3.359 mi)
GP2 Series
Feature race
Date
20 April 2013
Laps
32
Pole position
Driver
Switzerland Fabio Leimer

Racing Engineering
Time
1:39.427
Podium
First
Switzerland Fabio Leimer

Racing Engineering
Second
Monaco Stefano Coletti

Rapax
Third
United States Alexander Rossi

Caterham Racing
Fastest lap
Driver
Venezuela Johnny Cecotto Jr.

Arden International
Time
1:45.115 (on lap 28)
Sprint race
Date
21 April 2013
Laps
23
Podium
First
United Kingdom Sam Bird

Russian Time
Second
Brazil Felipe Nasr

Carlin
Third
Monaco Stefano Coletti

Rapax
Fastest lap
Driver
United Kingdom Sam Bird

Russian Time
Time
1:45.465 (on lap 4)

The 2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round was a pair of motor races held on 20 and 21 April 2013 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Bahrain as part of the GP2 Series. It was the second round of the 2013 GP2 Series and was run in support of the 2013 Bahrain Grand Prix. The first race, a 32-lap feature event, was won by Racing Engineering driver Fabio Leimer after starting from pole position. Stefano Coletti finished second for Rapax and Caterham Racing driver Alexander Rossi came in third. Sam Bird won the 30-lap sprint race for Russian Time held the following day, with Carlin's Felipe Nasr in second and Coletti third.


Leimer fended off pressure from the fast-starting Coletti to maintain his pole position advantage in the opening sequence of corners of the feature race. He pulled out an healthy advantage in the following laps but ceded the lead to Adrian Quaife-Hobbs for ten laps after a mandatory pit stop for tyres. Leimer retook first place after Quaife-Hobbs made his pit stop and held the position to win the race. Tom Dillmann started from pole position in the sprint race but lost the lead to teammate Bird before the end of the first lap. Coletti and Nasr gained on Bird in the final two laps as his tyres were worn out. Coletti bowed out after running wide and lost second to Nasr before the start of the final lap. Bird successfully fended off Nasr to win the race by 0.080 seconds, the closest margin of victory in GP2 Series history.


Leimer's feature race win was his second of the season and Bird's sprint event victory was the first for Russian Time after it took over from ISport International. The results of the round meant Coletti's lead in the Drivers' Championship had been lowered to a solitary point by Leimer. Nasr maintained third position and Bird's victory enabled him to move five places to be in fourth. James Calado performed poorly and fell to fifth. Rapax still led the Teams' Championship but their advantage was cut to two points behind Carlin. Racing Engineering dropped to third and Russian Time moved into fourth with nine rounds left in the season.




Contents






  • 1 Report


    • 1.1 Background


    • 1.2 Practice and qualifying


    • 1.3 Races


      • 1.3.1 Feature race


      • 1.3.2 Sprint race




    • 1.4 Post-race




  • 2 Classification


    • 2.1 Qualifying


    • 2.2 Feature race


    • 2.3 Sprint race




  • 3 Standings after the race


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links





Report



Background





Bahrain International Circuit, where the race was held.


The 2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round was the second of eleven scheduled events in 2013. It was held on 20 and 21 April 2013 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, and was run in support of the 2013 Bahrain Grand Prix.[1] Tyre supplier Pirelli brought two types of tyre to the race: two dry compounds (soft "options" and hard "primes"). The soft tyres were identified by a yellow stripe on their side-walls, and the hard tyres were similarly identified in orange.[2]


Before the race Rapax driver Stefano Coletti led the Drivers' Championship with 36 points, eleven ahead of nearest rival Fabio Leimer in second, who in turn, was a further point in front of Felipe Nasr in third. James Calado was fourth on 18 points and Stéphane Richelmi was six points behind the former in fifth place.[3] Rapax were leading the Teams' Championship on 42 points; Racing Engineering had a small deficit to be seven points in arrears in second and Carlin were in third with 32 points. ART Grand Prix were in fourth position with 18 points and Arden International stood one point behind in fifth.[3] Leimer and Coletti had won the previous two races of the season in the opening round in Sepang three weeks prior. Calado and Nasr each took one second-place finish and Mitch Evans had finished in third once.[3]


There were two driver changes heading into the round. Having been in one of the Caterham Racing cars in the season's preceding round in Sepang, Ma Qinghua was replaced by the former Formula Renaullt 3.5 Series driver Alexander Rossi for the remainder of the year.[4]Robin Frijns, the reigning Formula Renault 3.5 Series champion and the test and reserve driver for Sauber, was employed by Hilmer Motorsport to fill the seat vacated by Conor Daly who left the team after Sepang as he had a one-round contract with them.[5]



Practice and qualifying


One practice session lasting half an hour was held on Thursday before the two races.[6] Leimer for Racing Engineering set a benchmark which was the fastest time in the sole practice session—held in variable weather conditions and warm track temperatures—with a lap of 1 minute and 41.361 seconds on the hard compound tyres, a second faster than any one else.[7][8] His closest challenger was Sam Bird for Russian Time in second in front of third-placed Coletti and Rossi in fourth position. Marcus Ericsson of DAMS was fifth-fastest, ahead of Nasr. Calado was seventh-fastest, Russian Time's Tom Dillmann eighth, Johnny Cecotto Jr. of Arden International ninth and Daniel Abt for ART Grand Prix completed the top ten ahead of qualifying.[7] Frijns spun early on but recovered without needing external assistance.[7] Smoke bellowed out of Cecotto's car while driving at high-speed and later locked his tyres at the first corner before overshooting into the sand.[7][8]Julián Leal stalled at the exit of the pit lane and this led to a stewards investigation over whether his team's mechanics restarted the car outside of the limits of the pit lane.[8] Leal then narrowly avoided running into the rear of Rossi's car.[7]





Marcus Ericsson (pictured in 2014) was one of qualifying pace setters but eventually started from second on the grid.


Friday afternoon's qualifying session ran for half an hour. The drivers' fastest lap times determined the starting order for the first race. The driver who won the pole position was awarded four points that went towards the Drivers' and Teams' Championship.[6] Qualifying began under cloudy weather conditions and thus most of the field drove onto the track when it started. Rain fell five minutes in but it was not heavy enough to affect the track.[9]Simon Trummer was the early pace setter but was soon eclipsed by his teammate Coletti, who in turn, was suppressed by Ericsson.[10] Leimer then moved to the top of the time sheets with a new GP2 Series lap record of the Bahrain International Circuit and later lowered it to a 1 minute and 39.427 seconds lap which secured him the pole position. Ericsson appeared to challenge Leimer for pole but eased off after losing time in the final sector to join him on the grid's front row with a time nearly a second slower.[10][11] Nasr equalled his qualifying result from the previous year's race to start third.[12] Coletti improved his own fastest lap to place fourth.[10] Dillmann was best of the late improvers and qualified fifth. Richelmi was close in arrears in sixth.[11] Rossi was in the top three early in the session but fell to seventh by its conclusion.[10]Adrian Quaife-Hobbs (MP Motorsport) locked his tyres on his lap and took eighth. Bird improved late in the session to secure ninth and Frijns rounded out the top ten qualifiers.[10]


Calado was the fastest driver not to qualify in the top ten as his best time was 1.451 seconds slower than Leimer's pace. However he was demoted ten places on the grid for causing an accident in the previous round of the season in Sepang.[11] Trummer thus moved into eleventh and Palmer started from twelfth. The next two positions on the grid were filled by Cecotto and Abt.[12]Sergio Canamasas (Caterham Racing) set the sixteenth-fastest time but was sent to the back of the grid after being adjudged by the race stewards to have deliberately forced Kevin Ceccon (Trident) off the track while attempting to pass him after qualifying ended.[13]Kevin Giovesi (Lazarus) was also penalised after the stewards ruled that he impeded Cecotto between the ninth and tenth turns and dropped three places on the grid.[13]Mitch Evans (Arden International) was the only driver to be affected by problems as his car was affected by electrical problems and consequently pulled off into one of the track's run-off areas.[10][14] This meant Evans was restricted to starting from sixteenth. The rest of the field lined up as Ceccon, Leal, René Binder (Lazarus), Jake Rosenzweig (Addax), Nathanaël Berthon (Trident), Pål Varhaug (Hilmer Motorsport), Rio Haryanto (Addax) and Daniël de Jong (MP Motorsport).[11]



Races


The first race was held over a distance of either 170 kilometres (110 mi) or 60 minutes (which ever came first) and all drivers were required to make one pit stop. The first ten finishers scored points, with two being awarded to the competitor who recorded the fastest lap. The starting order for the second race was determined by the finishing positions of the first race but with the first eight drivers in reverse order of where they finished. It was run over a distance of either 120 kilometres (75 mi) or 45 minutes (which ever came first) and in contrast to the first race drivers were not required to make pit stops. The top eight finishers in the sprint race scored points towards their respective championships.[6]



Feature race


The first race commenced on 15:45 Arabia Standard Time (UTC+03:00) on 20 April.[15] Weather conditions at the start were dry and sunny with an air temperature of 33 °C (91 °F) and a track temperature of 41 °C (106 °F).[16] Ericsson stalled on the grid while the field began the formation lap and had to begin from the pit lane.[17] As the five red lights went out to signal the beginning of the event, Leimer fended off pressure from the fast-starting Coletti to maintain his pole position advantage in the opening sequence of corners.[18] Coletti had forced Leimer to defend the lead at the fourth turn and drew alongside him through turns five and six but could not overtake.[19] Bird made a quick start and was able to move past Rossi and Quaife-Hobbs in the centre of the circuit for third position. Palmer also made a fast getaway and ran in fifth place after he passed Rossi heading down the main straight. De Jong became the first retirement after the first lap was over when he limped back to the pit lane. He was joined by Varhaug on lap five who had mechanical trouble.[18]


Once the race had calmed down, Leimer was able to pull out an healthy gap of two seconds over Coletti by the start of lap five and set what was at that point the fastest lap of the race.[16][18] Both men were also focused on ensuring their soft tyres lasted for as long as possible.[20] The mandatory pit stops for the switch to the hard compound tyres began on the following lap when several drivers entered the pit lane.[18] Quaife-Hobbs and Dillmann elected to run on an alternative strategy with the latter falling from his starting position of fifth. During the pit stop sequence, Rossi moved back past Palmer and Frijns battled Leal for tenth place and later Giovesi before his own stop. Canamasas was penalised for the second day running as he handed a drive-through penalty after being deemed by the stewards of deliberately forcing Calado off the circuit.[18] Bird and Nasr had slow pit stops and both drivers fell down the order.[21] Leimer and Coletti made their stops from the top two at the end of the tenth lap and emerged ahead of the competitors who had already made their pit stops.[18]





Fabio Leimer (pictured in 2015) held off Stefano Coletti in the first lap and maintained the lead to clinch his second victory of the season.


Leimer's advantage over Coletti had dwindled to 1.3 seconds but he regained some of that lead by overtaking the battling Evans and Giovesi at turn four. Coletti was then delayed by the same traffic jam and was three seconds adrift of Leimer.[19] The yet-to-stop Quaife-Hobbs led and was followed by Dillmann, Leal and Giovesi. Dilmann made his pit stop on the 18th lap and Leal followed on the next lap;[18] Leal stalled as he drove away from his pit box and required assistance from his team's mechanics to restart his car. He later received a penalty for pit lane over-speeding.[16] On the 20th lap and having led the last ten laps, Quaife-Hobbs was the last driver to enter the pit lane and Leimer regained first.[19][18] Quaife-Hobbs fell behind Dillmann but he got back ahead him after getting his tyres up to temperature.[18] Frijns moved to the inside of Richelmi on lap 21 heading towards turn one but went into the side of Richelmi's car and damaged his front wing.[17] Frijns drove slowly to the pit lane for repairs but Richelmi had to abandon his damaged car on the circuit.[18] Evans became the event's final retirement on the 25th lap when he stopped at one of the circuit's run-off areas with smoke bellowing from his car due to debris penetrating its radiator and overheating the engine.[14][18]


Attention then focused on a battle for seventh between Quaife-Hobbs, Dillmann and Trummer. This battle had Trummer come out worse and was passed by the other cars in quick succession on lap 28.[18] Nasr passed teammate Palmer to take over fifth on lap 30.[19] Leimer held onto the lead for the remainder of the race to secure his second GP2 Series victory of the season and the fourth of his career.[21] Coletti followed 1.9 seconds in arrears in second and Rossi completed the podium positions. Off the podium, Nasr finished closely behind Rossi in fourth place with his teammate Palmer in fifth. Bird's pace reduced in the closing laps but held on to take sixth and fellow countryman Quaife-Hobbs clinched seventh.[19] Dillmann came in eighth and secured the pole position for the sprint race. Trummer and Cecotto completed the top ten points-scoring finishers. Outside the top ten, Ceccon finished eleventh having moved up six from his starting position and Calado came twelfth. Ericsson recovered from his formation lap stall to take thirteenth. Abt, Haryanto, Rosenzweig, Berthon, Binder, Leal, Canamasas and Frijns rounded out the 21 classified finishers.[21]



Sprint race


The second race began at 10:50 local time on 21 April.[15] Weather conditions at the start were dry and sunny with an air temperature of 30 °C (86 °F) and a track temperature at 42 °C (108 °F).[22] On the grid, pole position starter Dillmann made a clean getaway to hold off Quaife-Hobbs and keep the lead heading towards the first corner. Quaife-Hobbs attempted to steer onto the inside line but ran wide which contributed to some contact within the field.[23] Coletti made a fast start and moved from seventh to third by driving on the outside line at turn one. Bird initially got away from his starting position slowly but Quaife-Hobbs's blocking of Coletti allowed him into second place on the inside.[24][25] Rossi was clipped by Nasr going into the first corner and the latter broke Rossi's front wing.[25][26] Leimer was on the inside line driving into turn one and Rossi's nose cone made contact with the sidepod and the turning vane of Leimer's car. This affected Leimer for the rest of the event as debris was lodged in his car's sidepod.[22][26] Haryanto and Ericsson both sustained damage after they hit each other and went to the pit lane before resuming.[23]





Sam Bird (pictured in 2012) took the lead on the second lap and held off Felipe Nasr to take Russian Time's first GP2 Series victory.


Bird drew close to teammate Dillmann and overtook him for the lead exiting the final corner. Dillmann fought back against Bird driving towards the first turn and the two went alongside each other.[23][26] The two made minor contact in turns one and two which enabled Coletti to get a run on Dillmann and passed him to move into second. On the next lap, Nasr went down the inside of Dillmann going into the first corner and the latter lost third to Nasr. Calado was overtaken by Palmer for seventh place on the fourth lap and then held off an attack from teammate Abt.[25] The field settled down as drivers looked to conserve their tyres,[25] and the top three pulled away from Dillmann. On the sixth lap, Bird came upon a large chunk of debris driving towards the first corner and locked his tyres in an attempt to avoid running over it. He appeared to escape unhindered and the debris was then removed by a trackside marshal.[23] Further down the field, a battle for fifth place involved Quaife-Hobbs, Leimer and Palmer. By lap seven, one second covered the trio and Leimer looked for a way past Quaife-Hobbs but was cautious not to allow Palmer to take advantage of the situation.[22] Further back, Berthon lost two positions after being overtaken by Evans and Leal.[23]


The damage to Ericsson's car became too problematic for him and became the race's sole retirement at its midway point while Binder visited the pit lane twice, putting him a lap behind the leader. Tyres began to show signs of degradation during this period and more action was observed: Ceccon moved past Rosenzweig for eleventh and caught Cecotto. Canamasas battled with Trummer over who would be the first driver to pass the ailing Berthon who elected to make a pit stop for new tyres. Frijns appeared to falter and fell behind Richelmi, Evans and Leal in quick succession to be demoted to 16th. Quaife-Hobbs was inexperienced in tyre management in the GP2 Series and him delaying Leimer meant the latter came under pressure.[23] On the 19th lap,[23] Palmer overtook Leimer around the inside at turn one to move into sixth after the latter ran wide in an attempt to defend the position. Calado followed through for seventh at the fourth corner.[24][25] Quaife-Hobbs's tyres were heavily worn and was eventually demoted to eighth position when Calado, Palmer and Abt overtook him.[25]


As the race entered its final two laps,[26] Coletti and Nasr gained on Bird whose tyres were worn out.[24][27] The pressure on Bird was temporarily relieved when Coletti locked his tyres heading towards the tenth corner and then braked deep for the final turn. He overshot the corner and allowed Nasr through to second.[23][27] Coletti appeared to have flat-spotted his tyres as a consequence and could not remain on the track and his chances for the victory were over.[23] Nasr appeared to manage his tyre life better than other drivers and quickly drew close to Bird on the final lap and pulled alongside him under braking for the final turn. Bird went defensive and controlled the wheelspin in his tyres.[23][26][27] Nasr got out of Bird's slipstream but could not overhaul Bird who held on to win the race.[28][27] The margin of victory was eight-hundredths of a second, the closest in GP2 Series history.[28] Coletti took third with a comfortable margin over Dillmann in fourth. Calado was fifth, Palmer sixth, Abt seventh and Quaife-Hobbs rounded out the points-scorers in eighth. Leimer, Ceccon, Canamasas, Cecotto, Richelmi, Trummer, Evans, Leal, Giovesi, De Jong, Rosenzweig, Rossi, Varhaug, Berthon, Frijns, Haryanto and Binder were the last of the classified finishers.[27] Bird's victory was the first for Russian Time after it took over ISport International.[23]



Post-race


The top three drivers of both races appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and to participate later in a press conference. Leimer revealed that his objective for the feature race was to execute a fast getaway off the line, but in spite of struggling which almost lost him a position to Coletti, he declared himself "very happy" as he had waited for some time to win another race in the GP2 Series. When asked if he was not worried about heavy overtaking and tyre management, he replied yes, "but I was much quicker than them so I was not using my tyres that much. It’s not the perfect situation for the tyres, but I still managed to save them."[29] Coletti spoke of his happiness over the job performed by his team but felt he could have pushed harder earlier in the race due to the fear of wearing his tyres out and thus elected to not take the risk. He stated that he did not inform his team that he observed Leimer entering the pit lane on the same lap as him and now believed he could have remained on track for one additional lap.[29] Rossi revealed his apprehension about how his tyres would behave and was uncertain on how to push it. Nevertheless, he praised the effort his team put into the event and spoke of his happiness of finishing in third place.[29]


Bird said his victory in the sprint race felt "fantastic", "Being back in GP2 is already feeling very good, being back in the feeder series to Formula One is a great place to be. To win for RUSSIAN TIME after only four races of existence is a very good feeling."[30] He believed that he may have pushed too hard at the wrong time in the race, "it was just a case of keeping it on the racing line and hoping they'd battle it out behind me. Felipe's car was like a rocket at the end. Big thanks to my new team: to win in our fourth race, with no pre-season testing, is amazing."[27] Nasr spoke about car management and maintaining the pace levels with the leaders and believed he could have won in an alternative situation, "But anyway, it’s still a good result. We came here to score big points and it’s quite good to go back to Europe knowing that we have a good car, a good team. It keeps getting better and better. I’m feeling quite confident."[30] Coletti believed his third-place finish contributed towards "a good weekend" for himself. He stated that entering the season's European leg as the points leader had given him additional motivation and spoke of his hope to compete at the front of the field in Barcelona, "We’re still a few points ahead – ten I think. But like I said, we need to score big points in Race 1 and I think that in Barcelona we’ll be in the front."[30]


The results of the round meant Coletti still led the Drivers' Championship but his advantage over Leimer was one point less than it had been before the race weekend. Nasr remained in third place on 48 points. After standing in ninth prior to the round, Bird moved into fourth position with a points total of 33 while Calado fell to fifth on 24 points.[3] Rapax remained the leaders of the Teams' Championship in spite of their lead over Carlin being cut to two points. Racing Engineering's results dropped them to third while Russian Time were now in fourth having moved up three from their previous standing. Arden International rounded out the top five with nine rounds left in the season.[3]



Classification



Qualifying
























































































































































































































































Pos.

No.
Driver
Team
Time
Gap

Grid
1
8

Switzerland Fabio Leimer

Racing Engineering
1:39.427

1
2
1

Sweden Marcus Ericsson

DAMS
1:40.420
+0.993
2
3
9

Brazil Felipe Nasr

Carlin
1:40.520
+1.093
3
4
18

Monaco Stefano Coletti

Rapax
1:40.585
+1.158
4
5
12

France Tom Dillmann

Russian Time
1:40.689
+1.262
5
6
2

Monaco Stéphane Richelmi

DAMS
1:40.704
+1.277
6
7
15

United States Alexander Rossi

Caterham Racing
1:40.756
+1.329
7
8
26

United Kingdom Adrian Quaife-Hobbs

MP Motorsport
1:40.769
+1.342
8
9
11

United Kingdom Sam Bird

Russian Time
1:40.842
+1.415
9
10
22

Netherlands Robin Frijns

Hilmer Motorsport
1:40.865
+1.438
10
11
3

United Kingdom James Calado

ART Grand Prix
1:40.878
+1.451
212
12
19

Switzerland Simon Trummer

Rapax
1:40.892
+1.465
11
13
10

United Kingdom Jolyon Palmer

Carlin
1:41.033
+1.606
12
14
5

Venezuela Johnny Cecotto Jr.

Arden International
1:41.043
+1.616
13
15
4

Germany Daniel Abt

ART Grand Prix
1:41.070
+1.646
14
16
14

Spain Sergio Canamasas

Caterham Racing
1:41.229
+1.802
262
17
25

Italy Kevin Giovesi

Lazarus
1:41.236
+1.809
193
18
6

New Zealand Mitch Evans

Arden International
1:41.237
+1.810
15
19
21

Italy Kevin Ceccon

Trident Racing
1:41.243
+1.816
16
20
7

Colombia Julián Leal

Racing Engineering
1:41.504
+2.077
17
21
24

Austria René Binder

Lazarus
1:41.553
+2.126
18
22
16

United States Jake Rosenzweig

Barwa Addax
1:41.687
+2.260
20
23
20

France Nathanaël Berthon

Trident Racing
1:41.730
+2.303
22
24
23

Norway Pål Varhaug

Hilmer Motorsport
1:41.980
+2.553
23
25
17

Indonesia Rio Haryanto

Barwa Addax
1:41.981
+2.554
24
26
27

Netherlands Daniël de Jong

MP Motorsport
1:42.284
+2.857
25
Source:[11]

Notes:




  • ^1 — James Calado was demoted ten places on the grid for causing an accident at the previous round of the season in Sepang.[11]


  • ^2 — Kevin Giovesi was given a three-place grid penalty for blocking another competitor during qualifying.[13]


  • ^3 — Sergio Canamasas was moved to the back of the grid after race stewards ruled that he had deliberately attempted to force Kevin Ceccon off the circuit.[13]



Feature race




















































































































































































































































































Pos.

No.
Driver
Team

Laps
Time/Retired

Grid
Points
1
8

Switzerland Fabio Leimer

Racing Engineering
32
57:21.528
1

25 (4)
2
18

Monaco Stefano Coletti

Rapax
32
+1.929
4

18
3
15

United States Alexander Rossi

Caterham Racing
32
+9.030
7

15
4
9

Brazil Felipe Nasr

Carlin
32
+9.498
3

12
5
10

United Kingdom Jolyon Palmer

Carlin
32
+15.037
12

10
6
11

United Kingdom Sam Bird

Russian Time
32
+28.518
6

8
7
26

United Kingdom Adrian Quaife-Hobbs

MP Motorsport
32
+33.067
8

6
8
12

France Tom Dillmann

Russian Time
32
+33.589
5

4
9
19

Switzerland Simon Trummer

Rapax
32
+36.246
11

2
10
5

Venezuela Johnny Cecotto Jr.

Arden International
32
+37.459
13

1 (2)
11
21

Italy Kevin Ceccon

Trident Racing
32
+42.502
16

12
3

United Kingdom James Calado

ART Grand Prix
32
+48.084
21

13
1

Sweden Marcus Ericsson

DAMS
32
+48.709
2

14
4

Germany Daniel Abt

ART Grand Prix
32
+53.482
14

15
17

Indonesia Rio Haryanto

Barwa Addax
32
+59.146
24

16
16

United States Jake Rosenzweig

Barwa Addax
32
+1:05.997
20

17
20

France Nathanaël Berthon

Trident Racing
32
+1:10.696
22

18
24

Austria René Binder

Lazarus
32
+1:11.776
18

19
7

Colombia Julián Leal

Racing Engineering
32
+1:19.886
17

20
14

Spain Sergio Canamasas

Caterham Racing
32
+1:20.456
26

21
22

Netherlands Robin Frijns

Hilmer Motorsport
31
+1 lap
10

Ret
25

Italy Kevin Giovesi

Lazarus
27
Retired
19

Ret
6

New Zealand Mitch Evans

Arden International
25
Retired
15

Ret
2

Monaco Stéphane Richelmi

DAMS
20
Retired
6

Ret
23

Norway Pål Varhaug

Hilmer Motorsport
4
Retired
23

Ret
27

Netherlands Daniël de Jong

MP Motorsport
1
Retired
25


Fastest lap: Johnny Cecotto Jr. (Arden International) — 1:45.115 (on lap 28)
Source:[19]


Sprint race




















































































































































































































































































Pos.

No.
Driver
Team

Laps
Time/Retired

Grid
Points
1
11

United Kingdom Sam Bird

Russian Time
23
41:08.133
1

15 (2)
2
9

Brazil Felipe Nasr

Carlin
23
+0.080
3

12
3
18

Monaco Stefano Coletti

Rapax
23
+4.206
11

10
4
12

France Tom Dillmann

Russian Time
23
+10.328
6

8
5
3

United Kingdom James Calado

ART Grand Prix
23
+19.713
17

6
6
10

United Kingdom Jolyon Palmer

Carlin
23
+21.773
12

4
7
4

Germany Daniel Abt

ART Grand Prix
23
+24.108
20

2
8
26

United Kingdom Adrian Quaife-Hobbs

MP Motorsport
23
+27.722
8

1
9
8

Switzerland Fabio Leimer

Racing Engineering
23
+27.894
5

10
21

Italy Kevin Ceccon

Trident
23
+27.977
22

11
14

Spain Sergio Canamasas

Caterham Racing
23
+28.601
18

12
5

Venezuela Johnny Cecotto Jr.

Arden International
23
+35.477
2

13
2

Monaco Stéphane Richelmi

DAMS
23
+35.858
4

14
19

Switzerland Simon Trummer

Rapax
23
+36.346
15

15
6

New Zealand Mitch Evans

Arden International
23
+36.950
16

16
7

Colombia Julián Leal

Racing Engineering
23
+37.671
13

17
25

Italy Kevin Giovesi

Lazarus
23
+41.248
21

18
27

Netherlands Daniël de Jong

MP Motorsport
23
+44.757
9

19
16

United States Jake Rosenzweig

Barwa Addax
23
+47.006
19

20
15

United States Alexander Rossi

Caterham Racing
23
+52.044
14

21
23

Norway Pål Varhaug

Hilmer Motorsport
23
+54.740
10

22
20

France Nathanaël Berthon

Trident
23
+55.332
7

23
22

Netherlands Robin Frijns

Hilmer Motorsport
23
+1:02.964
7

24
17

Indonesia Rio Haryanto

Barwa Addax
23
+1:17.388
7

25
24

Austria René Binder

Lazarus
22
+1 Lap
7

Ret
1

Sweden Marcus Ericsson

DAMS
5
Retired
7


Fastest lap: Sam Bird (Russian Time) — 1:45.465 (on lap 4)
Source:[27]


Standings after the race










  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.


References





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External links


  • Official website














Previous round:
2013 Sepang GP2 Series round

GP2 Series
2013 season

Next round:
2013 Catalunya GP2 Series round
Previous round:
2012 Bahrain GP2 Series rounds

Bahrain GP2 round
Next round:
2014 Bahrain GP2 Series round









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