Stanaway storms to maiden GP2 win

It’s a happy day for Richie Stanaway: the rookie has claimed his and his team’s maiden GP2 win controlling the race from start to finish with a display of maturity and calm driving. Behind him, Raffaele Marciello and rookie Sergey Sirotkin completed the podium.

The victory was set at the start when Stanaway had the perfect getaway whilst poleman Marciello was sluggish away from the line. The Kiwi made quick work to build a two second gap which was enough to keep the Italian at bay. Behind the pair, Sirotkin made a great start to move past Julian Leal and take third.

As the pack went down turn 6, Rio Haryanto was squeezed in between Rene Binder and a charging Norman Nato. The contact was unavoidable and sent the Indonesian into the barrier. There was more drama at turn 7 with a collision between Zoel Amberg and Johnny Cecotto, with both men retiring. After a brief Virtual Safety Car period, Stanaway focused on building a four second gap to Marciello, whilst the Italian was busy keeping his deficit to Sirotkin.

Behind them, Leal was under pressure from Sergio Canamasas who was clearly hungry for more than fifth place: just as he did yesterday to Arthur Pic, the Spaniard found his way past Leal at turn 1. After his bold move, he was unable however to close in on Sirotkin and had to settle for fourth.

There was a second Virtual Safety Car period in the closing stages when Jordan King tried to overtake Pierre Gasly at the exit of the tunnel, but went airborne after tagging the Frenchman’s car. But this did not mess with Stanaway’s concentration and the GP3 graduate punched the air in delight after taking the checkered flag two seconds ahead of Marciello. Sirotkin finished third and enjoyed his first rostrum in the Series. Canamasas, Leal, Pic, Alexander Rossi and Stoffel Vandoorne took the remaining points.

Thanks to his eighth place and the bonus points for fastest lap, Vandoorne has extended his lead in the drivers’ standings over Rossi, 114 points to 70. Haryanto remains on 49 points ahead of Evans on 28 – the Kiwi was unable to take part in the race following electrical issues. Alex Lynn is fifth on 25 points ahead of Marciello on 24 points.

Monte Carlo – Sprint Race

Pos Driver Team Laps Behind
1 Richie Stanaway Status Grand Prix 30 0.000s
2 Raffaele Marciello Trident 30 2.038s
3 Sergey Sirotkin Rapax 30 3.207s
4 Sergio Canamasas MP Motorsport 30 5.698s
5 Julian Leal Carlin 30 13.479s
6 Arthur Pic Campos Racing 30 20.637s
7 Alexander Rossi Racing Engineering 30 22.119s
8 Stoffel Vandoorne ART Grand Prix 30 23.103s
9 Nick Yelloly Hilmer Motorsport 30 33.361s
10 Pierre Gasly DAMS 30 45.367s
11 Alex Lynn DAMS 30 46.007s
12 Daniel de Jong MP Motorsport 30 47.018s
13 Robert Visoiu Rapax 30 47.331s
14 Artem Markelov RUSSIAN TIME 30 47.697s
15 Nathanael Berthon Lazarus 30 50.015s
16 Rene Binder Trident 30 58.315s
17 Andre Negrao Arden International 30 58.464s
18 Marlon Stockinger Status Grand Prix 30 59.823s
19 Nobuharu Matsushita ART Grand Prix 30 1m00.570s
20 Marco Sorensen Carlin 30 1m08.579s
21 Norman Nato Arden International 30 1m10.989s
DNF Jordan King Racing Engineering 24 Retirement
DNF Mitchell Evans RUSSIAN TIME 0 Not started
DNF Rio Haryanto Campos Racing 0 Retirement
DNF Johnny Cecotto Jr. Hilmer Motorsport 0 Retirement
DNF Zoel Amberg Lazarus 0 Retirement

Fastest Lap: Norman Nato (Arden International) – 1:21.886 on lap 17

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