Theo Pourchaire

Pourchaire wins F2 feature race as rivals slip up on track and in pits

Formula 2

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Theo Pourchaire won a hectic Formula 2 feature race in Bahrain which saw numerous retirements, botched pit stops and safety cars, and ultimately ended a lap short of distance.

Jack Doohan took polep position during Friday’s qualifying session, with Theo Pourchaire lining up alongside him. Juri Vips and Logan Sargeant sat on the row behind as Ralph Boschung and Liam Lawson on the third row. Before the light went out, Dennis Hauger was unable to get away for the formation lap and his car was pushed to the pit lane.

When the race began, Vips claimed the lead off the line, Boschung following him up the straight, nearly claiming the lead through turn one. Doohan and Pourchaire had suffered extreme wheelspin, Doohan dropping down to third and Pourchaire relegated to fourth.

Frederik Vesti stopped on track at turn one at the start of lap two, prompting the first appearance of the safety car. The race restarted on lap five and Boschung, unlike at the race start, seemed to be caught napping. Doohan passed him into turn one, then Pourchaire followed into turn four, moving them both up to second and third, respectively.

Olli Caldwell was issued a 10-second stop-and-go penalty for being out of position at the restart. Ayumu Iwasa, who had once again started from last after crashing out on his first lap of Friday qualifying, had moved from 22nd to 11th seven laps in and was able to pass Caldwell for tenth into the popular overtaking spot of turn four.

Bizarrely, the first pit stops came from drivers who had started on hard tyres while those on the soft compound, were able to continue. Vips, Marcus Armstrong and Doohan were still running their starting tyres on lap 11, after Armstrong had claimed third from Pourchaire through turn one.

Iwasa passed Boschung, who had pitted, through the first turns of lap 12 to take seventh, showing the ongoing advantage to drivers who had started on softs.

Juri Vips pitted on lap 14 to disastrous effect, with the car needing to be raised twice in order to successfully switch his tyres. He re-emerged from the pit lane in 13th, having led the whole race. Doohan then pitted from the lead the following lap, coming back out to battle Pourchaire and the two collided in the fight for fourth, Doohan’s front wing ending up drastically bent by the contact.

Iwasa, the only car yet to pit at this point on lap 15, held the lead from Armstrong and Verschoor. Clement Novalak stopped on track on the same lap, but the race was able to continue uninterrupted.

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Finally, Iwasa pitted on lap 18 with a somewhat slowed stop on the rear left, emerging in ninth, behind Roy Nissany. Pourchaire took the overall lead, with a 1.4 second gap over Felipe Drugovich in second.

Vips, on a furious recovery drive from his disastrous pit stop, overtook Boschung into turn one on lap 21, claiming fourth.

Caldwell, already penalised for being out of position on the restart during his first pit stop, was told to box on lap 22 in order to serve another five-second penalty for exceeding track limits at turn four.

On lap 28 the safety car was called on again following contact between Enzo Fittipaldi and race one winner Richard Verschoor. Hauger pitted for more tyres, but disaster struck when one of the set he was supposed to be switching to came off when he was released, sending it flying down the pit lane. Then the same problem happened a few garages down with Calan Williams. Both drivers’ races were ended and the pit lane was briefly closed to avoid yet more incidents.

The safety car was called in on lap 30, with Pourchaire leading the restart on the penultimate lap. Pourchaire got away with the lead, before race control announced that the restart lap would be the final lap of the race due to exceeding Formula 2’s maximum race time limit.

Pourchaire therefore took the chequered flag, his third Formula 2 win, with Lawson and Vips following him across the line.

Lawson takes the championship lead, with Carlin narrowly leading the teams’ title.

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Formula 2 Bahrain race two results

PositionCarDriver
110Theo Pourchaire
25Liam Lawson
38Juri Vips
415Ralph Boschung
57Marcus Armstrong
611Felipe Drugovich
76Logan Sargeant
816Roy Nissany
924Jake Hughes
103Jack Doohan
1122Enzo Fittipaldi
124Marino Sato
1325Amaury Cordeel
142Jehan Daruvala
1523Cem Bolukbasi
1617Ayumu Iwasa
1714Olli Caldwell
1821Calan Williams
191Dennis Hauger
DNF20Richard Verschoor
DNF12Clement Novalak
DNF9Frederik Vesti

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Author information

Hazel Southwell
Hazel is a motorsport and automotive journalist with a particular interest in hybrid systems, electrification, batteries and new fuel technologies....

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9 comments on “Pourchaire wins F2 feature race as rivals slip up on track and in pits”

  1. Think they all need a bit more pit stop practice

  2. Poor Iwasa slowing down at the restart right at the end, that was a really impressive drive.

    I forgot how nerve-wracking watching F2 is, it was like a Moto3 race at some points. Didn’t like Doohan’s and Nissany’s driving style, cutting across the track and attempting ridiculously late braking.

    1. Indeed, Nissany’s antics were ridiculous and dangerous at times.

  3. Pourchaire doesn’t look like championship winning contender. He was nowhere in the race until he was lucky enough to get the first place.

    1. RandomMallard
      20th March 2022, 12:48

      He was on the alternate strategy I believe which may explain some of his slower pace earlier on in the race (on the hards while everyone else was on the softs).

      1. Many of the drivers ahead were on Hards at the beginning. Pourchaire kept them longer though. He also never went for crazy quick laps when he was leading, which makes sense because that enabled him to keep his tyres fresher.

        I don’t understand the above comment though, which appears non-factual. Pourchaire wasn’t as quick as Vips, but Vips was ahead of everyone else. Had Doohan been cleaner, he may finished ahead of Pourchaire.

  4. So when his car isn’t breaking, his front jack is. Vips has no luck at all.

    Hope Marko was watching the whole race, because pace-wise he was on another planet. He was matching Iwasa’s times later in the race despite having old hards, while Iwasa had fresh softs.

    1. @wsrgo Iwasa started on softs and still went longer than everyone else, he had the hard tire for the second half.

      1. @hunocsi Ah my bad. Still, Vips was on far older tyres than Iwasa and able to match him.

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