Mortara takes championship lead with victory in incident-packed Puebla race

Formula E

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Edoardo Mortara has won Formula E’s second race in Puebla, holding off Pascal Wehrlein, while Nick Cassidy claimed his first Formula E podium.

Olver Rowland had taken pole from Wehrlein, who was disqualified from victory 24 hours earlier. Mortara, who originally qualified fourth but was promoted to third after Alex Lynn was excluded from Super Pole, started on the second row next to Jean-Eric Vergne.

The left-hand side of the grid offered a clear advantage, being on the clean side of the track, and Rowland and Mortara got better starts than Vergne and Wehrlein. Rowland held the lead and Mortara took second out of turn one

A battle between Tom Blomqvist (who had qualified ninth, much further up the order than the 333 cars are ordinarily found) and Sam Bird turned to Alexander Sims’ advantage as he took two places at once, passing them both.

Rowland activated his first Attack Mode almost immediately after it became available, with 38 minutes remaining. Taking the loop of extra track put him down to fourth but he was able to pass Jake Dennis and was challenging Wehrlein by the time Mortara ahead took his own Attack Mode.

When Wehrlein took his first Attack Mode, Rowland followed him through the loop to take his second back-to-back with his first. They both emerged behind Mortara, who was able to hold the lead while they battled behind him.

Carnage broke out in the midfield midway through the race. Sergio Sette Camara hit the rear of Oliver Turvey’s car and damaging his own, earning him a five-second time penalty and probably contributing to Turvey’s later retirement.

Then Lucas di Grassi rear-ended Nyck de Vries into turn seven, breaking the Audi’s bodywork and taking the Mercedes out of the race entirely, De Vries retiring in the pits. André Lotterer squeezed Sims into the wall on the exit of turn seven, Sims collecting a trailing mass of advertising banner that streamed off his car for subsequent laps. He also retired later in the race.

Antonio Felix da Costa and Robin Frijns made contact, both ending up with their own banner-streamers. And Di Grass knocked Bird into Sebastien Buemi out of turn seven.

With 26 minutes to go, Mortara took his second Attack Mode period and was able to avoid losing a place to second-placed Rowland. With 19 minutes to go, an error into turn 10 by Rowland let Wehrlein pass him cleanly into turn 11 for second place.

Mortara came from third on the grid to win
Wehrlein drew close to Mortara but was unable to make a move, neither having an Attack Mode activation left and both equally matched on energy. Mortara’s control seemed to be much better by that stage, running on clear track. With seven minutes to go Wehrlein was heard complaining he had nearly crashed in turn seven, allowing Mortara to draw out a 1.5-second gap ahead.

Da Costa crashed at that very corner, on what looked like track that was breaking apart, as Mortara indicated after the race. The weight of Formula E cars and their ridged tyres means that on hot Tarmac they can effectively dig up chunks of it, creating hazardous marbles, which would explain why there was so much clumsy action at that particular turn.

Cassidy, who had lurked in fourth for much of the race, passed Rowland for the final podium place on the penultimate lap, after Rowland couldn’t stop himself locking up into turn one.

Mortara crossed the line comfortably ahead and took the championship lead. He has 72 points to second-placed Robin Frijns’ 62, the Virgin driver having failed to score at either Puebla race.

Mercedes keep a narrow lead in the constructors’ championship, with 113 points to DS Techeetah’s 110 and Jaguar’s 109.

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Race result

PositionDriverTeam
1Edoardo MortaraVenturi
2Pascal WehrleinPorsche
3Nick CassidyVirgin
4Oliver RowlandNissan e.Dams
5Jake DennisBMW Andretti
6Alex LynnMahindra
7Maximilian GüntherBMW Andretti
8Jean-Eric VergneDS Techeetah
9Mitch EvansJaguar
10René RastAudi
11Robin FrijnsVirgin
12Sam BirdJaguar
13Stoffel VandoorneMercedes
14Sebastien BuemiNissan e.Dams
15Joel ErikssonDragon Penske
16Sergio Sette CamaraDragon Penske
17André LottererPorsche
18Lucas di GrassiAudi
DNFTom BlomqvistNIO 333
DNFAntonio Felix da CostaDS Techeetah
DNFAlexander SimsMahindra
DNFOliver TurveyNIO 333
DNFNorman NatoNissan e.Dams
DNFNyck de VriesMercedes

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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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4 comments on “Mortara takes championship lead with victory in incident-packed Puebla race”

  1. I think it was easier to count the number of cars without damage / advertisement on front wing by the end of the race.

    Great drive by Mortara, but shame Wehrlein couldn’t win and get some redemption from Saturday.

    Appalling race from DiGrassi. If FE had penalty points I’m sure he’d be half way to a ban after his antics today.

    1. @cgturbo I do wonder if they’ll become more of a thing. It feels incongruous that eg: Lotterer, who has crashed almost every race this season (the one he didn’t, he was on the podium – almost like it’s a good idea…) doesn’t really face any lasting consequences for that feels a bit silly, for a world championship.

      1. @hazelsouthwell

        Totally agreed… How Andre hasn’t got a similarly negative reputation amongst fans as Grosjean, Maldonado, etc. for his pretty consistent careless driving is surprising. He has caused far too many accidents and seems to have gotten away with very little consequence.

        Wehrlein, on the other hand, I just read, receives ANOTHER penalty, albeit one that keeps him in the points this time.
        All the more reason to scrap Fanboost!

  2. Stayed so late in the night to watch it.

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