Cassidy wins after frantic three-way fight for victory in Portland

Formula E

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Nick Cassidy held off title rival Jake Dennis and Antonio Felix da Costa to win another frantic Formula E race in Portland.

The Envision driver claimed his third win of the season less than a second ahead of Dennis, who moved back into the lead of the championship by a single point over the race winner. Da Costa finished third, while former championship leader Pascal Wehrlein scored just two points in ninth.

Prior to the race, the two DS Penske cars of Jean-Eric Vergne and Stoffel Vandoorne were condemned to a pit lane start after their team were discovered to have installed RFID scanning hardware at pit entry that allowed them to collect data from other cars. The team were also fined €25,000 for the offence.

At the start, pole winner Jake Dennis leapt out into the lead with Sacha Fenestraz slotting into second place while Rene Rast moved past Norman Nato into third. Rast fell down the order over the opening laps as Nato moved up back by him and then Nissan team mate Fenestraz, while Antonio Felix da Costa and Nick Cassidy also joined the mix at the front of the field.

Dennis led from pole in the opening laps
Dennis was eager to allow another car through into the lead to try and save energy and Nato eventually took the lead as his team mate took Attack Mode for the first time. Robin Frijns suffered front wing damage that caused him to dropped down the order, then Roberto Merhi stopped on track with a problem around the back end of the circuit, bringing out the Safety Car onto the circuit.

Nato led under the Safety Car with Da Costa in second, Dennis third and Cassidy in fourth. The race restarted at the start of lap eight, with the top seven drivers all taking Attack Mode on the first racing lap, allowing Nato to retain the lead ahead of Da Costa and Dennis.

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Cassidy took his second Attack Mode on lap ten and used his extra power to move by Nato into the lead as Maximilian Guenther took second place in the Maserati. Back in the pack, Nico Muller suffered a high-speed off on the back straight, spearing off the track and over the grass into the wall and then coming to rest sideways over the track. The Abt Cupra driver complained of losing his brakes over team radio and climbed out of his car unaided, but the Safety Car was deployed for a second time to enable his car to be cleared.

Cassidy held the lead having used up all of his Attack Mode with Nato in second and the two Maseratis of Guenther and Edoardo Mortara in third and fourth. However, during the extended Safety Car period, race control determined that Nato had been ahead of Cassidy on the track when the Safety Car has initially deployed and directed Cassidy to allow the Nissan by through the lead. He obliged and Nato led the field to the restart at the start of lap 17 ahead of Cassidy and Guenther.

Nato immediately took Attack Mode the first time by and Cassidy retook the lead he’d been asked to surrender, Nato dropping to third behind Da Costa. Despite his extra power, Nato fell down to the mid pack as Sam Bird moved up the order to sit in third behind Cassidy and Da Costa.

Cassidy continued to lead until lap 25 when Da Costa moved through into first place. Due to the many laps under Safety Car, four additional laps were added on top of the original 28 scheduled. Despite the added race distance, the leaders had saved enough energy to allow them to pick up the pace with the field beginning to spread out.

Cassidy won his third race of the season
Cassidy took the lead back from Da Costa while Dennis in third passed the Porsche driver around the outside of turn two to take second. Da Costa battled back to retake second and then claimed the lead from Cassidy briefly before the Envision driver took it back into turn one.

Heading into the final lap, Cassidy led from Da Costa and Dennis and defended hard into turn one. Cassidy pulled a gap from the two behind as Dennis got ahead of Da Costa along the back straight. Dennis tried to chase down Cassidy over the line but ran out of road along the pit straight and Cassidy took the chequered flag for the third time this season.

With Dennis taking second, he moves back into the lead of the championship for the first time since the second round in Diriyah. Da Costa took third ahead of Mitch Evans and Sebastian Buemi in fifth. Guenther finished sixth ahead of Bird in seventh and Lucas di Grassi in eighth.

Previous championship leader Pascal Wehrlein could only manage ninth after failing to be a factor in the fight at the front all race with Nato claiming the final point in tenth place.

Just four races remain in the season over the final two rounds in Roma and London. Both will be contested over the course of next month.

2023 Portland Eprix race results

Pos.No.DriverTeamCar
137Nick CassidyEnvisionJaguar I-Type 6
227Jake DennisAndrettiPorsche 99X Electric Gen3
313Antonio Felix da CostaPorschePorsche 99X Electric Gen3
49Mitch EvansJaguarJaguar I-Type 6
516Sebastien BuemiEnvisionJaguar I-Type 6
67Maximilian GuentherMaseratiMaserati Tipo Folgore
710Sam BirdJaguarJaguar I-Type 6
811Lucas di GrassiMahindraMahindra M9Electro
994Pascal WehrleinPorschePorsche 99X Electric Gen3
1017Norman NatoNissanNissan e-4ORCE 04
114Robin FrijnsAbt CupraMahindra M9Electro
1225Jean-Eric VergneDS PenskeDS E-TENSE FE23
131Stoffel VandoorneDS PenskeDS E-TENSE FE23
1433Dan TicktumNIO 333NIO 333 ER9
1558Rene RastMcLarenNissan e-4ORCE 04
1623Sacha FenestrazNissanNissan e-4ORCE 04
173Sergio Sette CamaraNIO 333NIO 333 ER9
185Jake HughesMcLarenNissan e-4ORCE 04
1936Andre LottererAndrettiPorsche 99X Electric Gen3
2048Edoardo MortaraMaseratiMaserati Tipo Folgore
2151Nico MuellerAbt CupraMahindra M9Electro
228Oliver RowlandMahindraMahindra M9Electro

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Will Wood
Will has been a RaceFans contributor since 2012 during which time he has covered F1 test sessions, launch events and interviewed drivers. He mainly...

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5 comments on “Cassidy wins after frantic three-way fight for victory in Portland”

  1. Bwoah.
    Frantic race, very nice! 👍
    Love the permanent circuit too!

  2. Like the Finn’s, the Kiwi’s have so many top quality drivers in world motorsport categories, for a country with a small population they are punching well above their weight!

  3. It had a bit of everything: the oval-like tactics in the first 15 laps or so, with insane group manouvers, than it sped up and the last 10 laps were full on racing!

    Cassidy is great, Da Costa played the perfect wingman role for Wehrlein, defending hard against Dennis.

    Full grandstands, great circuit!
    Cars were going 280 km/h in the backstraight in qp, that isn’t far off Indycar’s top speed there!

    Hope to see more permanent venue in the future to mix up with the street tracks.

    1. Agreed, this has to be at least part of the future for FE now that they’ve proved that the cars work round a proper circuit, it was a totally different and much better vibe than the car park races give.

  4. It’s weird. Cassidy completely ran out of energy 3 seconds before he finished the race, yet carried on flat out to the line, with Dennis making zero ground on him. On the back straight heading to the last 2 corners, he had fractionally less energy than Da Costa, who realised he wasn’t going to make it, so backed off and allowed Dennis past. In contrast, Cassidy did not back off. Although the graphic just stayed at 0%, at the rate he had been running down accelerating out of the final corner, I estimate he would have been at about minus 0.9% when he crossed the line. Their crossings of the line and the checkered flag symbol on the timing graphic were well synced, so I can only guess that its battery data was too. This guess is backed up by Dennis doing a perfect job and reaching 0% just as he crossed the line.

    Take a look, starting at 4:06 in the highlights reel:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8GfYWnvMDM

    I’m guessing that in absence of a penalty, somehow the graphics were wrong. This isn’t the first time I’ve seen similar things happen, but it’s the biggest and most clear-cut I’ve seen yet. Maybe there is some hidden margin allowance in comparison with the graphics, such that in reality, Dennis was 1% too conservative. But if that’s the case, I do wish they’d fix the graphics to reflect the actual energy left.

    I thought that the car would automatically stop accelerating if no energy was left, but after Di Grassi’s near miss at the line in Mexico several years back, I don’t think I’ve seen that. Maybe they got rid of it and leave it to the drivers to self-regulate. But apart from that one disastrous race with multiple cars involved, I don’t remember any other race involving a car being penalised for using more than 100% of the race’s energy allowance. Maybe they have a secret agreement that if you only go less than 1% past running out of energy, then they won’t penalise you to avoid controversy. If so, that’s stupid, as the teams will just game this, as Cassidy seems to have.

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