Race 5
Pole-sitter Hughes got away well as the pack thundered off the grid in a shower of spray. Sebastian Fernandez was quickly up from P7 to third in the order, but then Hughes ran wide in the tricky track conditions and Joey Alders rocketed into the lead from his second-row grid starting position. Fernandez next found his way past Hughes, demoting him to third in the running.
Another driver to make a confident start as the field carefully sought out the best racing line amongst the standing water was Devlin DeFrancesco, up to fourth from his P8 grid position. The Canadian led from Nikita Mazepin, Ukyo Sasahara and Pietro Fittipaldi, who mounted a challenge on the Japanese ace which resulted in the pair making contact. Fittipaldi lost his front wing, while Sasahara initially appeared to have emerged from the fracas unscathed. With a damaged car, Fittipaldi dropped down the order before finally pitting for repairs and then re-joining.
In a final lap thriller, Doohan reeled in Hughes, who could put up little resistance against the on-form Australian. Then, in an epic last-gasp effort, Doohan deftly found his way past Mazepin to snatch the final podium position.
Mazepin had no choice but to settle for 4th, ahead of team mate Hughes who led Tommy Smith and DeFrancesco over the line. However, a season marked so far by challenges continued for Absolute Racing’s Smith, as well as for Fittipaldi. Both were handed drive throughs, converted to 20 second penalties post-race. That dropped Smith from what had been an encouraging 6th place down to 12th, one place ahead of Fittipaldi.
The penalties promoted MP Motorsport’s Amaury Cordeel to 7th, ahead of Zen Motorsport’s Yu Kuai, Seven GP’s Tatiana Calderón, with Yu Kanamaru of BlackArts Racing rounding out the top 10.
On a dryer track than the morning’s race, but with ominous rain drops appearing as the cars stood on the grid, it was a tense gamble for the teams whether to elect to go with slicks or wets. With all eventually opting for slicks, pole-sitter Ukyo Sasahara made a good start, but Jake Hughes made a better getaway, pulling alongside and grabbing the race lead. Jack Doohan too was on the move from P5, and up to second behind Hughes as the field jostled for position as the final race of the Dubai debut intensified.
Behind Sasahara, who had been demoted to third by Hughes and Doohan, Joey Alders led from Nikita Mazepin until the pair made contact at Turn 1, dropping the Dutchman down the order. Alders immediately began his fight back, passing Pietro Fittipaldi on the outside to go fifth. Mazepin, meanwhile was later handed a five second time penalty for the incident which dropped him to 6th on the final results sheets.
Further back, Devlin DeFrancesco was the fastest mover. Having started P10, the Absolute Racing driver was up to sixth by the end of the third lap having got by Pinnacle Motorsport’s Pietro Fittipaldi.
At the front, Doohan had closed the gap to Hughes, deftly using the car to get great drive out of the corners. Behind them, Sasahara was coming under fire from team mate Mazepin, the Russian getting by and up to third. Next, Doohan made his move on Hughes by diving up the inside, but the pair made contact, tipping the Australian into a spin. Mazepin took advantage of the incident to soar past and into the lead, as Doohan dropped down the order and Hughes held on to second.
The Hitech Grand Prix trio of Mazepin, Hughes and Sasahara led the way, but not for long. Yu Kanamaru had picked his way through the pack from his P9 grid position, careful to preserve his tires on the notoriously abrasive track. Showing incredible pace, Yu closed right up to Sasahara and began piling on the pressure.
But Yu was not the only driver to threaten the Hitech Grand Prix party. Sebastian Fernandez had done a remarkable job to work his way up from P16 to fifth, a thrilling cat and mouse jostle with Alders demonstrating some uncompromising yet fair racing.
Yu Kanamaru, meanwhile, was ready to make his move on Sasahara, getting by the Japanese driver as Hughes began dropping down the order, eventually pulling into the pits and retiring. With less than ten minutes on the clock, Yu sped towards Mazepin, passing the Russian and snatching the lead. From there, he charged unchallenged to the flag and his maiden championship win with a gargantuan margin of more than 23 seconds.
“The race was fine. I had a good start as I tried to get as little wheelspin as possible. From there, I tried to minimize the mistakes and bring it home. With about eight laps to go I saw Fernandez made a small mistake and heard on the radio I was losing time in sectors 2 and 3, so I had a bit of room to try some different lines. Then I just wanted to finish and bring it home for the team. It’s good points to extend the gap in the championship and keep building from there.”
Sebastian Fernandez (Pinnacle Motorsport)– 2nd Race 5
Yu Kanamaru (BlackArts Racing) – winner Race 6
“We struggled a lot last season and that was a hard time in our life, so I’m glad we won the race. Even in the last round we struggled. Until practice we were quick, and then suddenly from qualifying we lost some pace. I’m really happy for the team. It’s really easy to lose the grip on the tires here if you fight for it, so I was being kind of cautious and make the tires last to the end, although I had to overtake some guys. That strategy worked quite well mid-race, which is why I think we had our pace to the end.””