2019 Norisring W Series round

The 2019 W Series Nuremberg round (also commercially referred to as #WRace4) was the fourth round of the 2019 W Series, and took place at the Norisring in Germany on 6 July 2019.[1] The event was an undercard to the 2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters round at the same circuit.[2]

2019 Nuremberg W Series Round
Race 4 of 6 of the 2019 W Series
Race details
Date 6 July 2019 (2019-07-06)
Official name 2019 W Series Nuremberg round
Location Norisring, Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany
Course Temporary street circuit
Course length 2.300 km (1.429 miles)
Distance 36 laps, 82.800 km (51.429 miles)
Pole position
Driver
Time 50.712
Fastest lap
Driver Finland Emma Kimiläinen
Time 50.975
Podium
First
Second
Third
Saturday race

Report

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Background

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Following her win in the previous round, Jamie Chadwick enters the round on 68 points – 13 ahead of second-placed Beitske Visser. Marta García sits third in the championship, 20 points behind Visser.

Emma Kimiläinen will return to the series for the first time since practice at the Zolder round of the championship following an injury-induced break.[3]

Practice

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FP1 would see all twenty cars take to the track, although Sabré Cook's running would be delayed due to technical issues. The session was marred by a crash at the Grundig hairpin between Alice Powell and Esmee Hawkey, which would see Powell taken to hospital with wrist pain. Misano pole-sitter Fabienne Wohlwend would set the benchmark in the opening session, beating championship leader Jamie Chadwick by a tenth of a second.[4]

Only nineteen cars would take to the track in FP2, as the damage sustained to Hawkeys' car could not be repaired in time. This session would also be red flagged, with Miki Koyama plucking the rear wing off her car at the Schöller S. Wohlwend held the fastest time for the majority of the session however a last minute flurry of times put Gosia Rdest at the top, ahead of Beitske Visser and Wohlwend. All drivers would be within a second of the fastest time, with both sessions led by drivers with circuit experience having raced in the Audi Sport TT Cup previously.[5]

Following practice, W Series management announced that the field would remain set at 18 cars. It was subsequently announced that Vivien Keszthelyi would be promoted to main driver and Megan Gilkes would be demoted to reserve driver, with neither Gilkes nor Sarah Bovy allowed to compete.[6]

Qualifying

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Qualifying started earlier than normal at 8:50am local time. The session began in a non-descript fashion, before Jessica Hawkins set down a surprise yardstick with a low 51-second laptime at the halfway mark. With seven minutes remaining, Alice Powell would stop her car on the entry to the Schöller S with a gearbox failure, and having already sat out most of the session with technical issues would start from the back of the grid. Upon the resumption of the session, Keszthelyi would have a spin at the Dutzendteich Kehre, before Marta García knocked Hawkins off the top spot. Hawkins would eventually fall to sixth and would be unable to set a better time as Shea Holbrook would suffer broken suspension at the Grundig Kehre with a minute remaining, bringing out the yellow flags and effectively ending the session. García would score her first pole position in the W Series, ahead of Chadwick, Wohlwend, Rdest and Visser – the top six cars covered by less than a quarter of a second.[7]

Race

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Marta García would get the jump following a very quick light sequence. Beitske Visser would make the best start from 5th on the grid to dive down the inside of Chadwick at turn one. Wohlwend would be caught on the outside of the opening hairpin, and as she slowed to avoid hitting the barrier Rdest bumped into the Liechtensteiner's rear-left wheel, dislodging the Pole's front wing. There were no incidents in the opening lap, however Sarah Moore would lock up into the Grundig Kehre on lap 4 and spin into Shea Holbrook, catching out Keszthelyi and the slow-starting Caitlin Wood. Moore would suffer from suspension failure the following lap and parked her car behind the barrier at Dutzendteich, whilst Holbrook was forced to pit with a puncture.

As the race wore on, García built a healthy lead over Visser, with Chadwick in striking distance. Wohlwend began to drop off the back of Chadwick, however Rdest was keeping pace with Hawkins in the battle for fifth which disallowed the pair to make ground. Rdest was then given a mechanical black flag for the broken wing, before both she and Holbrook were handed drive-through penalties for pit lane speeding - dropping both drivers a lap down. Hawkins' pace struggles were on full display as she locked up and ran wide, with Kimiläinen overtaking her for fifth and chased after the leaders.

A quiet race would turn dramatic in the closing laps, as a battle for second between the championship contenders as well as a battle for fourth between Wohlwend and Kimiläinen would commence. With a handful of laps remaining, Hawkins slowed dramatically and pitted with a spark plug failure, with Alice Powell suffering a similar fate behind her having the fuel pump break after running as high as ninth from last on the grid. García took a dominant win followed by Visser, who survived a last-lap lunge from Chadwick which would see the Briton finish third, with Wohlwend maintaining fourth ahead of Kimiläinen who was stuck in fifth as a lack of straight-line speed would see her unable to take advantage of the slipstream. Miki Koyama finished in sixth and twelve seconds behind the top five, followed by Cook in seventh and Tasmin Pepper in eighth. Hawkey would score her first points of the season in ninth and Naomi Schiff finished tenth having benefitted from a time penalty for Vittoria Piria.[8]

Classification

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Practice

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Session No. Driver Time Condts
Practice 1 5   Fabienne Wohlwend 51.728 Dry
Practice 2 3   Gosia Rdest 50.983 Dry

Qualifying

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Pos. No. Driver Time/Gap Grid
1 19   Marta García 50.712 1
2 55   Jamie Chadwick +0.081 2
3 5   Fabienne Wohlwend +0.209 3
4 3   Gosia Rdest +0.212 4
5 95   Beitske Visser +0.223 5
6 21   Jessica Hawkins +0.233 6
7 11   Vittoria Piria +0.312 7
8 7   Emma Kimiläinen +0.432 8
9 85   Miki Koyama +0.450 9
10 37   Sabré Cook +0.491 10
11 31   Tasmin Pepper +0.737 11
12 26   Sarah Moore +0.777 12
13 20   Caitlin Wood +0.788 13
14 67   Shea Holbrook +0.804 14
15 2   Esmee Hawkey +0.826 15
16 99   Naomi Schiff +0.878 16
17 77   Vivien Keszthelyi +0.942 17
18 27   Alice Powell +4.355 18
Source:[9]

Race

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Pos. No. Driver Laps Time/Retired Grid Pts
1 19   Marta García 36 30:59.755 1 25
2 95   Beitske Visser 36 +3.619 5 18
3 55   Jamie Chadwick 36 +4.041 2 15
4 5   Fabienne Wohlwend 36 +6.176 3 12
5 7   Emma Kimiläinen 36 +6.592 8 10
6 85   Miki Koyama 36 +18.300 9 8
7 37   Sabré Cook 36 +20.029 10 6
8 31   Tasmin Pepper 36 +25.735 11 4
9 2   Esmee Hawkey 36 +38.281 15 2
10 99   Naomi Schiff 36 +41.466 16 1
11 20   Caitlin Wood 36 +42.443 13
12 11   Vittoria Piria 36 +44.5381 7
13 77   Vivien Keszthelyi 35 +1 lap 17
14 3   Gosia Rdest 35 +1 lap 4
15 67   Shea Holbrook 33 +3 laps 14
Ret 21   Jessica Hawkins 31 Mechanical 6
Ret 27   Alice Powell 31 Mechanical 18
Ret 26   Sarah Moore 4 Crash damage 12
Fastest lap set by Emma Kimiläinen: 50.975[10]
Source:[11]
  • ^1 – Piria would receive a ten-second time penalty for a jump-start.

Championship standings

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+/- Pos. Driver Pts Gap
  1   Jamie Chadwick 83
  2   Beitske Visser 73 -10
  3   Marta García 60 -23
  1 4   Fabienne Wohlwend 41 -42
  1 5   Alice Powell 33 -50

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Norisring, Germany". W Series. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  2. ^ "DTM announces 2019 calendar and W Series on support bill". Autosport. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  3. ^ "Emma Kimiläinen on Instagram". Instagram. 2 July 2019. Archived from the original on 2021-12-25.
  4. ^ "Norisring Free Practice Report". W Series. 5 July 2019.
  5. ^ "W Series - Norisring". W Series. 5 July 2019.
  6. ^ "@WSeriesRacing on Twitter". Twitter. 5 July 2019.
  7. ^ "Norisring W Series: Garcia beats Chadwick to pole". Motorsport.com. 6 July 2019.
  8. ^ "Norisring W Series: Garcia scores maiden victory". Motorsport.com. 6 July 2019.
  9. ^ "W Series 2019 Norisring - Qualifying". Motorsport.com. 6 July 2019.
  10. ^ "W Series 2019 Norisring - Fastest Lap". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  11. ^ "W Series 2019 Norisring - Race". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
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Official website Archived 2022-04-14 at the Wayback Machine

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