2019 Zolder W Series Round
Race 2 of 6 of the 2019 W Series
Race details
Date 18 May 2019 (2019-05-18)
Official name 2019 W Series Zolder round
Location Circuit Zolder, Heusden-Zolder, Belgium
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 4.011 km (2.492 miles)
Distance 19 laps, 76.209 km (47.348 miles)
Pole position
Driver
Time 1:28.681
Fastest lap
Driver Netherlands Beitske Visser
Time 1:29.629
Podium
First
Second
Third

The 2019 W Series Zolder round (also commercially referred to as #WRace2) was the second round of the 2019 W Series, and took place at Circuit Zolder in Belgium on 18 May 2019.[1] The event was an undercard to the 2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters round at the same circuit.[2]

Briton Jamie Chadwick took pole position but the race was won by Dutch driver Beitske Visser, who took an early lead and was able to hold on to it despite two safety car periods. Chadwick finished in second place, despite a late race charge by Alice Powell, who claimed the final podium place in third.

Report

Background

In October 2018, it was announced that W Series parent series, the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, would be returning to Zolder for the first time since 2002 and, as a consequence, the W Series would also race there.[3]

Following her victory in the previous round, Jamie Chadwick entered the weekend with a 7-point lead over fellow Briton Alice Powell, with a further 3 point gap back to Spain's Marta García.

Practice

FP1 would be a dry session. Jamie Chadwick continued her run of form from the previous round at the Hockenheimring, finishing ahead of Emma Kimiläinen by just over half a second, followed closely by Beitske Visser with Jessica Hawkins showing marked improvements from the opening round to finish the session fourth. Vittoria Piria brought out the only red flag of the session with a spin into the gravel.[4]

The second free practice session was held in mixed conditions. The session was delayed by 10 minutes, with the unpredictable Belgian weather bringing rain late into the session. All representative times were set early, with Visser outpacing Chadwick by three tenths of a second ahead of Marta García and Tasmin Pepper; the South African improving from 18th in the opening session. Most competitors ended their sessions with the onset of rain, however Gosia Rdest proved the exception in an attempt to gain wet-weather mileage.[5]

As in Hockenheim, the series reserve drivers Sarah Bovy and Vivien Keszthelyi ran in free practice. They finished 12th and 10th respectively in the opening session, however technical issues would sideline Hungarian driver Keszthelyi in the second session, with Bovy ending FP2 in 15th. Later on Friday, local driver Bovy received the call-up to join the regular field in the race.[6]

Qualifying

Ahead of qualifying, Kimiläinen was forced to pull out of the event after it was discovered that her accident with Megan Gilkes in the previous event had re-ignited a neck injury sustained in a Scandinavian Touring Car Championship accident three years prior. She was replaced with second reserve driver Keszthelyi, bringing the field back up to 19 cars.[7]

Jamie Chadwick claimed her second pole position of the year by just over a tenth of a second from Beitske Visser, who had led the majority of the session.[8]

Race

The race began under confusing circumstances. At the conclusion of the formation lap, Sarah Bovy's car pulled up a long way behind the grid with smoke pouring from the engine. The flag-waving marshal at the back of the field gave the all clear, but Bovy managed to restart her car and drive into her last-placed grid slot before the light sequence. Starting second, Beitske Visser got the jump on pole-sitter Chadwick, and the rest of the field left the grid cleanly – however Gosia Rdest jumped the start and dived into the mid-pack at turn one, forcing Fabienne Wohlwend and Tasmin Pepper onto the dirty outside line and dropping both to the back of the top ten. The safety car was deployed as the mechanical issues became terminal for Bovy, with the Belgian not making it off the grid in her home race.

After a single lap behind the safety car, the race got underway again. Visser remained in the lead from Chadwick, however at the end of the lap Esmee Hawkey made an ambitious move on Rdest at the Bolderbergbocht for 7th, with the pair tangling wheels and crashing out of the race. In the lead up to the same corner, Sabré Cook bumped into the rear wheel of Vivien Keszthelyi, sending the Hungarian reserve driver into the barriers and also out of the race. The safety car was deployed once again, and Cook later received a drive-through penalty for her involvement in the incident.

At the restart, Visser pulled away at the front, leaving Chadwick to defend from Alice Powell. Further down the field, Miki Koyama again proved her overtaking prowess by passing Caitlin Wood for 8th at the Kleine Chicane, having started 13th. Marta García meanwhile began to form a train, with her fourth place under attack from Sarah Moore, Pepper and Wohlwend. The Liechtensteiner attempted a move on Pepper at the Bolderbergbocht, however significantly locked-up her front-right wheel and fell into a no-mans-land between the South African and Koyama.

With a handful of laps remaining, Chadwick locked her rear wheels and ran wide at the Ickx Chicane, allowing Powell to close up. The Britons went into combat, spending most of laps 16 and 17 side by side with both holding the upper hand at various points. At the flag however, it was Visser who won her first open-wheel race since 2013 ahead Chadwick and Powell (the winner from Hockenheim victorious in the battle of the Brits), followed by the group of García, Moore, Pepper and Wohlwend, the latter having regained time in the closing laps. Koyama, having made good progress to 8th early failed to advance any further, with Vittoria Piria finishing in 9th and Naomi Schiff claiming the final point having benefitted from Caitlin Wood running through the gravel on the final lap.[9]

Classification

Practice

Session No. Driver Time Condts
Practice 1 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick 1:28.862 Dry
Practice 2 95 Netherlands Beitske Visser 1:29.490 Mixed

Qualifying

Pos. No. Driver Time/Gap Grid
1 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick 1:28.681 1
2 95 Netherlands Beitske Visser +0.116 2
3 27 United Kingdom Alice Powell +0.441 3
4 19 Spain Marta García +0.450 4
5 26 United Kingdom Sarah Moore +0.774 5
6 5 Liechtenstein Fabienne Wohlwend +0.817 6
7 31 South Africa Tasmin Pepper +0.859 7
8 2 United Kingdom Esmee Hawkey +0.976 8
9 11 Italy Vittoria Piria +1.147 9
10 3 Poland Gosia Rdest +1.169 10
11 20 Australia Caitlin Wood +1.408 11
12 99 Germany Naomi Schiff +1.476 12
13 85 Japan Miki Koyama +1.526 13
14 21 United Kingdom Jessica Hawkins +1.535 171
15 67 United States Shea Holbrook +1.578 14
16 49 Canada Megan Gilkes +1.704 15
17 77 Hungary Vivien Keszthelyi +2.010 16
18 37 United States Sabré Cook +2.063 18
19 58 Belgium Sarah Bovy +2.782 19
Source:[10]

^1 Hawkins was given a three-place grid penalty for crossing the pit exit line.

Race

Pos. No. Driver Laps Time/Retired Grid Pts
1 95 Netherlands Beitske Visser 19 32:28.495 2 25
2 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick 19 +8.451 1 18
3 27 United Kingdom Alice Powell 19 +9.084 3 15
4 19 Spain Marta García 19 +12.279 4 12
5 26 United Kingdom Sarah Moore 19 +12.739 5 10
6 31 South Africa Tasmin Pepper 19 +13.185 7 8
7 5 Liechtenstein Fabienne Wohlwend 19 +13.973 6 6
8 85 Japan Miki Koyama 19 +17.654 13 4
9 11 Italy Vittoria Piria 19 +25.871 9 2
10 99 Germany Naomi Schiff 19 +26.937 12 1
11 20 Australia Caitlin Wood 19 +29.596 11
12 67 United States Shea Holbrook 19 +30.859 14
13 21 United Kingdom Jessica Hawkins 19 +39.274 17
14 49 Canada Megan Gilkes 19 +47.413 15
15 37 United States Sabré Cook 19 +58.053 18
Ret 3 Poland Gosia Rdest 2 Crash 10
Ret 2 United Kingdom Esmee Hawkey 2 Crash 8
Ret 77 Hungary Vivien Keszthelyi 2 Crash 16
DNS 58 Belgium Sarah Bovy 0 Engine 19
Fastest lap set by Beitske Visser: 1:29.629
Source:[11]

Championship standings

+/- Pos Driver Pts Gap
1 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick 43
2 2 Netherlands Beitske Visser 37 -6
1 3 United Kingdom Alice Powell 33 -10
1 4 Spain Marta García 27 -16
5 United Kingdom Sarah Moore 20 -23

See also

References

  1. "Zolder, Belgium". W Series. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  2. "DTM announces 2019 calendar and W Series on support bill". Autosport. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  3. "DTM adds Assen, Zolder to 2019 schedule". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  4. "Zolder W Series: Visser outpaces Chadwick in practice". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  5. "Beitske Visser battles Jamie Chadwick during free practice at Zolder". W Series. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  6. "W Series adds reserve driver Bovy to expanded Zolder grid". Motorsport.com. Archived from the original on 3 September 2021. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  7. "Vivien Keszthelyi To Race In W Series Today At Zolder In Place Of Emma Kimilainen". W Series. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  8. "Zolder W Series: Chadwick beats Visser to pole". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  9. "Zolder W Series: Visser takes commanding win over Chadwick". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  10. "Zolder W Series: Chadwick beats Visser to pole". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  11. "Victory for Beitske Visser in Zolder". W Series. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
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