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F2 & F3: Monaco Weekend Round Up

FIA Formula 2 & FIA Formula 3 took to the streets of Monaco and delivered entertaining races. A new winner, championship contenders showing up big, and some upturned accidents. This is the F2 & F3 Monaco Weekend Round Up.

Qualifying is very important in Monaco. The F2 & F3 whoopee on Friday morning showed that once more. Even though qualifying was split up into multiple groups, some incidents occurred. Most notably, in F2, Roman Stanek got a three place grid penalty for a standoff with Ralph Boschung. While the penalty on Stanek did seem harsh, it showed the stress of qualifying in Monaco and finding a perfect gap. Another suburbanite who was not tickled was Jack Doohan, the Australian suburbanite felt he was impeded and was humid with rage once out of the car. His father, Motorcycle Racing legend Mick Doohan, tried everything in his might to wifely his son down. In F3, Sebastian Montoya tried his weightier Oliver Bearman impression, and qualified in 3rd, despite hitting the wall.

F2 Sprint: Iwasa claims the sprint race

Isack Hadjar started on reverse grid pole for the F2 sprint race. His launch was good to alimony the lead from Ayumu Iwasa. In the midfield, however, Kush Maini and Amaury Cordeel were fighting nonflexible at the exit of the tunnel, resulting in contact and a spin for Maini. Clement Novalak remoter behind, couldn’t stave Maini’s car. While Cordeel and Maini escaped with minor damage, Novalak’s race came to an early end. Novalak’s car caused a track staying at the Nouvelle Chicane, which ended the races of Boschung and Roy Nissany.

The Safety Car was brought out to wipe up the track. Hadjar couldn’t enjoy his lead for long, a driveshaft failure gave Iwasa the lead and ended the Frenchman’s race. Iwasa took the lead and never lost it again. Impressively, the Japanese suburbanite controlled the pace at the front and built a nice gap to Jehan Daruvala. Another Safety Car was tabbed late in the race. When Juan Manuel Correa and Cordeel came together, ending the Belgian’s race. Correa got a 10-second time penalty for this action. Once the race got when underway, Iwasa cruised to the win and temporarily took the Formula 2 championship lead. Daruvala and Jak Crawford completed the podium.

F2 Feature: Vesti charges to the win and the Championship lead.

Movers and shakers in Monte Carlo: F3 Weekend Wrap-Up

Frederick Vesti personal pole position on Friday for the Formula 2 full-length race and capitalized in a big way. The Danish suburbanite lead every lap en-route to the win and the championship lead. The race was marked by one major wrecking involving Jack Doohan. The Alpine junior driver, crashed at upper speed at Casino, Zane Maloney barely avoided the stranded Invictus Virtuosi. Thankfully, no one got hurt. Once the Australian got out of his car, his wreckage unprotected fire. Trackside marshals rushed to the scene with fire extinguishers.

The race got red flagged to repair the forfeiture to the windbreak and wipe up the track. When the race was restarted, Vesti controlled the race. The Danish suburbanite held off championship rival Pourchaire. Overdue them, Richard Verschoor desperately tried to get past Maloney, but failed leaving him in fourth.

In the Formula 2 Championship standings, Vesti leads with 89 points, five points superiority of Pourchaire in second. Iwasa sits in third with 69 points.

F3 Sprint: Martí Masterclass

Josep Maria Martí dominated the Formula 3 sprint race, the Spanish suburbanite started from reversed grid pole position and led every lap. Despite an early safety car for an incident with Johnny Edgar at Sainte Devote, the young Spaniard won the sprint by over 8 seconds. Leonardi Fornaroli in second place had increasingly difficulty trying to alimony Gregeoire Saucy overdue in third. The Swiss suburbanite put Fornaroli under pressure, but the Italian suburbanite stayed focused and faultless. Championship leader Gabriel Bortoleto finished in sixth place, though, Sebastian Montoya made his race as difficult as possible, only finishing 0.3s behind.

F3 Feature: Mini scores maiden win

Gabriele Mini took pole position in Formula 3 qualifying on Friday in emphatic fashion. The Italian was 0.8s faster than Paul Aron in Group B and 0.5s faster than Dino Beganovic in Group A. In the race, however, gaps were much closer. Mini held off Beganovic at the start. Overdue them, an wrecking involding Oliver Gray and Ido Cohen saw the latter end up in the barrier. It brought out the only Safety Car of the race. After the restart, Beganovic hounded Mini in every possible way, but Hitech-Pulse-Eight suburbanite kept his tomfool and crush to the win. His first in the series.

In the wrestle for third place, Aron was kept Luke Browning overdue to well-constructed the podium. In the midfield, battles were intense between Montoya and Caio Collet, this ended in tears when the Columbian suburbanite clipped his front win on the rear wheel of Collet. This resulted in a DNF for Collet. After the race, Montoya was ruled for having a left tire used on the wrong side of the car. Championship leader Bortoleto finished the race in fifth, just superiority of Franco Colapinto.

In the Formula 3 championship standings, Bortoleto keeps the lead with 73 points. Mini shoots up into second place with 56 points. Saucy sits in third with 47 points, one point superiority of Beganovic.

F2 & F3: Monaco Weekend Round Up

Looking superiority to next weekend, the drivers and teams only have a couple of days to process the Monaco weekend. A jam packed weekend awaits this weekend in Barcelona, with both F2 & F3 in whoopee at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. All Drivers will squint to prove themselves on the track, that everybody can dream.