2010 Hungaroring GP2 Series round

Hungary    2010 Hungarian GP2 round
Round details
Round 7 of 10 rounds in the
2010 GP2 Series season
and
Round 6 of 8 rounds in the
2010 GP3 Series season

The Hungaroring
Location Hungaroring, Budapest, Hungary
Course Permanent racing facility
4.381 km (2.724 mi)
Feature race
Date 31 July 2010
Laps 42
Pole position
Driver United Kingdom Sam Bird ART Grand Prix
Time 1:27.864
Podium
First Venezuela Pastor Maldonado Rapax
Second Germany Christian Vietoris Racing Engineering
Third Mexico Sergio Pérez Barwa Addax Team
Fastest lap
Driver Venezuela Pastor Maldonado Rapax
Time 1:30.767 (on lap 21)
Sprint race
Date 1 August 2010
Laps 28
Podium
First Italy Giacomo Ricci DPR
Second Germany Christian Vietoris Racing Engineering
Third Italy Davide Valsecchi iSport International
Fastest lap
Driver Romania Michael Herck DPR
Time 1:30.764 (on lap 7)
Race 1
Date 31 July 2010
Laps 14
Pole position
Driver Switzerland Nico Müller Jenzer Motorsport
Time 1:36.991
Podium
First Switzerland Nico Müller Jenzer Motorsport
Second Mexico Esteban Gutiérrez ART Grand Prix
Third Monaco Stefano Coletti Tech 1 Racing
Fastest lap
Driver Mexico Esteban Gutiérrez ART Grand Prix
Time 1:38.280 (on lap 10)
Race 2
Date 1 August 2010
Laps 14
Podium
First United States Alexander Rossi ART Grand Prix
Second Canada Robert Wickens Status Grand Prix
Third United Kingdom Dean Smith Carlin
Fastest lap
Driver Canada Robert Wickens Status Grand Prix
Time 1:38.332 (on lap 6)

The 2010 Hungarian GP2 round was a GP2 Series motor race held on July 31 and August 1, 2010 at Hungaroring in Budapest, Hungary. It was the seventh round of the 2010 GP2 Season and the sixth round of the 2010 GP3 Season. The race was used to support the 2010 Hungarian Grand Prix. In the GP3 series, Nico Muller took the Race 1 victory, ahead of runaway championship leader Esteban Gutiérrez. American Alexander Rossi took his second win of the year in Race 2.

GP2 Report

Feature Race

Pastor Maldonado took the GP2 Series feature race win at the Hungaroring to take his fifth feature race victory in succession, extending his record. Maldonado crossed the line 5.8s clear of Racing Engineering rookie Christian Vietoris, but a lot of the hard work was done for him at the start when both of the front-row qualifiers failed to get away from the grid. iSport's Davide Valsecchi was the first victim when his car stopped on the dummy grid, prompting a formation lap. The cars had barely finished forming up for the second time when pole-sitter Sam Bird waved his arms in the air, forcing him to join Valsecchi and fellow grid-staller Adrian Zaugg of Trident in starting from the pit exit. That effectively gave iSport's Oliver Turvey and Maldonado a front-row start, and when Turvey made a poor getaway Maldonado had a virtually unchallenged run into the first corner. The race was interrupted yet again when ART's Jules Bianchi went wide on the exit of Turn 2, lost control, and spun back into the pack. He tagged Racing Engineering's Dani Clos, who was able to continue, but was then flicked around and was hit head-on by DAMS' Ho-Pin Tung, who in turn was rear-ended by Arden's Rodolfo González. The accident triggered a lengthy red flag period while Tung was extracted from his car and airlifted to hospital, while Bianchi was taken to the circuit medical centre. Initial reports were that neither driver was seriously hurt, yet Bianchi was later said to have back pains, making him doubtful for the Belgian round. Maldonado was again swiftly in control when the race restarted and had built up a substantial gap when the safety car was brought out following a clash between Coloni's Alberto Valerio and Rapax's Luiz Razia that ended with Valerio stranded at the final corner. Luck was on Maldonado's side though, as he had the lapped car of Vladimir Arabadzhiev between him and Vietoris, and an awful restart from the Bulgarian allowed Maldonado to pull out more than 3.0s on the first lap back under greens. From there, the win was a formality. Vietoris had to work hard for second, the German spending virtually the entire race under pressure from Addax's Sergio Pérez, with Turvey also joining the fight in the final laps. Pérez's team-mate Giedo van der Garde took fifth ahead of DAMS's Jérôme d'Ambrosio, the Belgian back in the car after missing the Hockenheim round, while DPR locked out the front row for the sprint race with Michael Herck and Giacomo Ricci taking seventh and eighth respectively.

Sprint Race

DPR's Giacomo Ricci took his first victory in the GP2 main series in the sprint race at the Hungaroring. The Italian started from pole and had the front row to himself after team-mate Michael Herck stalled on the dummy grid. He was challenged into the first corner by DAMS' Jerome d'Ambrosio, but once he had seen that off he was able to cruise to the flag to secure DPR's first main series win since Oliver Pla's victory in Germany in 2005. D'Ambrosio had no answer to Ricci's pace, but the Belgian still looked good for second until his car developed a problem and he was forced to retire midway through the race. That opened the door for Racing Engineering's Christian Vietoris to claim second place, the German having done a great job after starting from seventh on the grid, while iSport's Davide Valsecchi made a nice move down the inside of Giedo van der Garde (Addax) to secure third with three laps to go. Oliver Turvey finished fifth for iSport ahead of Super Nova's Luca Filippi, the Italian taking his first point since returning to the series at Silverstone. It was a tough race for the main title protagonists. Pastor Maldonado (Rapax) was black-flagged on lap seven for ignoring a black and orange warning flag after breaking his front wing, while Addax's Sergio Pérez eliminated himself when an attempt to pass Valsecchi for fifth on the second lap resulted in contact[1] [2] [3] .[4]

References

  1. "autosport.com". autosport.com. Retrieved 2011-09-26.
  2. "autosport.com". autosport.com. Retrieved 2011-09-26.
  3. "autosport.com". autosport.com. Retrieved 2011-09-26.
  4. "autosport.com". autosport.com. Retrieved 2011-09-26.
Previous round:
2010 German GP2 round
GP2 Series
2010 season
Next round:
2010 Belgian GP2 round
Previous round:
2009 Hungarian GP2 round
Hungarian GP2 round Next round:
2011 Hungarian GP2 round
Previous round:
2010 German GP3 round
GP3 Series
2010 season
Next round:
2010 Belgian GP3 round
Previous round:
none
Hungarian GP3 round Next round:
2011 Hungarian GP3 round
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