Tag Archives: Formula E

BMW wins the 2021 Formula E London E-Prix

In his home race in London, Jake Dennis has celebrated his second win in the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship for BMW i Andretti Motorsport. The British driver started the London E-Prix from second on the grid in the #27 BMW iFE.21. He moved ahead in the opening third of the race, pulled away from his rivals before using the second attack mode and never looked likely to surrender the lead.

London (GBR), 23rd- 25th July 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, London E-Prix, Jake Dennis (GBR) #27 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

Having already tasted victory at Valencia (ESP), this is the second time that Dennis has topped the podium in his Formula E debut season. His team-mate Maximilian Günther (GER) crossed the finish line in 20th place.

This victory sees Dennis move up to third place in the drivers’ standings. He has now scored 79 points and is just two points off the lead. Günther is in 15th place with 54 points. BMW i Andretti Motorsport is sixth in the team standings, with 133 points.

London (GBR), 23rd- 25th July 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, London E-Prix, Jake Dennis (GBR) #27 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

Race 13 of the season will take place on Sunday in London as well. It starts at 15:00 CEST (14:00 local time).

Jake Dennis (#27 BMW iFE.21, starting position: 2nd place, race result: 1st place, points: 79, driver standings: 3rd place):

“I am super happy. I pretty much didn’t know what to expect going into the race. It was a little bit different to normal, with really not much energy-saving going on. It was obviously an intense battle with Alex Lynn; I was trying to put him under pressure. We took the risk to stay up in front when he took his second attack mode. I knew I could keep him behind, but I didn’t know if it would work out better or not.

Luckily he made a small mistake and then it was about three qualifying laps to pull the two-second gap before I went for my second attack mode. Then it was just a matter of bringing it home when we got the lead. We had really severe vibrations on the right rear. It was probably in the last 15 laps of the race. I was generally not taking any kerb just to make sure to bring it home. Now being third in the championship is far more than I expected at the beginning of the season.”

BMW i Andretti Motorsport wins NYC Formula E Race

Maximilian Günther claimed his first win of the season in race ten of this year’s ABB FIA Formula E World Championship in New York City. Starting from fourth place on the grid, he managed his energy extremely well and was then able to climb from third place into the lead in the closing laps.

This was the third win of Günther’s Formula E career and his first podium this season. Following Jake Dennis’ (GBR) triumph at Valencia (ESP), this was win number two of Season 7 for BMW i Andretti Motorsport. Dennis also had a strong race on his debut in New York, but unfortunately dropped well down the field after suffering a puncture, before ultimately retiring.

New York (USA), 8th- 11th July 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, New York E-Prix, Jake Dennis (GBR) #27 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

In the Driver’s Championship, Günther has climbed from 18th to 12th place, courtesy of the 25 points for the win. With 53 points, he now trails Dennis in eleventh place by just one point. BMW i Andretti Motorsport is now sixth in the Team standings with 107 points.

New York (USA), 8th- 11th July 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, New York E-Prix, Maximilian Günther (GER) #28 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

Dennis started the race from 15th place and battled his way into the points with some impressive racing. Unfortunately, he suffered a puncture and had to come into the pits. That initially dropped him well back through the field, before he eventually had to retire completely.

The eleventh race of the season takes place on Sunday at the same venue. 

New York (USA), 8th- 11th July 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, New York E-Prix, Jake Dennis (GBR) #27 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

Maximilian Günther (#28 BMW iFE.21, starting position: 4th place, race result: 1st place, points: 53, driver standings: 12th place):

“Winning here in New York at the team’s home race is very special, but it’s also a special victory because of the season we had so far. Many times things didn’t go our way and we couldn’t score as many points as we wanted to, but we always kept going and focused on ourselves. We know what we are capable of.

Today we did a good job managing the race. I had the most energy of all frontrunners left in the end. That is an advantage, but overtaking still is very difficult here. Jean-Éric made the move into the hairpin, both race leaders ran wide and for me that was the perfect opportunity to overtake both. After that I was in a comfortable situation with the amount of energy I had left.”

Formula E Rome e-Prix: Race Recap and Results

Last weekend saw the 2020-2021 Formula E World Championship touch down in Rome for the third and fourth rounds of the championship. There was still much to prove for the BMW i Andretti team, who arrived after two scoreless races in Diriyah a month ago languishing at the bottom of the Constructors’ Championship points standings.

While this weekend’s doubleheader was a significant step forward for BMW Andretti with Maximilian Guenther picking up points from both races, there is still a long way to go before the team and drivers can be classified as title contenders. We begin today with a recap of the first race in Rome.

Back In Rome

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Rome (ITA), 8th April – 11th April 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, Rome E-Prix, MINI Electric Pacesetter inspired by JCW. Safety Car.

Firstly, we proceed with a quick introduction to the weekend in Rome in general. Formula E returned to the streets of Rome for the first time since 2019 after a one-season hiatus, but the track had been radically reconfigured and now only loosely resembled the track that was used in the 2018 and 2019 seasons. This meant that previous records in Rome mostly went out the window — the drivers had to approach the race as if it were a brand new track.

Some sections from the previous track still remained, though, most notably the iconic “jump” section where Formula E cars were known to go the slightest bit airborne for a fraction of a second. But the Attack Mode activation zone, for example, was now on the outside edge of a wide hairpin turn instead of just on the inside line of a straight, meaning that cars would lose a lot more time taking the new Attack Mode compared to taking the old one.

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Rome (ITA), 8th April – 11th April 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, Rome E-Prix, Jake Dennis (GBR) #27 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

This also meant that the previous Rome track’s characteristic of numerous varying pavement surfaces remained. Drivers would face the challenge of navigating the circuit as quickly as possible while paying attention to inconsistent grip levels on the track due to the different pavement surfaces. In addition, white painted markings on the track for lane dividers, crosswalks, and bus lanes were slippery hazards in the event of rain.

And rain it did. The whole weekend was overcast, punctuated by small showers on Saturday and Sunday, affecting both Qualifying and the race for both Race I and Race II. In fact, both races would end up starting behind the safety car due to the damp conditions.

Race 1

Rome (ITA), 8th April – 11th April 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, Rome E-Prix, Maximilian Günther (GER) #28 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

Qualifying had been promising for the BMW Andretti team, with Max Guenther making it to the Super Pole session and managing to qualify 6th before being demoted to start 11th after the application of a five-spot grid penalty carried over from Diriyah II where he had been judged to have caused a collision. Jake Dennis, the driver of the #27 car, unfortunately was not able to get a clean lap in and would start the race from 19th place despite having been in Group 4 for Qualifying.

Before the race, the track was damp but it was not actively raining. Race Control, however, decided to call for a safety car start due to the dampness of the track. The brand new MINI Cooper safety car was called upon for the first time to lead the pack through two laps of the Rome street circuit before racing would begin in earnest. Drivers and viewers noted that certain parts of the track were wet while others were actually already quite dry.

Two laps behind the safety car quickly passed, and the queue of cars behind polesitter Stoffel Vandoorne of the Mercedes EQ team prepared for the green flag. With 40 minutes (+1 lap) to go, the green flag was waved and the cars took off at full pelt for the first time!

An immediate incident ensued: Porsche’s Andre Lotterer, having started the race in 2nd behind Vandoorne, looked racy and stuck to the rear end of Vandoorne’s Mercedes. Going into Turn 7, the German attempted a risky last-second move, diving to the inside of the Mercedes at the braking zone in an overtaking attempt. Vandoorne, however, was having none of it and turned into Lotterer as if he weren’t there.

The two leaders collided and went straight on instead of turning left. Luckily for them, they were able to recover quickly and get back into the race, but now Lotterer was running in 7th and Vandoorne had fallen all the way to 13th. These shenanigans promoted Guenther to 10th.

With 38’ (+1 lap) to go, former BMW Andretti driver Alexander Sims ran into trouble, with his Mahindra slowing to a crawl. This promoted Dennis into 18th position. At around this time, Attack Mode activation opened, meaning that cars were now allowed to activate Attack Mode by running to the outside edge of the Turn 14 hairpin. Mitch Evans, meanwhile, was right behind Guenther and attempted a dive down the inside at the hairpin, to no avail.

Rome (ITA), 8th April – 11th April 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, Rome E-Prix, Maximilian Günther (GER) #28 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

However, he was able to make a move stick a few laps later, demoting Guenther to 11th. In the meantime, Dennis made a move past Nico Muller’s Dragon to snatch 17th.

A frenzy of Attack Mode arming occurred with around 28’ (+1 lap) remaining, with cars directly ahead of and behind Guenther all arming Attack Mode. Guenther did an exceptional job of maintaining his position during this time, notably keeping Alex Lynn and Sebastien Buemi behind him.

At this time, cars from 1st position to 15th position were all running nose-to-tail, covered by approximately 7.0 seconds. None of the top 8 cars had taken Attack Mode yet though; perhaps they were waiting for each other to make the first move.

At 23’ (+1 lap), the DS Techeetah Driver Jean-Eric Vergne was the first to blink, activating Attack Mode and dropping from 2nd to 5th. His move prompted Robin Frijns, Nyck De Vries, and both Porsches to take Attack Mode as well on the following lap. Guenther was able to sneak past Lotterer when Lotterer ran wide following his Attack Mode activation, and thus moved into 9th. At 19’ (+1 lap) remaining, Guenther finally took his first Attack Mode, doing well to only drop into 11th, behind Sebastien Buemi. But disappointingly, he was unable to leverage four minutes of extra power to get past Buemi’s Nissan and thus remained in 11th. Up ahead, Vergne passed De Vries for the lead but Lucas di Grassi in the Audi was lurking behind.

10’ (+1 lap) to go marked a very negative turning point for BMW Andretti. Around this time, Dennis’s car appeared to have technical issues as it ground to a halt in the runoff area off a corner, ending his race. Guenther, in the meantime, had a spin and hit the wall in an incident that was only briefly replayed on live TV, resulting in him dropping to 16th after he took Attack Mode. However, he was resilient in continuing and even recovered to 13th place. But with 5’ (+1lap) remaining in the race, he was in a bit of trouble as he had consumed slightly more energy during the race than the cars around him had.

He received a lucky break in that regard though — just 4 minutes from the final lap of the race, race leader Lucas di Grassi suffered a driveshaft failure and was immediately out of the race, driving slowly on the track to move his Audi to retire in a safe location.

In avoiding the stricken Audi driving on the racing line, Vandoorne moved to the outside line and hit a manhole cover, sending his Mercedes into a spin and a crash. His teammate de Vries got involved in the ensuing chaos and was forced to retire from the race as well. This led to a safety car period, neutralizing any issues Guenther had in energy management. He would finish the race 10th behind the MINI safety car, which then became 9th after Lotterer’s penalty (for crashing into Vandoorne) was applied.

Rome (ITA), 8th April – 11th April 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, Rome E-Prix, Maximilian Günther (GER) #28 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

Overall, it was good to see the BMW Andretti team score their first points of the season. As a matter of fact, this was the first time Guenther had ever scored points for BMW Andretti in a race where he did not finish on the podium. Picking up these small scraps of points will be vital in what could be shaping up to be a long championship. However, there is clearly still a lot of work to be done back in the factory, as the BMW iFE.20 looked outmatched by many of its rivals during the race with Guenther being forced to drive defensively for much of it. What would Race II in Rome bring? Check back tomorrow for the report!

Formula E: No points for BMW i Andretti Motorsport in Diriyah

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The 2021 Formula E season is not off to a good start for the BMW i Andretti Motorsport. This is their last season which just kicked off in Diriyah (KSA). BMW i Andretti Motorsport drivers Maximilian Günther (GER) and Jake Dennis (GBR) both have missed out on the points. Günther reached sixth position in the first night race in the history of Formula E and was in with a good chance of mounting an attack on the podium but was forced to retire after sliding into crash barriers around ten minutes before the finish. Dennis, in his Formula E debut, crossed the line in twelfth place. The second race of the season will take place on Saturday.

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Diriyah (KSA), 25th February – 27th February 2021. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, Season 7, Diriyah E-Prix, Maximilian Günther (GER) #28 BMW iFE.21, BMW i Andretti Motorsport.

Günther began the race from ninth on the grid, moving up two places at the start. He then concentrated on driving efficiently, conserving his two ATTACK MODES for the closing stage of the race. After a yellow-flag period saw the BMW i8 Roadster Safety Car at the head of the field, he pushed on and attempted to pull away from the cars behind, only to slide into crash barriers when he lost the racing line.

His BMW iFE.21 was too badly damaged to continue the race. Dennis started his first Formula E race from 14th place, gave a consistent performance and managed largely to steer clear of the tough midfield battles. He crossed the finish line in twelfth position. Victory went to Nyck de Vries (NED, Mercedes). 

Roger Griffiths (Team Principal BMW i Andretti Motorsport, team standings: 10th place):

“Obviously, that was not the race we hoped for. It’s a disappointing start to the season. Maximilian sat in a pretty comfortable sixth position but then lost the car. The left side is damaged but the guys will look at it now and get it fixed for tomorrow. Jake learned a lot today. He had a conservative start, but especially in the second half of the race he showed strong pace. He will sleep on everything he experienced today and will come back stronger tomorrow. So will the whole team. We will analyse what happened today, improve certain things and come back fighting in tomorrow’s event.”

BMW i Andretti Formula E 2019-2020 Season Summary and Berlin ePrix Report — Part II

Quick. Calm. Composed. Talented. Mature. These are all adjectives that I have used to describe young Maximilian Guenther this season in his first full season of Formula E. He demonstrated that all again in a fiercely determined drive to victory in Race III on the standard Berlin-Tempelhof configuration where his offensive driving, defensive driving, and energy conservation skills were all put to the test. Part II of my season summary will focus on Guenther, firstly this piece on his magnificent win on home turf in Berlin, then on his season as a whole and his outlook going forward in Part IIb.

Berlin Race III Recap

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BERLIN TEMPELHOF AIRPORT, GERMANY – AUGUST 13: Maximilian Günther (DEU), BMW I Andretti Motorsports, BMW iFE.20 during the Berlin E-Prix VI at Berlin Tempelhof Airport on Thursday August 13, 2020 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Sam Bloxham / LAT Images)

As detailed in Part I, the first two races in Berlin on the reverse configuration track had not gone well by any means for the BMW i Andretti team. The team’s Qualifying woes and lack of race pace to make up for that meant that Guenther and Alexander Sims walked away with an abysmal sum total of 2 points from the two races. If there was any silver lining in this cloud, it was that both drivers dropped so much in the drivers’ championship standings that they were now both slated to participate in Group 2 qualifying. Sims in particular had spent almost the entire season in the Top 6 of the drivers’ championship, meaning that he had had to participate in Group 1 qualifying for almost the entire season thus far.

But it was Guenther who would make the most of this opportunity, as he had done in Santiago and in Marrakesh. Guenther squeaked into the Super Pole session in sixth place, just 0.011 seconds ahead of Porsche’s Andre Lotterer who had also been in Group 2. As the first car to take to the track during the Super Pole session, Guenther would set a highly competitive time that was even quicker than his time during the group stage of Qualifying.

No one would be able to touch his time, until it came to the turn of Jean-Eric Vergne, last on track due to his being quickest in the group stage. Vergne absolutely smashed Guenther’s time, finishing his lap nearly half a second quicker. As seen during the previous two races at Berlin, the DS Techeetah cars were just on another level in Qualifying. The gap between Vergne’s time in Super Pole and Guenther’s time in Super Pole was larger than the gap from Guenther’s time during the group stages to the 22nd-quickest time during the group stages, set by Daniel Abt in the NIO.

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BERLIN TEMPELHOF AIRPORT, GERMANY – AUGUST 09: Alexander Sims (GBR) BMW I Andretti Motorsports, BMW iFE.20 during the Berlin E-Prix IV at Berlin Tempelhof Airport on Sunday August 09, 2020 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Alastair Staley / LAT Images)

Guenther would line up second on the grid on a warm sunny afternoon in Berlin, on the outside line of the track. It would prove to be a disadvantage, as he made a decent getaway at the start but allowed the third-placed Mahindra of Jerome d’Ambrosio to slip under him at Turn 1, pushing him back to third place. Sound familiar? The same thing happened earlier this season at Santiago, where Guenther qualified second but allowed the third-placed Mahindra, this time driven by Pascal Wehrlein, to go down the inside and pass at Turn 2.

At Santiago, Guenther was stuck behind the Mahindra for a good chunk of the first half of the race before finally using Attack Mode to get past Wehrlein and eventually past the race leader Mitch Evans as well. But Guenther was absolutely determined to not let this happen again, as he launched attack after attack on d’Ambrosio, forcing the Belgian driver into driving very defensively throughout the entirety of the first lap while Vergne cruised away at the front. Finally, on the second lap,

Guenther made the move stick by going down the inside of the Mahindra at the large sweeping hairpin of Turn 6. Second place was his.

At this point, I was rather worried that Guenther had overconsumed on battery power in hounding the Mahindra for a full lap. So I was relieved when the battery levels flashed on screen during Lap 3 and Guenther had the same amount of usable energy remaining as the cars behind him and a little less than Vergne (understandable since Vergne had no one to fight with on the opening laps). Guenther then immediately set a series of fastest laps in his pursuit of Vergne, getting within 0.7 seconds of Vergne in the matter of just two laps.

BERLIN TEMPELHOF AIRPORT, GERMANY РAUGUST 08: Maximilian Günther (DEU), BMW I Andretti Motorsports, BMW iFE.20 during the Berlin E-Prix III at Berlin Tempelhof Airport on Saturday August 08, 2020 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Alastair Staley / LAT Images)

Guenther was then content to sit in the slipstream of Vergne, using the DS Techeetah car as a glorified windbreaker to reduce the drag of his own BMW iFE.20. This had the effect of allowing Guenther to lift the throttle earlier on straights while still maintaining similar top-end speed as Vergne, who had no one in front of him. Guenther had probably consumed more energy when setting his fastest laps to close down the gap to Vergne, but with 37 minutes (+1 lap) remaining, Guenther had only 1% less usable energy remaining than Vergne.

With 33 minutes (+1 lap) remaining, the two cars had about equal amounts of SOC (state of charge) and less than a second’s gap between them. The race was on! Vergne and Guenther were the easy favorites for the race win at this point — D’Ambrosio was the only car that was keeping up with them, and the Mahindra driver had overconsumed on battery in keeping up with the leading duo, resulting in him having 2% less usable energy remaining compared to Vergne and Guenther.

But a Formula E race is never predictable. With approximately 32 minutes (+1 lap) remaining in the race, there was carnage just past the Turn 9 hairpin. Just in front of Alexander Sims, Sergio Sette Camara tried to muscle his Dragon past James Calado’s Jaguar, but the pair collided at the hairpin. Multiple other cars were involved, but the damage was not terminal for anyone except for Porsche’s Neel Jani. The safety car was deployed to clean up the mess.

Racing resumed at full speed with right around 22 minutes (+1 lap) remaining. Interestingly, none of the frontrunners had taken Attack Mode at this point, and the race was already almost halfway over. How would this affect the strategy for the second half of the race?

The BMW Andretti team approached their strategy very aggressively, as it turns out. Guenther got a fantastic restart and was immediately right behind Vergne, having pulled away from D’Ambrosio. The team took a gamble and instructed Guenther to take Attack Mode immediately, in the hopes that he could retain his position and quickly catch up to Vergne. However, that worked out disastrously, as Guenther lost one place immediately and then two more to Robin Frijns and Stoffel Vandoorne when he got boxed in at the exit of the Turn 6 hairpin where the Attack Mode activation area is located. Guenther was now down to fifth place.

Guenther’s fight back began immediately. He passed Vandoorne into Turn 1 on the very next lap, then scythed past Frijns on the run down to Turn 6 of the same lap. In the meantime, both Vergne and D’Ambrosio took Attack Mode, allowing Guenther back into second place, just behind Vergne as he had been one lap ago. The gamble of taking Attack Mode early definitely had not paid off.

BERLIN TEMPELHOF AIRPORT, GERMANY РAUGUST 08: Maximilian Günther (DEU), BMW I Andretti Motorsports, BMW iFE.20 during the Berlin E-Prix III at Berlin Tempelhof Airport on Saturday August 08, 2020 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Alastair Staley / LAT Images)

Frijns, who would really come into the picture later in the race, took Attack Mode one lap later and actually made up a place on D’Ambrosio, moving into third place behind the two leaders. With 14 minutes (+1 lap) left in the race, Guenther activated Attack Mode for the second and last time, remaining in second place as Frijns behind did the same. A close moment came the following lap — Vergne activated Attack Mode and came back onto the racing line just behind Guenther, but managed to get on the inside for Turn 7 to remain in the lead!

Following this, it would basically be a straight battle to the checkered flag. Guenther knew this and drove accordingly, planning for the long term with his team. Being behind the Techeetah car allowed Guenther to bait Vergne into consuming more energy to defend — on several occasions, Guenther moved off the racing line to pretend to be sizing up an overtake, but lifted off the throttle early to conserve energy.

On the big run down the back straight to the Turn 6 hairpin, on-screen telemetry showed that Guenther was actually lifting off the throttle a few seconds earlier than Vergne was, despite being the car behind. At this point, Guenther was about half a second behind Vergne, with Frijns another three seconds back. But Guenther had 1% more usable energy remaining than Vergne, and Frijns had another 1% on top of that.

With 6 minutes (+1 lap) remaining, Guenther began his attack. He ran his BMW iFE.20 less than half a car’s length behind Vergne, forcing Vergne to cover the inside line at almost every major braking point around the circuit. As they approached Turn 1, Guenther had a sizable pace advantage and tried to send it around the outside. Unfortunately, going around the long way is always difficult, and Vergne kept the lead. This prompted the BMW Andretti team to tell Guenther to “remember Marrakesh,” where Guenther had benefited from sitting in the slipstream of Vergne’s Techeetah for the latter stages of the race before passing him on the last lap. In effect, Guenther’s team was telling him to be patient and wait until the last lap to make the overtaking maneuver.

However, Guenther showed his remarkable maturity at this stage of the race again, demonstrating impressive analytical ability even while wrestling a car around one of the fastest circuits on the Formula E calendar. Knowing that Frijns behind in the Virgin car had more energy than Vergne and himself and was closing the gap to the dueling pair, Guenther sensed the urgency of the situation. He overrode the team’s suggestion, continuing to hound Vergne mercilessly. Then his efforts paid off — he went down the outside of Vergne at Turn 6 of the very same lap, allowing him to get the switchback and thus, the inside line for Turn 7. Just like that, Guenther moved into the lead!

It was a brilliant call once again from the young German, and one that may have saved his race win. And with just under 2 minutes (+1 lap) to go, we could see why. Frijns began to attack Vergne with much conviction, closing the gap between himself and the Techeetah to less than a second in the matter of a few corners. If Guenther had not already cleared Vergne, he might have been the one feeling the wrath of a Virgin car with significantly more SOC. As they approached Turn 1 for the penultimate time, Frijns easily cruised past Vergne, who was now forced to ramp up his energy conservation efforts.

Going into the final lap, Frijns had closed up the gap and was now just 0.3 seconds behind Guenther! He also had fractionally more usable energy remaining than Guenther did. It would be a close fight to the end. Guenther defended for all he was worth, just had Vergne had done before him. He blocked the inside going into the Turn 6 hairpin, then immediately did the same at the Turn 9 hairpin. Then Frijns basically pulled alongside Guenther at Turn 10, the final turn of the lap, but Guenther held the inside line. It would be a sprint to the finish, and Guenther would just hold on by just 0.128 seconds! All the frontrunners would cross the line with approximately 0.0% remaining in usable energy. It would be a victory on home soil for both Guenther and the BMW Andretti team!

Guenther revealed after the race that he had just enough energy left in the battery to go full throttle all the way to the finish line — there was no way he was going to lose the victory at the line! Guenther and the team were understandably delighted at their triumph at their home track. It was a shame that the following three races in Berlin did not go to plan, but this race showcased the fruitful partnership between Guenther and the BMW Andretti team as Guenther vaulted up into second place in the drivers’ championship. Check back for Part IIb, which will be available soon and will document the ups and downs of Guenther’s Formula E career so far.

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