Round 8, MONACO, Monte Carlo
Race
Perhaps the most brutal race in Formula 2 served it's tradition by being extremely punishing on the cars. Just 9 cars made it to the finish this time around. Okado, being the superior driver that he is, used his advantage to full force and led pretty much the entire race, with the sole exception of one driver's mistake which luckily only took time away from him and the stop phase. After his aforementioned mistake, he fought back immediately and overtook Regazzi for the lead.
Giambattista Regazzi still has every reason to be happy with this race, seeing as he was able to add to his lead after Zickler's retirement and Abratte over 30 seconds adrift of him. But he may have to watch out for Shigeaki Okado, who won this race in dramatic fashion which gives Honda the numbers 26 and 27 for the upcoming F1 race.
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³ Race Results ³
³ ------------ ³
³ Monaco - Monte-Carlo ³
³ (62 Laps) ³
³ ³
³ Pos Driver Time/Speed ³
³ ³
³ 1st Shigeaki Okado 1h 27m 26.116s ³
³ 2nd Bethany Gibbs +27.346s ³
³ 3rd Giambattista Regazzi +27.779s ³
³ 4th Mason Du +28.153s ³
³ 5th Lugo Abratte +1m 02.495s ³
³ 6th Boy Arnhem +1m 02.836s ³
³ 7th Alexander Diehl -1 Lap ³
³ 8th Rio Riolon -2 Laps ³
³ 9th Marko Adamczyk -3 Laps ³
³ 10th Neel Shambi Transmission ³
³ 11th Paul-Jacques Dion Engine ³
³ 12th Emanuel Dumas Suspension ³
³ 13th Tim Tagusen Suspension ³
³ 14th Grischa Zickler Transmission ³
³ 15th Kostas Karanikolas Engine ³
³ 16th Jos Peeters Transmission ³
³ 17th Thierry Gromik Suspension ³
³ 18th Stomper Monahan Electrical ³
³ 19th Roman Riquelme Loose Wheel ³
³ 20th Franz Koenig Suspension ³
³ 21st Chao Gu Engine ³
³ 22nd Yiasoumis Mertakis Engine ³
³ 23rd Lewis Cool Suspension ³
³ 24th Hajime Yamazaki Transmission ³
³ 25th Roland Huber Transmission ³
³ 26th Oliver Kelly Engine ³