2021 Austin W Series round

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United States 2021 W Series Austin round
Event Information
Round 7 of 7 in the 2021
Date23–24 October 2021
LocationAustin, Texas, United States
VenueCircuit of the Americas
Results
Race 1
Distance 16 laps 88.208 km
Pole position United Kingdom Abbi Pulling
Puma W Series Team
2:05.633
Winner United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick
Veloce Racing
33:59.968
Race 2
Distance 16 laps 88.208 km
Pole position United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick
Veloce Racing
2:05.704
Winner United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick
Veloce Racing
33:48.906

The 2021 W Series Austin round was the seventh and final round of the 2021 W Series, and took place at the Circuit of the Americas in the United States on the 23rd and 24 October 2021.[1] The event was an undercard to the 2021 Formula One World Championship round at the same circuit.[2]

Report[edit]

Background[edit]

The championship was originally scheduled to hold two events in the Americas, one at the Circuit of the Americas and another at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in support of the 2021 Mexico City Grand Prix – however due to calendar changes for Formula One, W Series opted to hold just the one event in Austin but add a second race to their support billing. Two practice sessions would be held with only one qualifying session, where a drivers' fastest time set the grid positions for race one and her second fastest time set her grid position for race two.[3][4]

Prior to the event, it was confirmed that the top eight drivers in the standings at seasons' end would be guaranteed entry into the 2022 season.[5] The championship also announced a series of breast cancer prevention initiatives for the Austin round in response to Breast Cancer Awareness Month.[6]

Russian driver Irina Sidorkova was denied a visa to the United States and was forced to miss the event; she was replaced with Caitlin Wood.[7]

Alice Powell and Jamie Chadwick both led the championship on 109 points, however Powell was mathematically ahead with three wins to Chadwick’s two.

Race 1[edit]

Abbi Pulling scored a shock pole in just her third W Series outing but the young Brit lost out at the start as Emma Kimiläinen rounded up both drivers on the front row and shot to the lead, however a slow exit from the first corner allowed Jamie Chadwick to take the lead ahead of Pulling. Belén García had qualified third but a grid penalty put her back to sixth; the disadvantage was quickly wiped out as she went around the outside of both Kimiläinen and Pulling at turn two, the Finn using García as a slingshot to re-pass Pulling back up into the podium places as the field swept into the esses. Fabienne Wohlwend and Alice Powell both made solid progress on the opening lap as well, each gaining three places up into 6th and 7th respectively.

After Belén García's rapid start, the Spaniard began to form a train of cars behind – Kimiläinen attempted a move into turn 11, forcing the Scuderia W car offline and the Écurie W driver dragged her way past down the back straight. Pulling and Sarah Moore attempted moves behind, however had to settle for a little while longer. Powell, whose disastrous qualifying had placed her firmly on the back foot in the championship fight, made it a four-car battle for the podium as Pulling slid down the inside at the final corner. Powell used the move to pass Moore into turn 1 before taking García at turn 12, however had lost significant ground on her protégé Pulling.

Abbie Eaton started the weekend on the back foot having qualifying 14th for both races, and after falling to 16th at the start her weekend ended prematurely when she fractured her T4 vertebrae in a collision with a sausage kerb on the exit of turn 16.[8] Wohlwend's good start also fell apart as her tyres began to degrade as a result of a spin in Practice 2 – the Liechtensteiner falling back to 10th. Ahead of her, Beitske Visser got past Marta García in a three-car battle for seventh that included Jessica Hawkins.

Belén García's pace had deteriorated exponentially heading into the closing stages as the leaders pulled away from her fifth place at the rate of 2 seconds per lap. Nerea Martí was recovering from the worst qualifying of her rookie season by passing Wohlwend for the final point, whilst Hawkins passed Marta García ahead for eighth – and signalled her displeasure with the Spaniard's defence as she went past on the back straight. Moore, fed up with her team-mate's lack of pace, sent it down the inside of Belén García at turn 1 with eight minutes to go, Visser following closely behind. Half a lap later García ran wide on the exit of turn 11 under some pressure from Hawkins and lost out to the Brit – however when Marta García tried to make the move at turn 12 she applied too much throttle and spun out on her own, dropping a long way out of the points. Belén García soon suffered a similar fate; Martí, Wohlwend and Koyama all sailing past the Catalan to drop her out of the points.

Having disposed of her team-mate, Sarah Moore now found herself fighting Visser for the top five. A difficult season for the 2019 runner-up had left her with only two points finishes in six races, but the Dutchwoman soared past Moore at turn 12 to equal her best result of the season. At the front, Powell had steadily closed on Pulling in the Puma car – and a track limits warning for Pulling curtailed her pace even further. On the final lap of the race, Powell dived up the inside of Pulling at turn 11 to seal the bottom step of the podium and clawed back another three points in the championship hunt.

Jamie Chadwick took a lights-to-flag victory with Kimiläinen second. Powell's third place left her ten points down on Chadwick, and with the Veloce Racing driver starting 9 places ahead in the final race she had one hand firmly on the championship trophy.[9]

Race 2[edit]

The grid was reduced to sixteen cars for the last race of the season – Abbie Eaton was hospitalised with a compound fracture and Marta García withdrew citing mental health concerns.[10]

Chadwick rocketed away from pole position and took a comfortable lead into turn 1. Sarah Moore had a terrible start from third and slipped back into the midfield, and the two Bunker Racing cars went side-by-side – Fabienne Wohlwend was forced wide over the sausage kerbs, bouncing across them in a similar fashion to Eaton the day before but was unharmed. Alice Powell passed her team-mate for seventh as she attempted to stay in the championship hunt.

Kimiläinen was no longer in the championship fight and was guaranteed third in the standings, but that didn't stop her from seizing third from Beitske Visser at turn 11. The Dutchwoman was only just hanging onto a top eight place and attempted to re-pass at the end of the straight but the Finn defended stoutly. Visser's team-mate and Texan resident Ayla Ågren made her way past Bruna Tomaselli for twelfth, the Brazilian had a strong start after issues in qualifying saw her start last for both races.

Sabré Cook engaged in a battle with Hawkins over eighth; the only American in the field had failed to score a point in any of the races and was keen to impress on home soil. She passed Hawkins at turn 16 and chased down Powell, who was stuck behind Belén García. Moore attempted a pass on Visser at turn 1; the move was initially countered by the M. Forbes Motorsport driver, however the Brit made the pass stick a lap later. Wohlwend had suffered a cracked suspension wishbone in her first lap off, and having valiantly held onto a place just outside the points for more than half the race the damage proved too much of a problem and she chose to retire the car.

With Chadwick in a comfortable lead, Powell's chances of winning the championship were becoming increasingly difficult – the Brit used the hurry up from Cook to send one down the inside of García at turn 1, but ran wide and was re-passed. Cook was held up by the move and Hawkins, desperate to try and climb into the championship top eight, attempted to capitalise – but she made a half-hearted move on the American at turn 12 that spun both drivers around 180° and out of the points. Powell finally made the move stick on García with just four minutes remaining, forcing the Spaniard out wide and taking sixth.

Powell's efforts were in vain however as Chadwick cruised to her fourth win of the season and sealed the title by 27 points. Abbi Pulling capped off a breakthrough weekend by finishing second and Kimiläinen drove a quiet race to third. Nerea Martí finished the season as the highest placed rookie in fourth despite two eighth-place finishes in the last round; Moore, Wohlwend, Pulling and Visser securing the remaining spots in the top eight. Irina Sidorkova's absence saw her drop outside the cut-off by 4 points, however as an Academy driver she was contracted to a second season regardless.[11]

Classification[edit]

Practice[edit]

Session No. Driver Team Time Source
Practice 1 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick Veloce Racing 2:06.429 [12]
Practice 2 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick Veloce Racing 2:05.673 [13]

Qualifying[edit]

Sarah Moore qualified third for Race 2.
Pos. No. Driver Team Time/Gap
Fastest times (Race 1)
1 49 United Kingdom Abbi Pulling Puma W Series Team 2:05.633
2 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick Veloce Racing +0.070
3 22 Spain Belén García1 Scuderia W +0.292
4 26 United Kingdom Sarah Moore Scuderia W +0.414
5 7 Finland Emma Kimiläinen Écurie W +0.469
6 19 Spain Marta García Puma W Series Team +0.523
7 95 Netherlands Beitske Visser M. Forbes Motorsport +0.549
8 21 United Kingdom Jessica Hawkins Racing X +0.566
9 5 Liechtenstein Fabienne Wohlwend[a] Bunker Racing +0.718
10 27 United Kingdom Alice Powell Racing X +0.816
11 17 Norway Ayla Ågren M. Forbes Motorsport +0.898
12 37 United States Sabré Cook Bunker Racing +0.947
13 32 Spain Nerea Martí W Series Academy +0.982
14 44 United Kingdom Abbie Eaton Écurie W +1.376
15 54 Japan Miki Koyama Sirin Racing +1.866
16 20 Australia Caitlin Wood W Series Academy +2.045
17 11 Italy Vittoria Piria Sirin Racing +2.139
18 97 Brazil Bruna Tomaselli Veloce Racing +2.594
Second fastest times (Race 2)
1 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick Veloce Racing 2:05.704
2 49 United Kingdom Abbi Pulling Puma W Series Team +0.218
3 26 United Kingdom Sarah Moore Scuderia W +0.389
4 19 Spain Marta García Puma W Series Team +0.590
5 95 Netherlands Beitske Visser M. Forbes Motorsport +0.598
6 22 Spain Belén García Scuderia W +0.661
7 7 Finland Emma Kimiläinen Écurie W +0.682
8 21 United Kingdom Jessica Hawkins Racing X +0.726
9 27 United Kingdom Alice Powell Racing X +0.840
10 5 Liechtenstein Fabienne Wohlwend Bunker Racing +0.860
11 37 United States Sabré Cook Bunker Racing +1.184
12 17 Norway Ayla Ågren M. Forbes Motorsport +1.264
13 32 Spain Nerea Martí W Series Academy +1.343
14 44 United Kingdom Abbie Eaton Écurie W +1.681
15 11 Italy Vittoria Piria Sirin Racing +2.092
16 20 Australia Caitlin Wood W Series Academy +2.117
17 54 Japan Miki Koyama Sirin Racing +2.560
18 97 Brazil Bruna Tomaselli Veloce Racing +2.759
Source:[16]
  • ^1 – Belén García received a three-place grid penalty for impeding another competitor in qualifying.

Race 1[edit]

Local driver Sabré Cook finished eleventh, one place outside the points, in Race 1.
Pos. No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid Pts
1 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick Veloce Racing 16 33:59.968 2 25
2 7 Finland Emma Kimiläinen Écurie W 16 +1.257 4 18
3 27 United Kingdom Alice Powell Racing X 16 +3.596 10 15
4 49 United Kingdom Abbi Pulling Puma W Series Team 16 +9.292 1 12
5 95 Netherlands Beitske Visser M. Forbes Motorsport 16 +20.296 7 10
6 21 United Kingdom Jessica Hawkins Racing X 16 +21.463 8 8
7 26 United Kingdom Sarah Moore Scuderia W 16 +22.094 3 6
8 32 Spain Nerea Martí W Series Academy 16 +25.379 13 4
9 5 Liechtenstein Fabienne Wohlwend Bunker Racing 16 +29.024 9 2
10 54 Japan Miki Koyama Sirin Racing 16 +30.292 15 1
11 37 United States Sabré Cook Bunker Racing 16 +32.737 12
12 22 Spain Belén García Scuderia W 16 +35.169 6
13 20 Australia Caitlin Wood W Series Academy 16 +35.484 16
14 11 Italy Vittoria Piria Sirin Racing 16 +44.054 17
15 19 Spain Marta García Puma W Series Team 16 +46.601 5
16 17 Norway Ayla Ågren M. Forbes Motorsport 16 +49.516 11
17 97 Brazil Bruna Tomaselli Veloce Racing 16 +49.850 18
DNF 44 United Kingdom Abbie Eaton Écurie W 4 Injury 14
Fastest lap set by Alice Powell: 2:06.767
Source:[17]

Race 2[edit]

Nerea Martí finished both races in 8th place and secured 4th in the championship, the highest-placed rookie.
Pos. No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid Pts
1 55 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick Veloce Racing 16 33:48.906 1 25
2 49 United Kingdom Abbi Pulling Puma W Series Team 16 +5.030 2 18
3 7 Finland Emma Kimiläinen Écurie W 16 +7.209 6 15
4 26 United Kingdom Sarah Moore Scuderia W 16 +15.857 3 12
5 95 Netherlands Beitske Visser M. Forbes Motorsport 16 +21.061 4 10
6 27 United Kingdom Alice Powell Racing X 16 +24.809 8 8
7 22 Spain Belén García Scuderia W 16 +26.686 5 6
8 32 Spain Nerea Martí W Series Academy 16 +29.507 12 4
9 17 Norway Ayla Ågren M. Forbes Motorsport 16 +29.889 11 2
10 20 Australia Caitlin Wood W Series Academy 16 +36.869 14 1
11 97 Brazil Bruna Tomaselli Veloce Racing 16 +38.249 16
12 54 Japan Miki Koyama Sirin Racing 16 +42.691 15
13 37 United States Sabré Cook Bunker Racing 16 +43.723 10
14 11 Italy Vittoria Piria Sirin Racing 16 +45.309 13
15 21 United Kingdom Jessica Hawkins Racing X 16 +57.409 7
DNF 5 Liechtenstein Fabienne Wohlwend Bunker Racing 9 Collision damage 9
DNS 19 Spain Marta García Puma W Series Team 0 Mental health
DNS 44 United Kingdom Abbie Eaton Écurie W 0 Injury
Fastest lap set by Jamie Chadwick: 2:06.464
Source:[18]

Championship standings[edit]

Pos. Driver Pts Gap
1 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick 159
2 United Kingdom Alice Powell 132 -27
3 Finland Emma Kimiläinen 108 -51
4 Spain Nerea Martí 61 -98
5 United Kingdom Sarah Moore 56 -103

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Wohlwend races with a Swiss licence however is a Liechtenstein citizen and passport holder.[14][15]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "W SERIES GOES BIGGER IN TEXAS". W Series. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  2. ^ "W Series to support F1 in 2021 and beyond". ESPN.com. 2020-11-12. Retrieved 2020-12-08.
  3. ^ "W series cancels Mexico round, to end season in Texas". Reuters. 25 September 2021.
  4. ^ "W SERIES AT THE DOUBLE IN AUSTIN FOR 2021 SEASON FINALE". W Series. 23 September 2021.
  5. ^ "W SERIES' TOP EIGHT GO THROUGH TO 2022". W Series. 15 October 2021.
  6. ^ "W SERIES PADDOCK GOES PINK FOR BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH". W Series. 1 October 2021.
  7. ^ "Irina Sidorkova denied US visa, Caitlin Wood to step in at COTA season finale". Racers – Behind the Helmet. 21 October 2021.
  8. ^ "@abbieeaton44 on Instagram". Instagram. 25 October 2021.
  9. ^ "COTA RACE 1 REPORT". W Series. 24 October 2021.
  10. ^ "@martagarcialopez19 on Instagram". Instagram. 26 October 2021.
  11. ^ "JAMIE AT THE DOUBLE IN AUSTIN TO DEFEND W SERIES CROWN". W Series. 24 October 2021.
  12. ^ "W Series 2021 Austin Classification – Practice 1". Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  13. ^ "W Series 2021 Austin Classification – Practice 2". Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  14. ^ "Fabienne: Ein Podium für die Nachbarn". Autosprint.ch (in German). 27 June 2021. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
  15. ^ "FIA International Sporting Code" (PDF). Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 13 October 2013. p. 34. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 January 2015. Retrieved 25 January 2015. 9.5.2 All Drivers, irrespective of the nationality of their Licence, participating in any FIA World Championship Competition, shall retain the nationality of their passport in all official documents, publications and prize‐giving ceremonies.
  16. ^ "COTA QUALIFYING REPORT". W Series. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  17. ^ "W Series 2021 Austin Classification – Race 1". Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  18. ^ "W Series 2021 Austin Classification – Race 2". Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 20 January 2022.

External links[edit]

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