2010 FIA WTCC Race of Spain explained

The 2010 FIA WTCC Race of Spain (formally the 2010 FIA WTCC DHL Race of Spain) was the ninth round of the 2010 World Touring Car Championship season and the sixth running of the FIA WTCC Race of Spain. It was held at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo near Valencia, Spain on 19 September 2010. The two races were won by SR-Sport drivers Gabriele Tarquini and Tiago Monteiro.

Background

Coming into the final European round of the season, Chevrolet RML driver Yvan Muller was leading the drivers' championship and Sergio Hernández was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.

Marc Carol joined the field in a SEAT Customers Technology run SEAT León 2.0 TFSI.[1] Carol had last raced in the World Touring Car Championship at the 2005 FIA WTCC Race of Spain. Fabio Fabiani didn't return after the Race of Germany.

Report

Free practice

BMW Team RBM's Augusto Farfus was fastest in the opening practice session on Saturday morning, beating the lead Chevrolet of Alain Menu. Gabriele Tarquini was the leading SEAT in fifth while Carol was the quickest independent driver on his return to the WTCC.[2]

SR–Sport's Tom Coronel set the pace in the final practice session, edging out Menu by a tenth of a second. Kristian Poulsen was both the leading independent and BMW driver in seventh.[3]

Qualifying

Tarquini took pole position in qualifying for the first race on Sunday, beating the Chevrolet of Robert Huff. Fredy Barth had been the fastest driver in the first element of qualifying, beating the works Chevrolet drivers. Norbert Michelisz suffered an engine failure during Q1, finishing thirteenth while Franz Engstler ended his session in the gravel after setting a time good enough for fourteenth. Andy Priaulx narrowly made it through to Q2, finishing the session tenth at the expense of Michel Nykjær.

Tarquini set his pole time early on while later fast laps from Huff and Muller saw them finish second and third ahead of Menu who was hampered with gearbox problems. Tiago Monteiro and Coronel, who would take a ten place grid penalty for an unscheduled engine change. Jordi Gené, Barth and the works BMW pair of Priaulx and Farfus completed the top ten.[4]

Warm-Up

Michelisz led Sunday morning's warm–up session with pole sitter Tarquini half a second behind.[5]

Race One

Tarquini led away from pole position while further down, Priaulx moved up from ninth to sixth. Muller easily got ahead of Huff to take second place in opening laps while Barth and Farfus were battling over who would start on the front row for race two. Menu had dropped down the order to claim the reversed grid pole as Barth repeatedly tapped Farfus' rear bumper. The BMW eventually went wide, giving sevenths place to Barth. At the front, Tarquini took the win with Muller second and Huff third. Gené was fourth, Priaulx finished fifth and Monteiro was sixth. Poulsen was twelfth and won the independents' class.[6]

Race Two

Menu started on pole position and was followed by Barth, the two were then passed up each side by Monteiro on the outside and Priaulx on the inside. Priaulx and Menu then collided, allowing Monteiro to assume the lead and Barth took second place. Priaulx attempted another move on Menu at turn three but the Chevrolet took the normal line through the corner, the pair collided and Menu spun. Priaulx was delayed but Muller took the opportunity to pass both of them and take third, he then took second from Barth when the Swiss SEAT driver slowed with a puncture. Priaulx was left to battle with Tarquini for third, with Tarquini coming out on top. At the end of the race, Monteiro took the win with Muller second and Tarquini third. Poulsen was the Yokohama Trophy winner.[7]

Results

Qualifying

NameTeamCarQ1Q2
11 Gabriele TarquiniSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI1:44.7271:44.111
27 Robert HuffChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT1:44.9371:44.193
36 Yvan MullerChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT1:44.9221:44.258
48 Alain MenuChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT1:44.7101:44.439
53 Tiago MonteiroSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI1:44.8691:44.468
62 Tom CoronelSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI1:44.7891:44.525
74 Jordi GenéSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI1:44.8971:44.773
818 Fredy BarthSEAT Swiss Racing by SUNREDSEAT León 2.0 TDI1:44.6041:45.070
910 Augusto FarfusBMW Team RBMBMW 320si1:44.8231:45.205
1011 Andy PriaulxBMW Team RBMBMW 320si1:45.3131:45.416
1117 Michel NykjærSUNRED EngineeringSEAT León 2.0 TDI1:45.339
1224 Kristian PoulsenPoulsen MotorsportBMW 320siY1:45.607
135 Norbert MicheliszZengő-Dension TeamSEAT León 2.0 TDI1:45.741
1439 Marc CarolSEAT Customers TechnologySEAT León 2.0 TFSIY1:45.837
1520 Darryl O'Youngbamboo-engineeringChevrolet LacettiY1:46.017
1625 Sergio HernándezScuderia Proteam MotorsportBMW 320siY1:46.116
1721 Mehdi BennaniWiechers-SportBMW 320siY1:46.419
1815 Franz EngstlerLiqui Moly Team EngstlerBMW 320siY1:46.717
1926 Stefano D'AsteScuderia Proteam MotorsportBMW 320siY1:46.783
2072 Yukinori Taniguchibamboo-engineeringChevrolet LacettiY1:46.997
2116 Andrei RomanovLiqui Moly Team EngstlerBMW 320siY1:47.344

Race 1

NameTeamCarLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
11 Gabriele TarquiniSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI1323:11.124125
26 Yvan MullerChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT13+0.513318
37 Robert HuffChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT13+6.318215
44 Jordi GenéSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+9.949612
511 Andy PriaulxBMW Team RBMBMW 320si13+10.544910
63 Tiago MonteiroSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+11.66658
718 Fredy BarthSEAT Swiss Racing by SUNREDSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+13.73476
88 Alain MenuChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT13+14.52144
917 Michel NykjærSUNRED EngineeringSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+16.586102
102 Tom CoronelSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+17.217161
115 Norbert MicheliszZengő-Dension TeamSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+17.92912
1224 Kristian PoulsenPoulsen MotorsportBMW 320siY13+18.43411
1339 Marc CarolSEAT Customers TechnologySEAT León 2.0 TFSIY13+22.09513
1420 Darryl O'Youngbamboo-engineeringChevrolet LacettiY13+25.53514
1515 Franz EngstlerLiqui Moly Team EngstlerBMW 320siY13+29.31818
1616 Andrei RomanovLiqui Moly Team EngstlerBMW 320siY13+32.59521
1772 Yukinori Taniguchibamboo-engineeringChevrolet LacettiY13+37.00420
1810 Augusto FarfusBMW Team RBMBMW 320si13+1:37.3898
1925 Sergio HernándezScuderia Proteam MotorsportBMW 320siY11+2 Laps15
Ret21 Mehdi BennaniWiechers-SportBMW 320siY6Driveshaft17
Ret26 Stefano D'AsteScuderia Proteam MotorsportBMW 320siY4Race incident19

Race 2

NameTeamCarLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
13 Tiago MonteiroSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI1323:29.770325
26 Yvan MullerChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT13+0.719718
31 Gabriele TarquiniSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+3.455815
411 Andy PriaulxBMW Team RBMBMW 320si13+3.785412
54 Jordi GenéSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+4.183510
67 Robert HuffChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT13+4.98268
717 Michel NykjærSUNRED EngineeringSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+7.24896
810 Augusto FarfusBMW Team RBMBMW 320si13+7.825184
92 Tom CoronelSR-SportSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+9.024102
1024 Kristian PoulsenPoulsen MotorsportBMW 320siY13+10.125121
118 Alain MenuChevrolet RMLChevrolet Cruze LT13+13.3561
125 Norbert MicheliszZengő-Dension TeamSEAT León 2.0 TDI13+15.22611
1339 Marc CarolSEAT Customers TechnologySEAT León 2.0 TFSIY13+15.78913
1415 Franz EngstlerLiqui Moly Team EngstlerBMW 320siY13+15.95415
1525 Sergio HernándezScuderia Proteam MotorsportBMW 320siY13+18.71620
1621 Mehdi BennaniWiechers-SportBMW 320siY13+27.45519
1720 Darryl O'Youngbamboo-engineeringChevrolet LacettiY13+29.01114
1872 Yukinori Taniguchibamboo-engineeringChevrolet LacettiY13+32.97217
1916 Andrei RomanovLiqui Moly Team EngstlerBMW 320siY13+33.63616
Ret18 Fredy BarthSEAT Swiss Racing by SUNREDSEAT León 2.0 TDI7Brakes2
DNS26 Stefano D'AsteScuderia Proteam MotorsportBMW 320siY0Did not start21

Standings after the event

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Yvan Muller265
2 Andy Priaulx240
3 Gabriele Tarquini236
4 Robert Huff196
25 Tiago Monteiro158
Yokohama Independents' Trophy standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Sergio Hernández118
42 Kristian Poulsen87
13 Stefano D'Aste86
14 Darryl O'Young85
5 Franz Engstler81
Manufacturers' Championship standings
PosManufacturerPoints
1 Chevrolet569
12 SEAT Customers Technology524
13 BMW491

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Allen. Peter. Marc Carol To Race In Valencia. The Checkered Flag. BlackEagleMedia Network. 9 February 2013. 7 September 2010.
  2. News: Hudson. Neil. Farfus leads Free Practice 1 at Valencia. https://archive.today/20130412000253/http://www.touringcartimes.com/article.php?id=5285. dead. 12 April 2013. TouringCarTimes. Mediaempire Stockholm AB. 9 February 2013. 18 September 2010.
  3. News: English. Steven. Coronel fastest in final practice. Autosport. Haymarket Publications. 9 February 2013. 18 September 2010.
  4. News: Allen. Peter. Tarquini Secures Pole At Valencia. The Checkered Flag. BlackEagleMedia Network. 9 February 2013. 18 September 2010.
  5. News: Hudson. Neil. Michelisz leads Valencia warm-up. https://archive.today/20130412000539/http://www.touringcartimes.com/article.php?id=5301. dead. 12 April 2013. TouringCarTimes. Mediaempire Stockholm AB. 9 February 2013. 19 September 2010.
  6. News: English. Steven. Victory boosts Tarquini's title hopes. Autosport. Haymarket Publications. 9 February 2013. 19 September 2010.
  7. News: English. Steven. Monteiro wins second Valencia race. Autosport. Haymarket Publications. 9 February 2013. 19 September 2010.