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Buemi claims Monaco Formula E win
By alley - May 9, 2015, 1:01 PM ET

Buemi claims Monaco Formula E win

Sebastien Buemi became Formula E's first repeat winner with victory in the Monaco ePrix, ending a run of six different winners from the first six races.

The World Endurance champion, whose previous win with e.dams had come in Punta del Este in Uruguay last December, also becomes the first driver to convert an FE pole position into a win.

The start of the race was marred by two crashes on lap one. Jean-Eric Vergne hit the rear of Andretti Autosport teammate Scott Speed approaching the first corner, and in the concertina Jaime Alguersuari – who started 17th after a grid penalty – sustained enough suspension damage to retire on the spot.

One corner later, Daniel Abt went wide and hit the wall on the exit of Sainte Devote. Bruno Senna was left with nowhere to go and was fortunate not to roll as he was launched over the rear of Abt's car. The safety car was scrambled for four laps, with many drivers requiring bodywork repairs in the pits and Vitantonio Liuzzi losing 10 laps.

As the race unfolded, championship leader Lucas di Grassi tried an alternative strategy from his second place starting slot. He pitted to change cars first, on lap 24 of 47, whereas race leader Buemi was among the last three drivers to enter the pits when he stopped two laps later.

Buemi rejoined in his fresh car just ahead of di Grassi, who tried to pass at the hairpin that leads into the Formula 1 circuit's harbor-side chicane, but trying to take advantage of the cold brakes on Buemi's car didn't work as the Swiss driver held the inside line. From there Buemi wasn't under threat, and he went on to win by two seconds.

Di Grassi's championship rival, Nelson Piquet Jr., passed Jerome D'Ambrosio for third with the aid of the fan boost on lap five. He then conserved his battery power and was among the last to pit, on lap 26.

A spirited chase of second-placed di Grassi came close to paying off as he tried a pass on lap 42 of the 47. But his countryman defended at the inside of the hairpin and Piquet then fell back.

Sam Bird closed the gap to the Brazilian, having recovered from an 11th place starting position. He was aided by the lap one accidents, and ended the first tour in seventh. He couldn't pass Piquet in the final few laps though and finished fourth, just a tenth of a second behind his rival.

The result means di Grassi extends his championship lead from a single point to three points from Piquet.

"I tried a different strategy," said Di Grassi. "In the end it was very tight when Buemi came out of the pits. But it's the championship that matters."

RESULTS - 47 LAPS:

Pos

Driver

Team

Gap

1

Sebastien Buemi

e.dams

48m 05.225s

2

Lucas di Grassi

Abt

2.154s

3

Nelson Piquet Jr.

China

4.634s

4

Sam Bird

Virgin

4.801s

5

Jerome D'Ambrosio

Dragon

5.881s

6

Nicolas Prost

e.dams

11.032s

7

Stephane Sarrazin

Venturi

26.472s

8

Scott Speed

Andretti

41.138s

9

Charles Pic

China

49.538s

10

Antonio Felix da Costa

Aguri

52.658s

11

Nick Heidfeld

Venturi

52.936s

12

Jarno Trulli

Trulli

58.984s

13

Karun Chandhok

Mahindra

1 Lap

-

Vitantonio Liuzzi

Trulli

Retirement

-

Jean-Eric Vergne

Andretti

Retirement

-

Salvador Duran

Aguri

Retirement

-

Loic Duval

Dragon

Retirement

-

Daniel Abt

Abt

Retirement

-

Jaime Alguersuari

Virgin

Retirement

-

Bruno Senna

Mahindra

Retirement

CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS:

Pos

Driver

Points

1

Lucas di Grassi

93

2

Nelson Piquet Jr.

89

3

Sebastien Buemi

83

4

Nicolas Prost

77

5

Sam Bird

64

6

Jerome D'Ambrosio

52

7

Antonio Felix da Costa

44

8

Jean-Eric Vergne

34

9

Jaime Alguersuari

30

10

Bruno Senna

28

11

Scott Speed

22

12

Daniel Abt

22

13

Franck Montagny

18

14

Karun Chandhok

18

15

Oriol Servia

16

16

Charles Pic

14

17

Jarno Trulli

12

18

Stephane Sarrazin

10

19

Loic Duval

8

20

Nick Heidfeld

5

21

Takuma Sato

2

22

Salvador Duran

1

 

Originally on Autosport.com

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