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Orudzhev wins five-way FR3.5 fight in Hungary
By alley - Jun 13, 2015, 7:31 AM ET

Orudzhev wins five-way FR3.5 fight in Hungary

Rookie Egor Orudzhev claimed his first Formula Renault 3.5 victory after emerging on top from a thrilling five-car battle at the Hungaroring.

The Russian outdragged fish-tailing polesitter Oliver Rowland into the lead away from the lights, and spent the rest of the race fiercely and skilfully defending his position.

"I was lucky that it was almost impossible to pass on this track, as I was completely destroyed in 20 minutes," said Orudzhev. "I saved my DRS for the last five laps, but it was really tough, the most difficult race of my life, probably."

Rowland initially dropped behind championship rival Matthieu Vaxiviere on the run down to Turn 1, but recovered the position later round the opening tour. A wrong-footed Vaxiviere was also demoted by Orudzhev's Arden teammate Nicholas Latifi, who had charged from seventh on the grid into third.

The battle overheated on lap five when the pair made contact on the exit of Turn 1. Canadian Latifi was forced to retire with a left-rear puncture, but Lotus Formula 1 junior driver Vaxiviere survived the scare.

In the second half of the race, a gaggle of four cars consisting of Rowland, Vaxiviere, Manor Formula 1 driver Roberto Merhi and former GP2 ace Tom Dillmann former behind Orudzhev's gearbox.

There were numerous wild moments. First Frenchman Vaxiviere ran completely off the road at the fast Turn 11 right-hander. Rowland found the grass at Turn 12 and took to the run-off on the exit of Turn 3 in his efforts to wrestle the lead from Orudzhev before he could come under attack from his closest championship rival Vaxiviere.

But it was Pons driver Merhi who was able to make his overtaking attempts stick. The Spaniard, who has endured a troubled season in FR3.5 alongside his F1 campaign, first grabbed third from Vaxiviere on lap 25 of 27, before stealing second position from Rowland into the final corner on the last lap.

Behind the breathless lead battle action, Red Bull junior Dean Stoneman completed the top six for DAMS.

Monaco winner Jazeman Jaafar sustained a puncture and finished down in 18th.

RESULTS - 27 LAPS:

Pos

Driver

Team

Gap

1

Egor Orudzhev

Arden Motorsport

42m35.436s

2

Roberto Merhi

Pons Racing

0.413s

3

Oliver Rowland

Fortec Motorsports

0.450s

4

Matthieu Vaxiviere

Lotus

1.323s

5

Tom Dillmann

Jagonya Ayam with Carlin

1.745s

6

Dean Stoneman

DAMS

3.310s

7

Aurelien Panis

Tech 1 Racing

4.321s

8

Roy Nissany

Tech 1 Racing

9.427s

9

Beitske Visser

AVF

27.475s

10

Gustav Malja

Strakka Racing

27.711s

11

Nyck de Vries

DAMS

32.986s

12

Bruno Bonifacio

International Draco Racing

36.294s

13

Philo Paz Armand

Pons Racing

37.024s

14

Alfonso Celis

AVF

38.052s

15

Sean Gelael

Jagonya Ayam with Carlin

38.697s

16

Meindert van Buuren

Lotus

40.190s

17

Tio Ellinas

Strakka Racing

42.784s

18

Jazeman Jaafar

Fortec Motorsports

47.016s

-

Pietro Fantin

International Draco Racing

Retirement

-

Nicholas Latifi

Arden Motorsport

Retirement

 

Originally on Autosport.com

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