Germany (Nico Hulkenberg) scored their sixth consecutive win and their eighth of the season in round eight of the A1 Grand Prix World Cup of Motorsport with back-to-back wins in the sprint and feature races at Durban’s street circuit on Sunday.
The 19-year-old German dominated the race weekend, as he had done at Australia’s Eastern Creek circuit three weeks ago, with pole position in qualifying, comfortable wins and fastest lap of the day.
Britain (Robbie Kerr) and New Zealand (Matt Halliday) took the other podium positions in the feature race.
South Africa’s Adrian Zaugg endured a heart-breaking weekend at the wheel of Vulindlela. The 20-year-old followed up his seventh-place finish in the 20-minute sprint race on Sunday morning with a luckless outing in the afternoon’s 70-minute Feature race.
He was stranded against the tyre wall on the opening lap after two cars collided in front of him in turn one, a 90-degree hairpin, and he rode over a piece of one of the cars. The safety car was deployed and Zaugg managed to get going again to rejoin the field in 19th place.
After two laps behind the safety car, the race got under way again, but just two laps later an over-ambitious attempt by Indonesia (Ananda Mikola) to pass Zaugg down the inside of turn one saw the two cars collide. Mikola retired on the spot while the South Africa limped back to the pits.
The South African team spent the next 40 laps repairing the extensive damage to Vulindlela and Zaugg rejoined the race — to the delight of the partisan crowd — with five minutes remaining. He was rewarded with the fastest lap of the race — on the 49th and final lap — and was officially classified in 17th place, 38 laps behind the winner.
”This was not the South African debut I had hoped to make this weekend,” said a disappointed Zaugg. ”But that’s motor racing. It was just bad luck. We made some adjustments to the car after qualifying, as I was not 100% happy with the set-up, and we were really looking forward to a strong performance in the race.
”A big thank you to the team for getting me back out in time for a few laps at the end of the race. The car was great and, as we saw from the lap times, we might have done quite well had we not been the victim of other people’s mistakes.” — Sapa
Championship points after eight of 11 rounds
1 Germany 99
2 New Zealand 69
3 France 57
4 Britain 46
5 Switzerland 45
6 Netherlands 49
7 Malaysia 38
8 Mexico 34
9 Italy 29
10 Canada 28
15 South Africa 13