2011 Imola GP2 Asia Series round

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Flag of Italy.svg    2011 Imola GP2 round
Round details
Round 2 of 2 rounds in the
2011 GP2 Series
Imola 2009.svg
Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari
Location Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Imola, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Course Permanent racing facility
4.909 km (3.050 mi)
Feature race
Date 19 March 2011
Laps 35
Pole position
Driver Flag of France.svg Romain Grosjean DAMS
Time 1:27.067
Podium
First Flag of France.svg Romain Grosjean DAMS
Second Flag of the Netherlands.svg Giedo van der Garde Barwa Addax Team
Third Flag of France.svg Jules Bianchi Lotus ART
Fastest lap
Driver Flag of France.svg Romain Grosjean DAMS
Time 1:28.097 (on lap 32)
Sprint race
Date 20 March 2011
Laps 25
Podium
First Flag of Spain.svg Dani Clos Racing Engineering
Second Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Fabio Leimer Rapax
Third Flag of the Netherlands.svg Giedo van der Garde Barwa Addax Team
Fastest lap
Driver Flag of France.svg Romain Grosjean DAMS
Time 1:28.772 (on lap 8)

The 2011 Imola GP2 Asia Series round was a pair of motor races held on 19 and 20 March 2011 at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari in Imola, Emilia-Romagna, Italy as part of the GP2 Asia Series. It was the season-ending round of the 2011 GP2 Asia Series and was a standalone event after the two Bahrain rounds scheduled for February and March 2011 were cancelled due to civil unrest in the country. The first event, a 35-lap feature race, was won by DAMS driver Romain Grosjean from pole position. Giedo van der Garde finished second for Barwa Addax Team and Lotus ART racer Jules Bianchi was third. The next day, Dani Clos of Racing Engineering won the 25-lap sprint race with Rapax's Fabio Leimer and van der Garde second and third.

Contents

Grosjean won pole position for the feature race by setting the fastest lap in qualifying and maintained the lead at the start. He blocked van der Garde from overtaking him on lap one and pulled way from the fourth lap onward to claim his first GP2 Series victory of the season and his first since the 2009 Monaco round. Fauzy started from pole position in the sprint race after coming eighth in the feature event but a slow getaway lost him the lead to the fast starting Clos into the first corner. Clos came under pressure from Leimer throughout the event but he fended off his challenges each time and achieved victory.

Grosjean's results won him a second GP2 Series Drivers' Championship including the 2008 GP2 Asia Series after the leader entering the round Bianchi failed to finish the sprint race because he was caught up in a chain-reaction accident caused by Fauzy on the first lap. Van Der Garde moved him from seventh to third while Stefano Coletti and Leimer were fourth and fifth. DAMS claimed the Teams' Championship while Lotus ART ended the season second with Barwa Addax Team third.

Background

Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, where the race was held Autodromo aerea poster.jpg
Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, where the race was held

Following the cancellation of the two scheduled Bahrain rounds for February and March 2011 at the request of the Bahrain Motorsport Federation because of civil unrest in the country, [1] the GP2 Asia Series sought an alternative venue to host its next round with a stand-alone venue in Europe and the Losail International Circuit in Qatar mooted as possible replacements. [2] It was announced in early March that the replacement to hold the season-ending round of the 2011 GP2 Asia Series would be held at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari circuit in the Emilia-Romagna commune of Imola on 19 and 20 March. [3] GP2 Series CEO Bruno Michel said that while he was aware the Italian event was "quite peculiar", the track's resurfaced layout and improved facilities made Imola ideal to hold the series' final event: "It was important for everyone to have one last round, and with the tests in Europe starting soon and the logistical requirements, we had to find a European venue. We had to be quick and think on our feet and we are happy to return to Imola." [3] Tyre supplier Pirelli brought the medium compound tyre to the race because it was considered highly adaptable to the circuit. [4]

Before the race Lotus ART driver Jules Bianchi led the Drivers' Championship with 12 points, two ahead of Romain Grosjean in second, who in turn was a further point in front of equal third-place competitors Davide Valsecchi and Marcus Ericsson. Josef Král was fifth on eight points. [5] Lotus ART were leading the Teams' Championship with 12 points; Racing Engineering were one point behind in second place and DAMS were a further point adrift in third position. Team AirAsia were in fourth place with nine points and Arden International were fifth with eight points. [6] There were 13 teams of 2 participants each making up 26 drivers in total entered for the race and all used the Dallara GP2/11 chassis. [7] [8] There was one driver change for the round. Having driven for Scuderia Coloni at the Abu Dhabi round, James Jakes elected not to compete at Imola after testing for Dale Coyne Racing in the IndyCar Series in the week leading up to Imola and his car was driven by experienced GP2 Series participant Luca Filippi. [9]

Practice and qualifying

Romain Grosjean had his second consecutive pole position of the season and won the feature race the day after. Romain grosjean silverstone2011.jpg
Romain Grosjean had his second consecutive pole position of the season and won the feature race the day after.

The event was the first GP2 Series round to be held at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari since 2006 so race officials added an additional practice session after the usual half an hour worth of running to enable teams and drivers to familiarise themselves with the circuit. [10] [11] [12] Lap times improved as drivers enhanced their understanding of the circuit and track conditions changed. [12] In the first practice session, Giedo van der Garde was fastest with a lap time of 1 minute, 29.095 seconds, almost three-tenths of a second faster than Mikhail Aleshin in second. Fabio Leimer, Jolyon Palmer, Esteban Gutiérrez, Andrea Caldarelli, Valsecchi, Stefano Coletti, Julián Leal and Michael Herck were in positions three through ten. [12] Ericsson stopped at Variante Villeneuve turn in the opening minutes and Grosjean went off the track at the following corner soon after. [13] Bird set the fastest lap of the second practice session of 1 minute, 28.312 seconds; completing the top ten were Van der Garde, Leimer third, Coletti, Dani Clos, Valsecchi, Max Chilton, Herck, Pål Varhaug and Nathanaël Berthon. [12] Grosjean and Ericcson missed the session because their cars were being repaired while Fillipi had mechanical issues. [12] Gutiérrez lost control of his car in the closing period at Variante Villeneuve turn and broke his front wing. [13]

Friday afternoon's qualifying session ran for 30-minutes. The session determined the starting order for the first race with the drivers' fastest lap times. The pole position winner earned two points in the Drivers' and Teams' Championships. [10] Qualifying was held in sunny weather. [14] Grosjean clinched his second pole position of the season with a new track series record of 1 minute, 27.067 seconds set in the final seconds. [15] [16] He was joined on the grid's front row by Bird who was 0.317 seconds slower and had pole position until Grosjean's lap. Herck took what Autosport considered an "impressive" third having also been on pole position with Bianchi fourth fastest. [14] Van der Garde in fifth led a close group of runners consisting of Král securing sixth place and Ericsson in seventh. Palmer was eighth, Valsecchi ninth and Aleshin tenth. [17] Luiz Razia was the fastest driver not to qualify in the top ten and the rest of the field lined up as Caldarelli, Leimer, Oliver Turvey, Gutiérrez, Coletti, Rodolfo González, Chilton, Varhaug and Clos, [14] Fairuz Fauzy, Johnny Cecotto Jr., Charles Pic, Leal, Berthon, [15] and Filipi who was unable to set a timed lap because of a driveshaft problem affecting his car and was forced to start at the back of the field. [18] The session was briefly stopped when bodywork was located in the centre of the track and marshals were dispatched to retrieve it. [18]

Qualifying classification

Final qualifying classification
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeGrid
19 Flag of France.svg Romain Grosjean DAMS 1:27.0671
22 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Sam Bird iSport International 1:27.3842
311 Flag of Romania.svg Michael Herck Scuderia Coloni 1:27.5583
45 Flag of France.svg Jules Bianchi Lotus ART 1:27.6764
517 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Giedo van der Garde Barwa Addax Team 1:27:7375
63 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Josef Král Arden International 1:27.8346
71 Flag of Sweden.svg Marcus Ericsson iSport International 1:27.8727
84 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Jolyon Palmer Arden International 1:27.8988
927 Flag of Italy.svg Davide Valsecchi Team AirAsia 1:27.9099
1027 Flag of Russia.svg Mikhail Aleshin Carlin 1:27:98810
1126 Flag of Brazil.svg Luiz Razia Team AirAsia 1:28.07311
1214 Flag of Italy.svg Andrea Caldarelli Ocean Racing Technology 1:28.09312
1320 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Fabio Leimer Rapax 1:28.14313
1415 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Oliver Turvey Ocean Racing Technology 1:28.15114
156 Flag of Mexico.svg Esteban Gutiérrez Lotus ART 1:28.16015
1618 Flag of Monaco.svg Stefano Coletti Trident Racing 1:28.19416
1719 Flag of Venezuela.svg Rodolfo González Trident Racing 1:28.31017
1825 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Max Chilton Carlin 1:28.33218
1910 Flag of Norway.svg Pål Varhaug DAMS 1:28.35719
2023 Flag of Spain.svg Dani Clos Racing Engineering 1:28.37320
217 Flag of Malaysia.svg Fairuz Fauzy Super Nova Racing 1:28.38221
228 Flag of Venezuela.svg Johnny Cecotto Jr. Super Nova Racing 1:28.49022
2316 Flag of France.svg Charles Pic Barwa Addax Team 1:28.54923
2421 Flag of Italy.svg Julián Leal Rapax 1:28.64424
2522 Flag of France.svg Nathanaël Berthon Racing Engineering 1:28.64625
2622 Flag of Italy.svg Luca Filippi Scuderia Coloni No Time26
Source: [19]

Races

The first race was held over 170 km (110 mi) or 60 minutes (which ever came first) and all drivers were required by regulations to make one pit stop. The first ten finishers scored points, with two given to the fastest lap holder. The grid for the second race was determined by the finishing order of the first but the first eight drivers were in reverse order of where they finished. It was run for 120 km (75 mi) or 45 minutes (which ever came first) and, in contrast to the first race, drivers were not required to make pit stops. The top eight finishers earned points towards their respective championships. [10]

Feature race

The first race began at 14:00 Central European Time (UTC+01:00) on 19 March. [20] Grosjean made a fast start to maintain his lead on the run to the Variante Tamburello corner while van Der Garde had a brisk start to move from fifth to second whose attack for first was repelled by Grosjean. [21] [22] Bird was expected to be Grosjean's primary rival during the weekend but a slow start from him bunched up the field, causing Razia to run onto some grass. Razia spun straight into the tyre barrier and retired on the first lap. [22] [23] [24] Van der Garde appeared to challenge Grosjean but the latter pulled away starting on lap four and van der Garde focused on holding off Herck. [21] [23] Bianchi had wheelspin leaving his grid slot and fell to fifth, separated by the Arden cars of Palmer and Král with whom he duelled for position. [23] [25] Palmer damaged his front wing entering Rivazza corner and Bianchi passed Král at the end of lap six when the latter picked up a front-right puncture forcing him to make his mandatory pit stop earlier than scheduled. [21] [22] On lap eight, Bird was trying to make up ground when he and his teammate Ericsson (who was returning to the track after sliding onto some grass) collided. The incident forced Bird out of the race. [23] [25] Grosjean retained first place after the mandatory pit stops to change tyres with van der Garde second and Bianchi overtook Herck for third. [24]

Palmer and his teammate Král had problematic pit stops and dropped out of the top ten. [23] Berthon was closing up to Turvey. when on lap 15 he came into contact with another car that blocked his attempt at overtaking and retired when he struck the barrier. [26] Later on, Valsecchi made a driving error that put him off the track at Acque Minerali corner and Coletti took fifth from him. [23] At the front, Grosjean increased his lead over van der Garde to 14.349 seconds and crossed the start/finish line after 35 scheduled laps to achieve his first victory of the season and his first in the GP2 Series since the 2009 Monaco round. Grosjean needed to finish fourth in the sprint race to win the Drivers' Championship. [24] [25] Bianchi could not get near van der Garde and came third with Herck, Coletti and Leimer in positions four to six. [22] Clos gained 13 places from his starting position to finish seventh. Fauzy took eighth and the sprint race pole position after Valsecchi was disqualified due to his car failing a ride height test in post-race scrutineering. [22] [27] The final classified finishers were González, Ericsson, Gutiérrez, Král, Varhaug, Turvey, Cecotto, Leal, Caldarelli, Palmer, Aleshin, Pic, Chilton and Filippi. [21]

Feature race classification

Drivers who scored championship points are denoted in bold.

Final feature race classification
Pos.No.DriverTeamLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
19 Flag of France.svg Romain Grosjean DAMS 3552:59.103111
217 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Giedo van der Garde Barwa Addax Team 35+14.34958
35 Flag of France.svg Jules Bianchi Lotus ART 35+17.52746
411 Flag of Romania.svg Michael Herck Scuderia Coloni 35+21.50235
518 Flag of Monaco.svg Stefano Coletti Trident Racing 35+41.228164
620 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Fabio Leimer Rapax 35+51.867133
723 Flag of Spain.svg Dani Clos Racing Engineering 35+52.813202
87 Flag of Malaysia.svg Fairuz Fauzy Super Nova Racing 35+53.964211
919 Flag of Venezuela.svg Rodolfo González Trident Racing 35+54.22417
101 Flag of Sweden.svg Marcus Ericsson iSport International 35+54.6617
116 Flag of Mexico.svg Esteban Gutiérrez Lotus ART 35+55.39015
123 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Josef Král Arden International 35+55.8406
1310 Flag of Norway.svg Pål Varhaug DAMS 35+1:07.70019
1415 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Oliver Turvey Ocean Racing Technology 35+1:19.72114
158 Flag of Venezuela.svg Johnny Cecotto Jr. Super Nova Racing 35+1:20.56722
1621 Flag of Italy.svg Julián Leal Rapax 35+1:22.06624
1714 Flag of Italy.svg Andrea Caldarelli Ocean Racing Technology 35+1:24.22412
184 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Jolyon Palmer Arden International 35+1:24.5038
1927 Flag of Russia.svg Mikhail Aleshin Carlin 35+1:26.67210
2016 Flag of France.svg Charles Pic Barwa Addax Team 35+1:29.21523
2125 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Max Chilton Carlin 35+1:31.02318
2212 Flag of Italy.svg Luca Filippi Scuderia Coloni 35+1:31.05826
Ret22 Flag of France.svg Nathanaël Berthon Racing Engineering 15Collision25
Ret2 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Sam Bird iSport International 7Collision2
Ret26 Flag of Brazil.svg Luiz Razia Team AirAsia 0Spin11
DSQ27 Flag of Italy.svg Davide Valsecchi Team AirAsia 35Disqualified 1 9
Fastest lap: Romain Grosjean (DAMS) 1:28.097 (lap 32)
Source: [19]

Notes

  • ^1 Davide Valsecchi was excluded from the feature race because the car failed a ride height test in post-race scrutineering. [27]

Sprint race

Dani Clos (pictured in 2010) won the sprint race by gaining the lead at the start and held it after withstanding pressure from Fabio Leimer. Dani Clos.jpg
Dani Clos (pictured in 2010) won the sprint race by gaining the lead at the start and held it after withstanding pressure from Fabio Leimer.

The second event commenced on 20 March at 14:00 local time. [20] Under sunny weather, [28] Fauzy was slow to start and the fast starting Clos passed him for first into Variante Tamburello corner. [29] Fauzy lost some ground and locked his tyres going into Variante Tamburello corner and caused a chain-reaction accident when he ran into the rear of Coletti's vehicle. This led to Coletti being unable to avoid clattering into Bianchi's rear wing. [28] [30] [31] All three drivers retired and yellow flags were briefly waved in the area to warn others about the wreckage. [30] Grosjean moved from eighth to fourth and Bianchi's retirement guaranteed Grosjean a second GP2 Series Drivers' Championship regardless of the final finishing order. [31] [32] [33] The top four at this point were Clos, Leimer, van der Garde and Grosjean, who settled themselves into a rhythm and pulled away from the rest of the field. [28] Ericsson passed Herck for seventh place but lost the place when he attacked González on the outside for fifth and made an error that put him off the course at Variante Tamburello turn on the fifth lap. [31] The middle part of the race had no major action occurring since overtaking was difficult around the circuit. [28] González struggled to keep heat in his rear tyres and his race ended early when his car developed a gearbox fault on lap 15. [34]

Bird became the race's final retiree when Cecotto hit him and became stranded in the gravel trap at Variante Tambruello turn. [30] In the closing laps, Grosjean was close by van der Garde in third due to his car's higher straight line speed but could not find a way past him. Grosjean then focused himself on Gutiérrez in fourth who sought to take an advantage of a potential error from him. Gutiérrez challenged Grosjean for fourth with two laps left by steering to the inside of him going into the Variante Alta chicane. Grosjean defended his line by cutting across the grass in the search for more room and Gutiérrez did the same. [28] [30] [31] Leimer was close by race leader Clos throughout the duration of the race and challenged him several times but Clos responded each time to win by 0.931 seconds. Van der Garde completed the podium in third. [31] [33] Off the podium, Grosjean took fourth on the road with Gutiérrez and Herck fifth and sixth. [32] After the race, Grosjean was penalised 20 seconds because the stewards deemed him to have gained an advantage by running off the track at the Variante Alta chicane and Cecotto was handed the same penalty for the incident with Bird. [35] Following the application of penalties, the final classified finishers were Varhaug, Grosjean, Turvey, Král, Filippi, Pic, Caldarelli, Berthon, Razia, Chilton, Ericsson, Valsecchi, Leal, Cecotto and Aleshin. [19]

Sprint race classification

Drivers who scored championship points are denoted in bold.

Final sprint race classification
Pos.No.DriverTeamLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
123 Flag of Spain.svg Dani Clos Racing Engineering 2537:25.90126
220 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Fabio Leimer Rapax 25+0.93135
317 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Giedo van der Garde Barwa Addax Team 25+4.00774
46 Flag of Mexico.svg Esteban Gutiérrez Lotus ART 25+8.366113
511 Flag of Romania.svg Michael Herck Scuderia Coloni 25+15.31252
610 Flag of Norway.svg Pål Varhaug DAMS 25+27.415131
79 Flag of France.svg Romain Grosjean DAMS 25+27.826 2 81
815 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Oliver Turvey Ocean Racing Technology 25+29.29414
93 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Josef Král Arden International 25+29.72112
1012 Flag of Italy.svg Luca Filippi Scuderia Coloni 25+30.13922
1116 Flag of France.svg Charles Pic Barwa Addax Team 25+32.50520
1214 Flag of Italy.svg Andrea Caldarelli Ocean Racing Technology 25+36.00617
1322 Flag of France.svg Nathanaël Berthon Racing Engineering 25+36.89323
1426 Flag of Brazil.svg Luiz Razia Team AirAsia 25+38.99825
1525 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Max Chilton Carlin 25+39.81521
161 Flag of Sweden.svg Marcus Ericsson iSport International 25+40.19210
1727 Flag of Italy.svg Davide Valsecchi Team AirAsia 25+42.10026
1821 Flag of Italy.svg Julián Leal Rapax 25+1:05.46616
198 Flag of Venezuela.svg Johnny Cecotto Jr. Super Nova Racing 25+1:26.22415 3
2024 Flag of Russia.svg Mikhail Aleshin Carlin 24+1 Lap19
Ret2 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Sam Bird iSport International 20Collision24
Ret19 Flag of Venezuela.svg Rodolfo González Trident Racing 14Gearbox9
Ret7 Flag of Malaysia.svg Fairuz Fauzy Super Nova Racing 0Collision1
Ret18 Flag of Monaco.svg Stefano Coletti Trident Racing 0Collision4
Ret5 Flag of France.svg Jules Bianchi Lotus ART 0Collision6
Ret4 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Jolyon Palmer Arden International 0Mechanical18
Fastest lap: Romain Grosjean (DAMS) 1:28.772 (lap 8)
Source: [19]

Notes

Post-round

The top three drivers in both races appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and in separate press conferences. Although Grosjean did not have enough data to work with, he said he was pleased with the effort his team put into improving the car following practice, "We didn’t know how it was going. They did the right choice on the set up so I am very pleased and that gives me great confidence to keep pushing with the team." [36] Van der Garde stated his belief his team found a solution to the poor starts he had in Abu Dhabi and that his pace was the same as Grosjean's, "We tried to be constant and I think in the end we are in a good place. We still have to improve the car. But this result today is definitely a good boost for the team and for me." [36] Bianchi had mixed feelings because he was happy to finished third but was disappointed with his slow start, "I think it was not possible to win today because Romain was really quick, but we’ve improved our pace a lot compared to yesterday so we did a good job. Yes, Romain did the fastest lap but we were only one tenth behind. It’s not bad." [36]

Jules Bianchi (pictured in 2009) finished second in the Drivers' Championship. Bianchi Jules.JPG
Jules Bianchi (pictured in 2009) finished second in the Drivers' Championship.

After the sprint race, Clos called his race "a positive day" after a sub-par performance in practice and qualifying and was positive since his team acquired more data throughout the race as preparation for the start of the main GP2 Series in May at Istanbul Park, "We were able to do a good race and start today from P2. I had a pretty good start today. And after that, the job was to be constant and to hold back Fabio. Nothing else... It’s really positive for me because I have not done much mileage on this car during the Asia Series." [37] Leimer said he was overjoyed to finish second and believed he had slightly more pressure for the primary series than in 2010, "I am really happy because it’s been a while since my last podium. It was in Barcelona last race. In Abu Dhabi, it was also quite hard for me and now I am really happy that I can have a podium in the Asia Series for the team." [37] Third-placed Van der Garde commented he struggled on the downhill section of the back straight due to a lack of outright pace but stated his satisfaction on returning to the podium, "It is nice of course to be in the Top three in the championship. But we have got another load of data today that we need to analyse and then I’m looking forward to the start of the main Series’ season." [37]

Grosjean's championship success was his second in the GP2 Series since the 2008 GP2 Asia Series and the first for DAMS since Kamui Kobayashi won the 2008–09 GP2 Asia Series title. [33] [38] He said he was delighted with his success, "I'm over the moon with my second title. Once again I have to congratulate the whole team for doing a superb job after free practice, and I'd like to share this victory with them. It augurs well for the rest of the season in the main series. I can't wait for it to begin, and I'm convinced that we have every chance of winning another title." [39] The general manager of DAMS Loïc David called the championship title "a great reward" and congratulated the team's achievement, "The dice fell in our favour in the second race, but on Saturday we'd already done was necessary to be in the best possible position. Congratulations too to Pal who opened his score in only his second meeting. Other battles now await us in GP2 and this result has given our confidence a major boost!" [39]

Grosjean finished the season as the Drivers' Champion with 24 points. Bianchi, in second place, was six points behind and van der Garde's results in both races secured him third with 16 points. Coletti took fourth with 11 points and Leimer tied with Ericsson, Valescchi and Herck on points with nine but took fifth due to his second place in the second race. [5] DAMS took the Teams' Championship with 25 points, three ahead of Lotus ART in second. Third was claimed by Barwa Addax with 16 points and fourth and fifth were Trident and iSport International with 11 points each. [6]

Standings after the race

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The 2010 Belgian GP2 round was a GP2 Series motor race held on August 28 and 29, 2010 at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, near the village of Francorchamps, Wallonia, Belgium. It was the eighth round of the 2010 GP2 Series. The race was run in support of the 2010 Belgian Grand Prix.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2011 GP2 Series</span>

The 2011 GP2 Series season was the forty-fifth season of the second-tier of Formula One feeder championship and also seventh season under the GP2 Series moniker, the pan-European motor racing series for single specification open wheel GP2 cars. Thirteen teams competed over a nine event series that run from 7 May at Istanbul Park in Turkey to September 11 at Monza in Italy. The series again performed the role of a series for developing emerging young drivers, acting as the principal supporting motor racing series that fills in time between sessions of the nine World Championship Formula One Grands Prix that are held in Europe. The championship was won by reigning GP2 Asia champion Romain Grosjean at the penultimate round of the series. Luca Filippi, Jules Bianchi and Charles Pic were all divided just by two points in their battle for the second, third and fourth places respectively. Christian Vietoris, Davide Valsecchi, Stefano Coletti, Esteban Gutiérrez and Fabio Leimer was the other race winners.

The 2011 GP2 Asia Series was the fourth and final season of the GP2 Asia Series, and the second to be held entirely in a single calendar year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2012 GP2 Series</span>

The 2012 GP2 Series season was the forty-sixth season of the second-tier of Formula One feeder championship and also eighth season under the GP2 Series moniker and also the first season after merging with the GP2 Asia Series. The championship was expanded to include rounds in Malaysia, Bahrain and Singapore, in support of the 2012 Formula One season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2012 Bahrain 1st GP2 Series round</span>

The 2012 Bahrain 1st GP2 Series round was the second round of the 2012 GP2 Series. It was held on 21 and 22 April 2012 at Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain. The race supported the 2012 Bahrain Grand Prix. The second round was held one week later as an independent round of the championship, the only one of its kind on the 2012 calendar.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2012 Silverstone GP2 Series round</span>

The 2012 Silverstone GP2 Series round was a GP2 Series motor race held on 7 and 8 July 2012 at Silverstone Circuit in Silverstone, United Kingdom. It was the seventh round of the 2012 GP2 Season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 GP2 Series</span>

The 2013 GP2 Series season was the forty-seventh season of the second-tier of Formula One feeder championship and also ninth season under the GP2 Series moniker, a support series to the 2013 Formula One World Championship.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 Sepang GP2 Series round</span> Motor race

The 2013 Sepang GP2 Series round was a pair of motor races held on 23 and 24 March 2013 at the Sepang International Circuit in Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Malaysia as part of the one-make single seater GP2 Series. It was the first round of the 2013 GP2 Series and was run in support of the 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix. The first event, a 30-lap feature race, was won by Racing Engineering driver Fabio Leimer from a fourth position start. James Calado finished second for ART Grand Prix and Rapax's Stefano Coletti took third. Coletti won the 22-lap sprint race held the following day. Carlin's Felipe Nasr took second and Mitch Evans of Arden International was third.

References

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2011 Abu Dhabi GP2 Asia round
GP2 Asia Series Championship
2011 season
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