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Flag of the United Kingdom 2015 London ePrix II
London Layout
The Battersea Park circuit
Race Information
Date 28 June 2015
E-Prix No. 11
Official Name 2015 Visa London ePrix II
Location Flag of London Battersea Park Street Circuit, Battersea Park, London, UK
Format {{{format}}}
Lap length 2.925 km (1.818 mi)
Distance 29 laps / 84.825 km (52.708 mi)
Support Race {{{support}}}
Qualifying Result
Pole Sitter Flag of France Stéphane Sarrazin
Team Flag of Monaco Venturi Formula E Team
Time 1:23.901
Fastest Lap
Driver Flag of the United Kingdom Sam Bird
Team Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing
Fastest Lap 1:26.790 on lap 24
ePrix Result
First Second Third
Flag of the United Kingdom Sam Bird Flag of Belgium Jérôme d'Ambrosio Flag of France Loïc Duval
Winner Team Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing
Time 45:48.792
ePrix Guide
Previous Next
Flag of the United Kingdom 2015 London ePrix I Flag of China 2015 Beijing ePrix
Post-Race Test {{{test}}}

 

I couldn't have dreamt for a better ending

Alejandro Agag[1]

The 2015 London ePrix II, officially advertised as the 2015 Visa London ePrix, the eleventh and final round of the inaugural 2014/15 FIA Formula E Championship, staged at the Battersea Park Street Circuit in Battersea Park, London, UK, on 28 June 2015.[2] The race would see the the first FE Champion crowned, with Nelson Piquet Jr., Sébastien Buemi and Lucas di Grassi all able to take the title on the final day.[3]

The best placed of the title contenders after qualifying would be Buemi, whom qualified in sixth as Stéphane Sarrazin claimed a maiden pole.[4] di Grassi was the next highest title combatant in eleventh, while a miserable start to proceedings for Championship leader Piquet saw him start the race in sixteenth.[4]

It would still be advantage Buemi after the start of the race too, with the Swiss racer slipping into fifth at the first corner as Sarrazin swept into the lead.[3] Piquet, however, would get a lucky break later in the lap and leap into the top ten, by-passing Buemi's teammate Nicolas Prost as he did so.[3]

After his early success Piquet would opt for a conservative strategy, while Buemi tried to move further up the field in pursuit of victory.[3] Indeed, it seemed that Piquet was relying on the safety car making an appearance, for the Brazilian soon fell off the back of the lead pack, and was under threat from those behind.[3]

Indeed, the first real action in the race, barring the odd bit of minor contact, would involve Nick Heidfeld pushing his car down the pitlane, the German having suffered a sudden loss of power towards the end of his stint.[3] Even that, however, would not bring out the safety car that Piquet appeared to need, with the Brazilian slipping to eleventh once the pitstop shuffle had been completed.[3]

Indeed, in spite of a sudden surge in pace by Piquet it seemed as if the title was Buemi's to lose, with the Swiss racer a secure fifth, di Grassi a distant seventh, and Piquet out of the points.[3] It therefore came as a huge shock when Buemi sent himself spinning to drop back down ahead of di Grassi, moments before a late appearance by BMW Qualcomm i8 safety car bunched the field back up.[3]

The restart would work beautifully for Piquet, with the Brazilian pulling past teammate Oliver Turvey to move into the points, before the Brit snatched fastest lap from the Swiss racer.[3] That, combined with a subsequent move by Piquet on Salvador Duran gave the Brazilian the title lead by one point, and left him in the wake of his two title rivals on track.[3]

There would be one last flurry of action to upset the order, however, with race leader Sarrazin running out of energy through the final corner.[3] Sam Bird tried hard to get ahead of the Frenchman to claim a home victory, just falling shy, while in the resulting concertina Buemi tried a sneaky move on Bruno Senna for fifth.[3] Ultimately, however, the Swiss racer's move failed to leave him in sixth, and therefore gave Piquet the crown by a single point.[3]

After the race a penalty awarded to Sarrazin further shuffled the order, with the Frenchman relegated to fifteenth due to running out of energy.[3] That therefore handed victory to Bird, but, significantly, did not affect the balance between Piquet, Buemi and di Grassi, meaning it was the former of the trio who officially claimed the title.[3]

Background[]

With just 24 hours passing since the Saturday race, there were no changes to the entry list, although there were modifications made to the circuit. The bump at turn one, which had seen temporary barriers narrow the circuit to prevent cars getting airborne, had been eliminated by resurfacing over night.[5] The modification meant that the Second ePrix of the weekend could start from the grid rather than behind the BMW Qualcomm i8 Safety car as had happened on Saturday.[5]

Champions e.dams-Renault could not rest easy overnight on Saturday, with the First London ePrix dragging Sébastien Buemi into the heart of the Championship struggle, his victory having left him five points behind Championship leader Nelson Piquet Jr. Piquet also found himself under pressure from with Lucas di Grassi in third, whom had also closed the gap to the front, with Piquet's Saturday performances suggesting he was pushing very hard to keep with his rivals.

Saturday had also seen the title fight cut in half, with Sam Bird, Nicolas Prost and Jérôme d'Ambrosio all falling outside of the 30 point margin they needed to keep their title hopes alive. They now found themselves in a battle for fourth in the Championship, along with Jean-Éric Vergne, whose pace on Saturday could have seen him take victory. Other battles to be fought in the Championship were to be found over ninth, with Daniel Abt leading compatriot Nick Heidfeld by just one point, with a further ten cars within striking distance.

Entry List[]

The full entry list for the 2015 London ePrix II is displayed below:

2015 London ePrix II Entry List
No. Name Entrant Constructor Car
2 Flag of the United Kingdom Sam Bird Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing Spark-Renault SRT_01E
3 Flag of Switzerland Fabio Leimer Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing Spark-Renault SRT_01E
5 Flag of India Karun Chandhok Flag of India Mahindra Racing Spark-Renault SRT_01E
6 Flag of France Loïc Duval Flag of the United States Dragon Racing Spark-Renault SRT_01E
7 Flag of Belgium Jérôme d'Ambrosio Flag of the United States Dragon Racing Spark-Renault SRT_01E
8 Flag of France Nicolas Prost Flag of France e.dams-Renault Spark-Renault SRT_01E
9 Flag of Switzerland Sébastien Buemi Flag of France e.dams-Renault Spark-Renault SRT_01E
10 Flag of Italy Jarno Trulli Flag of Switzerland Trulli Formula E Team Spark-Renault SRT_01E
11 Flag of Brazil Lucas di Grassi Flag of Germany Audi Sport ABT Spark-Renault SRT_01E
18 Flag of Switzerland Alex Fontana Flag of Switzerland Trulli Formula E Team Spark-Renault SRT_01E
21 Flag of Brazil Bruno Senna Flag of India Mahindra Racing Spark-Renault SRT_01E
23 Flag of Germany Nick Heidfeld Flag of Monaco Venturi Formula E Team Spark-Renault SRT_01E
27 Flag of France Jean-Éric Vergne Flag of the United States Andretti Autosport Spark-Renault SRT_01E
28 Flag of Switzerland Simona de Silvestro Flag of the United States Andretti Autosport Spark-Renault SRT_01E
30 Flag of France Stéphane Sarrazin Flag of Monaco Venturi Formula E Team Spark-Renault SRT_01E
55 Flag of Japan Sakon Yamamoto Flag of Japan Amlin Aguri Spark-Renault SRT_01E
66 Flag of Germany Daniel Abt Flag of Germany Audi Sport ABT Spark-Renault SRT_01E
77 Flag of Mexico Salvador Duran Flag of Japan Amlin Aguri Spark-Renault SRT_01E
88 Flag of the United Kingdom Oliver Turvey Flag of China NextEV TCR Spark-Renault SRT_01E
99 Flag of Brazil Nelson Piquet Jr. Flag of China NextEV TCR Spark-Renault SRT_01E
Source:[6]

Practice[]

FP1[]

FP2[]

Qualifying[]

The familiar group qualifying format was followed once again in London's second race, with the random draw for the four groups of five drivers being made in the eVillage.[7] Each group would get ten minutes on circuit to set a flying lap, with the overall order deciding the grid once each group had run.[7] The conditions, however, would not be standard for FE, for a series of dark clouds began to drift over the British capital, meaning that the first wet qualifying session in Formula E history could seriously affect the title battle.[4]

Group 1[]

It was the Venturi Formula E Team pair of Nick Heidfeld and Stéphane Sarrazin who would lead out the final qualifying session of the season, joined on circuit by Jérôme d'Ambrosio, Bruno Senna and Alex Fontana.[7] Heidfeld and Sarrazin had been on the pace all weekend, as had d'Ambrosio, with all three expected to be solidly in the top ten, particularly as the skies darkened over London as they left the pits.

None of the drivers were particularly happy with their times afterwards, but with the clouds starting to burst as they completed their laps, their joy was set to soar.[4] Sarrazin took provisional pole ahead of d'Ambrosio, while Senna took third ahead of Heidfeld.[4] Fontana's difficult début weekend looked set to continue with the Swiss driver the slowest of the group.[4]

Group 2[]

The second Trulli Formula E Team machine of Jarno Trulli emerged in group two, alongside Sam Bird, Loïc Duval and Salvador Duran.[7] But all the attention was on Sébastien Buemi, who was upset to find himself in the second group, and annoyed when the rain began to fall on the Battersea Park circuit as he made his way round to start his flying laps.[7]

Buemi would be more disappointed by the time the group ended, finishing the session in provisional sixth, as Duval and Bird managed to pull enough time out to take third and fourth respectively.[4] The session ended with more rain falling onto the circuit, with Trulli a second and a half off team mate Fontana's time, while Duran took a provisionally best qualifying result of eighth behind Buemi and Heidfeld.[4]

Group 3[]

Nelson Piquet Jr.'s chance came in group three, as he joined Daniel Abt and Jean-Éric Vergne, two former pole sitters, out on circuit.[7] Also in their group were the two rookies, Fabio Leimer and Sakon Yamamoto, with the seasoned professionals looking set to top the group's times, and push for the overall pole.[7] However, the steady rain between the end of the first session and through the second continued, meaning an increasingly damp track greeted them.[4]

As the drivers wound themselves up for their first flying laps, Yamamoto got caught out, putting his Amlin Aguri machine into the barrier, bringing the session to a temporary halt.[4] The session resumed after five minutes, but the track conditions had deteriorated since, meaning Piquet ended the group in twelfth overall, behind Vergne.[4] It was an impressive display by Piquet nonetheless, as he threw his Spark-Renault SRT_01E around the circuit, getting sideways at virtually every corner in an attempt to find time.[4] Abt struggled in the wet, while Leimer's inexperience cost him potential time, with Yamamoto not setting a time.[4]

Group 4[]

Title outsider Lucas di Grassi had smiled when the groups were first drawn, but became glum as the circuit got wetter through the session.[7][4] He was to be joined by Simona de Silvestro and Karun Chandhok, as well as the team mates of his title rivals, Nicolas Prost and Oliver Turvey.[7] Yet, as their session approached, the rain stopped, meaning they had a chance to beat the group three times.[4]

And so it proved, although di Grassi remained visibly upset after only managing to take eleventh, in truth the best he could have hoped for.[4] Turvey impressed taking twelfth, almost beating the Brazilian, while de Silvestro and Prost barged their way above Piquet and Vergne.[4] Last in the group was Chandhok, whom struggled with the rear of his car throughout the session and ended the session dead last, but ahead of Yamamoto.[4]

Post Qualifying[]

With no penalties after qualifying, the grid remained unaffected, with the FIA opting to remove the 110% rule for the session, which would have seen half of the cars fail to qualify.[4]

The final qualifying results for the 2015 London ePrix II are outlined below:

2015 London ePrix II Qualifying Result
Pos. No. Name Team Time Gap Grid Group
1st 30 Flag of France Stéphane Sarrazin Flag of Monaco Venturi Formula E Team 1:23.901 1 G1
2nd 7 Flag of Belgium Jérôme d'Ambrosio Flag of the United States Dragon Racing 1:23.965 +0.064s 2 G1
3rd 6 Flag of France Loïc Duval Flag of the United States Dragon Racing 1:24.107 +0.206s 3 G2
4th 2 Flag of the United Kingdom Sam Bird Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing 1:24.241 +0.340s 4 G2
5th 21 Flag of Brazil Bruno Senna Flag of India Mahindra Racing 1:24.318 +0.417s 5 G1
6th 9 Flag of Switzerland Sébastien Buemi Flag of France e.dams-Renault 1:24.385 +0.484s 6 G2
7th 23 Flag of Germany Nick Heidfeld Flag of Monaco Venturi Formula E Team 1:25.494 +1.593s 7 G1
8th 77 Flag of Mexico Salvador Duran Flag of Japan Amlin Aguri 1:25.649 +1.748s 8 G2
9th 18 Flag of Switzerland Alex Fontana Flag of Switzerland Trulli Formula E Team 1:25.689 +1.788s 9 G1
10th 10 Flag of Italy Jarno Trulli Flag of Switzerland Trulli Formula E Team 1:27.093 +3.192s 10 G2
110% Time: 1:32.291[6]
11th 11 Flag of Brazil Lucas di Grassi Flag of Germany Audi Sport ABT 1:32.570 +8.669s 11 G4
12th 88 Flag of the United Kingdom Oliver Turvey Flag of China NextEV TCR 1:33.626 +9.725s 12 G4
13th 28 Flag of Switzerland Simona de Silvestro Flag of the United States Andretti Autosport 1:34.167 +10.266s 13 G4
14th 27 Flag of France Jean-Éric Vergne Flag of the United States Andretti Autosport 1:35.032 +11.131s 14 G3
15th 8 Flag of France Nicolas Prost Flag of France e.dams-Renault 1:35.111 +11.210s 15 G4
16th 99 Flag of Brazil Nelson Piquet Jr. Flag of China NextEV TCR 1:35.284 +11.383s 16 G3
17th 3 Flag of Switzerland Fabio Leimer Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing 1:35.543 +11.642s 17 G3
18th 66 Flag of Germany Daniel Abt Flag of Germany Audi Sport ABT 1:38.473 +14.572s 18 G3
19th 5 Flag of India Karun Chandhok Flag of India Mahindra Racing 1:41.232 +17.331s 19 G4
NC 55 Flag of Japan Sakon Yamamoto Flag of Japan Amlin Aguri 20 G3
Source:[6]
  • * The 110% rule was effectively dropped due to the changeable conditions in qualifying.[6]
  • Yamamoto would start the ePrix at the stewards discretion.

Race[]

The FanBoost announcement was made shortly before the race started, with two of the three title contenders gaining the five second boost.[8] Nelson Piquet Jr. and Sébastien Buemi would have their fans to thank for voting for them, while the home crowd also rewarded Oliver Turvey for his impressive début on Saturday with their votes.[8] With the summer heat drying the circuit out before the start, the final race of the season was set to be dry, and kicked off at 16:00 GMT.[3]

Report[]

Wheel spin at the front of the field saw the top four remain in grid order, as Buemi jumped Bruno Senna for fifth while the field compressed around the slow starting Alex Fontana.[9] That was good news for Piquet, who moved up four places on the first lap, and crucially got past Nicolas Prost, Buemi's team mate, as the Frenchman got boxed in behind Fontana.[9] The top four began to pull away over the following laps, with Buemi finding space to set fastest lap early on, with which he would win the title by five points as things stood,

It soon became clear that Piquet was trying to save the maximum amount of energy that he could, as he settled in at the head of a train of cars, and fell well behind Oliver Turvey, his team mate.[3] The Brazilian looked to be relying on a safety car, which became increasingly likely as the race went on.[3] The first incident saw Fabio Leimer, in the Piquet procession, lock up his rear wheels into turn three, sliding into the back of Simona de Silvestro, with Leimer losing the end plate of his front wing.[9]

Sakon Yamamoto used that, and de Silvestro's move on Jarno Trulli, to gain a couple of places, before attempting to pass Trulli into the same corner Leimer had made his mistake.[9] Again, the Japanese driver found himself unable to slow, and collected the back of the Italian's car, breaking his front suspension and ending his race.[9] Trulli suffered minimum damage and continued, having lost both time and places, yet still, Piquet's safety car did not emerge.[3]

Nor did it when Nick Heidfeld ground to a halt in the pitlane, with the German pushing his car down the remainder of the entry to change into his second car, although he would ultimately retire through lack of energy. Piquet's race did benefit, however, as he stayed out an extra two laps, while Sam Bird, at the front of the field, managed an extra lap over his rivals for the lead.[3] As Piquet remained in eleventh after his stop, Bird outpaced Loïc Duval for third, and then pushed Jérôme d'Ambrosio hard for second.[3]

The title fight, meanwhile, took a dramatic shift after the stops, as Buemi, safely in fifth place, spun on cold tyres, losing fifth to Senna and falling into the sights of Lucas di Grassi, now with nothing to lose.[9] It got worse for the Swiss driver when his country man Leimer crashed into the barriers at the penultimate chicane, finally bringing out the safety car that Piquet needed.[3] That dragged Piquet onto the back of the point scoring positions, and with an extra 12% of power relative to his competitors. The title fight was now fully on.

Bird pounced on d'Ambrosio for second at the front as Turvey neatly allowed Piquet through without allowing Prost to gain a position as well. That move saw Piquet now just three points behind Buemi, which suddenly closed to one when Turvey set the fastest lap. It was then that Piquet showed the class that had earned him his title chance, as he swung his NextEV TCR machine around the outside of Salvador Duran in turn thirteen, putting him in eighth place, and one point in the lead of the Championship,[9] It also saw him put his sights on his two title rivals, with Buemi and di Grassi in sixth and seventh.

A stalemate emerged over the next few laps, with Piquet dropping back to avoid contact with rival di Grassi and attempt to set fastest lap, while Buemi pushed to retake Senna. Bird, meanwhile, set an impressive fastest lap (quicker than his qualifying lap on Saturday) as he pushed Sarrazin closer and closer to his energy limit. It was then that the title got tasty, as two of the lead cars lost their final energy reserve.

Sarrazin was hit first, hitting 0% energy with over half a lap to go, with Bird crawling all over him.[9] Then, as the pack approached the final chicane, on the final lap, Duval slowed to prevent his car dropping below the maximum energy limit, causing Senna and Buemi to jump on the brakes. As Sarrazin fended off Bird into the final corner to win, Buemi forced his way up the inside of Senna, only to see the Brazilian stamp on the power on the exit of the chicane and pull across his e.dams machine.[9]

Buemi therefore missed out on the title by just one point and, in terms of the race, just half a second, as Piquet crossed the line in eighth.[9] With several cars under investigation, there was some tension as to who had finished where, with the FIA quick to announce that only one driver had received a penalty.[9] That man, awarded a 49 second penalty for exceeding the maximum power usage, was Sarrazin, which gave Bird the win and did not affect the title result.[3]

Ergo, with no further modifications to the result, Piquet was confirmed as the Champion, the first in Formula E, after a race which Formula E CEO Alejandro Agag responded to thus: "I couldn't have dreamt for a better ending."[1]

Result[]

The final classification of the 2015 London ePrix II is displayed below, with the fastest lap setter indicated in italics, and the pole sitter shown in bold.

2015 London ePrix II Race Result
Pos. No. Name Team Laps Race Time Fastest lap Pts.
1st 2 Flag of the United Kingdom Sam Bird Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing 29 45:48.792 1:26.790 27
2nd 7 Flag of Belgium Jérôme d'Ambrosio Flag of the United States Dragon Racing 29 +6.973s 1:28.155 18
3rd 6 Flag of France Loïc Duval Flag of the United States Dragon Racing 29 +9.430s 1:28.052 15
4th 21 Flag of Brazil Bruno Senna Flag of India Mahindra Racing 29 +10.147s 1:27.912 12
5th 9 Flag of Switzerland Sébastien Buemi FanBoost Flag of France e.dams-Renault 29 +10.689s 1:27.839 10
6th 11 Flag of Brazil Lucas di Grassi Flag of Germany Audi Sport ABT 29 +11.204s 1:28.316 8
7th 99 Flag of Brazil Nelson Piquet Jr. FanBoost Flag of China NextEV TCR 29 +11.561s 1:26.847 6
8th 77 Flag of Mexico Salvador Duran Flag of Japan Amlin Aguri 29 +12.402s 1:28.362 4
9th 88 Flag of the United Kingdom Oliver Turvey FanBoost Flag of China NextEV TCR 29 +14.142s 1:27.463 2
10th 8 Flag of France Nicolas Prost Flag of France e.dams-Renault 29 +14.535s 1:28.287 1
11th 66 Flag of Germany Daniel Abt Flag of Germany Audi Sport ABT 29 +23.170s 1:28.310
12th 28 Flag of Switzerland Simona de Silvestro Flag of the United States Andretti Autosport 29 +24.610s 1:28.520
13th 5 Flag of India Karun Chandhok Flag of India Mahindra Racing 29 +31.501s 1:29.234
14th 18 Flag of Switzerland Alex Fontana Flag of Switzerland Trulli Formula E Team 29 +38.423s 1:30.112
15th* 30 Flag of France Stéphane Sarrazin Flag of Monaco Venturi Formula E Team 29 +48.680s 1:27.752 3
16th 27 Flag of France Jean-Éric Vergne Flag of the United States Andretti Autosport 28 +1 Lap 1:27.139
Ret 23 Flag of Germany Nick Heidfeld Flag of Monaco Venturi Formula E Team 23 Retired 1:27.609
Ret 3 Flag of Switzerland Fabio Leimer Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing 17 Accident 1:29.862
Ret 10 Flag of Italy Jarno Trulli Flag of Switzerland Trulli Formula E Team 14 Damage 1:30.377
Ret 55 Flag of Japan Sakon Yamamoto Flag of Japan Amlin Aguri 6 Accident 1:30.843
Source:[6]
  • FanBoost Indicates a driver was awarded FanBoost during the race.
  • * Sarrazin awarded a 49 second penalty for exceeding the maximum power usage for the race.

Milestones[]

Standings[]

So Nelson Piquet Jr. rounded out the season as the Champion, beating Sébastien Buemi by a solitary point, while Lucas di Grassi missed out by eleven. Jérôme d'Ambrosio snatched fourth away from Nicolas Prost, who fell to sixth after Sam Bird's victory, while Jean-Éric Vergne was the first of those not to complete the full season in seventh. Bruno Senna scored his first points since the Long Beach ePrix to take tenth place, with Stéphane Sarrazin and Salvador Duran the only other big movers on the final day.

e.dams-Renault won the Team's title on Saturday, and announced that they would be a manufacturer backed team in 2015/16, the first team to confirm so.[10] Audi Sport ABT, meanwhile, had trailed the French team since almost the first race of the season, but found themselves overhauled by Dragon Racing, whose double podium shot them up to a surprise second in the Teams' Championship. NextEV TCR and Virgin Racing rounded out the top five, with the Trulli Formula E Team rooted to the foot of the table.

2014/15 Drivers' Championship
Pos. Name Pts. +/-
1st Flag of Brazil Nelson Piquet Jr. 144 ◄0
2nd Flag of Switzerland Sébastien Buemi 143 ◄0
3rd Flag of Brazil Lucas di Grassi 133 ◄0
4th Flag of Belgium Jérôme d'Ambrosio 113 ◄0
5th Flag of the United Kingdom Sam Bird 103 ▲1
6th Flag of France Nicolas Prost 88 (89) ▼1
7th Flag of France Jean-Éric Vergne 70 ◄0
8th Flag of Portugal António Félix da Costa 51 ◄0
9th Flag of France Loïc Duval 42 ▲4
10th Flag of Brazil Bruno Senna 40 ▲2
11th Flag of Germany Daniel Abt 32 ▼2
12th Flag of Germany Nick Heidfeld 31 ▼2
13th Flag of Spain Jaime Alguersuari 30 ▼2
14th Flag of France Stéphane Sarrazin 22 ◄0
15th Flag of the United States Scott Speed 18 ◄0
16th Flag of France Franck Montagny 18 ◄0
17th Flag of India Karun Chandhok 18 ◄0
18th Flag of France Charles Pic 16 ◄0
19th Flag of Spain Oriol Servià 16 ◄0
20th Flag of Italy Jarno Trulli 15 ◄0
21st Flag of Mexico Salvador Duran 13 ◄0
22nd Flag of the United Kingdom Oliver Turvey 4 ▲1
23rd Flag of Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi 2 ▼1
24th Flag of Japan Takuma Sato 2 ◄0
25th Flag of the United Kingdom Justin Wilson 1 ◄0
2014/15 Teams' Championship
Pos. Name Pts. +/-
1st Flag of France e.dams-Renault 232 ◄0
2nd Flag of the United States Dragon Racing 171 ▲2
3rd Flag of Germany Audi Sport ABT 165 ▼1
4th Flag of China NextEV TCR 152 ▼1
5th Flag of the United Kingdom Virgin Racing 133 ▲1
6th Flag of the United States Andretti Autosport 119 ▼1
7th Flag of Japan Amlin Aguri 66 ◄0
8th Flag of India Mahindra Racing 58 ▲1
9th Flag of Monaco Venturi Formula E Team 53 ▼1
10th Flag of Switzerland Trulli Formula E Team 17 ◄0

Only point scoring drivers are shown.

References[]

Videos and Images:

References:

  1. 1.0 1.1 'Agag: “I couldn’t have dreamt for a better ending”', fiaformulae.com, (FIA Formula E, 28/06/2015), http://fiaformulae.com/en/news/2015/june/agag-i-couldn-t-have-dreamt-for-a-better-ending.aspx, (Accessed 30/06/2015)
  2. 'Circuit Guide: London 2015', fiaformulae.com, (FIA Formula E, 2015), http://fiaformulae.com/en/calendar/2015-london.aspx, (Accessed 28/06/2015)
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 3.21 3.22 3.23 'Bird hails ‘unbelievable’ end to season', fiaformulae.com, (FIA Formula E, 28/06/2015), http://fiaformulae.com/en/news/2015/june/bird-hails-unbelievable-end-to-season.aspx, (Accessed 28/06/2015)
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 'Sarrazin takes pole in mixed conditions', fiaformulae.com, (FIA Formula E, 28/06/2015), http://fiaformulae.com/en/news/2015/june/sarrazin-takes-pole-in-mixed-conditions.aspx, (Accessed 28/06/2015)
  5. 5.0 5.1 'Drivers satisfied with overnight track changes', fiaformulae.com, (FIA Formula E, 28/06/2015), http://fiaformulae.com/en/news/2015/june/drivers-satisfied-with-overnight-track-changes.aspx, (Accessed 28/06/2015)
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 'Round 11 - London ePrix: Results Booklet', fiaformulae.alkamelsystems.com, (FIA Formula E, 2015), http://fiaformulae.alkamelsystems.com/Results/00_2014-15/12_London%20Round%2011/62_FIA%20Formula%20E%20Championship/201506281609_Great%20Britain_Round_11_Booklet.pdf, (Accessed 31/07/2018)
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 'Visa London ePrix: Sunday Qualifying groups', fiaformulae.com, (FIA Formula E, 28/06/2015), http://fiaformulae.com/en/news/2015/june/visa-london-eprix-sunday-qualifying-groups.aspx, (Accessed 28/06/2015)
  8. 8.0 8.1 'Turvey, Buemi and Piquet win FanBoost vote', fiaformulae.com, (FIA Formula E, 28/06/2015), http://fiaformulae.com/en/news/2015/june/turvey-buemi-and-piquet-win-fanboost-vote.aspx, (Accessed 28/06/2015)
  9. 9.00 9.01 9.02 9.03 9.04 9.05 9.06 9.07 9.08 9.09 9.10 'Visa London ePrix race two highlights', youtube.com, (YouTube: FIA Formula E, 28/06/2015), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mNOSOJXDJs, (Accessed 30/06/2015)
  10. 'Renault confirms manufacturer entry for season two', fiaformulae.com, (FIA Formula E, 29/06/2015), http://fiaformulae.com/en/news/2015/june/renault-confirms-manufacturer-entry-for-season-two.aspx, (Accessed 29/06/2015)
2014/15 FIA Formula E Championship
Entrants
Amlin AguriAndretti AutosportAudi Sport ABTDragon Racinge.Dams-RenaultMahindra RacingNextEV TCRTrulli Formula E TeamVenturi Formula E TeamVirgin Racing
Manufacturers
Spark-Renault
Cars
Spark-Renault SRT 01E
Drivers
2 Sam Bird • 3 Jaime Alguersuari/Fabio Leimer • 5 Karun Chandhok • 6 Oriol Servià/Loïc Duval • 7 Jérôme d'Ambrosio • 8 Nicolas Prost • 9 Sébastien Buemi • 10 Jarno Trulli • 11 Lucas di Grassi • 18 Michela Cerruti/Vitantonio Liuzzi/Alex Fontana • 21 Bruno Senna • 23 Nick Heidfeld • 27 Franck Montagny/Jean-Éric Vergne • 28 Charles Pic/Matthew Brabham/Marco Andretti/Scott Speed/Justin Wilson/Simona de Silvestro • 30 Stéphane Sarrazin • 55 Takuma Sato/António Félix da Costa/Sakon Yamamoto • 66 Daniel Abt • 77 Katherine Legge/Salvador Duran • 88 Ho-Pin Tung/Antonio Garcia/Oliver Turvey • 99 Nelson Piquet Jr.
E-Prix
BeijingPutrajayaPunta del EsteBuenos AiresMiamiLong BeachMonacoBerlinMoscowLondon ILondon II
Tests
DoningtonPunta del Este
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