City
Epaper

Cassidy ends winless run in rain-hit Shanghai E-Prix

By IANS | Updated: June 1, 2025 15:53 IST

Shanghai, June 1 Nick Cassidy ended a year-long wait for victory with a commanding drive in treacherous conditions ...

Open in App

Shanghai, June 1 Nick Cassidy ended a year-long wait for victory with a commanding drive in treacherous conditions to win the second race of the 2025 Shanghai E-Prix, as Formula E's typically close racing gave way to cautious control in the wet.

The Jaguar driver won from pole position in a race that started under the Safety Car following torrential rain that had disrupted both third practice and qualifying. Visibility and grip at the Shanghai International Circuit were at a premium throughout the day, and the race's opening six laps were neutralised before a rolling start finally released the field.

That rolling start created immediate separation, and the frantic, wheel-to-wheel action seen on Saturday was nowhere to be found. Whereas the previous race in Shanghai had seen second to 12th covered by just three seconds, the day's contest told a different story. Cassidy finished 13 seconds clear of Antonio Felix da Costa in third, with Pascal Wehrlein slotting into second to deliver a double podium for Porsche, reports Xinhua.

The lack of energy saving - made unnecessary by the low-speed opening laps and the race's overall shortened duration - turned the event into a flat-out sprint. But in conditions where aquaplaning was a constant threat, the challenge shifted from strategy to survival. Overtaking proved exceptionally difficult, as stepping even slightly off the racing line often resulted in a loss of control.

That reality was on full display when Wehrlein, who had closed on Cassidy after the first round of Attack Modes, ran wide at Turn 7 and lost crucial time. It left Cassidy unchallenged out front, allowing the New Zealander to steadily build a gap and cruise to the finish.

Further back, chaos continued in small bursts. Kiro's David Beckmann spun twice as he struggled for traction, and Saturday's winner Maximilian Gunther was forced into retirement with a mechanical issue. Notably, despite the treacherous conditions, the German was the only driver to fail to see the chequered flag.

Further down the field, title leader Oliver Rowland had qualified only 17th and made little headway through the field, eventually finishing 13th without scoring points.

Though the Briton retains a healthy lead in the Drivers' Championship, 68 points clear of second-placed Wehrlein, he cannot now seal the title at the next round in Jakarta, with the battle set to run until at least the Berlin double-header in mid-July.

Porsche's double podium sees the German outfit take the lead in the Team's Championship with 191 points, just a single point ahead of Rowland's Nissan team.

The next round of the 2024-2025 Formula E World Championship is the Jakarta ePrix on June 21.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessVisva-Bharati Alumna Prantika Saha Creates Waves with a Bold Reimagining of Tagore’s Chitrangada for Today’s Youth

National‘Friendship Pipeline’: India sends 5,000 tonnes diesel to Bangladesh​

NationalMP strengthens digital governance, targets 100 pc online services by 2026-end

NationalUP’s ‘bulldozer theory’ will be applied in Bengal after BJP comes to power: Yogi Adityanath

NationalBengal needs double-engine govt for rapid development: Rajasthan CM

Other Sports Realted Stories

Other SportsUdayan Mane's momentum fetches him maiden IGPL win by 7 shots in Joburg

Other SportsKadur takes advantage in APRC Round 2 and INRC opener at Madras International Circuit

Other SportsIPL 2026: Pat Cummins reaches Hyderabad ahead of SRH's clash with CSK

Other SportsIPL 2026: ‘Pay them money, ask them not to return’ -- Kris Srikkanth’s brutal verdict on Chahar, Shardul’s performances

Other SportsIPL 2026: Delhi Capitals keep Royal Challengers Bengaluru to 175/8 despite Salt’s explosive 63