ROKiT Venturi Racing’s Edoardo Mortara battled to the third victory of his ABB FIA Formula E World Championship career in Saudi Arabia this evening (29 January), as yesterday’s winner Nyck de Vries (Mercedes-EQ) endured a bruising bout that saw him only just scrape a top ten finish. Qualifying had promised a close contest around the Riyadh Street Circuit – and so it would prove to be. From pole position, de Vries controlled proceedings early on ahead of Mortara, Envision Racing’s Robin Frijns, Lucas Di Grassi in the second Venturi entry and TAG Heuer Porsche veteran André Lotterer, as the top five made a break from the chasing pack.
The order remained unchanged until the second round of ATTACK MODE activations. With enough of a margin in his mirrors not to concede any ground, Di Grassi was the first to blink, with Frijns following suit a lap later and dropping behind the Brazilian. A lap later again, it was Mortara’s turn, causing the Swiss star to fall to fourth. He would not stay there for long. Taking full advantage of the extra power at his disposal, Di Grassi snatched the lead from de Vries with a committed move at the chicane in which the two cars briefly touched. As de Vries found himself momentarily delayed, Mortara opportunistically snuck past Frijns for third, before relieving his Mercedes rival of second next time around to make it a Venturi one-two.
When his ATTACK MODE ran out, Di Grassi then similarly fell prey to his team-mate, who hit the front of the field at the 20-minute mark. For a while, the Venturis looked set to edge away, but after regrouping, de Vries began to zero back in, dragging Frijns along in his slipstream as the front-running quartet concertinaed once more. The Dutch duo swapped places when de Vries deployed his second ATTACK MODE, but the Mercedes man was thereafter unable to regain the position – and worse still was to come. Having latched onto the back of the leaders, two-time champion Jean-Éric Vergne (DS Techeetah) fought his way past de Vries at the chicane, with the ensuing loss of momentum relegating Saturday’s winner to the tail end of the top ten.
That reduced the four-way fight for honours to a three-way tussle between Mortara, Di Grassi and Frijns, and the Envision driver got a run on the 2016/17 title-winner with ten minutes remaining to take second place – only for the field to subsequently close up again as Lotterer, Jake Dennis (Avalanche Andretti), Vergne, Stoffel Vandoorne (Mercedes-EQ) and Oliver Rowland (Mahindra Racing) homed in on the leading trio. The stage was seemingly set for a grandstand finish, until an accident for Alexander Sims in the sister Mahindra brought out the Safety Car and the race would resume for the final three corners.
Mortara took the chequered flag ahead of Frijns and Di Grassi, who duly ascended the podium on his first weekend for Venturi. Lotterer wound up fourth as Porsche displayed much-improved race pace compared to Saturday, followed by Dennis, Vergne and Vandoorne, the latter pair having the misfortune to trigger their FanBoost immediately before the action was neutralised. For the Belgian, seventh place nonetheless represented a solid result from his 12th grid slot as he produced an accomplished drive through the pack – posting fastest lap in the process – with Rowland, Porsche’s Pascal Wehrlein and the disappointed de Vries rounding out the top ten. Following a two-week break, Formula E’s 2021/22 campaign will resume with the Mexico City ePrix on 12 March.