Lucas di Grassi will drive for Abt Cupra in the upcoming season of the ABB Formula E World Championship, returning to the team where he has spent the majority of his career in the all-electric series. The Brazilian – who has more entries than any …
Lucas di Grassi will drive for Abt Cupra in the upcoming season of the ABB Formula E World Championship, returning to the team where he has spent the majority of his career in the all-electric series.
The Brazilian — who has more entries than any other driver in Formula E, with 116, and 13 race wins, a record equaled with Sebastien Buemi — raced for Abt in the first seven Formula E seasons when it was tied to Cupra’s Volkswagen Group stablemate Audi.
“It just feels great to be back with ABT,” said di Grassi, who will partner Nico Muller on the team. “Not only did I win two titles with this team, but I also have endless memories with all the people who work there with so much passion. I couldn’t be more excited to return after two years and I’m really looking forward to working together. Together, we will give our all to get back, step by step, the results that the whole team deserves.”
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In his previous stint at the team, di Grassi secured all but one of his wins in the series, as well as the season three drivers’ title in 2016-17 and helped secure the teams’ title for Abt Cupra the following year. Abt sat out of the 2021-22 season and di Grassi subsequently moved to Venturi where he spent a single campaign, before switching to Mahindra — Abt Cupra’s current drivetrain supplier — for last season.
“We are happy that we have brought Lucas back to ABT,” said Hans-Jurgen Abt, CEO of the Abt Group. “He was and is a good friend of our whole team and is one of Formula E’s greats of the past 10 years.”
Thomas Biermaier, ABT CEO and team principal added, “We know about the great challenge of battling against international competition as a small customer team. That’s why experience, technical know-how and full passion for the joint project count all the more for us — with Lucas, we have the perfect man on board for the future.”
Maserati MSG Racing has confirmed Jehan Daruvala alongside Maximilian Gunther for the upcoming Formula E season. Former Red Bull junior Daruvala moves over to the all-electric single-seater series after four years in Formula 2 where he has notched …
Maserati MSG Racing has confirmed Jehan Daruvala alongside Maximilian Gunther for the upcoming Formula E season.
Former Red Bull junior Daruvala moves over to the all-electric single-seater series after four years in Formula 2 where he has notched up two sprint victories and a sole feature win, with a best championship finish of seventh in 2021 and ’22. He also served as test and reserve driver for Mahindra in Formula E last season, making his test debut in the series rookie test before driving in free practice at the Rome E-Prix.
“Formula E is a championship that I have admired for a long time, and after taking part in two test sessions, I’m very happy to have the opportunity to step up to a full-time race seat,” said Daruvala. “From my experiences so far, the Gen3 car is completely unique to drive, but I’ve found it to be a very rewarding experience.
“I would like to thank James [Rossiter, Maserati team principal} and Maserati MSG Racing for giving me this chance and I can’t wait to learn more about the car and get to know the team better in pre-season testing, before hitting the ground running in Mexico City in January.”
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Daruvala will team up with Gunther who returns for a second season with Maserati. Gunther had his best campaign in Formula E to-date last season, finishing seventh in the standings and taking his fourth career win in the second race at Jakarta.
“I’m very proud to continue with Maserati MSG Racing. We had a great first season together, particularly with the momentum we built in the second half of the year with one win, four podiums and two poles,” Gunther said. “Continuing to build on this base is something that I‘m very much looking forward to in 2024, alongside working with Jehan as my new teammate.”
Maserati’s announcement comes after its former driver, Edoardo Mortara, was announced at Mahindra Racing earlier today alongside previous series champion Nyck de Vries.
Nyck de Vries will return to Formula E next season after signing a multi-year deal with Mahindra Racing, where he will team with Edoardo Mortara (pictured at left, above, with de Vries). The Dutchman won the all-electric single seater championship …
Nyck de Vries will return to Formula E next season after signing a multi-year deal with Mahindra Racing, where he will team with Edoardo Mortara (pictured at left, above, with de Vries).
The Dutchman won the all-electric single seater championship with Mercedes in 2020-21 and earned a Formula 1 opportunity off the back of that success as a reserve driver for Mercedes and its customer teams Aston Martin, McLaren, and Williams. With the latter, he made his F1 debut, filling in for Alex Albon at last year’s Italian Grand Prix where he finished ninth.
The points-scoring debut was enough to earn him a full-time seat with AlphaTauri this year, but after failing to add to his haul in the first 10 races of the season, he was dropped in favor of Daniel Ricciardo. He now heads to a Mahindra team that’s going through a rebuild after team principal Dilbagh Gil was shown the door last season, and the recent exit of Formula E veteran Lucas d Grassi, whose departure was announced earlier this week after a single season with the team.
“It’s really exciting to be joining such a major automotive manufacturer as Mahindra, and to represent them in Formula E,” said de Vries. “I’m particularly excited about the future plans for the team. The basis is already strong, and the team has all the attributes to succeed. I believe going forwards we will be able to extract even more potential from the project and the organization, so to be a part of that process was very appealing for me.
Despite a seemingly positive start to the Gen3 era, with di Grassi taking pole and third in Mexico City, the team struggled for much of last season, and was even forced to withdraw from the fifth round in Cape Town after concerns were raised over the safety of its rear suspension setup. Points were hard to come by throughout the year, and Oliver Rowland — who scored in Hyderabad and Berlin — was replaced by former F1 driver Roberto Merhi with seven races to spare, while di Grassi saw out the season before his own departure.
“I think it’s no secret that the team has had a bit of a rough start to Gen3, although there were positive signs of improvement during the second half of last season,” said de Vries. “I believe the team can continue to build on those learnings and with the additional changes and plans in place for the future, we can make even greater steps forward in performance at the start of our new journey together.
“Coming back to Formula E will feel like coming home. I’ve been part of the Formula E family for three seasons — I know everybody very well. I’m looking forward to being back in a familiar environment, and to be back somewhere where ultimately, I’ve always enjoyed my racing.”
Mortara, who was de Vries’ rival for the 2020-21 title, joins the Dutchman on the team after recently making a surprise exit from the Maserati Formula E squad. Mortara also has signed a multi-year agreement with the Indian manufacturer.
“I’m extremely excited to be joining Mahindra Racing. It’s a team that I’ve been looking at for several years now, they have been in Formula E since the beginning of the championship, so there’s a lot of experience there,” said Mortara, a six-time race winner in Formula E. “What I could also feel from the people here is that we share the same values. We have a great project in front of us, but I can see a lot of determination and motivation from everyone in the team, and this is so important.”
“Mahindra is also such a big automotive manufacturer, with a worldwide reputation. I’m extremely proud to join and be a representative of this prestigious group. I can’t wait to get started, and I’m sure that, if we put in the necessary amount of work, we will be able to be successful in this very competitive championship in the future.”
Mahindra Racing CEO Frederic Bertrand, who replaced Gil last season, stressed the long-term nature of the team’s rebuild, as it looks to once again become a title challenger.
“I am delighted to welcome Edo and Nyck to the Mahindra Racing family. As a team, we are all embarking on a journey to bring Mahindra Racing back to the front of the grid in the coming years,” he said. “With their speed and experience, Nyck and Edo will play a key role in driving the team towards that goal, and I know everybody is feeling very motivated to work with them. Equally important for the team are the drivers’ appetites for a long-term project, which makes them the perfect fit for Mahindra Racing at the beginning of this journey.”
“We anticipate next year will be another year of development and progress, and in a championship like Formula E, success is impossible to achieve overnight. But the signing of Nyck and Edo, along with new recruits within the wider team, puts down a solid foundation on which we can build.”
Andre Lotterer has departed the Avalanche Andretti Formula E team after calling time on his single-seater racing career. Across 26 years, Lotterer won two Formula BMW titles and the 2011 Formula Nippon championship – a series in which he competed …
Andre Lotterer has departed the Avalanche Andretti Formula E team after calling time on his single-seater racing career.
Across 26 years, Lotterer won two Formula BMW titles and the 2011 Formula Nippon championship — a series in which he competed for 15 seasons between 2003 and 2017, finishing in the top three 10 times. He served as test driver for Jaguar’s Formula 1 team in 2001 and 2002, but made his race debut more than a decade later at the 2014 Belgian Grand Prix for Caterham. He also made a single Champ Car start for Dale Coyne Racing in Mexico City at the end of 2002
Since the 2017-18 season, the German, now 41, has been a mainstay in Formula E, where he has been an eight-time podium finisher. He debuted with Techeetah before moving to Porsche’s factory team in 2019-20. After racing there for three seasons he transitioned to Andretti, a Porsche customer outfit, last year.
“Got some news to share with you. It’s time for me to close a 26 year chapter of single-seater racing,” Lotterer posted on Instagram. “I have decided not to race anymore in the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship to fully focus on my challenge with Porsche Penske Motorsport to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans (for the 4th time) and the FIA World Endurance Championship.
“It has been a great ride racing in Formula BMW & Formula Renault to Formula 3, Champ Car, Formula Nippon, Super Formula, Formula 1 and finally the Formula E family which I joined at the start of Season 4 back in 2017.
“I would like to thank the people that helped me join this innovative and exciting Championship; Leo Thomas, Julian & Alexander Jakobi, JEV & the Techeetah team! The adventures together were great! A big thanks to TAG Heuer Porsche FE too who gave me the opportunity to lead the team into their Formula E debut in Season 6!
“Last but not least, my engineer Fabrice Roussel who has shown amazing support since the beginning and all the way through the three Formula E teams, and the Avalanche Andretti Formula E team for trusting me during Season 9.”
“I would like to personally thank Alejandro Agag, his team and the FIA for creating Formula E — it has been a fantastic journey and you have changed many of our lives. Formula E has been the most challenging and fun Championship I have competed in! I am extremely grateful and proud to have raced in Formula E, promoting all the sustainable technologies and for meeting the amazing people in this paddock, a few of which have become my best friends today.”
Lotterer’s biggest successes have come in the sports car arena. As well as a brace of Super GT titles (2006 and 2009), he won the Le Mans 24 Hours three times for Audi (2011, 2012, and 2014), and was champion of the inaugural FIA WEC season in 2012. Lotterer was with Audi from 2010 until its withdrawal from prototype racing at the end of 2017, when he then moved to Porsche’s prototype program.
Despite closing the door on single-seaters, Lotterer will remain an active driver with Porsche. He has been a part of the brand’s return to top-level sports car racing this year, contesting the WEC season alongside Kevin Estre and Laurens Vanthoor. The trio took a podium finish at the 6 Hours of Portimao back in April.
NEOM McLaren has confirmed that Sam Bird will replace Rene Rast at the team for its second Formula E season. Bird joins Jake Hughes in an all-British lineup for the team which debuted in the 2022-23 season after taking over the back-to-back …
NEOM McLaren has confirmed that Sam Bird will replace Rene Rast at the team for its second Formula E season.
Bird joins Jake Hughes in an all-British lineup for the team which debuted in the 2022-23 season after taking over the back-to-back championship-winning Mercedes entry. The move comes after Bird’s departure from Jaguar TCS Racing, his seat there being taken by Nick Cassidy.
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“I’m super excited to get going with the NEOM McLaren Formula E Team. Becoming part of a team with so much heritage and prestige as the McLaren Racing family feels special,” said Bird. “We know there is some work to do ahead of Season 10, to ensure we get to where we want to be, which is at the front of the Formula E pack.
“It feels great to be part of the team and I can’t wait to kick off the season preparations. I’m super motivated and driven to deliver success with the team in Season 10.”
Bird’s resume boasts a second-placed finish in the 2013 GP2 season,an FIA World Endurance Championship title in the LMP2 class with G-Drive Racing in 2015, and a runner-up finish in the GTE class with Ferrari a year later, as well as stints as a test driver for the Williams and Mercedes Formula 1 teams.
But it’s in Formula E where Bird has spent the majority of his top-level career. He has competed in every season of Formula E, and sits joint second on the series’ all-time entry list with 114 races entered, just two behind Lucas di Grassi. In that time he’s notched up 11 race victories (third overall) and had a best championship finish of third in the 2017-18 campaign.
He made his category debut with Virgin Racing, remaining with the team for six seasons as it morphed into DS Virgin and eventually Envision Racing. He moved to Jaguar for 2020, where he remained until the 2022-23 season finale.
It’s that experience that Ian James, managing director of NEOM McLaren Electric Racing and team principal, NEOM McLaren Formula E Team, believes will help propel the team forward.
“It’s great to be able to share the news that Sam will be joining the team for Season 10, alongside Jake,” he said. “Sam is a proven force in Formula E, as well as other categories of racing, and his experience and determination will fuel the team ahead of an exciting season to come.
“As soon as the deal was done, his first question to me was when he could come into the office to start the preparations for Season 10 – this clearly shows his hunger and commitment to making Season 10 a success for the NEOM McLaren Formula E Team.
“Having both Sam and Jake on board has already instilled confidence in the team.”
Mclaren Racing CEO Zak Brown added: ““It is a pleasure to welcome Sam to the McLaren Racing family. Throughout his time in Formula E, Sam has proven himself to be an impressive talent, and we are eager to leverage his experience and expertise to help bring the NEOM McLaren Formula E Team further success in Season 10.
“Alongside Jake, I’m confident that we have one of the strongest pairings on the Formula E grid. Bring on Season 10!”
Nick Cassidy has joined Jaguar TCS Racing for the 2023-24 Formula E season, replacing Sam Bird who raced for the team for the last three seasons. The move comes after Cassidy finished second in the 2022-23 season with four race victories driving for …
Nick Cassidy has joined Jaguar TCS Racing for the 2023-24 Formula E season, replacing Sam Bird who raced for the team for the last three seasons.
The move comes after Cassidy finished second in the 2022-23 season with four race victories driving for Envision Racing – a Jaguar customer operation which took the Teams’ championship.
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“I’m very excited to be joining the Jaguar TCS Racing team for the 2024 ABB FIA Formula E World Championship and I am looking forward to racing for a team like Jaguar that has such a successful motorsport history,” said Cassidy. “This season has been my most successful to date, so I can’t wait to get behind the wheel of the Jaguar I-TYPE 6 and fight for points, podiums and wins.”
Cassidy will line up alongside compatriot Mitch Evans, who was also a 2022-23 title contender and matched Cassidy’s season-high wins tally.
“Looking forward to having Mitch as a teammate, we have known each other since we were kids and have raced against each other for years, so I’m proud that we will be racing together and hope to continue to put New Zealand on the map in motorsport.”
Jaguar team principal James Barclay hailed the signing of the 2017 Super GT and 2019 Super Formula champion, and declared his team’s new all-Kiwi lineup as “one of the strongest driver line-ups on the grid”.
“We are thrilled to announce that Nick Cassidy has joined Jaguar TCS Racing,” he said. “Nick’s track record speaks for itself and is someone we have always had our eye on back to his time racing in Japan.
“Since joining Formula E he has gone from strength to strength and his 2023 season was very impressive. Nick was highly motivated to join the team and we are proud to welcome him into the Jaguar family.
“We head into the new season with one of the strongest driver line-ups on the grid and paired with the Jaguar I-TYPE 6 and our talented team we will be looking to once again challenge for both the Drivers and Teams World Championship titles.”
Cassidy’s signing follows news that Evans recently signed a new “multi-year” contract with Jaguar, continuing a relationship that began in 2016, making it the longest driver and team pairing in Formula E history.
“Having been with Jaguar TCS Racing since 2016, it was the natural choice to continue our successful partnership,” he said. “We’ve had some incredible moments over the last seven years and I’m looking forward to writing our next chapter together. I am proud to race for Jaguar and play my part with the team in JLR’s Reimagine strategy.”
After his exit from Jaguar, Bird is expected to join NEOM McLaren for the 2023-24 season.
A day on from the frustration of seeing his championship chances evaporate via a collision with his teammate, Nick Cassidy put on a masterful display amid challenging wet conditions in the second Hankook London E-Prix for a fourth win of the season. …
A day on from the frustration of seeing his championship chances evaporate via a collision with his teammate, Nick Cassidy put on a masterful display amid challenging wet conditions in the second Hankook London E-Prix for a fourth win of the season. In the process, he helped ensure his Envision Racing team of its first ABB Formula E World Championship teams’ title.
After a series of delays for the wet weather to recede, Cassidy took charge from the start and strode to a comfortable win, heading home fellow New Zealander Mitch Evans (Jaguar TCS Racing) and newly crowned champion Jake Dennis (Avalanche Andretti) to deliver the teams’ crown to Jaguar drive train customers Envision Racing, ahead of the factory Jaguar TCS Racing squad.
Cassidy led from pole, lights-to-flag and set the fastest lap of the race, keeping Evans at arm’s length throughout, while the lead pair drew out some 10 seconds over next-best Dennis in the brutal conditions. Not only did the Envision Racing-run Jaguar I-TYPE 6 have the pace advantage but it also looked better on energy, too, and Cassidy led Evans home by 4.934s to clinch the runner-up place in the drivers’ table.
“That was really hard, especially being the race leader — I didn’t know how hard to push,” said Cassidy, who admitted the lights-to-flag run felt oddly simple after the ups and downs of Saturday’s race. “I felt comfortable and it felt strange to have a race as difficult and not have any big moments.”
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Sebastien Buemi took sixth in the sister Envision car, fending off Sam Bird in the other Jaguar TCS Racing entry to make doubly sure of teams’ honors.
Norman Nato (Nissan) and outgoing champion Stoffel Vandoorne (DS Penske) were sandwiched between the front three and the squabbling Buemi and Bird, while Nico Mueller (ABT CUPRA) finished eighth.
Dan Ticktum, on home soil in the NIO 333, made a smart early move on Maserati MSG Racing’s Edo Mortara to break into the top 10 and steered to an eventual ninth, ahead of TAG Heuer Porsche’s Pascal Wehrlein.
Envision Racing beat out the factory Jaguar TCS Racing team by 12 points in the teams’ title race, while Porsche customers Avalanche Andretti also edged the factory TAG Heuer Porsche team to third, by 10 points.
Dennis wound up 30 points clear of Cassidy in the drivers’ running, with Evans third and Wehrlein fourth.
Avalanche Andretti’s Jake Dennis had a number of his obstacles in the path to his first ABB FIA Formula E World Championship in London. Among the challenges the British driver had to navigate were two red-flag periods, failed Attack Mode power boost …
Avalanche Andretti’s Jake Dennis had a number of his obstacles in the path to his first ABB FIA Formula E World Championship in London. Among the challenges the British driver had to navigate were two red-flag periods, failed Attack Mode power boost activations and a tense interlude with a Porsche factory driver, who failed to give him the space the Porsche-powered Andretti driver thought he’d get.
“It’s a huge relief,” Dennis said after finishing second to secure the title. “I didn’t expect it coming into today with Nick Cassidy on pole and Sebastien Buemi (both of Envision Racing) in third. By lap 8 I was like, ‘Yeah this is gonna be hard.’ Nick had taken both Attack Modes and Sebastien was the best wingman for Nick possible. But then it all fell apart for them and we managed to keep out of trouble.”
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In the late stages Dennis radioed his team that he was surprised at TAG Heuer Porsche’s Pascal Wehrlein declining to move out of the way for him despite pre-race conversations having given him the impression the works Porsche cars wouldn’t hinder him. Porsche supplies the Andretti team with its powertrains.
“That was a private conversation but ultimately, I felt like we had a bit of an agreement going into the race and it just obviously didn’t quite pan out the way I expected it,” Dennis said. “It was just one of those things.”
Another one of those things was the bizarre end to Cassidy’s title challenge, after starting up front with his Envision teammate Buemi in third. Buemi got a great start to emerge in second and help Cassidy pull a gap to the field, pushing Dennis down into third. However, the two Envision teammates ended up coming together, damaging Cassidy’s front wing and wrecking his championship hopes.
“I don’t know what to feel,” said a despondent Cassidy. “I just can’t believe the series of events. The start was a dream. There’s not too much I can add. Probably just take the moment to say well done to Jake [Dennis]. He had a really solid season and really deserved the championship. I think that we had all the ingredients and a potential to also get the job done, but there’s no would, could, should in motorsport — the results and kudos to him, so well done.”
Cassidy noted that he let Buemi pass later on in the race to help Envision.
“We’re also fighting for the teams’ world championship and I like to think I’m a good team player. Maybe I’m too good a team player,” he mused.
They get another chance in today’s second half of the doubleheader, in which Cassidy will start from the pole after beating Jaguar TCS Racing’s Mitch Evans by just 0.01s. That earned three more points for Envision in its fight with Jaguar for the teams’ championship.
For Dennis, the second London race is an opportunity to get his own back on drivers who he felt took advantage of his need for caution Saturday.
“They can and they’d be stupid not to [exploit it], so they divebomb and take high-risk maneuvers even if they think realistically it’s not on but you’ll probably give space,” said the Andretti driver. “There were some moves which I had to allow to happen because I would have crashed, but I am looking forward to enjoying (Sunday).”
Formula E holds a unique position in motorsports as an electric world championship, one that new CEO Jeff Dodds believes to be a favorable space for explosive growth. Having joined Formula E as CEO just a month and a half ago, the veteran of Ford, …
Formula E holds a unique position in motorsports as an electric world championship, one that new CEO Jeff Dodds believes to be a favorable space for explosive growth.
Having joined Formula E as CEO just a month and a half ago, the veteran of Ford, Honda, Callaway Golf and Virgin Media is looking to fully harness the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship’s assets in a way that builds on his own deep passion for motorsports.
“I am very much focused on turning the volume up,” he said ahead of London’s final doubleheader round of the series’ ninth season. “There’s a hardcore motorsport fan that loves racing — I consider myself one of those. I love Formula 1. I love MotoGP, World Superbikes, British Superbikes. If it’s got a drive train or an engine, then I’ll watch it. When I was at Honda, we even raced lawnmowers, so I will watch anything racing.”
Dodds’ vision for Formula E’s future isn’t talking about the noise level, though, but rather the cultural force electric racing can — and needs — to be, bringing compelling technology and competition to markets that both crave and benefit from it.
“I love cars and motorbikes — I love the technology,” he explained. “I love it more for what it can do as opposed to how it does it, so I don’t particularly want to take cars apart and put them back together, although I did do that with my dad when I was a small boy.
“The two things I love about technology are the ability to go faster and further, but also the ability to do that with placing less of a burden on the environment, less of a burden on the planet.
“When you’re in elite motorsports, everyone wants to see performance improvements. We’re on Gen 3 of the car; we’ll go to Gen 3 EVO within two seasons and then we have Gen 4 coming after that. Each of those steps, I’m looking for improvements in efficiency in the car — its sustainability credentials, but also performance. I want it to be able to go faster, not just from the acceleration point of view, but also top speed. That’s one area we’re focused on.
“Also, we want to take our product to more places around the world. We announced Tokyo for season 10, which I’m properly excited about. But there are other big venues in North America we like the look of… We’ve been to New York before. We’ve been to L.A. before. Both are great venues. We need to be back in mainland China at some point. So, ‘faster cars in more destinations’ would be one view.
“We’ve had the most incredibly compelling racing this season — loads of overtaking. We turn up at an event and I’ll ask the experts and nobody can tell me who’s going to win and, even within a team, which of the drivers is likely to win it.
“I just don’t think enough people know about it. Think about it — we’ve got Porsche, Maserati, McLaren, Jaguar… We’ve got great racing in great cities with brilliant cars. We haven’t turned the volume up enough around what we’re doing. One of my great opportunities is to bring this product to more and more people — bigger media deals around the world, broader reach, more social interaction; bring new fans into the sport.”
And where are these new fans to be found?
“First of all, there’s a hardcore motorsport fan that loves racing. I consider myself one of those,” Dodds said, “If you love motorsport, you’ll know what Formula E is; you’ll have watched it. Hopefully you enjoy it…
“[But] we’re not a combustion engine. We don’t make a very loud noise. We don’t smell like grease or gasoline. Some people are never going to watch us. They’re just not, and it’s not a good use of our time to try and convince a small group of people who are never really going to get excited about what we do, to try and convince them to watch us. We’ve got the broader motorsport audience who I absolutely would love to love our products, and many of them do already.
“We’ve also got an audience which is quite unique, and we call them the ‘electric generation.’ This is a younger, more socially aware, environmentally aware group of people that love what we do. There’s more of those people out there, more potential fans for us. But I also saw what happened during lockdown with (Formula 1’s docuseries) ‘Drive to Survive’ — bringing a different audience to Formula 1. They loved the competitive jeopardy, the theater, the drama, so they bought into the sport as well. You went from one person in the household watching it, to both people in the household watching it for quite different reasons. One loved motorsport, one loved the personalities and the drama and the theater of motorsport.
“We have a much broader audience that we can go after. I think the electric generation is more uniquely our audience than, say, MotoGP or Formula 1. If there’s a billion motorsport fans around the world, we have around 200 million of them that love our product today. My job is to get that from 200 to 300 to 400 to 500 by going after those different segments.”
A significant element to bringing in this new generation of fan, Dodds says, is being active in courting them, rather than allowing things to develop organically over time.
“If we rely on organic growth in that audience, it will take too long,” he admitted. “We have to push our product out more assertively, and that means bigger media deals around the world.”
In June, not long after Dodds took the helm, Formula E inked a deal to become Roku’s first live sports package as part of an expansion of the U.S. media rights held by CBS Sports. The goal for Formula E is “to replicate those kind of deals around all big markets in the world,” according to Dodds.
“We need to expose our product to more people, but also we have to leverage the ecosystem. If we just use the little old Formula E voice to tell people about what we’re doing, we’re only ever going to grow incrementally. If we use our voice and the voices of Porsche, Nissan, Jaguar, McLaren, and the driver’s voices, and the different venues that we’re racing, and our partners ABB, Julius Bär, Heineken and all these lovely people we work with… If we all talk about it, this multiplicative effect of getting news out there and telling our story to more people, then we can grow exponentially, and that’s what I’d love to see.”
That messaging hasn’t always been the modus operandi, according to Lucas di Grassi, the elder statesman of Formula E drivers. Over the electric series’ nine seasons, di Grassi says the organizers “could have been more aggressive…and smarter with some of the technical rules to create a faster and better car, to create a faster and better product that is easier for the marketing guys to sell and to promote. I think that’s more or less how Gen 3 is, and Gen 4 is going to be even more.”
When the Brazilian met Dodds for the first time, ideas began meshing almost immediately.
“He seems like a very straightforward guy,” di Grassi said of the new guy in town. “He was asking the right questions and he was listening. It doesn’t matter if he’s going to follow (suggestions) or not, but he was at least listening to everybody that was giving him input.”
One of the ideas di Grassi shared was utilizing the technology to suit Formula E’s geographic expansion to existing circuits — as they did at Portland International Raceway this season — but with an added layer of modularity to suit.
“At the moment,” he said, “(the FIA) is thinking about electric the same as combustion. We have one power, one energy we race at every track exactly the same. That’s the wrong approach. We should be modular to different tracks. So if you want to race in Paris again, in the middle (of the city), where we raced many years, you cannot race with Gen 3 — it’s too powerful. So…reduce the power to the same power level as we had in (the previous Gen) when we raced there.
“So at that race, the power limit is this much less, and then you go to Portland and it’s that much more. And then you could do anything you want with this. There are many ways of doing smarter things when the car is fully electric and fully software-controlled.”
Di Grassi cites Macau, a tradition-steeped but notoriously narrow street circuit, as another potential Formula E venue where the cars could be tailored to suit the track.
“We could do short, we could do the full long track that any car does — pretty much every track. Maybe not with this battery, but let’s say with a slightly bigger battery you could do pretty much every track and then you could modulate the car. You could have moveable aerodynamic devices — you say, ‘Look, for this event you can only run five degrees or zero degrees.’ You can do pretty much whatever you want.”
Dodds channels this same premise into an intrinsic part of Formula E’s future with manufacturer partners — really leaning into the “road relevance” that’s often talked about but rarely executed in modern motor racing, with Porsche being the most recent to re-up its commitment to the series and to the development of the Gen 4 car platform.
“One of the key reasons (why Porsche is) investing, and they want to continue working in this series, is because they do develop their technology for their road cars,” he says. “They develop a lot of technology and they learn a lot of things on the racetrack that goes straight back into their vehicles, and not just in hardware. We know there are examples where Jaguar has worked on efficiency through software in these race cars that they’ve been able to put back into production cars. So this was a massive, massive point for us — accelerating the take-up of EVs across the world.
“I know, as an EV driver — and I have been for a number a number of years now — that two of the big worries for people are, ‘What about the performance of an electric vehicle versus a combustion engine vehicle?’ and secondly, this whole anxiety about range and charging in a different way.
“We’re all used to going to a fueling station. We don’t like change very much as human beings and therefore there’s anxiety around, ‘What if I run out of charge? What distance can I get? Will I be able to charge quickly?’
“What the series is doing right now is showing performance is not a problem. These are 200mph racing cars that are only electric and they’re getting 0-60mph or 0-100mph — only using one drive train — in (something like) 2.7s. So imagine what’s possible with (both axles) opened up.
“The second thing is if we can race around a track for 40 minutes and we can start the race with only having 50 percent of the energy we need in the battery, but through regeneration get the other 40 to 50 percent throughout the race, you don’t need to worry about whether you’re going to be able to make it to go and see your mom and dad and back. This technology is developing really quickly.
“The fact that we are influencing production cars and helping reduce anxiety in people so that, when it comes to their next car, they may be considering an EV where previously they wouldn’t have done, then we’re doing a brilliant job. I would just love to do it and influence more people by being a louder voice, as opposed to the number of people we influence today.
“When we talk to the manufacturers about this series, they realize how important having electric credibility is for them as they move their whole range to EVs. Some of them say they want to have one electric variant in every one of their models by 2026; we’ve got others that say they only want to sell an electric car by 2026. We have varying levels of ambition, but they all know in order to make that change, they need to have credibility with electric vehicle production and this race series brings them direct credibility.”
With the state of Formula E going through such a pivotal transition period, former CEO Jamie Reigle has stuck around in an advisory role to help Dodds get acclimated, but the newcomer is finding the transition immensely enjoyable.
“There’s a couple of things that are very different,” Dodds said. “I love motorsport and I love entertainment and theater and all of that drama. The end of the race season has been brilliant for me because I get to see people excited. A large group of people turn up to work for Formula E, or to work for our partners or the race teams, and they just love what they’re doing. They’re not here necessarily just to earn a living; they’re here because they’re passionate about what they do every day, and I get it kind of by osmosis. I get to absorb some of that energy and that excitement from just being around people who love it.
“The second thing, which is maybe a little bit different for me, is I’m used to working in an industry that’s in a very, very mature stage of its life cycle and it has headwinds. There are tailwinds in Formula E around sustainability and around this particular series and sport. It’s nine years old. It feels like a start-up still. It’s come out the other end of COVID and starting to grow again — and grow rapidly.
“To be in an environment where the people are passionate about what they’re doing every day and they love to be here, we’ve got tailwinds. We have got some headwinds as well, but they’re outweighed by the tailwinds. So to be in that environment is super-exciting. I’m loving it.”
Jake Dennis dodged the slings and arrows of a typically frenetic Hankook London E-Prix to come home second, enough to secure the 2022/23 ABB FIA Formula E World Drivers’ Championship for the Avalanche Andretti driver with one race remaining, while …
Jake Dennis dodged the slings and arrows of a typically frenetic Hankook London E-Prix to come home second, enough to secure the 2022/23 ABB FIA Formula E World Drivers’ Championship for the Avalanche Andretti driver with one race remaining, while Mitch Evans took the checkered flag first for Jaguar TCS Racing.
Dennis survived two missed trips through the Attack Mode power boost loop, heavy pressure from his closest rival and polesitter Nick Cassidy (Envision Racing) as well as two red-flag stoppages to become Formula E’s first British champion and the first to take the title on home soil by taking a record 10th podium finish of the season. Dennis’ title is also Andretti’s first in Formula E, the American team having been a part of the series from day one.
Dennis headed into the race 24 points clear of Cassidy, who started from pole after Evans qualified first but was handed a five-place grid penalty for causing an accident last time out in Rome.
Cassidy led the early stages before ceding top spot to eventual winner and countryman Evans on lap 11 and second spot to teammate Sebastien Buemi. Dennis had earlier made it by Cassidy with an opportunistic move at the final corner just a couple of laps before, with Cassidy immediately fighting his way back by the Andretti car — a titanic scrap looked to be brewing.
However, with Cassidy running in formation, close behind the Swiss, the Envision drivers came into contact. The former’s front wing was dislodged, catching beneath his left-front wheel. Repairs were attempted but his race couldn’t be salavaged — one fewer challenger for Dennis to deal with.
— ABB FIA Formula E World Championship (@FIAFormulaE) July 29, 2023
Loose bodywork from that clash caused a brief spell under the safety car, bunching the pack up. Dennis, meanwhile was not impressed over the radio with Porsche stablemate Pascal Wehrlein (TAG Heuer Porsche), the German hanging onto fourth at the expense of the standings leader in the customer, Porsche-powered Avalanche Andretti as the teams’ title battle heated up. Team owner Michael Andretti wasn’t pleased either…
Tensions rising here as Team Owner of Avalanche Andretti, Michael Andretti, makes his feelings clear to the TAG Heuer Porsche garage following a close call between Wehrlein and Dennis.@Hankook_Sport#LondonEPrixpic.twitter.com/nENBITW1ot
— ABB FIA Formula E World Championship (@FIAFormulaE) July 29, 2023
Wehrlein’s challenge then also fell by the wayside in a shunt just before a red flag was flown for the recovery of Sacha Fenestraz’s Nissan. He and Jake Hughes tangled into Turn 1, with the damage to the German’s Porsche terminal.
On the restart Evans led away, with Dennis working his way into third. An over-optimistic move from Norman Nato (Nissan) at the penultimate turn on lap 34 then caused a chain reaction behind with several cars unable to avoid the melee, enforcing another spell under the red flag.
It was a three-lap sprint to the flag at the restart, with Dennis having only to hold fast to ensure he’d take top honors. Duly, he did, in front of jubilant home support — made doubly sure by his promotion to second at the flag, just behind Evans, with a penalty for TAG Heuer Porsche’s Antonio Felix da Costa, dropping him out of the podium positions. Sebastien Buemi (Envision Racing) rounded out the podium.
— ABB FIA Formula E World Championship (@FIAFormulaE) July 29, 2023
“Oh my God. That is incredible!” said Dennis. “That race was so hard, everything thrown at us. World champions, baby!
“I felt like everyone was racing against us but Jesus Christ — we have just become world champion and I am so so happy for myself, the team and everyone, we deserved it so much.
“I only joined the championship three years ago and we almost won it in our rookie year, but now to come back and properly have the year that we had, you know break all the podium records and to become world champion, it’s just mind blowing. I really didn’t think it coming into this year and full credit to my boys — I love them so much and they’ve given me an absolute rocketship all year. And this is the least I can do for them.
“I can hear the fans as well and it’s just absolutely incredible to share this with them.”
While the drivers’ crown is secured, there’s still all to play for in the teams’ title race in tomorrow’s season finale in London, with Envision Racing heading the way from the factory Jaguar TCS Racing squad while TAG Heuer Porsche clings to third with a mathematical chance of the top spot.