Veloce dominates first Hydro X Prix Final as rivals hit trouble

E.ON NEXT Veloce Racing claimed its first win of the 2024 Extreme E season, dominating the first Final of the Hydro X Prix weekend as its rivals hit trouble in Scotland. Molly Taylor began the four-lap main event on Saturday with a clean getaway, …

E.ON NEXT Veloce Racing claimed its first win of the 2024 Extreme E season, dominating the first Final of the Hydro X Prix weekend as its rivals hit trouble in Scotland.

Molly Taylor began the four-lap main event on Saturday with a clean getaway, emerging from the first two turns in the lead. Behind her, Rosberg X Racing’s Mikaela Ahlin-Kottulinky and Laia Sanz of Acciona Sainz came together, the contact resulting in right rear damage to the RXR machine, immediately taking it out of contention and opening the door for Andretti Altawkilat’s Timmy Hansen to get by.

Out in front, Sanz closed on Taylor during the remainder of the first lap, but the Veloce driver responded, dropping Sanz into Hansen’s clutches. From there, Hansen hit the back of Sanz twice, first at Waypoint 7, then again at Waypoint 22 – this time resulting in the dropping of a waypoint flag.

The pair survived both incidents with only superficial bodywork damage, but the collisions allowed Taylor to further extend her lead. She held a 2.137s advantage over Sanz when she came into the mid-race driver switch.

With Kevin Hansen now behind the wheel of the Veloce machine and Fraser McConnell taking over the Acciona Sainz car, the battle became closer, with McConnell reducing the gap to just 1.742s at the end of the third lap.

Hansen quickly responded with session-best times in the first two sectors of the final lap, and although McConnell was once again able to close in – ultimately finishing the race 1.435s adrift – he couldn’t overhaul the younger Hansen brother.

Catie Munnings brought the Andretti entry home in third, while RXR was classified third after initially getting going again, but retiring in the Switch Zone before Johan Kristoffersson could take over from Ahlin-Kottulinsky.

HYDRO X PRIX I FINAL RESULTS

In the redemption race, Legacy Motor Club’s Patrick O’Donovan and Gray Leadbetter won from SUN Minimeal’s Timo Scheider and Klara Andersson as both teams took their best results in Extreme E so far.

Scheider gave SUN Minimeal an early lead, but contact with JBXE’s Amanda Sorensen at the second waypoint on lap one sent Scheider into the track-lining hay bales, opening the door for O’Donovan to close in.

After getting by Scheider, then taking a look up the inside of Sorensen going into Waypoint 17, O’Donovan finally moved to the fore at Waypoint 20 towards the end of the first lap, and it was a position they would not relinquish, with Leadbetter bringing the car home 3.533s ahead of Andersson in the SUN Minimeal following the mid-race driver swap.

JBXE was classified third, albeit just under 1m27s back after contact between Sorensen and Scheider forced them to briefly stop. NEOM McLaren meanwhile finished bottom of the pile after a freak incident where the safety cut-off on the car – being driven by Mattias Ekstrom – was struck by a rock, which ended the team’s race before the second waypoint.

HYDRO X PRIX I REDEMPTION RACE RESULTS

Earlier in the day, Veloce got its event off to the best possible start after winning both its qualifying heats – those wins coming after setting the pace in practice on Friday.

It wasn’t totally straightforward, though. The team was the victim of heavy contact from SUN Minimeal at the start of Q1, race one, and while SUN went onto win the race, it was hit with a 10s penalty for the contact, dropping it to third in the classification.

That wasn’t the only mark on that team’s start to the day, with Andersson suffering a dramatic roll after crossing the finish line. While the car looked totally destroyed, it was repaired in time for Q2, where the team took second in Q2, race two, behind RXR – who had a troublesome Q1 race with a downed flag and a spin – and ahead of Andretti which won the other Q1 heat.

Veloce’s win means that it keeps its record of being the only team to finish on the podium in every round so far this season, while it is also its second consecutive victory on Scottish soil after its triumph in the second Final of last year’s Hydro X Prix – a race in which Andretti finished second.

As well as being its second consecutive podium in Scotland, third place for Andretti was both its second podium on the bounce this season.

With the round win, a brace of heat wins, and the fastest super sector time, Veloce takes a maximum score of 29 points from Saturday, moving it to the championship lead on 60 points. RXR’s tricky day drops it from first to third in the points, with Acciona Sainz moving up to second, while Andretti, McLaren, Legacy M.C., SUN Minimeal, and JBXE all maintain their positions.

Championship standings

1. E.ON NEXT Veloce Racing 60 points
2. ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team 57 points
3. Rosberg X Racing 54 points
4. Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E 47 points
5. NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team 34 points
6. LEGACY MOTOR CLUB 28 points
7. SUN Minimeal Team 18 points
8. JBXE 16 points

Leadbetter’s rise up the off-road ranks continuing in Extreme E

It’s been five months since the Extreme E season opener in Saudi Arabia, where Gray Leadbetter made her debut with Legacy Motor Club, but this weekend she’ll be back in action. It was a strong first showing for the American teenager, who was …

It’s been five months since the Extreme E season opener in Saudi Arabia, where Gray Leadbetter made her debut with Legacy Motor Club, but this weekend she’ll be back in action.

It was a strong first showing for the American teenager, who was competing internationally for the first time. Despite a lack of seat time ahead of the event, she helped the team to a pair of sixth place finishes, and this time around she’ll be racing in the mud, gravel, and grasslands of Scotland where she’s aiming to build on a positive first experience in the all-electric off-road series.

“It was quite funny actually as none of us had driven the Odyssey 21 before,” she says. “We were all stepping into the unknown a little bit, so we had to learn together once we got in the car for the first time.

“We got as much input as we could from the mechanics and from speaking to those around the paddock, but we had not driven in the series before so it was all new. Between Travis [Pastrana] and I we managed to get on the pace pretty quickly, which was great.

“For our first event we focused on staying out of trouble and bringing the car back in one piece, which we accomplished and not by being slow,” she adds. “We did it with plenty of pace as we showed with our Continental Traction Challenge times in Round 2. For a first weekend in an all-new series we were pretty happy with our performance.

Leadbetter had a familiar face in Pastrana – who was filling in for team boss Jimmie Johnson – alongside her. The 19-year-old is seen as something of an heir to Pastrana’s throne in the off-road world, and has competed with the action sports icon in Nitrocross’ side-by-side division.

“I got a message from Travis asking if I wanted to take part and race in the series! It was incredible. He said, ‘do you want to go racing in Saudi Arabia?’ and kept it pretty vague – but I was really up for it,” Leadbetter says. “Jimmie had asked Travis to fill in because Jimmie was competing at Daytona over the same week, and so Travis played a big part in helping me get that seat at Legacy Motor Club. It was all a shock and it happened so quickly, but I was so excited to get to Saudi Arabia and race for the team.”

Pastrana and Leadbetter debuted together in Rounds 1 and 2. Sam Bagnall/Extreme E

Leadbetter admits that after a busy 2023 competing in Nitrocross and other categories in the U.S. off-road world, the idea of competing in Extreme E had been put “little bit on the backburner”, but while the opportunity came “out of the blue”, the championship wasn’t entirely alien to her.

“I had been to the Season 2 finale in Uruguay to check out the series previously with the Chip Ganassi Racing team, so I had always been interested in Extreme E,” she says. “I had such a blast when I went to that event – I knew quite a few people within that team already and straight away I just loved how the racing worked. It was very different from anything I had ever seen.

“I thought the male and female driver dynamic was really cool, and I always kept an eye on what was happening in the series. I have always been interested in it, but I was just looking for the right opportunity to get into it.”

Her vast experience, despite her age, and that brief venture into the paddock in 2022, helped Leadbetter get up to speed in what is regarded as a very challenging series for newcomers.

“As a driver you have to be pretty adaptable when you get behind the wheel to maximize the amount of seat time you get and in Extreme E it is no different,” says Leadbetter. “We made the most of our sessions beforehand, and then it was about tweaking what worked best for us as we went along. I think we managed to do that pretty well.

“Driving off-road cars before, and especially side-by-sides, helped me hugely to get up to speed. There are some similarities in how the car moves out on course and how it is weighted. It’s similar with the sprint cars I’ve driven in terms of track time and preparation. As a driver you have to do your best to nail it down as quickly as possible and then maximize your performance from there.

“Essentially though, everything I’ve taken part in before has been a big help, because at the end of the day it is all about driving the car as best as you can.”

But while Leadbetter shined, much of the attention was on her wildcard teammate, who had NEOM McLaren’s Mattias Ekstom in his crosshairs for the whole event. It was Leadbetter, however, who was the one to cross swords with him on-track, putting up a strong fight against the two-time DTM and 2016 World RX champion on the second race day – a day where Legacy Motor Club went on to set the fastest ‘super sector’ time of the weekend.

“It was so cool. If you take Travis’ goal of beating Mattias for the first time as an example, who would have thought it would come down to pairing up with a female teammate in electric cars in the middle of the Saudi Arabian desert to do it?” she says. “It was just an incredible opportunity. Getting to race with such a talented driver line-up was amazing.

“We were a little bit unlucky with the red flag situation as Travis only got one lap out on course in the Round 2 Redemption Race. That definitely shook things up. However, being that close to beating not only NEOM McLaren, but winning a race on our first time out, was an incredible feeling.

Scotland will provide a wildly different challenge to the sands of Saudi Arabia. Andrew Ferraro/Motorsport Images

“Although it did not finish how we wanted it to, it was so reassuring for us that we were up to speed and on the pace with the more established teams after just a couple of days in the car.”

Extreme E has provided a strong platform for female racers, both rising stars and established competitors, to compete on an equal footing with legendary male names of the sport, and it’s something Leadbetter has taken in her stride.

“I would never have thought there would be a series out there like this which would have everybody from this type of racing,” she says. “There are people out there who so many have looked up to for years and years, so to put them all on the grid, and then add in the most talented female racers to the line-up, means there are so many different aspects of racing and motorsport rolled into one championship, which is incredible.”

Attention now turns to this weekend, where Legacy Motor Club and Leadbetter will continue to learn the series. This time she will have another debutant alongside her in the form of Patrick O’Donovan, with Johnson heading back Stateside to prepare for next week’s Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Johnson will race in Extreme E, but not until September’s races in Sardinia.

“Jimmie has not competed in off-road racing for a number of years so that is an exciting prospect,” Leadbetter says. “He’s one of the best there is in the world and so it is going to be interesting to see him behind the wheel with an off-road racing mindset. We’ll be working hard to get our car in the optimum window and as fast as possible.”

Then, the series heads to North America for the first time, with the series set to conclude in Phoenix in November.

“I am so excited for it! It is going to be a really cool event and I am hoping the track will be awesome,” she says. “Getting the Extreme E car to the U.S. is long overdue and will make for a pretty amazing spectacle.

“Getting behind the wheel of a racing car is exciting no matter what and the racing in Extreme E has shown that. To know that we are driving a car like the Odyssey 21, which has the speed out on track, is pretty cool. That is especially so for my generation I guess because of what’s happening around the world right now in terms of climate change. It is definitely so cool to see how motorsport is growing and adapting to the health of the planet.”

Sorensen to make Extreme E return with Button’s team

Amanda Sorensen will return to Extreme E at this weekend’s Hydro X Prix, racing for JBXE alongside Andreas Bakkerud in rounds three and four of the season. The American’s return for the races in Scotland comes after Dani Akeel’s exit from the team …

Amanda Sorensen will return to Extreme E at this weekend’s Hydro X Prix, racing for JBXE alongside Andreas Bakkerud in rounds three and four of the season.

The American’s return for the races in Scotland comes after Dani Akeel’s exit from the team following a difficult debut for her on home soil in February’s Desert X Prix in Saudi Arabia.

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“It’s great to be back in the championship competing for JBXE at the team’s home race in the UK,” said Sorensen. “I am excited to be back racing in Extreme E, and to join the JBXE team. I had a really strong event the last time we raced in Scotland and it would be fantastic to repeat and get on the podium again.

“The main thing, though, is to put in a strong performance alongside Andreas and get the team moving up the standings.”

Nitrocross Side-by-Side and Formula Drift regular Sorensen raced in the series for Chip Ganassi Racing last season, securing back-to-back podium finishes with RJ Anderson in the second Scotland race, as well as at the first of four Island X Prix races in Sardinia. The pair eventually fifth in the standings before the team exited the series in the off-season.

Anderson becomes the 11th driver to race for JBXE in four seasons after Jenson Button, Mikaela Ahlin-Kottulinsky, Kevin Hansen, Molly Taylor, Hedda Hosaas, Fraser McConnell, Heikki Kovalainen, Bakkerud, Tamara Molinaro, and Akeel.

“We are thrilled to have Amanda as part of our driver line-up for the Hydro X Prix in Scotland,” said JBXE team owner Button. “Amanda has strong pedigree in the series having already finished on the podium multiple times last season, and we are hoping she can form a strong team with Andreas and score a big haul of points at the Hydro X Prix.

“We are looking forward to racing again and believe we will be competitive in Scotland.”

Following the first two rounds of the season, JBXE sits seventh out of eight in the standings, after seventh and eighth place finishes in Saudi Arabia. The team scored its first redemption race win since 2021 last time the series visited Scotland, with Bakkerud and the team’s former driver Hedda Hosaas beating Andretti Altawkilat, Abt Cupra, and Lewis Hamilton’s X44 team.

Extreme E to race at former coal mine in Scotland

Extreme E has confirmed that its next round will take place at the former Glenmuckloch opencast coal mine in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. The May 13-14 event marks a return to the UK for the series, which concluded its first season on the …

Extreme E has confirmed that its next round will take place at the former Glenmuckloch opencast coal mine in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.

The May 13-14 event marks a return to the UK for the series, which concluded its first season on the Jurassic Coast of Dorset in England in 2021. It will also be a homecoming for Extreme E’s logistics hub and focal point, the RMS St. Helena, which was built in Aberdeen in 1989.

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This will be the second time a mine has played host to the series, with an active copper mine in Chile hosting the penultimate round of last season. The choice of location this time around will highlight the site’s transition from a coal mining facility to a greener, Pumped Storage Hydropower plant and windfarm.

“Extreme E is a unique sport for purpose racing series. We are thrilled to be headed to Scotland in May for the Hydro X Prix, and we could not have found a more perfect racing site than the former Glenmuckloch coal mine,” said series founder and CEO Alejandro Agag.

Andretti driver Catie Munnings will be racing on home soil. Extreme E photo

“Extreme E uses its racing platform to tell inspirational stories of global locations on the forefront of climate issues. In Scotland, our race site will play homage to the much needed transition of an old coal mine which is being given a new and exciting lease of life as a hydro-project which will provide a fully renewable energy source for the region for centuries to come.

“Not only will this site provide one of the most dramatic and extreme race courses we have seen in our global journey, it will tell a poignant story about transition and the changing of courses that the energy industry and communities must all take if we are to succeed in the fight against climate change.”

Andretti Altawkilat driver Catie Munnings, the sole British driver in the field, is looking forward to being one of the few Extreme E drivers that get to enjoy a home event.

“There’s always something unique about every Extreme E course but racing in a location like this which is close to home will be something special for me and the team,” she said. “I’ve heard the track will be a combination of both fast sections on grass as well as drops into a quarry which will be really interesting to see.”