Guenther overhauls Rowland for inaugural Tokyo E-Prix win

Maximilian Guenther claimed his and Maserati MSG’s first win of the Formula E season on the streets of Tokyo, resisting a late charge from polesitter Oliver Rowland, who’d handed him the lead earlier to save power. Nissan driver Rowland controlled …

Maximilian Guenther claimed his and Maserati MSG’s first win of the Formula E season on the streets of Tokyo, resisting a late charge from polesitter Oliver Rowland, who’d handed him the lead earlier to save power.

Nissan driver Rowland controlled the race for the first two thirds, but ceded the lead on lap 25 to fellow front-row starter Guenther, who’d lost out to a fast starting Edoardo Mortara at the start of the race.

A move to reclaim second from Mortara on lap 10 gave Rowland some breathing space up front as he went for his Attack Mode power boost for the first time, while a subsequent trip round the longer line for Mortara consolidated Guenther’s move.

A second trip to the Attack Mode zone dropped Guenther down once again on lap 14, but he retook position on track, getting by Mortara at Turn 16, before setting his sights on Rowland out front.

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A safety car on lap 21 for debris after Jaguar TCS Racing’s Mitch Evans slammed the wall at Turn 9 three laps earlier bunched up the field and aided Guenther massively as Rowland needed to save power to make it to the end of the race, which had been extended by two laps to 35 after the caution period.

He was now in prime position to snatch the lead when the race resumed on lap 23, and two laps later, Rowland lifted on the approach to Turn 10, making Guenther’s pass for the lead an easy job, but Rowland remained on his tail. However, an attempt at snatching the lead with a pass around the outside on the final lap — what would have been the second race in succession the win was decided in such a fashion — failed to pay off, allowing Guenther to bring Maserati its first victory since the second race in Jakarta last June.

Oliver Rowland conceded the lead to save power for a chance to steal back the win, but his tactic fell short. Andrew Ferraro/Motorsport Images

Third went to Andretti’s Jake Dennis, who capitalized on a failed attempt from da Costa to pass Rowland for second with three laps to go. Da Costa was left to take fourth ahead of TAG Heuer Porsche teammate Pascal Wehrlein, who’d also dropped down the order after a tussle with Dennis earlier in the race.

Nico Mueller claimed Abt Cupra’s first points of the season in sixth, ahead of Nick Cassidy who finished eighth on the road — having started 19th as a result of a penalty in qualifying — but was bumped up a place after Mortara was disqualified from what would have been Mahindra’s first points finish of the year in sixth for energy overuse.

Robin Frijns subsequently took eighth for Envision Racing despite a collision with Norman Nato on lap 32 that resulted in the Andretti driver receiving a five-second penalty which dropped him out of a points scoring position, too. Sergio Sette Camara was ninth, giving ERT its first points finish of the season, while Sacha Fenestraz ensured two Nissans scored points on home turf with 10th.

After pitting to replace his front wing, Evans came home 14th, behind DS Penske’s Jean-Eric Vergne, Envision’s Sebastien Buemi, and NEOM McLaren’s Jake Hughes, but ahead of the penalized Nato.

In a stark contrast to last time when he won in Sao Paulo, Sam Bird was the last of the runners to finish, taking 19th ahead of Abt Cupra driver Lucas di Grassi and Mahindra’s Nyck de Vries, who both retired after colliding while trying to avoid Evans. Bird did, however, claim the fastest lap, with a 1m19.731 on lap 27.

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Why Maserati chose Formula E for its return to racing

I’m not old enough to remember Maserati’s racing heyday, yet like neighboring brands Alfa Romeo and Ferrari, the mere mention of its name triggers certain feelings for car enthusiasts. There’s no denying that Maserati is a giant of motorsport, but …

I’m not old enough to remember Maserati’s racing heyday, yet like neighboring brands Alfa Romeo and Ferrari, the mere mention of its name triggers certain feelings for car enthusiasts. There’s no denying that Maserati is a giant of motorsport, but for a long time it has been a sleeping giant.

In the first half of the 20th century, Maserati was a powerhouse with successes in pre-war grand prix racing and later Formula 1, as well as sports car racing. It also won the Indy 500 twice, in 1939 and 1940. But aside from a brief but wildly successful revival in sports car racing in the 2000s with the MC12, the legendary Italian brand’s place at the dining table of motorsport’s manufacturer greats has been largely empty since the 1960s.

Now it’s back competing once again, and intends to stick around.

Giuseppe Farina drives a Maserati 4CLT at the 1948 Monaco Grand Prix. Motorsport Images

“It’s the incredible energy that it brings to the company, personally and professionally,” Giovanni Tommaso Sgro, head of Maserati Corse, tells RACER of Maserati’s motorsports comeback. “We were in racing most of our entire life, that’s where we say we were born on track — the company was born in 1914 and we started racing in 1926. We won the Indianapolis 500, Formula 1, GT, we’ve won championships, had the first female Formula 1 race car driver, so we’ve done a lot of different things.

“We made a promise a few years ago that we’re going to go back to racing, and we kept that promise.

While the Maserati in motorsport story is very much a historical tale, its next chapter is firmly rooted in the future. Its headline category is Formula E, a series which Maserati first entered last season, and one which aligns with the wider Maserati brand’s aims for the next few years.

“Maserati’s goal is to go electric,” Sgro says. “By 2030 we will have just the electric fleet, by 2025 you’ll be able to buy an electric version of our range. So we’re sticking to what we’re saying.”

The ethos that led to the fondly remembered Maserati MC12 (above) of the early 2000s lives on in the manufacturer’s GT2 racers. Motorsport Images

There is also a nod to Maserati’s past, though, with its participation in GT2 — SRO’s gentlemen driver category introduced in 2020 and contested with vehicles from the likes of Porsche, Audi, Lamborghini, and Mercedes-AMG, as well as Maserati. The program – developed with the help of long-term Maserati and Ferrari factory driver Andrea Bertolini, a multiple FIA GT champion during Maserati’s unstoppable crusade of GT racing with the MC12 — also began last year and was instantly successful.

“Last year was exciting, not just because of Formula E, but also because we announced that we’re going to go back to GT racing. That was a memorable moment,” Sgro says. “We had our first race in GT2 last October at Paul Ricard and we had pole position and P2. So after we spent a year or so developing a car, we had that success in the first race … obviously we want to stay humble, but it was very exciting to be there.”

The GT program will also be complimented by the introduction of the MCXtrema, a million dollar track day car of which only 62 will be produced. Together, the three programs turn Maserati back from being Ferrari’s cool but quiet cousin that it’s been for much of the 21st century, into the legitimate force it was in its early days.

“We couldn’t be more excited because it also reminds loyal fans of Maserati where Maserati was born and what it means to the racing world,” says Sgro. “But I think it also taps into a new consumer, a new audience that really perhaps didn’t know Maserati, as well as some others, that gets to understand its roots and understand its DNA. And everything we produce for people like you and I that we drive on the road is inspired and derived from the past on the track.

“I think the positive thing that all these things have in common is that we really are credible and authentic about the fact that we said we wanted to go back to racing and we decided to do it. And it’s a full plate, because you’re talking to different audiences. Formula E, you have motorsport fans, but you also have people that maybe are not so engaged in motorsport but they love technology, innovation. They want to know, ‘What am I going to drive in the future? What I can learn from Formula E?’

“(In) GT2, we’re going back to the future. We’ve won championships in GT with Bertolini and the MC12 — here we go again, back in a GT championship. And the MCXtrema is a car we’ve never built before. It’s a 1,300 kilogram (2866 lb) car, 740 horsepower, extreme performance. The shakedown is coming up at the middle to the end of February.

“So (they’re) different things, but they all talk to each other in terms of a credible past and a really exciting future.”

Maserati MCXtrema

Of the trident brand’s rather appropriate three-pronged return to the track, Formula E is the central, taller spike. It puts Maserati back on the world stage and gives the company a platform from which Sgro says can benefit its upcoming road products in ways other forms of motorsport can’t.

“Think about software technology — that has an immediate [benefit]. You can adjust technology and software,” Sgro explains. “Software, there might be positive changes and you do that in a flash — those are the things that you can apply to the full range, the electric range. Think about energy consumption, how you apply energy when you’re driving at this level, with this caliber and these types of drivers. Think about also the input that they can give you, the human input of what they’re doing on track.

“Those are just a couple of the things that, as we go on from one race to another, you can really sit down with teams, engineers, and the engineers that are back in Modena and understand what it is that we can learn from from this really exciting, ever-changing path.”

Taking a name like Maserati back to the track is, of course, no mean feat. With its history, there’s always going to be a level of expectation, but that’s an albatross that Sgro relishes having around his neck.

“I think it’s that sense of responsibility that you just have to have when you’re a brand like Maserati,” he says. “I always go back to the first day that I started working at Maserati — you drive into Modena and you see the trident on the big wall. It’s more than just a job, it’s more than just a brand, it’s more than just the company. You get that sense of responsibility.

“Everything you do is to continue for the next 110 years, so I think you do have a lot of weight on your shoulders. Last year we had some challenges in the beginning and it’s not pleasant to read the headlines that might be negative. But at the same time, I think every journalist and every fan of Maserati was waiting for that moment that Max got on the podium at that point in Berlin, because the narrative changed completely — ‘Maserati back on top’ and ‘Max is the next Fangio’ and it was nice to relive that.”

Sgro is referencing Maximilian Guenther’s third place in the first half of last season’s Berlin E-Prix. It marked Maserati’s first racing podium in over a decade, and it marked a turning point for the team after a rather anonymous run of results up to that point. Another third followed three races later in Jakarta, before the German won from pole the following day. He later took a final podium in Maserati’s home race in Rome last July. It was a run of results that validated Maserati’s return to top-level motorsport and underlined the brand’s race-to-retail ethos.

“It’s a great platform, a great championship, it allows us to be the first Italian luxury automobile to be in a championship like this, so that gives us a lot of visibility,” Sgro says of Formula E. “We can talk about technology transfer, which obviously gives us a great narrative around what we’re doing on track and off track, but also gives us a really great opportunity to reflect on where Maserati comes from – this Italian resilience, this audacity and the victories, the highs, the lows.

“This year we’re celebrating 110 years of history. If you think about all the global iconic brands, not everybody can say we have a 70 year-plus history. So it’s really, for me personally and for all of us at Maserati, it’s really nice to be able to read those headlines again.”

Max Guenther became a Fangio for a new generation with his breakthrough win for Maserati in Formula E in Jakarta last year. Simon Galloway/Motorsport Images

It’s been the start of something, something that Sgro sees as a long-term project. And while he says the customer GT and MCXtrema efforts “underline what the value of that brand is,” the Formula E program is “the best place for us to be right now” as a factory operation.

“I think our strategy, our mission right now is to go electric by 2030,” he stresses. “Can there be a parallel path? Or maybe in the smaller circuits where we’re not mass oriented, can you still live, co-exist, with combustion? I’m not sure. We really want to stick to that 2030 goal. If anything changes between now and then, or the rules and the regulations change, we’ll do the best thing that we can for the branded products.

“Based on the statements that we made in terms of being electric and going electric, I think for now this is what the goal is and where the efforts are: producing the most luxurious, high-end, Italian-made and electric cars that really give you an experience that no one else can. And I think the combination of doing that, and also being an electric championship like Formula E, I think that’s the best.”

Daruvala joins Maserati for Formula E

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.

Maserati reveals GT2 car

Maserati officially revealed its new GT2 race car Friday at the 24 Hours of Spa, which brings the Maserati brand back to GT racing for the first time since its MC12 model, which raced from 2005-2010. A racing version of the MC20 sports car, powered …

Maserati officially revealed its new GT2 race car Friday at the 24 Hours of Spa, which brings the Maserati brand back to GT racing for the first time since its MC12 model, which raced from 2005-2010.

A racing version of the MC20 sports car, powered by a 621hp Nettuno V6, the Maserati GT2 was designed and built for use by customer teams and gentleman drivers in the GT2 class. and is set to debut later this year in the Fanatec GT European Series.

“Our DNA and our spirit have always lain in racing. Our story began and developed from the track to the road,” said Davide Grasso, Maserati CEO. “The decision to return to track racing forms part of a thorough strategic framework, inaugurated this year with the debut in Formula E, to which we have now added our return to the world of GT competitions. Now more than ever we want to rekindle and nourish that competitive passion that has always characterized and motivated us to achieve major milestones.”

Jaguar goes one-two in Berlin E-Prix with Maserati third

Mitch Evans and Sam Bird executed a perfect strategy in the opening race of the 2023 SABIC Berlin E-Prix double-header to secure a show-stopping one-two for team Jaguar TCS Racing. Maximillian Gunther in third put the iconic Maserati trident on the …

Mitch Evans and Sam Bird executed a perfect strategy in the opening race of the 2023 SABIC Berlin E-Prix double-header to secure a show-stopping one-two for team Jaguar TCS Racing. Maximillian Gunther in third put the iconic Maserati trident on the podium for the first time since returning to single-seater motorsport this season following a hiatus of more than 60 years.

In a deeply strategic yet fiercely competitive race, the capacity crowd filling the grandstands of the Tempelhof Airport Circuit witnessed 190 overtakes, 53 lead changes and eight different leaders taking charge – all breaking previous Formula E records.

Round seven of the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship was already marked down in record books before the race began – Pascal Wehrlein and his TAG Heuer Porsche Formula E team both leading the points standings going into their home race in Germany.

The race was also the European debut of the GEN3 – the world’s fastest, lightest, most powerful and efficient electric race car – and the cutting-edge EV lived up to its potential as the first formula car specifically designed for wheel-to-wheel racing on high-speed street circuits.

Throughout the 43 laps, a record number of drivers took charge of the race as the teams’ strategies emerged, with an early surge of front-runners electing to take ATTACK MODE early on and those further back running for longer.

Dan Ticktum (NIO 333 Racing) launched into the lead in stunning style with a move around the outside of Turn 1, right by Julius Baer Polesitter Sebastien Buemi (Envision Racing), Sam Bird (Jaguar TCS Racing) and Stoffel Vandoorne (DS PENSKE).

After the lead group jumped for their second 50kW boosts, the racing settled for just three laps before Edoardo Mortara (Maserati MSG Racing) and Vandoorne pushed to the front. Glancing at the timing screens yielded a different race leader at almost every stage as positions changed almost continuously. The first of two spells under the safety car compounded things further with the field split by just over 5s going into the second half of the race.

Quick-starting Ticktum had been shuffled into the top 10 until he and Vandoorne came into heavy contact, deploying the safety car for the second time. The Jaguar pair and Buemi then fought to fill out the top three spots after Gunther had briefly taken P1 as the race headed into its closing stages. The Jaguar-powered cars went on to assert their new-found dominance and pace, with Gunther looking to pick up the pieces as the front three challenged for the race lead.

Evans managed to edge second-placed Bird on the exit of the hairpin with a good run down the start/finish straight to make a lunge into Turn 1 stick for the lead on Buemi as the race headed into three added laps. The Kiwi was able to get the jump and pull away, extending a 0.750s lead with two full laps remaining as Bird hassled Buemi for second just behind in the sprint to the finish.

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Bird’s incessant efforts paid off as he took the gamble to brake late in the approach to the Airplane turn and squeeze by Buemi for the second spot, sealing Jaguar TCS Racing’s first one-two in Formula E.

Gunther then broke the Jaguar-power stranglehold as he fired up the inside of Buemi at the final turn to prevent a second consecutive 1-2-3 for the I-TYPE 6. The Maserati MSG Racing’s podium is the first under the Italian marque and builds nicely for the Monegasque/Italian team following an unexpectedly disappointing start to the season as they head to their two “home” races in Monaco on May 6 and the Rome doubleheader on July 15-16.

“The last race was special having us both on the podium and also with Nick, all Jaguar powertrains on the podium,” Evans said after the race. “At this one, it’s extra special because it’s a one-two for the team and a really hard race to manage. It got a bit chaotic out there. I wasn’t expecting a victory in this place. This place has haunted me for many years. So super happy to get a second win, but here it was unexpected. It’s full credit to everyone. Sam drove really well. He’s been quick all day. I was surprised to get in the front bunch so early. There was a lot of games being played out there and it was hard to manage but we got it done.”

Standings leader Pascal Wehrlein started all the way down in 15th and made up huge ground before slipping to ninth late on. Out of sight, the German driver made up good ground on that final lap to finish sixth with nine places and strong points gained, nullifying Nick Cassidy’s comparatively quiet and collected run to fifth position for Envision Racing. Jean-Éric Vergne (DS PENSKE) recovered from contact early-race to seventh spot, again, another important if unsung drive in the battle for points.

Wehrlein heads into round eight tomorrow in Berlin with a standings lead and 94 points. Cassidy is second with Vergne doing enough to retain third position. TAG Heuer Porsche’s early season dominance however is coming under severe and increasing pressure from the Jaguar-powered cars.