Taylor Barnard took advantage of wet conditions to win the Formula 3 feature race in Belgium, in which the top three finishers started no higher than 10th.
Mixed conditions played a crucial role in producing a totally unexpected outcome to the second race of the weekend.
Barnard started in 10th and won ahead of Christian Mansell, who climbed up from 23rd. Nikita Bedrin, who lined up 18th, claiming the final podium position.
The trio arrived in the top places having chosen wet weather tyres for the start of the race on a track which had been soaked by pre-race rain but was forecast to dry out. Most of the leading runners opted for slicks but fell back immediately after the start.
There was drama before the race began as Gabriele Mini spun off during his reconnaissance lap and crashed heavily at Speaker’s Corner, ruling him out of the start. The formation lap was delayed and during the wait many drivers committed to starting the race on slicks, while those with less to lose towards the back of the 30-car grid opted for wet.
Josep Maria Marti started from pole position with Leonardo Fornaroli behind him, but the race began with a rolling start. Marti led away but the 10 drivers behind on wet weather tyres found an immediate advantage. They were led by Paul Aron, who started 11th, but lunged down the inside of turn one and was fourth by the following corner.
The Prema driver continued his charge on wets and was into the lead by Les Combes, passing Marti as he tiptoed through and slid at the exit. It was a similar story for everyone else on slicks. By lap two Aron led Barnard with Mari Boya up to third, while Marti was leading the slick-shod runners in 11th.
Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and
Aron continued to build his advantage and led by 8.8 seconds on lap three. Behind him a battle for the final podium position was developing. On lap four Mansell overtook Boya for the position, but moments later the Safety Car was summoned called after Oliver Goethe spun into the barrier at Raidillon.
With enough of a gap to pit and emerge ahead of those on slicks, Aron was one of several drivers to use this as an opportunity to pit, expecting the track would dry sufficiently before the end of the race to make the call pay off. The Prema team swapped Aron’s tyres and he rejoined in seventh behind six drivers who stayed out on wet weather rubber.
Barnard inherited the race lead, ahead of Mansell and Bedrin with Alex Garcia, Sebastian Montoya and Sophia Floersch completing the top six respectively. At the restart, the wet-shod pack broke away from the rest again.
By the end of the first flying lap Caio Collet had overtaken Aron at turn 10 to lead the chase of those on slicks, but trailed Floersch by 9.2 seconds while Barnard kept the lead. The slick tyre runners continued to scrap, including championship leader Gabriel Bortoleto, who had risen from 19th to 14th by lap 10.
Now Mansell began a charge for the lead. He trailed Barnard by 0.3 seconds and was continuously looking for his opportunity to overtake.
On lap 11 Mansell attempted to pass Barnard on the outside into Les Combes. However their front wheels touched which sent the Campos driver into the escape road. He rejoined the track in the lead but wisely let Barnard through again.
Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and
By now those on slicks were finally starting to set the fastest sector times. But there was life left in the wet weather tyres and Mansell continued his attack on Barnard. He tried again at Les Combes on lap 13, but once more Barnard’s strong defence kept him ahead.
Further back Bortoleto attempted a late charge into the points knowing if he finished ninth, he would be crowned champion. Despite setting the fastest lap, he failed to break into the top 10.
The chequered flag arrived just as those on slicks were beginning to lap much quicker than those on wets, but before they had time to exploit their advantage. Barnard crossed the line 1.3 seconds ahead of Mansell, with Bedrin a further 6.1s behind.
Fourth place for Garcia meant only Mansell stopped the Jenzer team from sweeping the podium places, after their drivers lined up 10th, 18th and 22nd. Collet was the first of the slick tyre runners home in fifth, having passed Montoya and Floersch.
Aron, no doubt ruing his Safety Car pit stop, finished eighth and saw his slim title hopes fade to almost nothing. Marti and Franco Colapinto were the final points scorers.
Bortoleto now leads the championship by 38 points, and needs just one point at Monza in September to claim the title. Aron has now moved up to second in the championship, and is one point ahead of third-placed Marti.
Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and
Formula 3 feature race result
Position
Car
Driver
Team
1
27
Taylor Barnard
Jenzer
2
24
Christian Mansell
Campos
3
26
Nikita Bedrin
Jenzer
4
28
Alejandro García
Jenzer
5
17
Caio Collet
Van Amersfoort
6
14
Sebastian Montoya
Hitech
7
29
Sophia Floersch
PHM Racing by Charouz
8
1
Paul Aron
Prema
9
23
Pepe Martí
Campos
10
10
Franco Colapinto
MP
11
5
Gabriel Bortoleto
Trident
12
3
Zak O’Sullivan
Prema
13
11
Mari Boya
MP
14
4
Maxwell Esterson
Trident
15
7
Kaylen Frederick
ART
16
2
Caio Collet
MP
17
9
Nikola Tsolov
ART
18
19
Tom Smith
Van Amersfoort
19
12
Jonny Edgar
MP
20
8
Gregoire Saucy
ART
21
18
Rafael Villagomez
Van Amersfoort
22
25
Hugh Barter
Campos
23
16
Luke Browning
Hitech
24
21
Francesco Simonazzi
Rodin Carlin
25
31
Woohyun Shin
PHM Racing by Charouz
DNF
20
Oliver Gray
Rodin Carlin
DNF
22
Ido Cohen
Rodin Carlin
DNF
30
Roberto Faria
PHM Racing by Charouz
DNF
6
Oliver Goethe
Trident
DNF
15
Gabriele Minì
Hitech
Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and
Formula 3
Browse all Formula 3 articles