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Race report

Monteiro wins in Motegi as title contenders hit trouble

Castrol Honda’s Tiago Monteiro claimed his second win of the season, and the third for Honda this year while championship contenders Yvan Muller and Jose Maria Lopez both failed to finish the race after separate incidents.

Tiago Monteiro, Honda Civic WTCC, Honda Racing Team JAS

Tiago Monteiro, Honda Civic WTCC, Honda Racing Team JAS

Honda Racing Team JAS

Jose Maria Lopez, Citroën C-Elysée WTCC, Citroën Total WTCC
Yvan Muller, Citroën C-Elysée WTCC, Citroën World Touring Car team
Sébastien Loeb, Citroën C-Elysée WTCC, Citroën World Touring Car team
Mehdi Bennani, Citroën C-Elysée WTCC, Sebastien Loeb Racing
Gabriele Tarquini, Honda Civic WTCC, Honda Racing Team JAS
Tiago Monteiro, Honda Civic WTCC, Honda Racing Team JAS
Nicky Catsburg, Lada Vesta WTCC, Lada Sport Rosneft
Jose Maria Lopez, Citroën C-Elysée WTCC, Citroën Total WTCC
Jose Maria Lopez, Citroën C-Elysée WTCC, Citroën Total WTCC
Jose Maria Lopez, Citroën C-Elysée WTCC, Citroën Total WTCC

Monteiro catapulted into the lead from third on the grid, passing the pole-sitting Campos Racing Chevrolet of Hugo Valente and the Lada of Nicky Catsburg, while Yvan Muller also made a strong start moving one spot up to third behind Valente in his Citroen C-Elysse WTCC.

Further down the order there was drama as Lopez ran into trouble in the first corner melee which also saw Sebastien Loeb Racing driver Mehdi Bennani spun out. Lopez picked up damage and returned to the pits with a broken wheel, only his second career DNF in the WTCC.

Honda’s Gabriele Tarquini and Citroen’s Ma Qing Hua battled away for the first few laps, with Tarquini passing Hua for fourth before the end of lap one, but the Chinese driver retook the spot at Turn 11 on lap three, before the two made contact the next time they headed into the first corner, which dropped Hua to the middle of the pack, and saw Lada’s Rob Huff elevated to fourth ahead after a strong start to the race.

The race was now about two key battles, the fight for second between the French drivers Valente and Muller, and the battle for fourth between Huff, Tarquini and Sebastien Loeb.

The first battle was decided on lap six when the bonnet catch on the left side of Muller’s Citroen came loose as a result of contact with Valente earlier in the race. The stewards ordered the team to bring him in for repairs, which saw him drop to the tail end of the field and eventually retire with no possibility to score points.

Huff, Tarquini and Loeb now was a battle for third and raged on throughout the rest of the race. Tarquini tried to pass Huff at Turn 9 on lap eight, but left himself vulnerable to Loeb’s Citroen behind and dropped to fourth.

Now it was Loeb’s turn to try and pass Huff, making several attempts to move ahead of the Briton. A lunge at Turn 4 on the final lap and Loeb made the same error as Tarquini five laps earlier and dropped back behind the Italian.

However, the battle wasn’t over, as Loeb fought back, and out-dragged the Honda driver across the line to snatch fourth by just under a tenth of a second.

Monteiro won the race with almost a ten-second margin over Valente, who took his second podium of the season, as did Lada’s Huff with third.

The stewards will investigate the incidents between Tarquini and Hua, as well as an incident between WTCC newcomer Nicolas Lapierre and Norbert Michelisz, which saw the Hungarian retire from tenth, after the race.

Lopez maintains a 74 point lead over Muller, with just 165 remaining from the final three race weekends, the next of which is in Shanghai, China in two weeks’ time.

Neil Hudson / TouringCarTimes

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