Sakhir,
Bahrain, April 6th 2008: India’s Karun
Chandhok was left to rue what might have been following
round four of the new-for-2008 GP2 Asia Series at Sakhir, supporting
the Bahrain Grand Prix. He scored one point after a sparkling
recovery drive in the feature race on Saturday, after he was delayed
by a slow pitstop and a spin, but was pushed out of the lead at
the first corner of Sunday’s sprint race.
Chandhok
could reflect on a superb qualifying session that put his iSport
International car on the front row for Saturday’s feature
race for the second race running. The 24-year-old from Chennai,
who is backed by Red Bull, JK Tyre, Amaron and ICSA Logistics,
impressed the watching Formula 1 fraternity with his qualifying
performance that was bettered only by series leader Romain Grosjean,
Renault’s F1 test driver.
He
leapt into the lead at the start, followed by iSport team-mate
Bruno Senna, as Grosjean made a poor getaway. A second corner
collision put two cars into the tyrewall, and the safety car was
required to remove the debris.

Karun
in the lead......
Karun
pitted from the lead, but a traffic in the pitlane meant
he rejoined the queue in seventh. To compound matters, he then
spun at the first corner on his new cold tyres, dropping him to
the tail of the field: “The safety car really
messed things up for us. When leaving the pits I made a mistake”,
he admitted, “but I was determined to make up
for it, once I’d got the car going again.”
Rejoining
at the tail of the field in 22nd place, Chandhok charged
back into the points in 8th place with an amazing recovery drive.
“I was passing cars left, right and centre
; it was very exciting ! There were a couple occasions where I
was passing 2 or 3 cars at one shot” he said.
Karun grabbed a point, and reverse grid pole
for the sprint race, with a final sensational pass on Vitaly Petrov
between Turns 1 and 2.
For
Sunday’s sprint race, Chandhok made a solid
start but had to fend off fellow front row starter Diego Nunes
on the run to Turn 1. He thought he had the Brazilian covered,
but Nunes crashed into Chandhok’s right-rear
tyre, sending him spinning out of the lead.
“I
squeezed him on the straight and he backed out of it, so I was
clearly ahead turning into the corner. Suddenly, he just drives
into me out of nowhere. I was keen to get ahead into Turn 1, because
I knew he would hold up the quicker guys behind him, but the next
thing I knew : Bang! He ruined both our races.”
The stewards of the race penalized Nunes but it was no consolation
to the Indian. “I don’t really care if
he has a penalty or not for Dubai – it doesn’t fix
what happened today !”
Karun
once again rejoined at the back, and overtook a number
of cars until damage sustained to the rear suspension in the collision
with Nunes eventually forced him into the pits and retirement.
Chandhok’s
next race is the final round of GP2 Asia at Dubai in
the United Arab Emirates on April 11/12. “I’m
determined to end the this string of bad luck in Dubai !!”
he said. “I’ve been the front row now 4 times, so
everyone knows I’m quick but that’s not resulting
in points for a variety of reasons. The team and I have worked
really hard for the last two weekends to get to a position where
we can fight for wins and podiums and I really think that we deserve
it.”
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