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Lausitz DTM: Muller wins as Rast drama reignites title race

The 2019 DTM title race took an unexpected twist as Audi's Nico Muller won the Lausitzring opener following an early retirement for championship leader Rene Rast.

Nico Müller, Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline, Audi RS 5 DTM

Nico Müller, Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline, Audi RS 5 DTM

Audi Communications Motorsport

Rast held a 39-point buffer heading into the race, boosted by three points for his earlier pole position compared to Muller's haul of one, but his advantage now stands at just 14 points. 

While Rast held the lead at the start, front-row starter Jamie Green made a slow getaway that allowed Muller to jump him for second heading into the Turn 1 right-hander.

Muller remained within a second of Rast through the first seven laps but swept into the lead when Rast's RS5 DTM slowed through the Turns 2-5 complex, forcing him to pull off onto unused banking.

Onboard footage showed Rast slowing moments after hitting third gear following the Turn 1 left-hander, with his steering wheel also vibrating heavily as he went through the subsequent corners.

While Rast continued after falling 30 seconds off the lead, he retired soon after and Audi says the problem has yet to be identified.

It meant Muller's attention soon switched to keeping outside title contender Marco Wittmann behind.

Wittmann attempted an undercut by pitting at the end of the 13th tour of 34, with Muller responding by stopping a lap later.

But Wittmann's bid to overhaul Muller was hindered by Audi's Robin Frijns, who had cleared Green to run third early on, and the Formula E driver had become the first frontrunner to make a pitstop, doing so on lap 12.

That meant Frijns's Hankook tyres were already up to temperature, allowing him to dart to the inside of Wittmann - running on cold tyres - at the Turn 6 left-hander for an eventual second place.

Wittmann kept in touch with Frijns through the second phase of the race but was passed by Mike Rockenfeller late on, with the Phoenix Audi driver securing the final podium place.

BMW's Philipp Eng followed Wittmann across the line to finish fifth after making up two places from eighth on the grid early on.

He then had to fight back from losing out to WRT Audi's Pietro Fittipaldi in the pitlane during the mandatory stop phase, and he also picked off eventual sixth-placed finisher Loic Duval.

Joel Eriksson placed his BMW in eighth behind Fittipaldi and Bruno Spengler was ninth.

Green fell from second to 10th place at the flag after he was penalised for an unsafe pit release in which he almost collided with Timo Glock, as the BMW driver entered his pit stall and Green exited his.

Green then ran alongside Rockenfeller on the run to exit the pits but he conceded the place.

Shortly after Green was hit with a drive-through penalty that dropped him down to 15th before his late fightback.

Green's rise meant Jake Dennis narrowly missed out on scoring a point for R-Motorsport, although it would not have counted towards its manufacturers' points total after the Aston Martin team broke four engine seals after qualifying.

Previously, Dennis and teammates Paul di Resta and Ferdinand Habsburg had made minor contact on the opening lap when the three Astons ran side-by-side on the second lap.

BMW's Sheldon van der Linde lost out on a potential top 10 finish when he was forced into the pits late on to change the left door of his car.

His stablemate Glock retired from the race shortly after making his mandatory pitstop and the reason for his retirement is currently unclear.

Race results:

Cla # Driver Car Laps Time
1 51 Switzerland Nico Müller
Audi RS 5 Turbo DTM 34 56'53.891
2 4 Netherlands Robin Frijns
Audi RS 5 Turbo DTM 34 56'56.387
3 99 Germany Mike Rockenfeller
Audi RS 5 Turbo DTM 34 56'57.097
4 11 Germany Marco Wittmann
BMW M4 Turbo DTM 34 56'59.698
5 25 Austria Philipp Eng
BMW M4 Turbo DTM 34 57'07.368
6 28 France Loic Duval
Audi RS 5 Turbo DTM 34 57'08.633
7 21 Brazil Pietro Fittipaldi
Audi RS 5 Turbo DTM 34 57'10.750
8 47 Sweden Joel Eriksson
BMW M4 Turbo DTM 34 57'11.423
9 7 Canada Bruno Spengler
BMW M4 Turbo DTM 34 57'15.363
10 53 United Kingdom Jamie Green
Audi RS 5 Turbo DTM 34 57'18.209
11 76 United Kingdom Jake Dennis
Aston Martin Vantage DTM 34 57'27.989
12 23 Spain Daniel Juncadella
Aston Martin Vantage DTM 34 57'28.402
13 3 United Kingdom Paul di Resta
Aston Martin Vantage DTM 34 57'37.248
14 27 South Africa Jonathan Aberdein
Audi RS 5 Turbo DTM 34 57'38.975
15 62 Austria Ferdinand Habsburg
Aston Martin Vantage DTM 34 57'45.839
16 31 South Africa Sheldon Van Der Linde
BMW M4 Turbo DTM 34 57'55.499
16 Germany Timo Glock
BMW M4 Turbo DTM 17 28'31.690
33 Germany René Rast
Audi RS 5 Turbo DTM 8 14'02.379

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