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DTM Oschersleben: Engelhart leads Porsche 1-2-3-4 in Sunday's race

Porsche driver Christian Engelhart scored his maiden DTM victory in Sunday’s second race at Oschersleben after a penalty for long-time leader Thomas Preining.

Preining had looked set for a third career victory in the DTM having led the race comfortably from pole position until the final 10 minutes of the race, when his Manthey EMA team was found to have not correctly completed the pitstop procedure.

The 24-year-old was handed a long-lap penalty for the infringement, leaving him down in third and elevating Toksport WRT duo Engehlart and Tim Heienmann up to first and second positions.

At the start of the race, Preining pulled away cleanly from pole position in his Manthey EMA Porsche, while Grasser Lamborghini’s Clemens Schmids slipped past Heinemann to split the two Porsches.

Dennis Olsen got the jump on SSR Performance Lamborghini of Mirko Bortolotti to take fourth, while eventual race winner Engelhart was only sixth at the end of the opening lap after passing the Bernhard Porsche of Ayhancan Guven.

By lap 8, three-time champion Rene Rast had broken inside the top 10 but the right-rear tyre of his Schubert BMW suddenly came off loose, sending him into the gravel trap and out of the race.

When the consequent safety car peeled into the pits and the action resumed, Preining was rapid in his reflexes and retained the lead of the race, while Heinemann managed to overtake Schmid to establish a Porsche 1-2 again.

The pitstop sequence followed soon after, with Preining again managing to stay in front after pitting 32 minutes into the race.

Engelhart was among the last of the frontrunners to complete a pitstop and this allowed him to jump up to second, albeit with a train of cars including Heinemann and Olsen circulating behind him.

The second safety car was deployed with 20 minutes to go when Kelvin van der Linde’s Abt Audi stopped on track with what appeared to be a technical issue.

At the restart, the order at the front remained the same, with Preining pulling away from the chasing pack led by Engelhart, who was able to keep Heinemann and Olsen at bay.

A third victory for Preining looked certain at this stage as he had managed to build a three-second buffer up front, but the race control handed him a long-lap penalty for a pitstop infringement in the final 10 minutes, ending his chances of adding to his victories at the Norisring and the Red Bull Ring last year.

Serving his long-lap penalty, Preining dropped down to third position, as Engelhart assumed the lead of the race en route to a maiden win in only his second-ever weekend in the DTM.

Second place for two-time DTM Trophy champion Heinemann put him in the lead of the championship, having also finished runner-up in Saturday’s race.

Olsen finished fourth behind his team-mate Preining to complete a historic 1-2-3-4 result for Porsche, even as Preining’s penalty dented the manufacturer’s celebrations a tad bit.

Schmid lost positions in the pitstop sequence but still finished as the best of the rest in fifth, ahead of the fellow Lamborghini of factory driver Bortolotti.

Abt Audi driver Ricardo Feller charged to seventh position after a poor qualifying session left him 13th on the grid, with an early pitstop helping him move up the order.

Jusuf Owega was the top representative for Mercedes in eighth place, as the AMG GT3s endured one of their worst showings in the DTM since the series’ switch to GT3 cars in 2021.

He was followed by the Team Bernhard Porsche of fellow rookie Laurin Henrich, while last year’s championship runner up Lucas Auer completed the top 10 for Winward Mercedes.

Schubert BMW’s Sheldon van der Linde put in a feisty driver to finish 11th after a torrid start to his title defence in Saturday’s opening race, and was the only points scorer for BMW in the race after a retirement for Rast and a long-lap penalty for Project 1's Marco Wittmann.

Franck Perera finished right behind in 12th with 20kg of ballast on his SSR Performance Lamborghini following his victory in the first race of the weekend.

Race results:

Cla # Driver Car Gap
1 99 Germany Christian Engelhart
Porsche 911 GT3 R (992)
2 9 Tim Heinemann
Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) 0.872
3 91 Austria Thomas Preining
Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) 1.232
4 90 Norway Dennis Olsen
Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) 1.687
5 63 Austria Clemens Schmid
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 2 0.762
6 92 Italy Mirko Bortolotti
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 2 2.685
7 7 Switzerland Ricardo Feller
Audi R8 LMS Evo II 0.738
8 84 Jusuf Owega
Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo 0.535
9 75 Germany Laurin Heinrich
Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) 0.387
10 22 Austria Lucas Auer
Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo 3.610
11 1 South Africa Sheldon Van Der Linde
BMW M4 GT3 1.793
12 94 Frank Perera
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 2 0.508
13 27 Germany David Schumacher
Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo 0.889
14 48 Germany Maro Engel
Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo 0.342
15 36 India Arjun Maini
Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo 1.311
16 69 Thierry Vermeulen
Ferrari 296 GT3 0.497
17 14 United Kingdom Jack Aitken
Ferrari 296 GT3 2.729
18 11 Germany Marco Wittmann
BMW M4 GT3 2.246
19 83 Switzerland Patric Niederhauser
Audi R8 LMS Evo II 4.375
20 6 Italy Alessio Deledda
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 2 0.530
21 8 Germany Luca Engstler
Audi R8 LMS Evo II
22 24 Turkey Ayhancan Güven
Porsche 911 GT3 R (992)
23 4 Germany Luca Stolz
Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo
24 3 South Africa Kelvin van der Linde
Audi R8 LMS Evo II
25 19 Austria Mick Wishofer
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 2
26 40 Italy Mattia Drudi
Audi R8 LMS Evo II
27 33 Germany René Rast
BMW M4 GT3

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