Home FeaturedMaccagnani leads Prema 1-2-3 in Misano Italian F4 opener

Maccagnani leads Prema 1-2-3 in Misano Italian F4 opener

by Roger Gascoigne

Photo: ACI Sport

Niccolo Maccagnani headed his Prema team-mates Alp Aksoy and Sasha Bondarev to win the first race of the Italian Formula 4 season at Misano.

The Ferrari Academy driver, under the watchful gaze of ex-Ferrari Academy boss, Jock Clear, took the lead at the start, as polesitter Aksoy was slow away, and maintained a comfortable lead throughout. The Prema trio gradually pulled a gap on the chasing pack, with US Racing’s Ary Bansal coming out on top of a six-car battle.

With 47 cars qualifying on Friday evening, the field was divided into three groups, with each group racing twice ahead of Sunday evening’s final. With US Racing’s Luka Sammalisto topped the qualifying times, to earn pole position for races two and three, with the second-fastest qualifier, Aksoy taking pole for race one, which pitted Group B against Group C.

After an early safety car following a spin from Prema’s Zheng Kwan Ho, Maccagnani quickly reasserted his lead from Aksoy and Williams junior Bondarev. R-ace GP’s Kenzo Craigie initially headed the pursuers from US Racing’s Oleksandr Savinkov and Jenzer Motorsport’s Bader Al Sulaiti.

Van Amersfoort Racing’s Thomas Bearman had made a storming start, up to eighth from 15th on the grid, and putting pressure on Bansal for seventh, with the Indian driver’s team-mate Arjen Kraeling completing the pack battling for fourth.

Savinkov moved up to fourth, while Bearman dropped to the back of the group. That train ran nose-to-tail throughout, as each looked for a mistake on the tight Misano track. In the closing stages, Craigie got a run on Savinkov into turn one after the Ukrainian ran wide on to the pits straight, allowing Bansal challenging both.

Contact dropped Savinkov back to ninth at the flag, allowing Bansal through to claim fourth, with Bearman completing a solid debut in the series won by his brother Oliver in 2021 to claim seventh.

The other Formula 1 team juniors endured a trying start to their weekends. Mercedes-AMG protege Andy Consani and McLaren’s Christian Costoya were both caught up in the incident that brought out the safety car and pitted at the end of lap one. Costani retired three laps later, while Costoya was able to fight his way back to 15th at the flag. Consani’s fellow Mercedes-AMG junior, Craigie, ran strongly in the chasing group before retiring four laps from the finish after his contact with Savinkov.

Race results (16 laps)
Pos Driver Team Time
1 Niccolo Maccagnani Prema Racing 27m52.600s
2 Alp Aksoy Prema Racing +1.170s
3 Sasha Bondarev Prema Racing +3.324s
4 Ary Bansal US Racing +9.509s
5 Arjen Kraeling US Racing +10.199s
6 Bader Al Sulaiti Jenzer Motorsport +11.473s
7 Thomas Bearman Van Amersfoort Racing +12.947s
8 Florentin Hattemer Trident Motorsport +16.373s
9 Oleksandr Savinkov US Racing +21.970s
10 Knud Nielsen Real Racing +23.180s
11 Roland Kuklane PHM Racing +25.347s
12 Edu Robinson US Racing +25.545s
13 Levi Arn Jenzer Motorsport +26.430s
14 Bernardo Bernoldi Trident Motorsport +28.538s
15 Christian Costoya Prema Racing +28.801s
16 Emily Cotty R-ace GP +30.725s
17 Fabricio Fogaca AKM Motorsport +31.589s
18 Payton Westcott R-ace GP +32.165s
19 Igor Polak Maffi Racing +38.487s
20 Ginevra Panzeri AS Motorsport +45.644s
21 Iacopo Martinese PHM Racing +1m25.650s
22 Emma Felbermayr PHM Racing +1m33.888s
23 Rafaela Ferreira Cram Motorsport
24 Kenzo Craigie R-ace GP
Ret Alexander Chartier PHM Racing
Ret Augustus Toniolo Trident Motorsport
Ret Lyuboslav Ruykov Trident Motorsport
Ret Andy Consani R-ace GP
Ret Federico Diaz Alpha 54 Racing
Ret Kingsley Zheng Prema Racing
Pole position: Aksoy, 1m35.637s
Fastest lap: Aksoy, 1m35.907s