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Alexander Rossi claimed his third win in the last four GP2 races after DAMS driver Alex Lynn crashed out while on course for victory at Sochi.

Prior to crashing after running wide off the track at Turn 13, Lynn was under little pressure in a race that was dramatically shortened thanks to a long red-flag period caused by first-lap shunts.

The red flag was caused by four cars crashing at the long Turn 3 left-hander on the opening lap.

Russian Time driver Artem Marklov ran wide at the second corner, hitting the wall on the left-hand side of the track as he attempted to rejoin, suffering a front-left puncture and shedding his rear-left wheel.

That meant he spun as he returned to the track, which led to Marlon Stockinger and Sergio Canamsas having to go wide in avoidance and ending up in the barriers.

All three cars ended up in the barrier at the same point.

Jordan King also crashed heavily further around the long corner, most likely as a result of front-end damage caused when he clipped the rear of Stockinger under braking for Turn 2.

The British driver was judged to be at fault for the contact, earning a grid penalty that he will have to serve on Sunday by starting from the pitlane.

It was the King shunt that caused the red-flag delay to be so long thanks to the need for barrier repairs, with the delay running to just over 30 minutes.

When the race was restarted with the distance reduced from 28 to 15 laps, it was under the safety car with the order dictated by the brief green-flag period before the accidents.

Lynn, who converted pole position into the lead at the original start after fellow front-row starter Stoffel Vandoorne wheelspun his way down to fifth, executed a perfect restart.

He finished the fourth lap, and the first entirely run under green-flag conditions, 2.7 seconds ahead of Rossi.

Lynn pitted on lap six to switch from the soft-compound Pirellis that most drivers started on, with Rossi attempting to pull enough of a gap to retain the lead before pitting two laps later.

The Racing Engineering driver succeeded, but Lynn was right with him at Turn 2 after Rossi rejoined and took the de facto lead around the outside of Turn 3.

With victory seemingly in the bag as leader Vandoorne still had to pit, Lynn then crashed out and handed the initiative to Rossi.

But the American still had to see off the challenge of Vandoorne, who ran long on the soft-compound Pirellis before making his stop.

Vandoorne was close, but could not stay ahead of Rossi or the second DAMS entry of PIerre Gasly, meaning he had to settle for third place and could not clinch the title today.

Sergey Sirotkin took fourth ahead of Rio Haryanto, with Raffaele Marciello sixth.

Red Bull-backed Dean Stoneman took ninth on his GP2 debut for the Carlin, finishing just behind Arthur Pic who had taken the restart third but dropped to eighth.

RACE RESULT

Pos Driver Team Laps Gap 1 Alexander Rossi Racing Engineering 15 58m33.520s 2 Pierre Gasly DAMS 15 3.101s 3 Stoffel Vandoorne ART Grand Prix 15 4.279s 4 Sergey Sirotkin Rapax 15 8.474s 5 Rio Haryanto Campos Racing 15 11.884s 6 Raffaele Marciello Trident 15 12.695s 7 Richie Stanaway Status Grand Prix 15 14.506s 8 Arthur Pic Campos Racing 15 15.698s 9 Dean Stoneman Carlin 15 20.660s 10 Nobuharu Matsushita ART Grand Prix 15 23.457s 11 Mitch Evans RUSSIAN TIME 15 26.819s 12 Norman Nato Arden International 15 27.140s 13 Johnny Cecotto Jr. Trident 15 30.727s 14 Nathanael Berthon Daiko Team Lazarus 15 32.828s 15 Andre Negrao Arden International 15 37.369s 16 Rene Binder MP Motorsport 15 39.930s 17 Robert Visoiu Rapax 15 42.614s 18 Nicholas Latifi MP Motorsport 15 44.888s 19 Sean Gelael Carlin 15 59.064s - Alex Lynn DAMS 10 Retirement - Marlon Stockinger Status Grand Prix 0 Retirement - Jordan King Racing Engineering 0 Retirement - Sergio Canamasas Daiko Team Lazarus 0 Retirement - Artem Markelov RUSSIAN TIME 0 Retirement



