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Pascal Wehrlein

Pascal Wehrlein reflects on 'insane' Formula E Berlin misery

Pascal Wehrlein had almost wrestled his way back into contention to defend his Formula E drivers' title, only for a complete disaster to occur in the second race of the Berlin E-Prix.

Wehrlein Berlin
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Pascal Wehrlein was left in disbelief after his "insane" fall from pole position to 16th in the second race of Formula E's Berlin E-Prix, which allowed Oliver Rowland to secure the world title. 

The 2024 FE world champion had entered the double-header in the German capital 69 points adrift of Rowland, but managed to reduce his deficit to 47 points by the conclusion of qualifying for the second race. 

Following a dominant pole position for the second race, there was a genuine sense that the championship would miraculously be decided in London.

However, Wehrlein fell to almost to the back of the field once his first use of attack mode had concluded, which lasted for two minutes. 

It was immediately questioned why the German's first attack mode was two minutes long, with the majority of his rivals having opted for two periods of four minutes each.

What was looking like the weekend of dreams, quickly became one of horror, as he tumbled to 16th as Rowland clinched the crown after crossing the line in fourth.

Wehrlein was adamant after the race that something was "completely wrong", due to the speed of which he was swamped by the pack. 

"Yeah, for sure, the two-minute attack mode didn't help," Wehrlein told RacingNews365. And yeah, honestly, we are still analysing what went wrong, because something went completely wrong. 

"I mean, starting first and finishing P16 is insane. So yeah, very disappointing race which looked like a promising day after qualifying. 

"No pace, maybe wrong call on strategy, but yeah, for sure, not satisfying."

Wehrlein 'not disappointed'

Rowland's fourth-place finish was enough to become world champion due to having needed to score 11 points more than Wehrlein. 

Throughout the Berlin event, the former F1 driver had stressed he was not even thinking about the chance of defending his title due to Rowland's advantage. 

Wehrlein's frustration was more due to the way his car changed, from being unstoppable in qualifying to being unable to score a point in the race.

"I'm not disappointed about the title being decided now, because I was not thinking about it anyways," added Wehrlein. 

"I'm more disappointed about the race, like the result, because it should never happen if you're dominating in qualifying that you just have no pace and drop out off the points, and almost, yeah, being last. There's no positive about this race."

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