Feeder Series weekend review, results and standings: 15–17 May 2026

Euroformula Open and French F4 joined a host of series in North America this weekend in holding junior single-seater races. Feeder Series reviews all the action from the six championships.

By Feeder Series

The busiest period for European single-seaters is on the horizon, but this weekend is an exception. Only two of the junior series we cover – Euroformula Open and French F4 – raced on the continent this weekend at Spa and Dijon respectively. 

The United States was instead the focal point of this weekend’s racing activity, especially after Indianapolis 500 qualifying was condensed to a single-day format. FR Americas, F4 US and the Ligier Junior Formula Championship raced at Road America this weekend – with a livestream this time. Heavy thunderstorms, however, moved through Wisconsin on Sunday, and lightning and rain in the area forced the cancellation of the final races of each series.

The only championship we covered that was not to be affected by rain was USF Juniors, which made its debut in Canada this weekend at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, commonly known as Mosport. There was also racing action from SMP F4, which held its season opener at Moscow Raceway with Ivan Pigaev, Maksim Orlov, Timur Shagaliev and Platon Kostin each claiming one victory.

Note: There is no Feeder Focus or Race Recap this weekend. Instead, enjoy our interviews with 2026 FR Middle East champion Kean Nakamura-Berta, released 14 May, and F2 points leader Gabriele Minì, released today!

  1. Euroformula Open: Yeh brings skill and cunning to Spa to complete clean sweep
  2. French F4: Bouzar dominates, rookies shine at Dijon-Prenois
  3. FR Americas: Golan, Papasavvas claim wins in wet weekend at Road America
  4. F4 US: Irazú sweeps weather-shortened Road America weekend
  5. Ligier Junior Formula Championship: Speth, Jacir win twice in truncated Road America round 
  6. USF Juniors: Pasiewicz sweeps Mosport weekend to become season’s third points leader

Euroformula Open: Yeh brings skill and cunning to Spa to complete clean sweep

Having won twice in the season opener, Euroformula Open championship leader Enzo Yeh went one better in Spa, taking pole and all three race wins in a feat unseen in Euroformula Open since 2022, when Oliver Goethe swept the Spa round.

As in Portimão, Yeh did not top either practice session on Friday but fought his way to pole, 0.175 seconds ahead of teammate Jesse Carrasquedo Jr.

In race one, Yeh and Carrasquedo pulled a gap in the opening laps while those behind squabbled over third. The fighting was abruptly stopped by a safety car on lap eight after Jan Koller ended up beached in the gravel at Fagnes.

The safety car ended on lap 10, and Carrasquedo suffered a heavy lock-up at the Bus Stop chicane at the restart. Diego de la Torre pounced to take second while Everett Stack waited until the next lap, by which point the race had become time-limited, to make a move.

Scrambling through Eau Rouge and Raidillon on the final lap, Carrasquedo suffered a puncture following contact with Stack, leaving Yeh with a clean run to victory. De la Torre took second and Javier Herrera survived the last-lap tussling for his first series podium, passing Stack exiting Les Combes.

A damp race two began with a jump start for reverse-grid polesitter Lorenzo Castillo and a slow start for second-placed Alessandro Famularo. A rapid Yeh found himself in the lead by the middle of lap two having started sixth.

Wide moments for drivers ahead left Stack and Herrera in the podium spots by lap three before Alceu Feldmann Neto and De la Torre collided on lap four. Stack then received a drive-through penalty for a starting grid infringement, promoting Herrera to second and Carrasquedo to third.

Contact between Stack and fifth-placed Trappa on lap 11 caused punctures for both. Yeh held on to win a time-limited race after 12 laps, ahead of Herrera and Carrasquedo.

Jesse Carrasquedo Jr suffered a costly lock-up at the safety car restart in race one | Credit: Fotospeedy / GT Sport

The reversal of the qualifying top eight put Wiktor Dobrzański on pole for race three, which began under safety car conditions because of rain earlier in the afternoon. Drivers had been told not to pit until the green flag, but Yeh and Famularo, evidently betting on overcoming a potential penalty, pitted for slick tyres anyways. 

Almost all others then pitted under racing conditions, leaving Yeh and Carrasquedo on the back of leader Castillo, who had yet to pit. They quickly dispatched him before both receiving a drive-through penalty for the flagrant violation on lap seven.

As expected, the penalty made no difference for Yeh, who took a third win to become only the fourth Euroformula Open driver to win all races in a weekend since the three-race format was adopted in 2021. Famularo finished fourth after his penalty, with Stack and Trappa overtaking him in the final three laps.

Yeh now has 138 points, 49 ahead of De la Torre and 64 ahead of Famularo. The rookies’ standings have changed with Herrera now leading on 41 points, while Motopark remain well atop the teams’ standings.

Report by Archie Harper

ResultsP1P2P3
QualifyingEnzo Yeh, 2:09.405Jesse Carrasquedo Jr, +0.175sEverett Stack, +0.503s
Race 1 (12 laps)Enzo Yeh, 30:43.122Diego de la Torre, +2.655sJavier Herrera, +3.611s
Race 2 (12 laps)Enzo Yeh, 30:08.621Javier Herrera, +16.813sJesse Carrasquedo Jr, +20.940s
Race 3 (12 laps)Enzo Yeh, 30:26.991Everett Stack, +26.436sGino Trappa, +31.916s
StandingsDriversTeamsRookies
P1Enzo Yeh, 138Team Motopark, 87Javier Herrera, 41
P2Diego de la Torre, 89BVM Racing, 49Lorenzo Castillo, 35
P3Alessandro Famularo, 74Drivex, 28Wiktor Dobrzański, 33
P4Everett Stack, 64Neri Autosport, 22 Aaron Ferrazzano, 27
P5Javier Herrera, 47Gino Trappa, 18
P6Jesse Carrasquedo Jr, 43Filippo Fiorentino, 17
P7Wiktor Dobrzański, 28Jan Koller, 15
P8Lorenzo Castillo, 27Alceu Feldmann Neto, 0
P9Gino Trappa, 26
P10Divy Nandan, 25

Read the previous round’s report here.

French F4: Bouzar dominates, rookies shine at Dijon-Prenois

Dijon-Prenois hosted the second round of the French F4 season after the opening meeting in Nogaro one month ago, and championship leader Guillaume Bouzar picked up where he left off by winning both of the main races and extending his advantage to a staggering 47 points.

The 32 FFSA Academy drivers were welcomed by rain for practice and qualifying on Friday. The 30-minute qualifying session took place on a wet track, and a red flag was waved with three minutes to go after a spin from Yuval Rosen. On a drying track, drivers had two laps to deliver, and Bouzar took a dominant double pole position, his best lap 0.202s faster than Lilian Soares’ and his second-best lap a staggering 0.806s faster than the 15-year-old’s.

Several stars from the last round were mired down the order, with Thibaut Ramaekers qualifying 22nd for race three and Matthéo Dauvergne and Kota Tsuchihashi outside the top 20 for both of the main races.

Those two drivers ended up causing the first of two interruptions in race one by going into the gravel on lap three. At the restart on lap seven, Oscar Goudchaux and Lisa Billard went off in separate incidents at the first turn and brought about the safety car’s return.

The weather, however, posed no issues from here, and nor did the rest of the grid for Bouzar. The 17-year-old French-Luxembourger was unrivalled at the front of the field while a heated battle between Soares, Ramaekers and Hugo Herrouin unfolded for second. Herrouin pulled a superb double overtake on the outside of the double right-hander at Villeroy to grab second position at the second safety car restart. Ramaekers later overtook Soares at the same spot with two laps to go.

Behind, Ginevra Panzeri made history. Having qualified ninth, the 17-year-old Italian driver clinched the best-ever race result for a female driver in French F4, taking sixth after gaining positions with Goudchaux’s mistake, Lewis Francis’ drive-through penalty for overtaking under safety car conditions, and a pass on Arthur Eschalier on lap 12.

Ginevra Panzeri scored the best result for a female driver in French F4 Championship history | Credit: Elwynn Staerker

In the reverse-grid race on Saturday afternoon, no one could challenge the pace of Thibaut Ramaekers, starting from seventh. The reigning OK world champion in karting overtook every driver in front of him one by one, eventually taking the lead on the 12th lap.

For the first time this season, the race was not interrupted by any safety car appearance. Race one’s fifth-place finisher Jack Iliffe confirmed his form by leading for six laps after overtaking poleman Goudchaux, though he too was overthrown by Ramaekers. Goudchaux lost the podium on lap 17 of 23, overtaken by Jules Avril. 

For the final race of the weekend, Bouzar once again cruised to a lights-to-flag victory, taking his third triumph of the season. This time, Soares managed to keep second place despite facing pressure from Iliffe, who finished third. After earning top-five finishes in all previous qualifying classifications but no points in any of the first five races because of mechanical failures or incidents, Tom Dussol finally had a clean race to take fourth.

Starting from 12th and 22nd-second, Shane Chandaria and Ramaekers animated the race by climbing to fifth and seventh respectively, the Belgian scoring important points for the championship and moving up to second, 47 points away from Bouzar.

Report by Perceval Wolff-Taffus

ResultsP1P2P3
QualifyingGuillaume Bouzar, 1:27.041Lilian Soares, +0.202sArthur Eschalier, +0.372s
Race 1 (17 laps)Guillaume Bouzar, 30:03.903Hugo Herrouin, +1.028sThibaut Ramaekers, +2.795s
Race 2 (23 laps)Thibaut Ramaekers, 30:08.773Jack Iliffe, +4.185sJules Avril, +6.428s
Race 3 (18 laps)Guillaume Bouzar, 30:53.664Lilian Soares, +1.946sJack Iliffe, +2.753s
StandingsDrivers
P1Guillaume Bouzar, 100
P2Thibaut Ramaekers, 53 
P3Lilian Soares, 53
P4Hugo Herrouin, 52 
P5Jack Iliffe, 33
P6Oscar Goudchaux, 32
P7Matthéo Dauvergne, 28
P8Kota Tsuchihashi, 27
P9Lewis Francis, 24
P10Jules Avril, 22

Read the previous round’s report here.

FR Americas: Golan, Papasavvas claim wins in wet weekend at Road America

Brady Golan and Evagoras Papasavvas repeated their winning form from the opening FR Americas round at NOLA, each winning for the second time this season during a rain-shortened weekend at Road America.

Although Golan led Friday’s practice session over Cooper Shipman – the points leader exiting NOLA – and Papasavvas, it was the last of those who edged out Golan and Shipman for pole later in the day, with a session-topping 2:03.619.

A poor getaway in race one, however, dropped the polesitter to ninth by Turn 3 as Shipman challenged Golan for the lead down the straight leading to Turn 5, with Golan maintaining the position. The big winner on lap one was Kekai Hauanio, who, despite having qualified only seventh, found himself in third by the end of the lap.

Papasavvas made quick work of several drivers over the next three laps, making his way into fourth just seven minutes into the race. Soon after, the safety car was deployed for Aidan Schuh, whose car stopped at Turn 13 on lap four. 

With just under 10 minutes remaining, the green flag was displayed again. As Golan gapped the pack, a fierce battle for second erupted between Shipman and Hauanio. Shipman nearly squeezed Hauanio into the pit wall on the frontstretch, with Papasavvas passing both of them simultaneously to take second position. Hauanio slipped by Shipman for third, but Shipman tried to regain the position entering the Kink. The move didn’t pay off, however, as Shipman tumbled down to 11th position.

Papasavvas spent the final few laps chasing Golan, but he came up just short. Golan took victory by 1.042s, with Dass taking his first series podium by finishing third.

Brady Golan dominated race one to claim his second win of the season | Credit: Gavin Baker

Race two began with an aborted start after Shipman missed his grid box and tried to reverse into it, for which he received a 30-second penalty. A rolling start ensued, with Papasavvas driving away from Golan and Hauanio on lap one. After Hauanio passed Golan around the outside of Turn 13, Shipman attempted to do the same in Turn 1, but the Kiwi Motorsport driver ran wide and lost several positions before spinning in Turn 3 as the track got wetter. Three more cars then spun in Turn 5, bringing out the safety car.

The ensuing restart on lap four brought more trouble. Remaining on slick tyres despite the wet conditions, several drivers spun at Turn 1 and Turn 3, and race control displayed the red flag to mandate a change to wet tyres.

The race resumed for a two-lap shootout, with Hauanio taking the lead from his teammate. Papasavvas recaptured the lead down the main straight, taking the win after the caution came out as Alex Bobadilla crashed into Golan while disputing fifth. It was later decided that because more than half the race was run behind the safety car, half points would be given out.

Race three was then cancelled as the rain intensified.

Exiting the weekend, Papasavvas leads the championship on 75.5 points, with Shipman trailing on 63 and Bogle third on 57.5.

Report by Owen White

ResultsP1P2P3
QualifyingEvagoras Papasavvas, 2:03.619Brady Golan, +0.153sCooper Shipman, +0.653s
Race 1 (12 laps)Brady Golan, 30:56.989Evagoras Papasavvas, +1.042sHarbir Dass, +6.612s
Race 2 (7 laps)Evagoras Papasavvas, 29:51.821Kekai Hauanio, +0.325sChristian Bogle, +1.960s
Race 3Cancelled
StandingsDriversTeamsRookies
P1Evagoras Papasavvas, 75.5Toney Driver Development, 138.5Evagoras Papasavvas, 75.5
P2Cooper Shipman, 63Crosslink Motorsports, 131.5Cooper Shipman, 63
P3Christian Bogle, 57.5Kiwi Motorsport, 78Kekai Hauanio, 56
P4Kekai Hauanio, 56Atlantic Racing Team, 25Luke Powers, 45
P5Brady Golan, 54.5Hillenburg Motorsports, 24Eric Wiśniewski, 17
P6Luke Powers, 45MLT Motorsports, 6Harbir Dass, 15
P7James Lawley, 25Momentum Motorsports, 0Whitney Strickland, 7
P8Barrett Wolfe, 21Alex Bobadilla, 7
P9Eric Wiśniewski, 17Jonathan Cottrill, 6
P10Harbir Dass, 15Aidan Schuh, 3

Read the previous round’s report here.

F4 US: Irazú sweeps weather-shortened Road America weekend

Reigning Ligier JFC champion Gaston Irazú avenged his winless start in F4 US’ season opener at NOLA by taking victory in both races this weekend at Road America in dominant fashion.

Clemente Huerta topped practice over Irazú and Caleb Campbell, who swept the opening round. In qualifying, it was Irazú who edged out Huerta, with the rest of the field over a second slower than the polesitter 

Irazú had a stellar getaway, immediately building a comfortable lead. Behind him, Zach Fourie, Huerta, Campbell and Fernando Rivera partook in a four-way battle for second position. After a few laps, Campbell was able to pull away as slight contact between Fourie and Huerta sent the South African back to fifth. Fourie then charged back past Rivera and Huerta, retaking third on lap eight and leaving the pair to swap spots on several occasions over the next handful of laps. 

Huerta appeared to come out on top, and with one lap remaining, he narrowly held on to fourth position. Rivera attempted a divebomb into Turn 1, but his heroic effort on the brakes sent him spinning into the gravel trap and finishing in last place. In the end, neither driver finished fourth as a post-race penalty awarded to Huerta for his contact with Fourie elevated Luca Day into the top four.

Up front, it was Irazú who rode off into the overcast skies, beating Campbell by 5.579 seconds to claim his first win in the series, with Fourie rounding out the podium.

Gaston Irazú became the newest F4 US winner at Road America | Credit: Gavin Baker

The second race began with a rolling start, with Campbell overtaking Irazú in the opening turn of green-flag running to take the lead. At the start of the next lap, Fourie too was able to pass Irazú, using the slipstream to fly past the Uruguayan driver on the pit straight. Irazú’s time down in third position was short-lived, however. Using the slipstream to his advantage, he retook second just a few corners after being passed. 

At the end of the following lap, Irazú drafted close to Campbell, forcing the Canadian to take a defensive line into the first corner. On exit, Campbell drifted wide, allowing Irazú an opportunity to slip through for the lead.

As the field entered the final lap, Fourie and Luca Day caught up to Campbell, igniting the battle for second position. Campbell again took a defensive line, this time to keep Fourie behind in Turn 5. Fourie, performing a textbook over-under move, slipped down the inside of Campbell on the exit of the corner, snatching the spot away. Day then tried to steal the final spot on the podium, drafting alongside Campbell as they crested the hill on the run to the finish line. Ultimately, it was Campbell who held on to third place by just 0.024s.

Irazú took victory by 6.809s over Fourie and moved up to third in the championship with 80 points. Campbell continues to lead with 108 points, ahead of Fourie with 87.

Race three was cancelled because of rain.

Report by Owen White

ResultsP1P2P3
QualifyingGastón Irazú, 2:15.248Clemente Huerta, +0.396sZach Fourie, +1.031s
Race 1 (14 laps)Gastón Irazú, 31:53.098Caleb Campbell, +5.579sZach Fourie, +10.027s
Race 2 (9 laps)Gastón Irazú, 23:45.587Zach Fourie, +6.809sCaleb Campbell, +8.347s
Race 3Cancelled
StandingsDriversTeamsRookies
P1Caleb Campbell, 108Kiwi Motorsport, 195Zach Fourie, 87 
P2Zach Fourie, 87 Champagne Racing, 80Gastón Irazú, 80 
P3Gastón Irazú, 80 MLT Motorsports, 39Cole Medeiros, 39
P4Cole Medeiros, 39Speed Factory, 36Luca Day, 32
P5Clemente Huerta, 36Momentum Motorsports, 32Fernando Rivera, 26
P6Luca Day, 32Vmax Motorsport, 28Ayden Kohut, 22
P7Robert Soroka, 28Crosslink Motorsports, 26Ben Ramirez, 14
P8Fernando Rivera, 26Rase Motorsports, 14
P9Ayden Kohut, 22
P10Ben Ramirez, 14

Read the previous round’s report here.

Ligier Junior Formula Championship: Speth, Jacir win twice in truncated Road America round 

Jack Speth won both races outright in the Gen 2 class of the Ligier Junior Formula Championship’s second round at Road America, while Beckham Jacir scored both the Gen 1 wins after a photo finish in race two with Lázaro Bainotti.

Speth originally qualified on pole for the first race of the weekend, but he was forced to start at the back after all of his laps were deleted for returning to the paddock without approval before the chequered flag was shown. That handed pole to Beckham Jacir, who topped the Gen 1 times, but Jacir was jumped at the start by Ava Hanssen, who led through the first few corners before the Champagne Racing driver got back past on the run down to Turn 5.

Behind them, Speth was making his way through the field and eventually took over the lead outright on the second lap at the same spot. On lap three, Hanssen took back the class lead from Jacir at Turn 1 and maintained the lead even after exchanging positions with the championship leader. At the end of the following lap, Alexander Savage crashed at Turn 14, forcing the safety car to be deployed.

The race restarted on lap eight, with Jacir retaking the lead as Hanssen fell down the order, but he was then overtaken by AJ Abdullah, who took the Gen 1 lead into Turn 12 just before Speth flew past for the second time in the race to return to first overall. As Speth set off in the distance to take his first Gen 2 win, Jacir moved back to the lead on lap nine and held onto it as he took his third class win of the season ahead of Abdullah and Bainotti.

Beckham Jacir took both Gen1 wins at Road America, the second by just 0.021 seconds | Credit: Gavin Baker

In race two, Hanssen led from pole at the start as Ella White crashed while braking for Turn 5, forcing the safety car to be deployed. Hanssen maintained the overall lead from the restart on lap three until lap six, when Speth passed her before Turn 1, and remained in the Gen 1 lead for two more laps until Jacir passed her in the braking zone for Turn 5.

Bainotti followed at Turn 7, dropping Hanssen to third, but she retook second with two laps to go as she closed on Jacir. As Speth remained unchallenged for his second Gen 2 win of the weekend, the top three in Gen 1 battled for the class win on the final lap. Jacir ultimately came out on top, just 0.021 seconds ahead of Bainotti, with Hanssen 0.168s behind the winner in third.

Race three was declared wet and shortened from 30 to 25 minutes. It was then postponed because of lightning shortly before the start and ultimately cancelled.

Speth now leads the Gen2 standings on 104 points, 29 ahead of Edward Kennedy, who elected to race in USF Juniors this weekend. In Gen1, Jacir grew his lead to 44 points over Bainotti and 54 over Hanssen.

Report by Marco Albertini

ResultsP1P2P3
QualifyingBeckham Jacir, 2:21.316Ava Hanssen, +0.171sLázaro Bainotti, +0.412s
Race 1 (11 laps)Jack Speth, 30:27.809Beckham Jacir, +11.586sAJ Abdullah, +12.013s
Race 2 (12 laps)Jack Speth, 30:59.436Beckham Jacir, +3.473sLázaro Bainotti, +3.494s
Race 3Cancelled

Standings
Gen 1Gen 2
DriversTeamsRookiesDrivers
P1Beckham Jacir, 118Berg Racing, 123Lázaro Bainotti, 74Jack Speth, 104
P2Lázaro Bainotti, 74Champagne Racing, 118Truly Adams, 51Edward Kennedy, 75
P3Ava Hanssen, 64Maestro Racing Team, 74AJ Abdullah, 48Michael Fatutta, 18
P4Truly Adams, 51Ava Hanssen Racing, 64Alexander Savage, 34
P5AJ Abdullah, 48G Tech Motorsport, 48Will Franklin, 30
P6Alexander Savage, 34Kiwi Motorsport, 30Tyler Wade, 26
P7Will Franklin, 30Ella White, 19
P8Tyler Wade, 26
P9Ella White, 19
P10Michael Fatutta, 14

Read the previous round’s report here.

USF Juniors: Pasiewicz sweeps Mosport weekend to become season’s third points leader

USF Juniors made its first-ever trip to Canada this weekend, and Karol Pasiewicz dominated, scoring all three poles and winning all three races to take the points lead.

The Olivia Racing driver was the fastest in the sole qualifying session and the leader at the start of race one, while Iván Machado Pérez made a lightning start from 10th, moving to fourth by the end of the opening lap. The Spaniard’s strong run, however, was eviscerated on lap three when he had a trip through the grass on the exit of Turn 8. He fell to the back – before finding himself on his lid at the same spot a lap later.

After a safety car period to recover his heavily damaged car, the race resumed on lap eight, but the race was neutralised again a lap later after Brenden Cooley went off course at Turn 3 and hit the barriers. Victor Couto had moved into the lead by this point, but on the lap 14 restart, Pasiewicz retook the lead exiting Turn 5 and never looked back. He took his maiden series win behind the safety car, brought out after Grant Mitchell crashed at Turn 8. Couto and Zanella Racing teammate Olivier Mrak completed the podium.

With his trifecta of wins in Canada, Karol Pasiewicz is the new USF Juniors points leader | Credit: Gavin Baker

Pasiewicz was once again on pole for race two, and he held off Couto’s attacks to lead the early stages. The safety car was deployed first for Elías Vignola’s crash at Turn 8 on lap seven. After a large accident for Jared Oselka at Turn 2 on lap 15 that brought out another safety car, Pasiewicz maintained the lead on a late-race restart to take his second consecutive win of the weekend, while Couto held off Mrak for second.

The Polish driver started the final race of the weekend from pole and held off Couto’s persistent attacks in the opening stages to maintain the lead. Unlike the first two races, the Zanella duo of Couto and Mrak were able to stay close, but Pasiewicz was given some breathing room when the teammates began battling for second on lap seven. Mrak took over second on lap eight with an opportunistic pass at Turn 5b.

Behind them, Machado Pérez and Bex Cranston began to battle for fourth on lap 14, with the Spaniard coming out on top after exchanging positions several times with the Exclusive Autosport driver. The VRD driver then moved up to third on the last lap after Couto nearly spun at Turn 5b and fell to fifth.

Up ahead, Mrak kept the pressure on Pasiewicz, though it was ultimately to no avail as the Polish driver took his third win of the weekend by just 0.1793s. Further back, karting graduate Dean Hoogendoorn took his best result of the weekend by finishing seventh in his debut single-seater round while also taking the fastest lap.

Pasiewicz now leads the drivers’ standings by 19 points over Machado Pérez and 26 over Mrak. In the teams’ standings, Zanella Racing stays on top, 91 points over Olivia Racing.

Report by Marco Albertini

ResultsP1P2P3
QualifyingKarol Pasiewicz, 1:21.3386Victor Couto, +0.0838sCole Medeiros, +0.2033s
Race 1 (20 laps)Karol Pasiewicz, 36:45.9622Victor Couto, +0.6952sOlivier Mrak, +1.2052s
Race 2 (20 laps)Karol Pasiewicz, 34:56.8468Victor Couto, +0.6177sOlivier Mrak, +0.8977s
Race 3 (20 laps)Karol Pasiewicz, 27:30.5182Olivier Mrak, +0.1793sIván Machado Pérez, +4.7172s
StandingsDriversTeamsRookies
P1Karol Pasiewicz, 186Zanella Racing, 249Karol Pasiewicz, 186
P2Iván Machado Pérez, 167Exclusive Autosport, 158Iván Machado Pérez, 167
P3Olivier Mrak, 160Olivia Racing, 153Olivier Mrak, 160
P4Max Mokarem, 156VRD Racing by Pole Position, 143Max Mokarem, 156
P5Victor Couto, 141DEForce Racing, 100Victor Couto, 141
P6Cole Medeiros, 137JHDD powered by ECR, 98Cole Medeiros, 137
P7Vilho Aatola, 132Berg Racing, 58Casper Nissen, 117
P8Casper Nissen, 117Bex Cranston, 114
P9Bex Cranston, 114Leonardo Serravalle, 108
P10Leonardo Serravalle, 108Max Cuthbert, 94

Read the previous round’s report here.

Header photo credit: Elwynn Staerker