Mattias Ekstrom is not just a two-time DTM (Deutsche Tourenwagen
Masters) champion, he is now also a three-time winner of the Race of
Champions. The Swedish touring car ace added another RoC title to his
list of achievements in this year's event in Beijing today, beating
seven-time Formula One champion Michael Schumacher in the finals.
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Final race 1: Michael Schumacher and Mattias Ekström. Photo by xpb.cc.
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"This is a very special day for me," the 31-year-old Swede smiled. "I
was not particularly fortunate this year in the DTM. To end the season
with a victory against Michael Schumacher is fantastic!"
Ekstrom, the 2004 and 2007 DTM champion, scored three DTM pole positions for
Audi this year, but could not convert any of those into victories. However,
today's victory adds to his 2006 and 2007 RoC titles, moving him into a tie
for second place in the all-time Champion of Champions list with the
dominant WRC (World Rally Championship) driver Sebastien Loeb; 1994 WRC
champion Didier Auriol still holds the record with four victories from 1993
to 1999.
Ekstrom's drive to the title was flawless, as the Swede won every single
start on the 1.074-km track built within Beijing's famous "Bird's Nest"
Olympic stadium. It was the first RoC event held in Beijing; the last
two events were held in London's Wembley stadium, after three years at
Stade-de-France in Paris -- and 12 years on Gran Canaria.
The cars used in this year's Race of Champions races included the
Volkswagen Scirocco, Ford Focus WRC, KTM X-Bow, Solution F Prototype and
three different sprint buggies.
This year's new format saw the introduction of an initial group stage, where
Ekstrom handily won all three of his races against Andy Priaulx, Mickey
Doohan and Travis Pastrana. Driving a RoC buggy, VW Scirocco and KTM X-Bow,
Ekstrom's wins were never by less than two seconds. Prialux took second in
the group, but would end up losing to Jenson Button in a Ford Focus WRC in
the quarter-finals.
Button had won his group, beating Tom Kristensen, Guerlin Chicheret
and Tanner Foust. Ekstrom's DTM teammate Kristensen took second in
the group, but lost the quarter-final, driving a pair of Solution F
buggies, to Ekstrom by nearly 1.3 seconds.
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Final, race 2: Mattias Ekström and Michael Schumacher. Photo by xpb.cc.
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In the meantime, on the other side of the draw, Schumacher had handily
won his initial group as well. The F1 legend beat his old rival David
Coulthard, touring car ace Yvan Muller and two-time WRC champion Marcus
Gronholm, by margins close to those of Ekstrom. Coulthard secured second
in the group with close-fought wins over Muller and Gronholm.
In the final group, it was the new star of Formula One in Germany,
Sebastian Vettel, that took the group victory, beating WRC star Mikko
Hirvonen, 2009 Dakar Rally winner Giniel de Villiers and motocross
superstar Chad Reed. Hirvonen took second in the group.
In the quarter-finals, Schumacher easily disposed of Hirvonen in a race
with the KTMs, while Vettel barely edged Coulthard in the RoC buggies,
setting up a semi-final showdown between the glorious past and promising
future of Formula One.
In the event, we will never know which would have been faster, as Vettel
crashed his KTM into the barriers on the final lap of their semi-final,
and had to retire with a broken wheel.
With Ekstrom having handily disposed of Button, this year's Formula
One champion, it was time for the final showdown. While Schumacher has
more F1 titles than anyone else, the closest he had come to a Race of
Champions victory in three previous attempts had been a loss in the 2007
finals -- to Ekstrom.
With the final being a best-of-three format, the two drivers first
lined up in RoC buggies: Ekstrom would draw the first blood, beating
Schumacher with a time of 1:57.290, just 0.181 seconds faster than the
German. The gap had been more than twice as big at the midpoint of the
race, but Schumacher was able to push to make up most of the gap by the
end.
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Quarter final, race 2: Tom Kristensen and Mattias Ekström. Photo by xpb.cc.
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The second heat saw both drivers switching to a KTM X-Bow, a sportscar
that should be better suited for both Ekstrom and Schumacher. However,
Ekstrom was clearly at home in the KTM as well, and took the heat
victory -- and the overall title -- by more than six tenths of a second,
1:56.044 to 1:56.657.
Ekstrom has now won the Race of Champions titles in Paris, London and
Beijing; it remains to be seen where else we will yet see Ekstrom
celebrate a Race of Champions victory. But, first, he has the small
matter of the 2010 DTM title to shoot for.
See also: Team Germany earns third Nations' Cup trophy