• Best result of the season for Timo Scheider
  • Mike Rockenfeller on the podium for the first time since 2007
  • Mass collision deprives Mattias Ekström of last title chance
DTM 2010

In front of an impressive turnout of 140,000 spectators (throughout the weekend) Audi put two drivers on the podium at the German finale of the DTM. Timo Scheider achieved his best result of the season with a second-place finish. Mike Rockenfeller in his 40th DTM race managed a podium result for the second time in his career.


After starting from the pole position Timo Scheider was leading the race for a long time. Only in the final phase he lost the remote duel against Paul Di Resta, who was using a different strategy and returned to the track in front of Scheider after a late second pit stop. As Di Resta was running on the fresher tires Scheider was no longer able to counter and was instructed by Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline to save the tires and secure second place.

“Obviously I would have liked to win the German finale here in front of our home crowd of fans for Audi,” said Scheider. “But we didn’t quite make it. Paul (Di Resta) was very quick, so we had to change our strategy and be a bit more aggressive. Unfortunately, that wasn’t completely sufficient. Still, being the best Audi driver again is a nice feeling.”

Mike Rockenfeller, who was by far the strongest driver of a 2008-specification car at Hockenheim and with a third-place finish clinched the first podium result of the season for Audi Sport Team Phoenix, was highly pleased. The Le Mans winner last mounted the podium in the DTM in 2007 at Oschersleben.

On the first few laps “Rocky” held up to the pressure by Gary Paffett who had won the past two Hockenheim races. After his first pit stop the German managed to gradually put a distance between himself and the former DTM Champion and to build up a cushion of more than five seconds. “My car was really good during the whole weekend,” raved Rockenfeller. “In the race it was running perfectly, particularly on fresh tires. Only toward the middle of my stints I had a little bit of oversteer.”

Martin Tomczyk and Oliver Jarvis went on a chase after Gary Paffett on the final laps but did not manage to bump the Briton from fourth place any more. “After my first attack my tires picked up some rubber off the track,” reported Tomczyk, who occupied fifth place just barely in front of Jarvis.

After a mass collision on lap one, just half of the 18 cars that had started from the grid finished the German finale. For Markus Winkelhock and Katherine Legge (both from Audi Sport Team Rosberg) the race on the new short circuit layout was over at the end of the “Parabolika” as quickly as it was for Miguel Molina, the best rookie in the 2010 DTM.

Mattias Ekström was entangled in the mass collision as well. At first the Swede was able to continue to drive his damaged A4 DTM but after two unscheduled pit stops had to retire on lap eight due to a broken right rear suspension. Before the race at Hockenheim Ekström had been the last Audi driver to still have chances of winning the DTM title.

“That ‘Eki’ was struck right on the first lap was of course really unfortunate for us and the fans,” said Head of Audi Motorsport Dr. Wolfgang Ullrich. “Consequently, the title will go to a Mercedes driver for the first time since 2006. Congratulations to Stuttgart! The level in the DTM is extremely high, that’s why this defeat after three triumphs is not an embarrassment for us but motivates us to regain our old strength in 2011 and bring the title back to Ingolstadt and Neckarsulm – which we also managed to do this year at the Le Mans 24 Hours. If you want to win the DTM, everything has got to fit perfectly. This year that simply wasn’t the case with us – today included.”

This was true for Alexandre Prémat as well, who had been running in the points before being brushed by Jamie Green in the pit lane. The right front suspension broke in the incident.