What occurred when Formula E went to an American oval trackOn lap 14,

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
On lap 14, the actual race broke out as everyone started to push at their actual pace
From single-file slipstreaming to running three-wide in a pack, it still looked like Porsche's day, until a three-car collision at the turn
11 chicane blocked the track, resulting in a red flag
When the cars returned from the pits for the final five laps, some of them had a big problem: they hadn't yet used all of their attack mode
time, and there wasn't enough time left in the race to do so.Da Costa had already used all of his allocation and had been building a
commanding lead when the red flag came out
Now 50 kW down on most of the cars around him, he slipped back to seventh on track
His teammate Wehrlein had to use just four minutes, and did so to good effect, keeping his car in the lead until the checkered flag
Next on track was Nato, but without time to use all of his Attack Mode, he received an automatic 10-second penalty that dropped him to sixth
place.There were also 10-second penalties for Robert Frijns, Oliver Rowland, Sam Bird, and Taylor Barnard, meaning that second place
actually went to Lola-Yamaha's Lucas Di Grassi
A star of Formula E's early seasons, in Miami, it looked like the younger version was back in the car as he delivered his best result in
several years
The multitude of penalties also promoted Da Costa back into third place. Antonio Felix Da Costa (l), Lucas di Grassi (m), and Pascal
Wehrlein (r) celebrate on the podium. Credit: Simon Galloway/LAT Images for Formula E
It's easy to be cynical about Formula E, and based on the complaints I heard from other journalists in attendance, some people
can't get over a lack of sound in this motorsport
But most of the sport's problems are a thing of the past, and the racing usually delivers, even somewhere like the tight and twisty confines