Sebastien Buemi picked up the win in race two in Berlin after Felix Rosenqvist picked up a 10 second time penalty.
Rosenqvist finished the race ahead of the championship leader but Buemi was able to stay two seconds behind to be given the race victory.
The incident came in the pits when Rosenqvist was let out at the same time that his Mahindra team-mate Nick Heidfeld was getting to the garage. Even with the penalty he stayed in the top two as Lucas di Grassi in third was 12 seconds behind.
The Swedish driver was able to get a good start from pole position, building a gap between him and Buemi by the time they exited the chicane after turn 3. The result propels Rosenqvist into third in the drivers’ championship ahead of Nico Prost.

Di Grassi finished on the podium ahead of his team-mate Daniel Abt. The Brazilian pressured Jean-Eric Vergne into a mistake at the start of lap 32 and was able to slip through on the inside at turn 1.
Contact was made between a few drivers at the beginning of the race, with Maro Engel having to come back to the pits before the end of the first lap. The Venturi driver went back onto the circuit later, and like Mitch Evans in race one this weekend gained a point for the fastest lap.
In the second half of the race, Jean-Eric Vergne was made to defend by many drivers. Him and Abt nearly made contact going into turn 1, while Vergne had to make his car as wide as possible when the two DS Virgin Racing drivers caught up to him.
Jose Maria Lopez was able to pass Vergne to secure fifth place, while his team-mate Sam Bird had to settle for seventh. The two drivers made contact when battling in the first half of the race, with Bird losing multiple positions as a result.

Prost was able to make his way from 10th to finish eighth in a relatively quiet race for the Frenchman. Oliver Turvey ended his race in ninth after qualifying sixth earlier during the day.
Nick Heidfeld started from the back of the grid thanks to a difficult qualifying session, but was able to pick up a point by finishing 10th. The German was up to 12th in the opening five laps of the race.
Antonio Felix da Costa was able to hold off Nelson Piquet Jr for 11th, while Jerome d’Ambrosio was put down to 13th after picking up a drive-through penalty for leaving the pits early.
Stephane Sarrazin finished ahead of Tom Dillmann to secure 14th. Behind them the two Jaguar Racing drivers finished out of the points in 16th and 17th, with Mitch Evans originally starting the race in ninth.




