The tribute to Paul Aron is legitimate for what he was able to show on track in Sarno. As was the naive behavior of his more direct opponents, such as Beganovic and Askey, who instead of following in the slipstream of the race leader, gave way to an inexplicable duel on the fifth lap. With the classification virtually frozen to then, the only other event was the contact between Zak O’Sullivan and Alfio Spina on the seventh lap, an episode sanctioned with disqualification for unsportsmanlike conduct inflicted on the British driver.
With each successive laps and the slowing down of Beganovic, the gap created by Aron increased further, while Laursen and Minì filled the gap. On lap 12, Askey, Laursen and Beganovic are close, too close, with the last two getting the worst of it. Beganovic brakes late, skilled in closing the turn, but is hit sideways by the Dane. An error that led Beganovic off the track, and slowed Laursen. Taking advantage was Gabriele Minì who goes through, passing Askey also. A key episode that puts an end to the race. Paul Aron crosses the line alone with a three second lead. Behind him are Gabriele Minì and Kay Askey. Top five completed by Kirill Smal and Conrad Laursen Special mention for Maya Wueg (Luxor / LKE), with the Spaniard gaining eleven positions, and finishing just a step off the top ten.
Paul Aron, firmly ahead in the final, with Askey and Beganovic losing time duelling among themselves instead of more shrewdly following in a slipstream, thus allowing the Estonian to increase his gap. On the right, again Beganovic and Askey with Laursen and Minì cacthing up. The tussle will favor Minì in second place, Askey in third.