Starting from the front row, Italy’s Filippo Sala (RFM) and Finland’s Sebastian Lehtimaki (Koski Motorsport), who had already claimed pole position on Friday, had to be content with 7th and 9th respectively in the Final. It has to be said that a lot happened during the 20 laps of the decisive race. Briton Kenzo Craigie (Prema Racing) was the first to get the better of Sala. Belgian driver Dries Van Langendonck (Forza Racing) tried to follow in his wake, but found himself outpaced by Austrian Niklas Schaufler (DPK Racing). Schaufler made a great effort to come back from 11th place at the start.
At the same time, another driver got off to a stunning start. Starting from P9, Finland’s Joel Pohjola (Tony Kart Racing Team) overtook all his rivals one by one to take the lead of the Final on lap 6. With the fastest lap of the race, he increased his pace as the laps went by and took the lead by more than four seconds. Behind him, Schaufler won his duel with Craigie and Van Langendonck for 2nd place. For his first season in OK-Junior, Craigie was delighted to be on the podium, while Van Langendonck reassured himself by taking the series lead from Schaufler.
A magnificent duel took place for 5th place, which narrowly went to American Jack Iliffe (Forza Racing) at the expense of Dutchman Rocco Coronel (Victory Lane) and Japan’s Kosei Oguma (AKM Motorsport). Coronel had hoped for a better result, but lost a number of places in the scramble at the start. Oguma eventually finished P8, with the top ten completed by a young Swiss driver on the rise, Paul Andriotis (RFM). The biggest comeback came from Spaniard Christian Costoya (Parolin Motorsport), who climbed from 35th to 13th place behind China’s Jiang Hou Zai (RFM) and Great Britain’s Asher Ochstein (CRG Racing Team). On the other hand, there were disappointments for Australian William Calleja (Parolin Motorsport), P2 after the Qualifying sessions, and for Poles Kacper Rajpold (Koski Motorsport) and Borys Lyzen (Sodikart), who started the Final race P6 and P8 respectively.