The Lotus E20 showed its potential early in the season when Grosjean qualified third for the
Australian Grand Prix. However, the team would go on to experience a difficult season in which they never quite made the most of the car's potential, let down by poor race management and frequent entanglements in on-track incidents. Despite predictions that the team would be competing for race wins — if not the
Drivers' and
Constructors' Championships' — as early as April, the team would remain winless by October. Grosjean's strong performance in qualifying for the race in Australia came to nothing when he made contact with
Pastor Maldonado on the second lap and retired on the spot. Räikkönen, who had struggled in qualifying and started the race from seventeenth place, made the best of a bad situation to finish the race seventh. The team fared little better in the next race in
Malaysia; both Grosjean and Räikkönen qualified comfortably inside the top ten, but Grosjean made contact with
Michael Schumacher on the first lap and slipped down the order before spinning off, while Räikkönen was given a grid penalty for an unscheduled gearbox change and had to fight to recover to fifth. The team's troubles continued in
China; once again, both drivers qualified inside the top ten, but Räikkönen's race was compromised by poor tyre management and he lost eleven positions in a single lap. Grosjean, on the other hand, managed a clean race and was rewarded with his first points in Formula One. The
Bahrain Grand Prix represented a breakthrough for the team, with both Räikkönen and Grosjean finishing the race on the podium behind race winner
Sebastian Vettel. Both drivers had challenged Vettel for the lead over the course of the race, and while neither managed to catch the reigning World Champion, it was an encouraging sign for team, and one that they would back up at the next race in
Spain, with Räikkönen scoring his second consecutive podium after attempting a daring strategy in which he tried to force race winner
Pastor Maldonado and
Fernando Alonso to drive beyond the life expectancy of their tyres. Räikkönen ran out of laps before Maldonado and Alonso ran out of grip, and the
2007 World Champion finished third, with Grosjean fourth. The team's fortunes came crashing back down to earth in
Monaco when Grosjean was at the centre of a first-lap accident that put himself, Maldonado,
Kamui Kobayashi and
Pedro de la Rosa out of the race. Räikkönen, meanwhile, struggled after losing valuable track time during Friday practice, as he was unhappy with parts introduced onto the car for the race. He qualified eighth and went on to finish the race ninth. The team's poor form in Monaco proved to be an exception, rather than the rule, as Grosjean went on to finish the
Canadian Grand Prix in second place after race leaders Alonso and Vettel fell victim to the ultra-sensitive
Pirelli tyres; Grosjean later admitted that he had not thought a podium was possible until he found himself running second with three laps left to run. Räikkönen, on the other hand, missed out on a spot in the top ten on the grid, and so had to work his way up from twelfth to eighth. Grosjean was in contention for his maiden race win in
Valencia after an alternator failure forced race leader Sebastian Vettel to retire. Grosjean kept pace with new race leader Fernando Alonso, only to fall victim to the same alternator failure seven laps later. Räikkönen, meanwhile, took advantage of this to finish the race second behind Alonso. The
British Grand Prix proved disappointing for Lotus, with Grosjean spinning off during qualifying and Räikkönen struggling with the wet conditions. In the race, Grosjean made contact with
Paul di Resta on the first lap; di Resta retired, while Grosjean was forced to pit for a new front wing, shuffling him back down the order to twenty-third. He later recovered to finish sixth behind Räikkönen, both drivers having struggled to match the leaders for pace all race long. Both drivers struggled in qualifying for the
German Grand Prix, with Räikkönen starting tenth after being caught out by heavy rain in the middle of the session, and Grosjean managing no better than fifteenth. Räikkönen, however, recovered in the race to finish fourth, inheriting a podium when Sebastian Vettel was given a twenty-second post-race penalty for passing
Jenson Button off the circuit. Grosjean, meanwhile, finished eighteenth, a lap behind race winner Alonso. The team bounced back once again in
Hungary, with Grosjean qualifying on the front row and finishing third after the team managed to find a strategy for Räikkönen that saw him steal second place away from his team-mate. Disaster struck in
Belgium. Grosjean was once again involved in a first-lap incident when he cut across the circuit at the start, clipping
Lewis Hamilton and being launched into Alonso and
Sergio Pérez. The violent nature of the accident led to the stewards handing down a one-race ban for Grosjean. but expressed disappointment with the result given his previous achievements at
the circuit, including four wins in five starts. With Grosjean forced to miss the
Italian Grand Prix, the team drafted their testing and reserve driver,
Jérôme d'Ambrosio, to drive car #10 for the race. around at the start of the
Japanese Grand Prix. Grosjean returned to the car in
Singapore, and once again out-qualified Räikkönen, starting eighth while his team-mate could do no better than twelfth. In the race it was Räikkönen who performed better, finishing sixth, a second ahead of Grosjean. Despite not having won a race by this point, Räikkönen remained in championship contention, sitting in third place, forty-five points behind championship leader Fernando Alonso. While Alonso's nearest rival, Sebastian Vettel, would make significant in-roads into Alonso's championship lead in
Japan, Räikkönen went on to finish sixth after making contact with Alonso during the start that forced the Ferrari driver out of the race. Grosjean, on the other hand, was once again caught up in a first-corner melee, making contact with
Mark Webber and earning a ten-second stop-go penalty for his troubles, the harshest in-race penalty available to the race stewards. With eight first-lap incidents from fourteen starts to his name in 2012 alone,
Red Bull Racing team principal
Christian Horner opined that Lotus "needed to control" Grosjean, describing the Frenchman as dangerous to himself and others. Both cars finished in the points once more at the
Korean Grand Prix, with Räikkönen and Grosjean finishing where they started in fifth and seventh place, but the team lost further ground to
Red Bull Racing and
Ferrari in the World Constructors' Championship. The team scored another double points finish two weeks later in
India, with Räikkönen finishing seventh — having spent much of the race stuck behind
Felipe Massa — and Grosjean climbing from eleventh to finish ninth overall. Räikkönen would later claim that a podium finish was possible, but mistakes made during the final free practice session and qualifying cost him dearly. One week later in
Abu Dhabi, Räikkönen picked up two positions off the start line to be second as the cars began their first lap, inheriting the lead when
Lewis Hamilton's
McLaren developed a terminal electrical fault that forced him out of the race. Räikkönen held onto the position for the remainder of the race despite a late challenge from
Fernando Alonso, finally winning
Lotus' first race in 2012 six months after it had been predicted. Grosjean, on the other hand, was involved in early contact that forced him to pit to repair damage. He recovered to fifth, but retired when
Sergio Pérez veered sharply onto the circuit after being forced off by
Paul di Resta. Pérez and Grosjean made contact, pushing Grosjean into the path of
Mark Webber, and the two retired with collision damage. The team were unable to continue their winning form in the
United States; despite Räikkönen's surprise at a strong qualifying performance when both he and Grosjean had struggled for grip throughout free practice, any potential for a podium finish was lost when Grosjean spun early in the race and a clutch problem held Räikkönen during his one and only pit stop. Räikkönen and Grosjean went on to finish in sixth and seventh places respectively, while Lewis Hamilton's race win put third place in the
World Constructors' Championship out of Lotus's reach. The team scored just a single point at the
final race of the season in Brazil, when Räikkönen finished tenth. Grosjean spun out and crashed heavily early on in difficult conditions, while Räikkönen made a poor tyre choice and fell down the order. He was later running as high as sixth, but lost a considerable amount of time in a bizarre incident where he left the circuit and attempted to re-join using the support paddock pit lane, only to find that the way was blocked, which forced him to turn around and re-join the circuit another way. He recovered to eleventh, which became tenth when
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