NEW
F1 SIGNING HEADS UP
STERLING F3 ENTRY
This year's line up
of Macau Grand Prix Formula 3 pilots is one of the most talented and competitive
the event has ever seen, topped by a man who could well be a motor racing
legend in the making, Japanese sensation Takuma Sato.
Sato's signing of
a two-year deal with the Jordan Formula 1 squad this month makes him the
first F1-contracted driver to compete in the Macau Grand Prix for sixteen
years.
The 24-year-old, who
began his racing career only four years ago having attended Japan's SRS-F
school financed by Honda and the Suzuka Circuit, dominated the ultra-competitive
British Championship this year. He won 12 of the 26 races in the series
with the highly successful Carlin Motorsport outfit, as well as notching
up victories in two European F3 international events.
Sato's first race
at Macau was the 1999 Ericsson Formula Challenge Race in an AF2000 machine.
He won that race, but was less fortunate in his first F3 outing at Macau
last year, when he ended his race in the barriers.
He comes to Macau
with unfinished business. As he said of the Macau Grand Prix at Suzuka
earlier this month, "That is the big one for sure. My final target
is obviously to win at Macau."
Although all eyes
will be on Sato this year, the entry list is packed with talent from the
British, French, German, Japanese and Australian series, many of whom
will be determined to give the Japanese a run for his money.
One of the brightest
stars in the line up is Sato's team-mate, Anthony Davidson from the UK.
Davidson was runner up in the British Championship this year in only his
second full season in single-seaters. After an indifferent start to the
year, he set pole position at the Oulton Park meeting in May and was a
winner by the next round at Croft.
Davidson dominated
the FIA International Formula 3 event on the picturesque Pau road circuit
in France in June, and further victories followed. Test work for the F1
BAR team ensued, and confirmation of his seat at Carlin for 2002, makes
the on-form driver a favourite at Macau.
Third in the British
Championship standings is Ulsterman Derek Hayes, who was the man pushing
Sato the hardest at the start of the season. What Hayes has lacked in
outright pace this year, he has more than made up for with startling consistency.
Joining the top three
from the British series will be Italian Gianmaria Bruni, fifth in the
Championship and making his second attempt at victory at Macau, and Guernseyman
Andy Priaulx, who finished 8th last year. Mark Taylor, who has just re-signed
for 2002 with the crack Manor Motorsport team and who took pole position
at the Spa Elf Masters international race, will be making his Macau debut,
as will Frenchman Bruce Jouanny.
Heading the entry
from the German Championship is this year's champion, Japan's Toshihiro
Kaneishi with Bertram Schafer Racing. The final series standings were
undecided until one week ago following an acrimonious finale at Hockenheim.
Going in to the final round, Kaneishi was leading the championship but
his title hopes were apparently dashed when Frank Diefenbacher took the
chequered flag. However, Diefenbacher was excluded from the results following
a protest, an appeal against which was overturned, making Kaneishi series
champion by four points.
Joining Kaneishi in
the BSR line-up will be Italian Enrico Toccacelo, who finished fifth at
Macau last year, and recently won the final round of the Russian F3 Championship.
Another man to watch
will be Team Kolles Racing's Pierre Kaffer, the very same driver that
lodged the protest against Diefenbacher. Kaffer took the chequered flag
in leg one of last year's Macau Grand Prix, and has been on the pace all
season, finishing fourth in the German series.
Also from the German
series will be Joao Paulo de Oliveira with the Swiss Racing Team, Bjorn
Wirdheim and Kosuke Matsuura both with the Prema Powerteam, and Italian
Raffaele Giammaria.
The season has been
a bumper one for Japanese drivers, taking the British, German and French
Formula 3 Championships.
Ryo Fukuda will return
to Macau as French Champion determined to improve on his third placed
finish last year. Fukuda notched up an impressive runner-up spot at Pau,
and was once again on the pace at Zandvoort. He should be a favourite
for victory at Macau with the Saulnier Racing outfit, given his experience
and natural speed.
Also from the French
series comes popular Portuguese racer Tiago Monteiro, returning to Macau
for a fourth time. Monteiro has been a consistent winner in this, his
fourth year in the category, and finished behind Fukuda in the series.
A newcomer to Macau
is Monteiro's team mate, Frenchman Tristan Gommendy.
Another driver who
looks set to be a front-runner is Frenchman Benoit Treluyer, winner of
the Japanese Championship. Treluyer secured a front row slot alongside
Sato at Zandvoort this year, but a stall on the startline put pay to any
thoughts of doing battle against the Japanese, a situation he will be
looking to reverse at Macau.
Series runner-up Paulo
Montin, third at Macau last year, teams up with Macau rookie Sakon Yamamoto
for the two-car Tom's campaign. Fourth placed championship driver Yuji
Ide partners Frenchman and Macau regular Jonathan Cochet with the Signature
team.
The Australian Formula
3 series will be represented by Peter Hackett who will drive the third
Carlin Motorsport car alongside Sato and Davidson. Hackett learned his
racecraft in Australia, rather than in Europe, and will therefore be an
unknown to the rest of the field. He has been a front-runner in the fledgling
Australian series this year and could provide some surprises at Macau.
Closer to home, Lei
Kit Meng, Michael Ho and Jo Merszei will be flying the flag for Macau,
while Hong Kong driver Marchy Lee, who raced at Pau and Zandvoort this
year, will compete in the second Saulnier Racing machine.
The 48th Macau Grand
Prix will be run on November 18, 2001 over two legs of 15 laps each. As
last year, the winner will be the first driver to cross the finish line
at the end of leg two, provided he has completed the maximum number of
race laps over the two legs.
Macau, October 30,
2001
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