50th
Macau Grand Prix - Macau, China, November 13th/16th, 2003
© Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
Second
Qualifying (Friday November 14th):
Weather: Warm, sunny, slightly overcast.
If the F3 drivers had behaved reasonably in yesterday's free
practice, they didn't in this morning's session, with cars
hitting the barriers all over the shop. The first one came
about 5 minutes in (Naoki Yokomizo [JB Motorsport with Inging]
hit the barriers at Dona Maria) and it all fell apart from
there. As a result, and because a number of the Porsche drivers
were once again trying to modify their cars to make them look
like VW beetles, there were a lot of delays and by afternoon,
we were already 25 minutes behind schedule.
The temperatures were up on Thursday, which suggested this
might be a much slower session, though at Macau you can never
tell. Pierre Kaffer (Superfund TME Racing) clearly thought
it was going to be a faster session and came in very early
on for fresh rubber, while other drivers had opted to try
and save two sets of tyres for the two legs of the race on
Sunday. It didn't immediately seem to have done the German
any good, and no one else was showing signs of improving either.
Despite the lack of extra speed, there was a great deal of
close formation running going on out there, because this is
one of those places where you really do need a tow if you
want to be quick. There also seemed to be an element of follow-my-leader
going on with the more experienced of the drivers being followed
by those who didn't know their way round.
The first improvement finally came from Robert Kubica (Target
Racing), though given where he'd ended up the day before it
would have been hard for him not to improve Ryan Briscoe (Prema
Powerteam) was another to begin progressing when he shot up
the order to 10th overall. Meanwhile Fairuz Fauzy (Promatecme
F3) managed to bend the front wing of his car against the
wall at Police, but at least he kept going. Another to improve
was Hiroki Yoshimoto (Swiss Racing Team SRT), going from 27th
to 20th.
Lewis Hamilton seemed to be finding his feet at last, and
a quicker time saw him improve to 15th. It wasn't what he
was hoping for but for a driver with so little experience
in the Formula it was a good result. You just couldn't get
him to believe it! Jo Merszei (Alan Docking Racing) also improved
his time but, unsurprisingly, remained last. Kubica was now
looking like he would soon move into the top 20, while Richard
Antinucci (Hitech Racing) dug deep to get a 2.14. He was now
6th and looking remarkably confident, a great contrast to
last year.
At the back end of the order Danny Watts (Alan Docking Racing)
and Ernesto Viso (Promatecme F3) were trading places around
23rd place. Viso had the distinction of being the first driver
to be listed on the incident report, having bumped into Rob
Austin (Menu Motorsport) at Melco. He might have been the
first but he wouldn't be the only one.
The next incident came at Dona Maria, when Marco Bonanomi
(Target Racing) hit the barriers and his car had to be removed.
Shortly afterwards, Narain Karthikeyan (Carlin Motorsport)
hit trouble at Police. Not feeling at all well, the car got
away from the little Indian and he just didn't have the strength
to wrestle it back on track. That was the end of his session
though he had at least improved his time first.
Nicholas Lapierre (Signature Plus) was the next to improve,
going up the order to 6th. He looked as if he could manage
more yet. There were a series of offs and resultant yellow
flags, which caused everyone to have to back off. Merszei
threw it off at Lisboa, and then Viso did the same. Briscoe,
who was really pushing now, spun at Fisherman's, clipped the
barrier and had to sort himself out in the escape route. As
Briscoe limped round for suspension repairs (a new wishbone
was needed), Kaffer improved. There were now 25 minutes of
the session left, and Courtney was still leading from Fabio
Carbone (Signature Plus), Kaffer and Tatsuya Kataoka (Tom's).
The tendency to hit things was still proving very pronounced
- Yoshimoto was next, having a spin at Police. While he was
doing that, Hamilton and Lei Kit Meng (Manor Motorsport) both
went off at Lisboa but both managed to miss hitting anything.
Watts finally managed to ease his way into the top 20, while
Austin was still floundering in 26th place. Afterwards he
seemed resigned to his fate. "I've had better days,"
was all he would say. At least his teammate, Doornbos, was
able to improve. Someone had to uphold Menu's honour.
Paolo Montin (Three Bond Racing) improved too to go 8th, while
Nelson Piquet Jr (Hitech Racing) was 9th. The improvements
now started to come thick and fast, with Kubica leapfrogging
to 10th just before Antinucci grabbed 6th, despite an earlier
off at Lisboa. The next one to investigate the barriers a
little too closely was Nico Rosberg (Carlin Motorsport), the
car clipping the wall at Police and having to be pushed on
its away. While the Finn was being removed, Carbone found
a few more tenths from somewhere, while Doornbos improved
to a temporary 4th place. Montin was briefly 5th but Kataoka
took it off him almost immediately afterwards, and Lapierre
shoved Antinucci back to 8th. Doornbos' chances of improving
any further were stymied when he hit the barriers at Lisboa,
and he would slip back to 10th as a result.
With some nice shiny new suspension parts Briscoe was back
in the hunt now, and was 6th, just ahead of Montin. The Aussie
wasn't finished yet either. Kaffer was still looking good
too and shot up to 2nd while Rosberg, spurred on perhaps by
his off, was 4th. Antinucci was briefly 3rd but again there
were more changes to come.
With around 10 minutes left, the order was Courtney, Lapierre,
Kaffer, Antinucci, Carbone, Rosberg, Kataoka, Doornbos, Montin
and Briscoe. Fauzy was now 11th while Piquet was acting as
if the world was about to end because he was only 12th. Montin
leapt back up to 8th while Carbone grabbed pole position from
Courtney who was unable to answer him as the track was crowded
and there was a rash of yellow flags again. Most of this was
because Rosberg was in the barriers at Dona Maria, though
it didn't stop Briscoe making a determined effort on pole,
which proved good enough to put him 2nd on the grid.
The pole man suddenly went missing, crashing out at Sao Francisco,
just as his predecessor Tristan Gommendy did last year - before
going on to win the race. Perhaps it was an omen. And that
was pretty well the end of any improvements, with the exception
of Watts who hauled himself up to 16th, which was a substantial
improvement and probably just enough to land him in the middle
of any first lap mayhem on Sunday.
Afterwards, Carbone was pretty confident that he could add
this race to the Pau and Zandvoort victories that he already
has. Briscoe was pleased with his position, as he should have
been, while Courtney felt he had lost out because the team
had made changes to car despite him asking them not to.
Sunday was going to be very interesting indeed.
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