FORMULA
3 GRAND PRIX
Sunday, November 16
Heat Two
Weather: Dry and overcast
NICOLAS
LAPIERRE CLAIMS VICTORY IN 50th MACAU GRAND PRIX
Frenchman
Nicolas Lapierre won one of the most dramatic Macau Grands
Prix for years on Sunday, after Japanese F3 champion James
Courtney was left heartbroken when he crashed out of the lead
with just four laps to go in the second heat after suffering
a puncture.
Courtney
had stormed away from pole position and, after holding off
intense pressure from fellow front-row starter Lapierre in
the early stages, he appeared to be well on his way to a victory
in the 50th running of the event. But on the 11th lap, as
he held nearly a two-seconds lead, a stray piece of carbon
fibre punctured one his tyres and he hit the barriers on the
way out of the Melco Hairpin. The crash ripped off the right-front
suspension and his race was over.
That
left the way clear for Lapierre, who had originally qualified
fourth for heat one, to grab a brilliant victory over his
Signature Plus team-mate Fabio Carbone. Lapierre was overjoyed
with the victory and said: "It was a very difficult race
because James was really quick. I pushed really hard in the
early stages to put some pressure on him. I didn't see what
happened to James but I am just so happy."
Carbone
had had a difficult afternoon after beginning the first heat
from pole position. He had damaged his front-wing in the first
race, after a brush with Ryan Briscoe, but still held on to
finish fourth. At the second start, he stayed out of trouble
in an incident-packed first lap that led to the Safety Car
coming out.
Robert
Kubica had crashed at San Francisco Bend and, as he bounced
into the track, several cars crashed in avoidance, including
American Richard Antinucci who had finished third in the first
heat.
Hamilton
briefly ran third behind the Safety Car, after somehow avoiding
most of the carnage, but he had picked up a puncture from
a collision with Antinucci and eventually dropped down the
order on the restart at the beginning of lap three. That left
the way clear for Carbone, who was not too disappointed at
missing out on the way. He said: "I am happy for the
team and my team-mate that they had great results. Pole position
and second place from the Macau Grand Prix is nothing to be
unhappy about."
Third
place went to Japan's Katsuyuki Hiranaka, who had managed
to stay out of trouble for the afternoon. "In Macau anything
can happen, so I just waited to see what happens," he
said.
Issued
on behalf of the Macau Grand Prix Committee by PR Plus Limited
|