50th
Macau Grand Prix - Macau, China, November 13th/16th, 2003
© Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
Macau
Grand Prix Leg 2 (Sunday November 16th):
Weather: Warm, muggy, overcast. Light rain on the grid.
Once again, perhaps inevitably, one of the drivers in the
50th Macau Grand Prix tried to take himself out of contention
on the formation lap. This time it was Hiroki Yoshimoto
(Swiss Racing Team) who was left looking foolish after he
knocked the front wings off his Dallara before the race
had even begun. Luckily he hadn't done any further damage
and the team had plenty of time to fix the problem before
the race start, which was a long way off as first there
was a lion dance and then the drivers had to be lined up
to meet various local dignitaries before they could even
think about getting back in their cars.
With the rain seemingly holding off despite some damp patches
on the circuit, the second and final leg of this remarkable
race finally got underway. James Courtney (Tom's) made the
most of his pole position to get away cleanly when the lights
went green. Behind him, Nicholas Lapierre (Signature Plus)
also held position just behind the Australian. Lewis Hamilton
(Manor Motorsport) astounded the spectators with a daring
move to grab 3rd place. For a rookie, this was the performance
of a lifetime. Elsewhere Lei Kit Meng (Manor Motorsport)
and Jo Merszei (Alan Docking Racing), the local heroes in
this race, were in the middle of the grid by virtue of having
stayed out of trouble in the first leg, and were both anxious
not to get in the way of the visitors. As a result we were
treated to the rather odd spectacle of two cars pulling
over to the side and waiting for everyone else to go through.
This is not something you see every day!
However, others were not so fortunate. Having survived the
mayhem that was the first leg, Richard Antinucci (Hitech
Racing) found that his luck had run out and he hit the wall.
Arriving at Sao Francisco to find the American in his way,
Robert Kubica (Target Racing) joined him in the wall, along
with Antinucci's teammate Andrew Thompson. Hamilton was
clipped by the American's wing, as well as a lot of other
flying debris, but managed to cling on to 3rd through it
all, and the survivors soon found themselves lining up behind
the Safety Car. Although the wreckage was again removed
in a very efficient manner, it still took two laps to clear
away the debris. While the mopping up operation was in progress,
the order behind the Safety Car was Courtney, Lapierre,
Hamilton, Fabio Carbone (Signature Plus), Katsuyuki Hiranaka
(Prema Powerteam), Rob Austin (Menu Motorsport), Ernesto
Viso (Promatecme F3), Robert Doornbos (Menu Motorsport),
Ronnie Quintarelli (JB Motorsport with Inging) and Ryan
Briscoe (Prema Powerteam).
At the restart a number of things rapidly became obvious.
The major one was that the first lap incident would have
more repercussions than were immediately apparent. The first
major consequence came when Hamilton discovered he'd picked
up a puncture. As the lights went green and the Safety Car
pulled in to the pits, Hamilton had to pull over and allow
Carbone through before limping into the pits himself.
At the front Courtney had to defend himself from a very
determined onslaught from Lapierre, who really wanted the
lead and was trying all sorts to get it. Meanwhile, Viso
had also gone out of the race with damage sustained from
debris, which left the Menu cars of Austin and Doornbos
slugging it out, the former hampered by no longer being
in possession of a full set of front wings. He wasn't the
only one either. A little further back, young Nico Rosberg's
Carlin Motorsport Dallara was also looking decidedly used,
though as at Pau it didn't seem to be slowing him down any.
At the head of the field, Lapierre was almost underneath
Courtney's rear wing as they arrived at Melco each time,
though on the straight sections Courtney was able to make
use of the Toyota engine's superior straight line speed
compared to that of Lapierre's Renault power unit, and would
break away only to be reeled back in again as Lapierre set
a new fastest lap of the race. Courtney promptly responded,
by going even faster and trying even harder to pit some
space between himself and Lapierre, and was finally able
to break the tow. After that he started to pull away, putting
in some remarkable lap times as he headed for what looked
like being his second win of the day.
Further back in the order there was an equally absorbing
battle in progress, although it wasn't anywhere near as
fast as the fight for the lead. It did involve a gaggle
of drivers who had been less than lucky in the first leg.
It seemed to start with Rosberg charging up the order while
Austin slipped down and developed a traffic jam all his
own as he struggled with a car made difficult by the lack
of most of his front wing. The similarly-hampered Finn was
scrapping furiously with Danny Watts (Alan Docking Racing),
and had Fairuz Fauzy (Promatecme) right with him, until
the Malaysian pulled off and out of the race, limping into
the pits, a victim of on-track debris.
Meanwhile Carbone was looking like he was about to be disqualified.
At the end of the Safety Car period it appeared he had overtaken
Hamilton before they crossed the start/finish line and the
race went live again. He was handed a drive through penalty,
which he appeared to be ignoring, though it later became
clear that the penalty had been awarded erroneously. Hamilton
had slowed right down as the puncture that put him out of
the race made itself felt, leaving Carbone no choice but
to pass him. All was well at Signature after all. Carbone
responded by setting a new fastest lap, though Lapierre
almost immediately improved on that and started reeling
Courtney back in again. The Frenchman was soon close enough
to think about passing and as the pair reached Lisboa he
took a good look. Courtney shut the door very firmly, and
tried to find a way to respond.
A little further down, the other Aussie, Briscoe, was making
good progress and had made his way up to 7th, mainly by
keeping his head and staying out of trouble, something that
had clearly not occurred to the mob bottled up behind Austin.
There were oil flags out at various points on the circuit,
to say nothing of a rash of yellows, which was hampering
them all somewhat, though it ceased to matter to Alvaro
Parente (Carlin Motorsport), as he pulled into the pits,
his race run.
Rosberg, meanwhile, was trying all sorts to get past Austin,
only to lose out to Nelson Piquet Jr (Hitech Racing), leaving
the older members of the press corps wondering if this was
some sort of strange flashback! With Piquet no longer attacking
him, Rosberg could concentrate on Austin, which can't have
made Austin too happy. Rosberg edged alongside but couldn't
quite make it to start with, but almost immediately came
back again, finally squeezing through to leave his nose
wing end plate stickers flapping, having tried to leave
them stuck to Austin. With only half a front wing of his
own, Austin was now in real trouble, and was immediately
passed by Watts and César Campanico (Signature Plus).
As Piquet broke away, Rosberg made a mistake and went missing,
ending up in the barriers after an entertaining but ultimately
fruitless drive. Watts was now at the head of the hideous
mess in the middle, and some of the pressure was taken of
when Austin finally pitted, though his team waved him straight
back out again.
Courtney was now on a serious charge, setting the fastest
lap of the race, managing somehow to go even faster than
he had in the morning's race (when he was almost a full
second faster than anyone else). He had been convinced all
weekend that a lap under two minutes and thirteen seconds
was possible, and now he had proved it. It was a stunning
effort and it really looked as if he was clear of Lapierre
too. Then, to the amazement of the Frenchman, Courtney hit
the wall at Melco, the result as it turned out of a piece
of carbon debris puncturing one of his tyres. The suspension
was heavily damaged and the bodywork deranged and Courtney
was out of the race in the most heartbreaking way, leaving
a stunned Lapierre leading from Carbone, with Doornbos now
in 3rd place and in sight of the podium. Things seemed to
be much calmer now, probably because there were hardly any
cars left in the race, and the ones that were now had a
lot of space around them. Even so, there was another retirement,
this time Marco Bonanomi (Target Racing) was out but he
had been so far back that it really made no difference to
anyone except him and the team. Pierre Kaffer (Superfund
TME Racing), meanwhile, was on the move, and was after Tatsuya
Kataoka in the remaining Tom's. The German was piling the
pressure on, and was giving the Japanese driver a very hard
time in his efforts to grab 6th place. That suddenly became
5th two laps from the end when Doornbos' luck turned cruel.
A gearbox failure, on top of the driveshaft failure in race
one, was almost too much for the Dutchman to bear and he
was obviously deeply distressed at having a podium placing
taken from him through no fault of his own. This promoted
Hiranaka to an unexpected third place, a long way ahead
of Quintarelli, while Kaffer was now 5th after pulling a
very fine move on Kataoka, who promptly crashed out on the
last lap, perhaps in solidarity with team mate Courtney.
It meant that Tom's went home with nothing, while Signature
Plus took the first two places, Lapierre becoming both the
youngest ever winner of this event, and the first rookie
since David Coulthard to take the title. It would be a long
time before he would stop smiling afterwards, though there
was a brief tearful moment on the podium.
Paulo Montin (Three Bond Racing), here for the umpteenth
time, took 6th, from Briscoe, Piquet Jr, Campanico and Watts,
with Courtney setting the fastest lap in a time 2:12.937,
a mind-boggling average speed between these unforgiving
walls of 102.98 mph.