2004
Avon Tyres British Formula Three Championship - Round 9,
Snetterton, Norfolk, June 5th/6th
© Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
Race
Report:
Weather: fine, sunny.
This is not Snetterton - this is Silverstone (or rather
this is the race that should have been held at Silverstone,
but that had to be abandoned after a deluge of biblical
proportions flooded the circuit and we all went home early
instead). Everybody clear about that? Good! Although Snetterton
is so much shorter than Silverstone, the two circuits have
something in common in that they are flat, ex-airfields
that can produce some stunningly dull races, where things
become processional almost immediately and then nothing
at all happens. This wasn't one of those races.
Perhaps in a moment of prescience, Marko Asmer (Hitech Racing)
opted to start from the pit lane. As it turned out, it was
probably the safest place to be. At least it kept him out
of the way of the mayhem that broke out shortly after the
lights turned green. At the start, Will Power (Alan Docking
Racing) briefly edged ahead, but couldn't hold it and would
return almost at the back, while Nelson A Piquet (Piquet
Sports) grabbed the lead on the run up to Sears, getting
ahead for the first time this season. Meanwhile, current
series leader - and after the qualifying sessions for Rounds
9 and 10 possibly the Most Unpopular Man in the Paddock
- James Rossiter (Fortec Motorsport) made an awful start,
losing significant amounts of ground before the field even
reached Riches. Meanwhile, Ernesto Viso (P1 Motorsport)
was floundering around near the back of the field and very
nearly collected Barton Mawer (Performance Racing) as he
did so.
Of course all of this played right into Piquet's hands,
and he gratefully took a hold of the lead, despite the best
efforts of Adam Carroll (P1 Motorsport), who clearly also
thought he could use a win this weekend! Anyway, after some
reshuffling, the front-runners seemed to settle, with Danilo
Dirani (Carlin Motorsport) and Lucas di Grassi (Hitech Racing)
fighting to be second fastest Brazilian of the afternoon
(as well as 3rd placed on the track). At the moment, that
was going Dirani's way. However, things were falling apart
further down the order. In the Scholarship Class, Vasilije
Calasan (Promatecme F3) and Barton Mawer (Performance Racing)
got tangled up on the approach to Riches. The result of
this was that Calasan exited stage left, while Mawer continued,
but in possession of a wishbone that was now shaped more
like a banana than anything that belongs inside a chicken.
A side effect of this was that Stephen Jelley (Performance
Racing) also went off, his car disappearing so far into
the cornfield that only the top of the roll bar was visible
once it stopped. It was all getting a bit agricultural.
And that, in effect, was that for the Scholarship Class,
the battle ending before it could even begin. Ryan Lewis
(T-Sport) must have been laughing all the way to the chequered
flag and yet another class victory.
Two laps later and Rossiter was out of the running too.
He'd only been 14th anyway, but that wasn't the point. A
clash with Karun Chandhok (T-Sport) saw the end of the series
leader's race, and afterwards several people came to thank
the Indian for removing their least favourite person. A
bit harsh perhaps
A lap later, and we'd lost Marko
Asmer (Hitech Racing) too, and there were so many cars littering
the countryside that the only thing to do was scramble the
Safety Car while a cleaning up operation was mounted.
And so they settled in behind the Safety Car, as the circuit
sprouted SC (Someone's Crashed?) boards and yellow flags.
Piquet was leading from Carroll, Dirani, di Grassi, and
Danny Watts in the Lola-Dome, which appears to be well suited
to the Norfolk track. In 6th was Alvaro Parente (Carlin
Motorsport), from Fairuz Fauzy (Menu Motorsport), the Malaysian's
change of number (from 6 to 39) appearing to have also produced
a change of fortune for him. In 8th was Clivio Piccione
(Carlin Motorsport), from Andrew Thompson (Hitech Racing)
and Will Power (Alan Docking Racing). In 11th was James
Walker (Hitech Racing), the Englishman still looking to
score his first points of the season. On 12th was a deeply
dispirited Will Davison (Menu Motorsport), just ahead of
the hero of the hour, Chandhok. Lewis was next up, leading
his class, while Ernesto Viso (P1 Motorsport) was busy trying
to recover lost ground and rejoin the Championship Class
runners. 2nd in the Scholarship Class was Adam Khan (Alan
Docking Racing), with Mawer hanging on to 3rd despite the
pain in his hand, and the state of his Dallara's suspension.
Bringing up the rear, as usual, was Ajit Kumar (Mango Racing).
The Bollywood actor looked as if the shooting schedule he
is saddled with - and the consequent jet-lag - was taking
its toll, and he looked less confident even than normal.
Anyway, three laps behind the Safety Car passed with little
excitement (apart from Power, who had a brief moment of
madness and nearly drove into Walker, having apparently
forgotten they were all behind the Safety Car). At the restart
Piquet controlled it beautifully, despite anything Carroll
could dream up in the way of overtaking manoeuvres. And
as far as the battle at the front went, Piquet would have
it all his own way to the chequered flag. Carroll wasn't
about to throw away his first podium for what must have
felt like a very long time by doing something silly. And
the one chance he got, he found Kumar (who was busy being
lapped) in his way.
The pair behind him, however, seemed to have no such reservations
Dirani was hanging on to 3rd place, but di Grassi really
wanted to take it of him. It took him another 10 laps after
the removal of the Safety Car, but eventually he forced
a way through, making it to the bottom step of the podium
at last. Behind him Watts ran a lonely race, with Parente,
Fauzy and Piccione not far behind, but not close enough
to be any threat. Thompson came home in 9th, but the real
battle was for the last point and 10th place. Initially
this was just down to Power and Walker, the youngster trying
all sorts to dive past the Australian, and repeatedly finding
that Power was having none of it. As a result, Davison was
able to catch up too, turning it into a three-way fight
before they were done. When Chandhok lost the next place
to Viso, it became a four-way scrap instead. It had the
look of a tussle that could end in tears, or at least in
gravel. Walker made a series of mad lunges before it was
all over, but he was now having trouble with Viso, so that
in effect saved Power from much more annoyance. Not that
10th place was about to make him very happy at all.
And in the Scholarship Class, Lewis coasted home ahead of
Khan, Mawer and the lapped Kumar. Apart from the early laps
it was a typically dull Snetterton race. Maybe it would
stay that way, and we could all avoid any unpleasantness.