2004
Avon Tyres British Formula Three Championship - Round 6,
Croft, Yorkshire, May 1st/2nd
© Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
Race
Results:
Weather: Sunny/cloudy, dry, windy.
The race started with a dilemma - or at least it did if you
were the marshal appointed to be the start judge, but you
were also the marshal who was supposed to stand at the back
of the grid with a flag and stop Ryan Lewis (T-Sport) from
moving until 10 seconds after the rest of the grid had gone
(he'd been penalized after the rear wing of his car failed
scrutineering after qualifying). Needless to say, the start
took place without any officials watching the front of the
field to see what they were doing. This series needs more
marshals, and it needs them soon.
Even if no one was watching, it made no difference to Danilo
Dirani (Carlin Motorsport). He'd already had one win today
and he wasn't going to miss his opportunity to take another
one. The lights went green and - despite wheelspin - the Brazilian
was off, closely followed by Ernesto Viso (P1 Motorsport)
and Will Davison (Menu Motorsport). One threat soon fell by
the wayside though; this time around James Rossiter (Fortec
Motorsport) did an even better job of disproving his theory
that left-handers don't crash, when the poor deluded boy only
got as far as the first corner, ending his race underneath
the Dallara of Will Power (Alan Docking Racing), who didn't
seem to be too impressed, judging by the rather graphic gestures
he was making in the general direction of Rossiter. The upshot
of all this was that Dirani's start was of purely academic
interest, as the Safety Car was scrambled and took up the
lead at the end of lap 1. Behind the top 3, Lucas di Grassi
(Hitech Racing) was 4th, from Clivio Piccione (Carlin Motorsport),
Adam Carroll (P1), Karun Chandhok (T-Sport), Marko Asmer (Hitech),
Nelson Piquet (Piquet Sport) and Andrew Thompson (Hitech).
In 11th was Fairuz Fauzy (Menu), ahead of Danny Watts in the
Lola-Dome (Promatecme F3), while the Scholarship Class leader,
Barton Mawer (Performance Racing) headed his team-mate, Stephen
Jelley, who seems to suffer from an odd compulsion to let
other people win! Marcus Marshall (Fortec) was trapped between
the two of them and another Scholarship Class runner, Vasilije
Calasan, in the second Promatecme car, thus proving that there
is insufficient luck to stretch round all the Aussies in the
category at present. There were another couple of interlopers
in among the Scholarship Class boys in the shape of Matthew
Walker (Fortec), and Alvaro Parente (Carlin), the latter having
been caught up in the Power/Rossiter debacle and having just
managed to survive it. Adam Langley-Khan (Alan Docking Racing)
was next up, from Ajit Kumar (Mango Racing) and of course
the resulting delay allowed Lewis to catch up with the field
easily. Some drivers have all the luck, and Lewis would appear
to be among them.
Considering Piquet had started 12th, he was at least now in
the points. However, that was soon of little consolation to
him, and a lap later he was out of the game, pulling over
with a dead car, an earth lead having come loose. It was to
be hoped that his team would keep him away from sharp instruments
for the rest of the day; his mood hadn't been good before,
and now he was completely disconsolate. It took a second lap
behind the Safety Car while the debris was cleared away, and
then things gout underway again. Dirani's restart was superb.
He'd got a taste for being at the front and he wasn't about
to let it go, whatever Viso and Davison tried. And before
long they were too busy fighting each other to notice that
the Carlin car was beginning to leave them behind - again.
It was probably just as well that the cluster of drivers behind
(di Grassi, Piccione, Carroll, Chandhok, Asmer, Thompson,
Fauzy and Watts) seemed to be glued together at that point,
and couldn't concentrate on the duo fighting for second. Parente,
meanwhile, had started to carve his way back through the field,
making short work of Walker, before setting about Marshall,
who also failed to offer much resistance. Jelley decided it
wasn't his fight, and let the Portuguese go, which was sensible;
a lap later Mawer did the same, preferring to concentrate
on his possible class win. With all that going on, it was
possible to miss that at the back, Lewis was in pursuit of
the class lead if he could get it. He'd started by dispatching
Kumar. He dropped his wheels in the dirt to do it, but it
didn't seem to slow him down much, and he was soon breathing
Langley-Khan's exhaust fumes, trying to find a way past. Despite
suggestions from Adam's dad that this would be easy and Lewis
wouldn't be held up, it turned out rather different, as Langley-Khan
resisted for all he was worth, blocking Lewis ruthlessly for
what must have felt like a very long time. Finally he had
to bow to the inevitable, though not before he'd put up quite
a fight.
Parente's cause was aided in no small way by what was happening
at the front, when Carroll pitted and Viso speared off into
the field a lap later, thus causing the second complete wash
out of the day for P1. Viso clambered out of his car and then
flopped down in the long grass, too furious to go far. Davison,
meanwhile, gratefully accepted 2nd place though it seemed
unlikely that he would be able to catch Dirani. Suddenly,
life was much quieter.
Parente's comeback drive seemed to have stalled now, though
there was some amusement to be had watching Walker and Marshall
squabbling for places, Marshall losing out in the end. Lewis
took a while to catch up but he was now behind Calasan, having
finally disposed of Langley-Khan. The Frenchman was unable
to stop him coming through, and he was now 3rd in class, but
he had Marshall and Walker in the way before he could get
to Jelley and Mawer. As it was, Walker passed Jelley and later
Mawer, and Marshall edged ahead of Jelley a little later.
Which gave Lewis a clear run at the second placed Scholarship
Class runner. Having been demoted by Lewis more than once
already this season, Jelley was having none of it this time
and put up a spirited resistance for what remained of the
race.
Someone else who wasn't about to let anyone through was Watts,
who now had Parente all over the back of him, the Portuguese
deciding that having got back into the points positions, he'd
like more than just one, thank you very much. Unfortunately
for him, Watts had other ideas. The next thing anyone knew,
there were cones flying everywhere, and Alvaro backed off,
deciding it probably wasn't worth the pain for one more point.
And that really was the end of the excitement, as cooler behaviour
set in and everyone finished pretty much as they were.
A second win (coupled with another point for fastest lap)
means that Dirani now tops the table on equal points with
Piquet, but technically in the lead as he has more race wins
(two to Piquet's none). Davison took an impressive 2nd place,
from di Grassi, Piccione, Chandhok (who was much happier afterwards),
an increasingly confident looking Asmer, Thompson, Fauzy,
Watts and Parente. Walker was just out of the points in 11th,
while the Scholarship Class victory went to Mawer, from Jelley,
Lewis, Calasan, Langley-Khan and Kumar. Marshall was still
mixed in with them and followed Mawer home, which, as neither
of them have been here before, may well have been a case of
the blind leading the blind.
Next
Races: Rounds 7 & 8, Knockhill, Scotland. May 15th/16th.
Note: Round 4 now scheduled for Snetterton, Norfolk. June
5th.
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