2004
Avon Tyres British Formula Three Championship - Round 8,
Knockhill, Fife, May 15th/16th
© Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
Race
Report:
Weather: fine, sunny.
Round 8: Well, what can we say? At the moment it seems as
if the repercussions from this one are going to run and run.
The one thing it did do of particular note (in a "Well,
we've never seen that happen before!" fashion) was to
unite the disparate group of individuals who own/run the Formula
Three teams - with the exception of Fortec's Richard Dutton,
but more of that later.
Initially things looked to be pretty normal. When the pit
lane opened for 10 minutes prior to the grid forming up Stephen
Jelley (Performance Racing) and Ernesto Viso (P1 Motorsport)
were the first drivers out there, keen to make sure their
cars were fine after a rebuild of most of the suspension and
an engine change respectively between races. Ryan Lewis (T-Sport)
was another with a rebuilt car, so he was out fairly early
on too. Anyway, they all seemed to be OK, and so the grid
formed up and set off on the formation lap, at which point
we lost Marcus Marshall (Fortec Motorsport), the red Dallara
grinding to a recalcitrant halt coming out of Clarks and having
to be pushed away behind the barriers, where it would stay
for the rest of the race. As it turned out, that may have
been the best place to be.
When the lights finally did turn green, Adam Carroll (P1)
made a good start to try and make up for a dreadful qualifying
session, but the real blinder came from Will Davison (Menu
Motorsport). Stuck in 10th place on the grid - and having
scored precisely no points in the first race of the day -
he'd decided he had nothing to lose, so he went for it, and
although he didn't seem to make up much ground immediately,
by the time they headed into Duffus he was ideally placed
to slingshot round the outside of not one, not two but three
of his fellow competitors, snatching 7th place from under
the noses of the Carlin Motorsport men, Alvaro Parente, Danilo
Dirani, and Clivio Piccione. At the front, James Rossiter
was upholding Fortec's honour all on his own, and despite
wheel spin he was in the lead by the time they reached Duffus
Dip. Will Power (Alan Docking Racing) was again the bridesmaid,
hanging on grimly to 2nd despite everything Nelson A Piquet
(Piquet Sports) could think of to stop him. Lucas di Grassi
(Hitech Racing) had crept at the start and then hauled on
the anchors, which meant he was still in 4th at the end of
the first lap, with Karun Chandhok (T-Sport) and Viso scrapping
over 5th. Behind the Davison/Carlin trio, Carroll was holding
off the attentions of Marko Asmer (Hitech Racing) and Andrew
Thompson (Hitech), the two of them staging a re-run of the
morning's battle for points. Barton Mawer (Performance) was
leading the Scholarship Class from Jelley, though he didn't
have to worry about Jelley for long, the latter staggering
past the pits a lap later with a terminally sick car, which
ended up parked on the side of the track. The result of Jelley
parking where he did was an initial outbreak of yellow flags
at Duffus, though it didn't stop Parente from going after
Davison, who in turn was attacking Viso. While Lewis was coming
up from the back of the field and trying to pass Adam Khan
(Alan Docking Racing), while Khan wrestled with a broken front
wing, in the middle of the field Piccione was all over Dirani,
and you could be forgiven for forgetting they're in the same
team; they certainly seemed to have done. Meanwhile, Vasilije
Calasan was awarded a drive through penalty for jumping the
start, but his chances of actually coming in were looking
slim, as the Safety Car was finally scrambled to allow Jelley's
car to be moved to a safer position.
And this was when the trouble really started. Certainly there
was nothing wrong with the actual Safety Car process, which
was handled very well. In fact it may well be the fastest
Safety Car laps imaginable. In fact it was so fast in the
hands of Gordon Shedden that it looked as if it was about
to off once or twice. No, the trouble started when several
drivers appeared not to have seen the warning signals, and
went shooting past those who were slowing down as instructed.
One of the worst offenders was Asmer, who made up a handful
of places and then had to drop back. Ajit Kumar (Mango Racing)
also failed to notice the flags, but he was already so far
back that it really didn't matter. And so, the order behind
the Safety Car was Rossiter, from Power and Piquet. Di Grassi
was 4th, ahead of Chandhok, Viso, Davison, Parente, Dirani
and Piccione. In 11th, Carroll headed Asmer, Thompson, James
Walker (Hitech Racing), Fairuz Fauzy (Menu Motorsport) Mawer,
Lewis, Khan, Calasan and Kumar. And that's how it stayed till
Lap 10, while Jelley was retrieved on a flatbed truck and
the officials assured themselves that the track was now clear
enough to race on. The Safety Car lights went out on Lap 11
and Shedden pulled off neatly, at which point instead of accelerating
Rossiter hauled on the anchors. Unfortunately most of the
people behind him didn't, which meant there were cars all
over the place as they all tried to avoid each other. For
a few brief and horrible seconds the pit wall was a very bad
place to be. The reaction of most team personnel can be summed
up in the words of Russell Eacott of T-Sport. "I could
see cars everywhere and I thought f***ing hell! We're all
going to die!" Once the dust had settled, and Piquet
and di Grassi had also slammed the brakes on, sending a ripple
effect back through the field, there was obviously going to
be trouble over that, or at least lively discussion. While
Rossiter was informed by his team that he should never do
that again (well, the Clerk of the Course ordered them to
tell him that), Shedden was already back in action, leading
the field round.
This time Calasan and Khan had clashed at the Hairpin, leaving
Calasan stuck on the kerbs again, and just to put the kibosh
on a really rotten afternoon, Carroll ran foul of a kerb at
MacIntyres. Just before the Safety Car picked them all up
again, they were still mostly going far too fast into the
Hairpin, especially considering that there was a car stuck
half way onto the track, and there were marshals trying to
deal with it. It looks as if it's time for a serious talk
about driving standards as a whole, with particular reference
to one or two individuals. The situation wasn't in any way
improved by the fact that there was dust and rubbish all over
the track now, most of it apparently bits of broken wing.
Oh, and Kumar was missing part of his nose, though you had
to wonder how he'd managed to go fast enough to do that amount
of damage. Now Shedden was again bouncing the Safety Car over
the kerbs - they'd be lucky if it had any brakes left by the
end of the day - so at least someone was enjoying themselves.
Behind him, the order was now Rossiter, from Power, Piquet,
di Grassi, Chandhok, Viso, Davison, Parente, Piccione and
Dirani. Thompson had inherited 11th and was still ahead of
Asmer, Walker and Fauzy. Lewis was now leading the Scholarship
Class, having got the drop on Mawer at the first restart,
while Kumar was in front of Khan. Five laps later and the
carnage was all cleared away. So what happened next? For some
reason, Rossiter did exactly the same thing again. This time,
at least Power and Piquet were expecting it, and so they backed
off too. Unfortunately, this time Davison and Viso (who were
too far back to know what had caused the chaos the first time)
both went for it. In the ensuing mayhem, Mawer went off at
MacIntyres, though he was able to come back on in last place,
trapped behind Khan, who was by now missing most of his front
wing (and the rear wing was no longer looking too pristine).
However, just because Khan now had the world's most evil-handling
Dallara, didn't mean he was about to let Mawer back through.
The Carlin battle wasn't over yet either, with Parente having
yet another go at Piccione as soon as the opportunity presented
itself. In addition, Chandhok was showing a fine turn of speed
as he tried everything he could think of to get past di Grassi.
He was probably being spurred on by the sight of Viso looming
large in his mirrors, and who could blame him for that? And
behind Viso, there was a lot of dust and smoke, mostly being
created by the Carlin boys. Parente had another go at Davison,
while Piccione went on the attack again, but only succeeded
in breaking his front win against Dirani's rear wing, going
off and losing ground. Thompson and Asmer were still battling
it out in the mid-field, when Walker tried to go up the inside
of both of them. It was clearly never going to work, and it
wasn't made any easier by the fact that he suddenly encountered
Piccione, who was falling back now. With Asmer treating the
Dallara as if it was a very wide Formula Ford, Walker wasn't
coming through any time soon, even after he'd disengaged from
Piccione. The Monegasque's race was almost over anyway, as
it turned out. With two laps left to run, he was passed by
Fauzy, and a lap later he pulled into the pits and out of
the running. There really was nothing to be gained from staying
out. He was out of the points and the car was damaged. Maybe
he was just practicing for the Porsche Supercup in Monaco,
which he's been invited to participate in.
And apart from the Mawer/Khan battle, the remaining excitement
would almost certainly take place in the Clerk of the Course's
office later. But first, the battle for the Scholarship Class
podium. Khan's car was now lifting in the twistier parts of
the circuit, there was so little wing left he was running
out of downforce. However, he was still trying to hang on,
finally going off after a somewhat ill considered blocking
attempt on the Australian. The resulting yellows at Duffus
would probably have led to a third Safety Car period had there
been more than a couple of laps left to run. As it was, it
was all over bar the shouting; and there would be a lot of
that. The order as they crossed the Start/Finish line for
the last time was Rossiter, from Power and Piquet. Di Grassi
was fourth, ahead of Chandhok, Viso, Davison, Parente, Dirani
and Thompson. Asmer again just missed out on a point, while
Walker and Fauzy brought up the rear. Lewis, the bulletproof
man, took another Scholarship Class victory from Mawer and
Kumar. There were no other finishers, with points for fastest
lap going to Piquet and to Lewis.
Shortly afterwards, the fastest moving thing was the queue
of team bosses outside Ian Watson's office wanting to protest
about Rossiter. Oddly enough, the one thing he had managed
to achieve was an unusual degree of unity among a normally
disunited and factious lot. Apart from that, Khan was waiting
to protest Mawer, though it should probably have been the
other way round. Latest news suggests that the results will
remain provisional until a stewards meeting at Snetterton
in three weeks time. There is to be an investigation into
driving standards behind the Safety Car (whereas it might
be better to investigate what happened immediately after the
Safety Car periods). Apparently Rossiter has been fined, as
has Power (presumably for declining to run into Rossiter),
but everything is subject to appeal. We could all be a lot
older by the time we get the result of this one.
Next
Races: Rounds 4, 9 and 10, Snetterton, Norfolk, June 5th/6th
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