51st
Macau Grand Prix - Macau, China, November 18th/21st 2004
© Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
First
Qualifying (Thursday November 18th):
Weather: Warm, sunny.
After
a rain of Renaults, and a fairly messy local touring car race,
the first official qualifying session for the 51st Macau Grand
Prix finally got underway a mere 15 minutes later. With sunny
skies and dry weather set in for the day, (and hopefully the
weekend) conditions were as close to the optimum as they were
likely to get on this tricky street circuit. As a result there
was a long line of F3 cars waiting to go out on the track
by the time the green lights went on and the cars were released
onto track. The green flag symbol came up on the timing screens,
but for some reason the officials in the pit lane were rather
slow to get the message. Still, with 45 minutes to go, it
probably wouldn't matter too much at the end of the day. One
of the questions in everyone's minds was what sort of pole
time we could expect. Fabio Carbone (Three Bond Racing) was
in the low 2 minutes 13 seconds bracket last year, and was
two seconds slower this morning (though still fastest overall
by a good half second from Richard Antinucci, racing with
TOM'S this year after a year in Japan). With lots of traffic
to contend with you needed a lot of luck and a clear lap,
which might explain why Loïc Duval (Signature) was clearly
in no rush to go out, letting most of the rest of the field
go before he emerged from the pits.
Getting out there in the crowd could get you in serious trouble,
or at least make you look a bit stupid, as demonstrated by
Kazuki Nakajima (TOM'S), who shot off up the slip road at
Lisboa Bend and had to be hauled back.
Danny Watts (Hitech Racing) and Marko Asmer (Carlin Motorsport)
were the first to set times but they weren't doing anything
special yet; meanwhile Lewis Hamilton (Manor Motorsport) banged
in a 2:16 on his very first lap, while Jamie Green (ASM Formule
3), Alexandre Premat (ASM Formule 3) and Franck Perera (Prema
Powerteam) were all close to his time. Asmer was quickly up
there too, but Hamilton was flying. Meanwhile, Giedo van der
Garde (Signature) had made a bit of a fool of himself and
crashed out on his out lap at San Francisco. With the wheels
off the car on one side, he was clearly not going anywhere
fast. Meanwhile, Hamilton, Green and Robert Kubica (Manor
Motorsport) now made up the top three, and they were all in
the 2.16s, where they were rapidly joined by Carbone, who
leapfrogged to the top of the order, only to get shoved back
when Hamilton found a couple of seconds from somewhere, and
set a 2:14! Elsewhere, James Rossiter (Signature) had been
last all bar his stricken teammate, but then he shot up the
screen to go 6th.
With Hamilton ahead by over 1.5 seconds, the session was red
flagged after Eric Salignon (ASM Formule 3) crashed out at
Maternity Bend, and had to be retrieved. So with 34 minutes
left to run, everyone trundled back to the pits while cleanup
operations were instituted. The order at this point was Hamilton,
Premat, Carbone, Green, Kubica, Antinucci, Rossiter, Ronnie
Quintarelli (Inging), Marchy Lee (Meritus) and Lucas di Grassi
(Hitech Racing).
And pretty much as soon as they got going again we had more
mayhem with another of the sort of used car parks that you
so often get at Melco Hairpin. Except that the driver that
started it, Kubica, got out of his car in the middle of the
track, abandoning the wreckage for the marshals to deal with.
With another two cars involved - those of di Grassi and Daisuke
Ikeda (Swiss Racing Team) - it took a while to clear the mess
away and get most of the field moving again, Green being the
first man to squeeze past and go on his way. As a result of
all the mayhem, and that fact that the track wasn't clear,
it was very hard for anyone to improve. Hamilton certainly
didn't seem to think there was much point staying out there
while the mess was being cleared away. As a result, the mid-part
of the session proved singularly uneventful in terms of improvements,
with most people diving into the pits for new tyres, taking
advantage of the self-imposed pause. Meanwhile, Katsuyuki
Hiranaka (Prema Powerteam) was able to make the first improvement,
moving up to 9th, but otherwise there was not much going on
out there. And then, with the track clear, and the Yokohama
tyres nicely warmed up, the timing screens went mad. First
Parente jumped to 6th, then Watts made a tremendous effort
to 2nd, although he was still over half a second adrift of
Hamilton. The next change came when Nakajima snatched 4th,
just ahead of Adam Carroll (Menu Motorsport), who seems to
have settled in nicely on this demanding circuit. Nico Rosberg
(Opel Team Rosberg) then flexed his muscles to claim 3rd,
while Perera was able to improve to 6th. Quintarelli was another
to join the lemming-like rush up the order, and was now 4th.
So, with slightly over a third of the session to go, Hamilton
led, from Watts and Rosberg. That soon changed, however, with
2nd and 3rd going to Green and Parente, which meant Watts
was 4th, from Rosberg and Quintarelli. Nakajima then showed
that he's more than a chip off the old block, by slotting
into 5th place. And he was joined on the 3rd row by Duval,
who was almost immediately demoted a place by Naoki Yokomizo
(Inging). Nakajima immediately leapt up a place, only to find
he had Rosberg ahead of him in 3rd. Meanwhile, Perera and
Antinucci finally managed to join the top 10. And then it
all fell apart yet again. This time it was Parente in the
wall at Teddy Yip Bend with terminal damage to the car. And
so, with 10 minutes left to run, the session was once again
red flagged while the overworked (and possibly overwrought)
marshals rescued yet another batch of F3 boys.
At this stage the order was still Hamilton on provisional
pole, from Green, Rosberg, Quintarelli, Parente, Nakajima,
Yokomizo, Perera, Watts and Antinucci. At the restart it quickly
became apparent that most people had either given up or their
tyres were shot. There were few changes, although Carbone
appeared to still have something in reserve. The only question
was would it be enough? At least he was now backing in the
top 10, with 8th place. The trouble was that Hamilton had
now managed a 2.12 second time and was absolutely flying.
He was beginning to look unstoppable, which should be no surprise
to anyone who saw what he was capable off last year. He was
now 1.3 seconds faster than Green, who seemed to have run
out of answers. So Carbone had a go, upping the ante to go
2nd, less than a second behind Hamilton, who wasn't going
to take that lying down. Green, meanwhile, dug deep to take
2nd back, though he was still a long way off Hamilton's time.
Further down the order, Adam Carroll was now 9th looking steady
on his debut here, while Watts had dropped to 10th. And then
Hamilton went even faster, making you wonder what he was capable
of. While all this was going on at the front, Antinucci joined
Carbone on the 2nd row, and as the chequered flag came out
Watts grabbed 5th.
And so, with the second session to be run tomorrow afternoon,
the provisional order is Hamilton, Green, Carbone, Antinucci,
Watts, Rosberg, Perera, Nakajima, Quintarelli and Parente.
11th was Carroll, from Rossiter, Prémat (who suffered
a puncture at a critical stage), Yokomizo, Duval, a severely
spooked Nelson Piquet (Piquet Sports) who couldn't seem to
cope with the Melco Hairpin at all, Rob Austin, (Menu Motorsport),
Hiranaka, Ho Pin Tung (Hitech Racing) who appears to have
become Dutch again, having been Chinese for a couple of years
when his handlers thought it might be financially advantageous,
and Kubica.
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