51st
Macau Grand Prix - Macau, China, November 18th/21st 2004
© Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
Qualifying
Race (Saturday November 20th):
Weather: Hot, sunny.
There's
always a likelihood of a deadly boring race when the drivers
know they have a second race to get through to determine the
final result. Unfortunately, the qualifying race for the 51st
Macau Grand Prix was eventful from the word go, and not necessarily
in a good way either. It started when Richard Antinucci (TOM's)
was a little slow getting away from his grid slot, and Nelson
Piquet (Piquet Sports) jinked out to pass him. He didn't get
it quite right and tore the left-front wheel off the car.
He limped onwards, but behind him all hell broke loose. Kazuki
Nakajima (TOM's) also bogged down badly at the start, and
was promptly hit by Marchy Lee (Meritus). The great hope of
Chinese motorsport - who may well be Dutch again if the entry
list is to be believed - Ho Pin Tung (Hitech Racing) arrived
on the scene and was launched into the air when he hit Lee,
and the next thing anyone knew, Rodolfo Avila (Carlin Motorsport)
and Eric Salignon (ASM Formule 3) were both in the wall just
after the Start/Finish line.
Almost everyone got out and ran away from the wreckage, apart
from Salignon who remained trapped in his car for what seemed
like a very long time. Needless to say the Safety Car was
quickly scrambled, picking up the leader Lewis Hamilton (Manor
Motorsport), who'd got the jump on the pole man, Robert Kubica
(Manor Motorsport), at the start; by his own admission, the
McLaren supported youngster had frightened his team-mate into
lifting as they approached Mandarin. "It was very scary.
Robert was covering the inside as I got the tow. I pulled
to the left to try and pass him, but there wasn't enough room
to go through side-by-side. I hoped to scare him into lifting,
which he did, though I was sideways
"
With debris everywhere, and the extraction team working to
free Salignon, the survivors were left to pick their way delicately
across the Start/Finish line trying to avoid anything sharp
that might lead to a puncture, before settling in for four
laps behind the Safety Car. The order was pretty well established,
with Hamilton in the lead from Kubica, Nico Rosberg (Opel
Team Rosberg), Alexandre Prémat (ASM Formule 3), Fabio
Carbone (Three Bond Racing), Jamie Green (ASM Formule 3),
Lucas di Grassi (Hitech Racing), Loïc Duval (Signature),
Danny Watts (Hitech Racing) and James Rossiter (Signature).
In 11th was Franck Perera (Prema Powerteam), ahead of Adam
Carroll (Menu Motorsport), Antinucci, Rob Austin (Menu Motorsport),
Katsuyuki Hiranaka (Prema Powerteam), Ronnie Quintarelli (Inging),
Daisuke Ikeda (Swiss Racing Team), Naoki Yokomizo (Inging),
Marko Asmer (Carlin Motorsport) and Matteo Cressoni (Ombra).
Giedo van der Garde (Signature) was 21st, from Alvaro Parente
(Carlin Motorsport), Michael Ho (TME Racing), Lei Kit Meng
(Ombra), Christian Jones (TME Racing) and Jo Merszei (Swiss
Racing Team).
While all this was occurring Piquet had managed to limp round
to the pits, despite the fact that his left front wheel was
no longer properly attached. Whatever the team did, however,
they wouldn't be able to fix the problem in the time available
so he would start Sunday's Grand Prix from somewhere very
close to the back of the grid. Oddly, he didn't seem terribly
distressed by the whole thing.
To the relief of everyone Salignon was finally extracted from
the car and taken to hospital for precautionary observation;
he would later be released with no serious damage. Meanwhile
the wreckage was craned away and cement dust spread everywhere
by the incredibly efficient Macanese marshals. And so, finally,
it was time for the race to go live again, though hopefully
with a little less insanity. If we kept on losing cars at
this sort of rate we'd be lucky to have any left by the time
the Grand Prix came around. As soon as the Safety Car pulled
in, Hamilton floored it, controlling the restart beautifully,
while Rosberg was harassing Kubica for that second place,
taking it from him in a nifty manoeuvre on the run up to Mandarin.
A little further back, di Grassi was seemingly slower than
the men behind him, but he wasn't about to hand over his hard
won place. There was further interest in the mid-field area
too, where Carroll was giving Perera a hard time. He finally
managed to get past before the lap was completed, and then
set about hunting down Rossiter, just to reprise his British
Formula Three season experiences. Elsewhere, Carbone was having
trouble holding off Green, and in fact lost a place to the
Englishman. He wouldn't give up, but he'd have trouble taking
it back.
Apart from Prémat, who was displaying a marked fondness
for scuffing the wall at Maternity Bend, they all seemed much
calmer now. However, you had to wonder how long the French
driver could get away with getting so close to wall. Meanwhile,
Hamilton was busy building up a lead at the front, while Kubica
was having difficulties maintaining station, losing out to
Prémat into Lisboa. That left him to the mercies of
Prémat's teammate, Green, though he wouldn't prove
so successful at overtaking. A last lap lunge came to nothing
and the Polish pole man would come home in 4th place, somewhat
disappointed but philosophical about it. He maintained that
being on the second row of the grid for the Grand Prix was
frequently better than being on the front row, and history
certainly seems to back up this theory. We'd just have to
wait and see. Meanwhile, Prémat was busy setting fastest
lap, while a group of drivers were all bottled up behind Duval.
Included in this gaggle was Watts, who'd managed to rip his
front wing end plates off but was clearly having fun out there.
He now had Rossiter to contend with, and Carroll was just
behind the two of them; it was starting to look like Donington
in July all over again. A lap later and the fastest lap had
gone to Hamilton, who was still pressing on as hard he could,
as shown by the fact that he then went out and set a whole
series of fastest laps up to the end of the race.
Watts, meanwhile, lost his place to Rossiter, which left him
and Carroll slugging it out - the two of them having despatched
Perera in summary fashion - slipstreaming each other down
the straights and scrabbling through the corners in a most
entertaining manner. It all went a bit pear-shaped when Antinucci
tried to join in, having also passed Perera. On lap 7 Carroll
pulled a move on Watts as they headed to Lisboa once again,
and Antinucci was left with nowhere to go apart from up the
escape road. He tried to get going again, but the car had
cried enough, and was removed from the track, leaving the
American to contemplate what might have been. And so, after
10 laps, and some fine driving from Hamilton, he came home
the winner, to claim pole position for Sunday's 51st running
of the Macau Grand Prix. That was the job half done, and Manor
Motorsport were clearly back on form after a somewhat rocky
year in the Formula 3 Euro Series. Rosberg was also impressive
in 2nd place, again on the back of a disappointing year in
the Euro Series. Prémat was the top Macau rookie in
3rd, with Kubica 4th from Green, Carbone, Duval, di Grassi
(highest placed of the British F3 series runners), Rossiter
and Watts. 11th was Carroll, from Perera, Hiranaka, Austin,
Yokomizo, Quintarelli, Parente, Ikeda, Asmer and Cressoni.
After a somewhat torrid couple of days in qualifying van der
Garde actually brought the car home in one piece, in 21st,
ahead of another son of a former F1 World Champion, Christian
Jones. Local boys Ho, Lei and Merszei were the last classified
runners.
The question now was could Hamilton do it again, or would
Rosberg get the drop on him at the line. The Finn hadn't been
pushing especially hard by his own admission, not wanting
to crash out at this point. The Englishman, on the other hand,
had been doing his damnedest to get away from Rosberg, and
was clearly flying this afternoon. Sunday afternoon was either
going to be very destructive or very dull. As this is Macau,
you could probably bank on destructive. You can also pretty
much guarantee that the race would provide its usual selection
of thrills and spills. Watch this space
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