British
F3 International Series Press Day, Silverstone, March 16th
2005
© Lynne Waite and Stella-Maria Thomas
Weather:
changeable (starting dry and ending up damp and nasty).
Someone told Ronayne O'Mahony (Fortec Motorsport) that it
would be the wettest day of the year. At first it seemed as
if his flatmates might just be winding him up, but as the
day wore on it began to look as if it might be true. It was
certainly pretty grim by mid-morning. The teams had all been
asked to set up and look professional, and some of them had
even managed it. Of the teams that were looking especially
good, Carlin and Fortec both seemed very neat and tidy, as
did P1. Performance Racing was also looking very smart.
Sadly the same could not be said of newcomers Räikkonen
Robertson Racing, henceforth to be known as Double R Racing.
They were not looking at all impressive, but they had good
reason. Most of their kit hadn't arrived yet (they should
be called Repossessed Retro Racing, according to Team Manager
Anthony "Boyo" Hieatt). However, just because they
looked messy, doesn't mean we should write them off. For one
thing, half of last year's Carlin boys seem to be working
there, and for another they have a couple of promisingly quick
drivers. Daniel Clarke, 2004 Formula Ford Festival winner,
has been notably quick on occasions in the past, though he
seems to have a tendency to lose his head more often than
you might expect. If he can calm down and think all the time
he may do well. In the second car is Bruno Senna, one of the
few drivers who kept a cool head in the Macau Formula Renault
race last year (thus finishing on the podium instead of in
the Armco). He's fresh from Formula BMW, and knows that the
pressure will be on simply because of who he is. It's fair
to say that the family resemblance is alarming when he has
his helmet on and the visor up, and all you can see are his
eyes and nose. Meanwhile, he's keeping his head down and trying
to learn. Meanwhile, he's keeping his head down and trying
to learn.
Over at Carlin, Dave Lowe was looking somewhat stressed. As
the new Team Manager he feels he has to win it for Trevor
Carlin (now Technical Director of Jordan/Midland/Whatever
they're called now). With Trevor on an aeroplane bound for
Malaysia, it's all down to Lowe to get it right. He was not
being helped by the fact that not all of his drivers were
in place yet (or rather they were all present, it was just
that not all of them had cars to drive yet). Christian Bakkerud
seems to be more than a little insane, but in our experience
this is perfectly normal for Danes; he seems cheeky and outgoing,
and as he's in agreement that Tom Kristensen is a fine person,
we were off on the right footing there. He also seemed to
be getting the hang of F3 quite quickly, though he wasn't
as fast as his new team-mate, Charlie Kimball. Kimball is
much quieter, and seemed to be taking a studious approach
to things, poring over the data logging long into the afternoon,
end expressing disappointment at only being third fastest.
He might, perhaps, have been happier had he been the fastest
rookie. He certainly seemed to be settling in well, and thus
far prefers the smooth style of an F3 car over the rough-and-tumble
of Formula Ford (at least last year's version of it). Keiko
Ihara, on the other hand, was never very effective in Formula
Renault (though to be fair she wasn't completely useless either),
and can, I think, best be regarded as part income generator
for the team (she has sponsorship from a cosmetics company)
and part publicity stunt. She is also, at 31, the oldest driver
in the formula. It would be nice to think she might turn into
an effective driver, but somehow it seems unlikely.
The fastest woman is surely going to be Suzie Stoddart, the
rapid young Scot delighted to have moved up the ladder at
last. She was slightly embarrassed to drop her Alan Docking
Racing car in the gravel during the session, but at least
she wasn't alone. Her National Class team-mate, Jonathan Kennard,
also collected a large amount of gravel thus putting a premature
end to his session. The other Championship Class ADR runner,
Juho Annala, on the other hand, stayed out of trouble, though
he wasn't too happy with his turn of speed (he spent a lot
of the session in the garage, but seemed unable to grasp the
idea that garages don't tend to go very fast), and doesn't
like Silverstone one little bit. Still, as he said, at least
one car was still in one piece.
Returning to the fray after a long absence was Edenbridge
Racing (Champions way back in 1995 with Oliver Gavin). After
a number of years away from F3 in a variety of other series,
they are back with a Macanese driver, Lou Meng Cheong. One
of the difficulties he is likely to face - apart from not
knowing any of the tracks - is his lack of English. Using
an interpreter who is not a racer, and therefore doesn't understand
the concepts he's having to translate into Mandarin, probably
won't make communication much easier. Sadly, it also looks
as if he could do to be one hell of a lot fitter; he's somewhat
wider than the average F3 driver at present.
At the very sharp end of the time sheets was Marko Asmer.
The Estonian appears to have got his focus back now, and as
the only driver to have stayed in the same team as he drove
for in 2004, he must start the season with a tremendous advantage.
It remains to be seen whether he and Hitech Racing can make
the most of the head start they have, but judging by his relaxed
demeanour and his pace during the morning, it may well be
on the cards for them this year. He was run a close second
by Mike Conway in one of the Fortec Motorsport cars, the rookie
Englishman spending a lot of time staring off into space and
not communicating with anyone outside the team. Altogether
less successful was O'Mahony. He made a nonsense of it early
on and ended up being brought back in the rescue vehicle,
his car dangling sadly from a forklift appliance on the circuit
tractor. He was deeply embarrassed and ended the day last
of the Championship Class runners. The two team-mates couldn't
have had more varied fortunes. Tim Bridgman, in the second
of the Hitech cars, was also faring much worse than his team-mate
(Asmer), but at least he couldn't be blamed for his lack of
pace. A clutch failure sidelined him early on, and by the
time the car was even close to fixed the weather turned against
us and no one was going anywhere fast (or even slow).
The latest Lola is in the hands of P1 Motorsport, with Roly
Vincini taking on Danilo Dirani to run in the latest challenger
to the might of Dallara. In addition to the personable Brazilian,
he has a National Class Lola for Mexican Salvador Duran. While
Danilo set a fine pace, Duran was confined to the pits once
the weather turned nasty, because "Roly says I can't
go out because he thinks I am crazy!" This, from the
team boss who ran Ernesto Viso last year! This is some sort
of crazy we are not at all anxious to find out about, though
the lad seems friendly enough. He admitted he'd had a bad
year last year in Formula Renault in Italy and Europe, and
seems set to run for two seasons in British F3. He has the
backing, which is more than can be said for some. He was second
fastest in class, but he was outpaced in the course of the
morning.
The fastest man in the National Class was the tall Indian,
Suk Sandher. He was hoping to impress his potential sponsors
to the point where they would put their hands in their pockets
and stump up a budget for him. Certainly between Sandher and
Performance Racing they did all that they could. If the money
men weren't impressed they should have been. Fingers crossed
that having recently seen the debut of the first Indian driver
in Formula One, they may feel they'd like another one sometime
soon.
Of the remaining three Championship Class runners, James Walker
(Fortec Motorsport) was the fastest, having swapped teams.
He's one of only three Class A runners from 2004 (Dirani and
Asmer are the others), so in theory he's also at an advantage,
at least during the early stages of the season. Ryan Lewis
seemed to be struggling somewhat in the only T-Sport car,
and almost certainly won't have things anywhere near as easy
this year as he did in 2004 when he controlled the Class B
championship from start to finish, only occasionally losing
out to arch-rival Stephen Jelley. Jelley is back too, having
moved up to the Championship Class with Menu Motorsport. Unfortunately,
Jelley has lost ground already after writing off the first
Dallara chassis in a somewhat bizarre accident at Snetterton
a couple of weeks back. A minor off was the cause of his troubles;
driving back on to the track in order to get underway again,
the floor caught on the kerbs and was ripped off, taking the
seat-belt mountings with it, and totally destroying the chassis.
The second car, luckily, was on its way from the factory,
but of course all the set up work needs to be done again.
It wasn't what the driver/artist needed at this stage, but
hopefully his talent will show through and allow him to catch
up.
There are other drivers out there too, with Charlie Hollings
finally getting as far as F3 after a career in Formula Fords
and Renaults that seems to have lasted forever. He takes over
Promatecme F3's 2004 Lola-Dome to compete in the National
Class, and was well ahead of West countryman Josh Fisher,
the Team SWR driver making the step-up from Formula BMW. It's
going to be quite a learning curve for him and the team. Another
driver who isn't going to find this year easy is Nick Jones,
the American/Welsh driver also stepping up to F3 with Team
SWR. The third of the SWR cars, a Lola-Dome, was driven by
Gavin Halls.
|