British
F3 International Series, Rounds 1 & 2, Castle Donington,
April 2nd/3rd 2005
© Lynne Waite and Stella-Maria Thomas
Weather:
Cool, sunny.
Notes:
Another year, another season and here we all are again. And
after the sodden unpleasantness of the Media Day in March,
the first qualifying session of the newly named British F3
International Series was held in sunny - albeit chilly - conditions.
Of course, some people didn't get much of an opportunity to
appreciate the weather. With a field full of rookies, and
a number of new teams, there was always going to be scope
for mayhem. The first of the rookies to embarrass himself
was Charlie Kimball (Carlin Motorsport), the American skittering
off into the gravel before the session was five minutes old.
It was odd really; he'd been looking very impressive in testing,
and he seems pretty steady usually, but there he was in the
gravel at Coppice, doomed to sit out the rest of the session.
He'd set a time, but it wasn't a fast one, and the result
was that he ended up starting his first F3 race from a very
distant grid slot.
Meanwhile, Steven Kane (Promatecme) was trying to ignore his
exhaustion, as he pushed his new Lola to its limits. As the
car had only arrived a week before, everyone, including the
driver, had been working flat out into the wee small hours
every night to get ready. At this point it was uncertain whether
the gamble would pay off or not. Certainly Kane was quick
straight off, though the car looked to be something of a handful,
to put it mildly. Another returnee, Marko Asmer, was soon
on the pace, the Hitech Racing driver really trying this year,
after what could only be described as a very up-and-down year
in 2004. He was being hotly pursued by Fortec Motorsport's
Mike Conway, the debutant from Formula Renault settling in
well in his new formula, snatching an early provisional pole.
Meanwhile, in the National Class, Australia's Barton Mawer
(T-Sport) was starting out as he intended to continue. Apart
from having provisional class pole, he was 4th overall. It
looked as if this might be one of those years when the National
Class cars (formerly known as Class B, or as Scholarship Class)
would prove capable of getting on terms with the A class (now
known as Championship) Class runners.
The battle for the front row was a long way from over of course.
Bruno Senna was the next to show his hand. The Double R Racing
Brazilian was looking impressive, but he wasn't the fastest
Brazilian, and wouldn't be either if Danilo Dirani had his
way. P1's Lola was looking good, and Dirani was looking very
smooth as he powered through the corners. The order now was
Conway, from Daniel Clarke in the second of the Double R Dallaras,
while Dirani was 3rd, ahead of Asmer. Fifth now was Ryan Lewis
(T-Sport), the 2004 Championship Class champion wanting to
prove a point now he's up against a lot more opposition.
Elsewhere, Josh Fisher (SWR Pioneer) was now heading the National
Class times, while Dirani grabbed overall pole, and showed
every sign of wanting to hang on to it. A lap later he went
even faster, and although it wouldn't move him any further
up the order, it did at least make him look as if he was in
control. Susie Stoddart (Alan Docking Racing) was beginning
to settle in, though at present she was only 9th. That wouldn't
be to the young Scot's liking at all. She was just behind
Kane, and then the two of them were pushed back a place each,
when James Walker (Fortec Motorsport) leapfrogged them. It
was just as well things were changing mid-field because at
the front Dirani was proving utterly unshakable. It wasn't
that unexpected really, though the pace of the Lola might
well have shaken a few people. If you'd been paying attention
last year, this really shouldn't be a surprise. In Danny Watts's
hands, the car had been steadily improving, and towards the
end of the season it was always there or thereabouts. It'll
be interesting to see what happens this year if the Lola continues
to impress. Back when the Dallara was merely an experiment
in many peoples' eyes, it took about half a season for everyone
to ditch their Reynards, Ralts and whatever as soon as the
Italian marque started to look unbeatable
Meanwhile, Senna was still attempting to impress, and he was
certainly drawing attention to himself, though not necessarily
for the right reasons. Pushing as hard as he could, the young
Brazilian came haring round to break the timing beam, and
while he improved his times to take 4th on the grid, he also
spun as he crossed the line, flat-spotting his tyres and putting
an abrupt end to his session. A lap later he meandered into
the pits somewhat sheepishly, where presumably he got something
of a talking to from team boss Anthony Hieatt. He couldn't
go out again if he was to have decent condition tyres available
for the race, so presumably that may be a lesson well-learned.
While Asmer joined Dirani on the front row, driver after driver
was giving up the unequal struggle, and were pitting. The
National Class was still wide open though, with Salvador Duran
(P1 Motorsport) now claiming pole, though he would have it
taken off him again by Performance Racing's Suk Sandher, the
Indian then being demoted by Mawer, who in turn lost out to
Fisher. Just as it seemed the session was gaining momentum
again, Ricardo Teixeira, Carlin Motorsport's only National
Class runner, managed to run out of brakes. The Angolan was
stranded at McLeans, and the yellow flags slowed everyone
right down. This left Dirani very much in charge still, ahead
of Asmer who had at least closed the gap right down, from
Conway, Senna and Lewis.
Another improvement from Asmer saw him edge ahead of Dirani,
only to have the Brazilian come back at him in the closing
stages. This wasn't going to plan as far as Marko was concerned
It wasn't going to plan for Kane, either, as he limped round
to the pits suffering from gear selection problems. The shift
was proving very stiff, and it looked as if the car was still
in need of quite a bit more work to get it race ready. It
would leave him further down the order than he really wanted
to be, way back in 13th. And so, as the flag dropped, Dirani
was a very happy pole man. Asmer was 2nd, and Conway and Clarke
took the next row. Senna was disappointed in fifth, while
Lewis was 6th, just ahead of Tim Bridgman. There were an awful
lot of rookies occupying the first few rows, which didn't
bode too well for the race come Sunday. Walker was next up
in 8th, while Christian Bakkerud (Carlin Motorsport) was 9th,
the Dane having been ill most of the week. For a man who'd
missed testing because of a stomach bug (which also knocked
around 5 lbs of his less than considerable body weight), he
wasn't doing too badly.
Joining the ranks of the disappointed was Stephen Jelley (Menu
Motorsport), the Englishman having all sorts of trouble with
his Dallara. Regardless of what the team did, there was a
mysterious misfire plaguing them, and the thing simply wouldn't
accelerate. It would be sometime on Saturday night that they
would isolate and cure the fault. 11th was Stoddart, who would
undoubtedly like a teammate to help with the set up, but is
unlikely to get that advantage any time soon.
12th overall, and on National Class pole, was Fisher, ahead
of Kane, Mawer, Sandher and Duran. 17th - 5th in class - was
Charlie Hollings, another Lola runner. The Promatecme team
seemed to be having trouble communicating with him, however,
judging by the frantic arm waving going on from the pit wall
when they wanted him to come in. Another on the sick list
was Ronayne O'Mahony (Fortec Motorsport). Having gone down
with tonsillitis earlier in the week, the Irishman had gone
three days without solid food, so he was more than a bit light-headed,
and probably not really in any condition to be out there.
18th was the best he could manage. The Alan Docking Racing
National Class pair of Jonathan Kennard and Juho Annala was
next up, both of them circulating together for much of the
session as they tried to learn the circuit. They were still
quicker than Keiko Ihara (Carlin Motorsport), the Japanese
woman not showing any more pace than she did in Formula Renault
way back. The final places went to Nick Jones (Team SWR Pioneer),
a deeply embarrassed Kimball, Edenbridge's Macanese driver,
Lou Meng Cheong, and the unfortunate Teixeira.
It looked as if Sunday's first race of the season could prove
to be interesting, and not necessarily in a good way
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