British
F3 International Series, Round 20, Mondello Park, Ireland,
September 17th/18th 2005 © Lynne Waite and Stella-Maria
Thomas
Weather:
Cool. Cloudy.
Qualifying
Report:
Possibly because most of the fast times were set in the first
part of the morning session, there was a mass rush for the
pit lane exit at the start of the qualifying session for Round
20. This time Ronayne O'Mahony (Fortec Motorsport) was first
out of the pits, and onto the track, but this didn't make
him especially fast. Instead, Danilo Dirani (P1 Motorsport)
was the first man to present himself as a target this time.
He quickly found he had Mike Conway (Fortec Motorsport), Steven
Kane (Promatecme F3) and Stephen Jelley (Menu Motorsport)
trailing in his wake and looking very keen to get ahead if
they could. With 18 of the 23 runners out on the track, the
times started to come down very quickly indeed. The changes
kept on coming, with Conway leaping ahead next, trailing Dan
Clarke (Double R Racing) and Dirani. That put Jelley to 4th.
He wouldn't stay there for long, but he was enjoying it while
it lasted. It lasted all of a lap, before Charlie Kimball
(Carlin Motorsport) grabbed pole, followed by Ryan Lewis (T-Sport).
Meanwhile, the battle for National Class looked like it was
over before it had begun. Salvador Duran (P1 Motorsport) reckoned
he'd made a mistake or two in the morning session and he didn't
intend to repeat any of them this time round if he could help
it; sitting in 6th overall, it didn't look like he was going
to.
Just ahead of him, the fight for overall positions was still
raging. Bruno Senna (Double R Racing) was now joining in as
well, the young Brazilian slotting in to 4th place. However,
they were all surprised by Alvaro Parente (Carlin Motorsport),
the 2005 champion starting his latest lap in 19th place and
finishing it in 2nd. It was quite a performance. The next
thing anyone knew, Conway was ahead of Kimball for pole, and
Jelley had slipped past Parente to move into 3rd. It was beginning
to look like it might be Jelley's best performance of the
season, or any season for that matter. Just to prove it wasn't
over yet, Kimball went back to pole, and Parente, in a display
of solidarity, took the other front row slot. No doubt Trevor
Carlin would have been delighted if the session could have
ended then. Sadly for him, it didn't.
In the pitlane an absolutely furious Kane had got himself
caught behind a badly located GT car that was blocking his
exit. After some frantic gesticulation, Kane finally got out
and took off onto the track leaving a trail of rubber as he
accelerated away. In the meantime, while the aggravated Ulsterman
charged round, Parente put in a bid for pole, only to find
he had Lewis go with him for 2nd. As Kane crossed the line
to complete his latest flying lap, however, notice was served
that he was hoping for a second pole position. It was a wild
lap and it earned him 6th place. He dived off to the first
corner with renewed determination. As he was busy with that,
Dirani went to pole, but he was no match for Kane. The next
time round he'd wrestled the Lola to pole position and would
never be threatened again. The battle would now be for 2nd
and the rest
Actually, the battle was about to go off the rails, but not
before a few more people had improved. One of them was Charlie
Hollings (Promatecme F3). The Yorkshireman seemed to be in
a lot of trouble for the greater part of the session, but
he suddenly leapt up the order to 3rd in class. Even so he
was a very long way behind Duran; and he was also caught up
in a tussle with Barton Mawer (T-Sport), who really wants
to take the fight back to Duran for the series lead. It didn't
take the Australian long to get ahead, leaving Hollings to
try and overhaul him again. It was highly entertaining stuff!
Eventually, however, someone was going to come a cropper,
and - to no one's great surprise - that someone was Nick Jones
(Team SWR). He spun out of contention (not that he's ever
been in contention) and by the time he'd sorted himself out
everyone else seemed to go slightly mad. While Conway claimed
5th place from Kimball, Hollings also went faster though he
couldn't get on terms with Mawer. And his chances were further
hampered by the fact that a series of incidents saw the red
flags finally brought out to bring the session to a temporary
halt with a little under ten minutes left to run. Duran had
finally paid the price for pushing too hard and had come off
at the first corner. Meanwhile, Karl Reindler (Alan Docking
Racing) had also come a cropper, despite running much better
than he had in the first session. The final casualty was Christian
Bakkerud (Carlin Motorsport), whose Mugen-Honda had cried
enough and dropped bits of itself everywhere.
The order at this point was Kane, from Dirani, Parente, Lewis,
Conway, Kimball, Jelley, Duran, Bruno Senna (Double R Racing)
and James Walker (Fortec Motorsport). 11th was Dan Clarke
(Double R Racing), Marko Asmer (Hitech Racing), Reindler,
Jonathan Kennard (Alan Docking Racing), Bakkerud, O'Mahony,
Mawer, Hollings, Juho Annala (Alan Docking Racing) and Josh
Fisher (Team SWR). The usual suspects brought up the rear
in the shape of Keiko Ihara (Carlin Motorsport), Cheong Lou
Men (Edenbridge Racing) and Jones.
At the restart there was even less activity than there had
been in the morning's session. In fact, it was pretty much
a waste of effort, despite Parente leaving in a flurry of
squealing tyres and frantic engine revs. He was back a lap
later, and sat out the rest of the session. The only change
of any significance to come was from Asmer, who moved ahead
of Clarke, but he'd only done enough for 11th place. Admittedly
after the morning session it was a huge improvement, but he
wasn't exactly impressed.
And so the chequered flag came out. Kane was again on pole,
from Dirani, Parente, Lewis, Conway, Kimball, Jelley, Duran,
Senna and Walker. 11th was Asmer, ahead of Clarke, Reindler,
Kennard, the unfortunate Bakkerud, Hollings, O'Mahony, Mawer,
Fisher and Annala. Ihara, Jones and Cheong will start from
the back.
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