British
F3 International Series, Round 21, Silverstone, Northamptonshire,
October 8th/9th 2005 © Lynne Waite and Stella-Maria Thomas
Weather:
Clear, cold.
Race
Report:
The penultimate round of the British F3 International Series
was held in crisply autumnal weather at Silverstone this morning.
Whatever the weather, things were hotting up before the race
even started. As poleman Charlie Kimball (Carlin Motorsport)
led the field round to take the start, it became apparent
that Steven Kane (Promatecme F3) and Ben Clucas (Fluid Motorsport)
would both start the race from the pit lane, if at all.
With the brand new Mugen-Honda in the back of his Dallara,
all eyes were on Kimball. Along with Kimball making his bid
for Rookie of The Year and for the runner-up slot, this could
also be viewed as the first salvo in the engine wars that
are set to swamp British F3 next year. Ever since Mercedes
announced they would be supplying their all-conquering Euroseries
engine to teams in Britain next year, there's been a great
deal of nervousness in the pitlane. This looks like Mugen-Honda's
answer.
And when the lights went out to signal the start of the race,
Kimball left the line as if he was jet-powered. Behind him
the Double R Racing boys were busy fighting each other; Bruno
Senna made a reasonable start and hacked his was past Dan
Clarke, setting off after Danilo Dirani (P1 Motorsport). Meanwhile,
Karl Reindler (Alan Docking Racing) was hanging on to 6th,
while in the middle of the pack Keiko Ihara (Carlin Motorsport)
managed to spin. Almost everyone missed her except Juho Annala
(Alan Docking Racing), whose race ended abruptly at Becketts.
In the National Class Charlie Hollings (Promatecme F3) was
clinging to his lead for all he was worth, while Barton Mawer
(T-Sport) held off Salvador Duran (P1 Motorsport) in an attempt
to stop the Mexican taking the National Class title. In addition,
Ryan Lewis (T-Sport) was fighting with James Walker (Fortec
Motorsport), but that was for 10th place, and no one was really
looking back there. All eyes were on Kimball.
The American was 2.4 seconds ahead of Dirani by the time they'd
completed the first lap, and he looked like it was an easy
stretch too. It wasn't quite so calm behind Kimball. Lewis,
having gained some ground, promptly threw it all away again,
when he spun off into the gravel at Becketts. That benefited
Christian Bakkerud (Carlin Motorsport), the Dane having started
12th and finding himself 9th.
Someone else throwing themselves around was Duran, who had
a bit of a moment, having discovered there were a number of
damp patches on the track after the overnight rain. He wasn't
the only one. Senna managed to collect a marker and suddenly
lost a whole lot of places, coming round dead last and pulling
into the pits. Kane and Clucas, on the other hand, were both
making good progress through the pack, having easily dispatched
Cheong Lou Meng (Edenbridge Racing) and Nick Jones (Team SWR).
However, no one was as fast as Kimball. Dirani set a race
fastest lap, but Kimball soon wrested it back, and promptly
set fastest lap after fastest lap for four laps in a row,
breaking the lap record on the way. No one looked likely to
get near him; the fight was for second not the lead.
In fact, while Kimball continued on his unstoppable way, there
was a lot of squabbling behind him. Stephen Jelley (Menu Motorsport)
and Yelmer Buurman (Fortec Motorsport) were busy scrapping
for a top ten place, Buurman getting the better of Jelley
at least temporarily. And just for good measure Clarke and
Dirani were fighting furiously for second, now they didn't
have Senna getting in the way. Duran seemed to be inspired
by this and he made an attempt to get round the outside of
Mawer. It wasn't successful and ended in the Mexican having
a bit of a moment and almost going off. He managed to hang
on though. He wasn't about to lose the National Class championship
if he could help it, not given that he was missing the A1GP
round at Lausitzring to complete a title he should have won
at Mondello Park two weeks ago.
Behind the Australian/Mexican battle, Kane and Clucas had
surrounded James Jakes (Performance Racing), the saxophone
playing Yorkshireman having quite an introduction to F3. By
the time they'd finished, they'd also caught up with Jonathan
Kennard (Alan Docking Racing), and the main battle had become
a fight to be second behind a driver called Charlie. By this
point Kennard had Mawer, Duran, the interloping Kane, Jakes,
and Clucas in a tightly packed bunch behind him; it must have
been unnerving to look in his mirrors
It wasn't unnerving for race leader Kimball to look in his
mirrors. He couldn't see much other than a distant speck or
two by the time the race was half run. By that stage he'd
set a series of fastest laps and was nearly six second clear
of Dirani and Clarke, who were slugging it out for 2nd place,
Clarke getting wilder by the minute. What with that and the
Mawer/Duran battle, it looked as if there might be trouble
before we were done. To add to the fun, Senna had emerged
from the pits and was busy hacking his way through the National
Class boys, and on the edge of the top ten Jelley managed
to get back ahead of Buurman.
With the race now in its final third, things suddenly got
very strange. Cheong managed to spin out, after running reasonably
well by his standards, and Senna had a bit of an off, possibly
as a result of the Chinese driver's gravely moment. Whatever
the cause, Senna pitted a second time with the car full of
grass and gravel, while the organisers tried to scramble the
Safety Car. It might have helped if they'd actually put the
SC boards and yellow flags out all round the circuit, and
would have been even more useful if they'd managed to get
the car out in front of the leader. Instead, they picked up
James Walker, realised what had happened, and waved him through.
Kimball slowed right down, and circulated for two laps wondering
just where the Safety Car was (when he was at Luffield it
was at Copse, which didn't help), before it finally appeared
in front of him, and then confused him further by not speeding
up. It was all a bit of a shambles, and one would have hoped
for better from Silverstone. Still, at least no one managed
to do anything stupid in the confusion. The order, with 5
laps to run, was Kimball, from Dirani, Clarke, Conway, Asmer,
Bakkerud, Reindler, Walker, Bridgman and Jelley. Buurman was
just out of the points in 11th, with Lewis and Kane behind
him. 14th overall was Hollings, still leading the National
Class from Kennard, Mawer, Duran, Clucas, Jakes, Fisher, Ihara
and Jones.
With two laps to go, the Safety Car pulled over rather than
in, which also seemed strange, but we were back racing. Kimball
controlled the restart confidently, helped by the fact that
Clarke was all over Dirani as they headed towards Copse at
racing speed, and Asmer got the drop on Conway, and Jelley
squeezed ahead of Bridgman. However, there was no time to
do much more because within seconds the Safety Car boards
were out again, this time after Lewis went off, along with
Buurman and Kane, the latter surviving to race on. With only
one lap left to run, they all took the chequered flag behind
the Safety Car in one of the weirder F3 finishes of recent
years. And to make it even weirder, Bridgman put himself out
of the race while running behind the Safety Car, when he ran
into the back of Jelley, apparently because he was busy looking
for the radio on-off switch and not concentrating on where
he was going. He lost out on a points finish 100 yards from
the line.
And so Kimball came home to take 21 points for a win and fastest
lap, clinching the Rookie of the Year award, and securing
2nd place in the championship behind Alvaro Parente. In the
National Class the extra point for fastest lap was enough
to make Duran the 2005 champion, as there were still 21 points
up for grabs in Round 22, but he was now 22 points ahead of
Mawer.
Behind Kimball, Dirani held off Clarke for 2nd, with Asmer
and Conway next, ahead of Bakkerud, Reindler, Jelley, Walker
and Hollings. 11th overall was Kennard, from Mawer, Duran,
Clucas, Fisher, Jakes, Ihara, Jones and Kane.
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