Parente
on Form at Croft
British
F3 International Series, Round 5, Croft, North Yorkshire,
May 7th/8th 2005
© Lynne Waite and Stella-Maria Thomas
Weather:
Very cold, windy, sunny to begin.
Changes:
We're still without Susie Stoddart (Alan Docking Racing),
supposedly resting her damaged ankle, and we also have no
Suk Sandher (Performance Racing), the Indian having run out
of money after Spa. With no sponsorship forthcoming, that
looks like the end of his championship chances in the National
Class. Oh, and Bruno Senna Double R Racing car has had a paint
job, and is now blue instead of carbon-fibre black, a fact
that won't bother most people one way or the other.
Qualifying
Report:
The session got underway on time, as it should have done given
the F3 boys were the first act of the day here in Yorkshire.
With a freezing cold wind blowing across the circuit (possibly
from Finland) getting tyres warm enough to do the job was
likely to be tricky. Keeping them that way might well prove
even more difficult. There were two schools of thought in
operation at Croft, it soon became apparent. There were the
"get out there and get a time" merchants, and the
"let someone else get the track surface clean" boys.
Stephen Jelley (Menu Motorsport) was among the former, as
was Daniel Clarke (Double R Racing). It might have been just
as well to get to the front of the queue, because technical
checks were being carried out on every car before they were
allowed out, and the need for these noise checks was slowing
everyone down badly. That was probably one of the reasons
why the session was already well established by the time ten
cars had got out, With Clarke setting the first competitive
time, it was a while before he was joined by anyone else.
Further back, Danilo Dirani (P1 Motorsport) was struggling
from the off, the Lolas looking pretty wayward round this
tight ex-airfield circuit. He managed to haul the thing to
7th, but it wasn't easy, that much was obvious.
Clarke's second lap was fast enough to allow him to snatch
provisional pole, but it was only in the 1 minute 18 seconds
range, while the lap record (set by Takuma Sato in 2000) was
4 seconds less than that. Alvaro Parente (Carlin Motorsport)
was after doing something about that, and was able to improve
on Clarke's time, just ahead of National Class runner Juho
Annala (Alan Docking Racing). Suggesting that Dirani might
be alone in having trouble with the Lola, Stephen Kane (Promatecme
F3) was right up there with Parente, at least to begin with.
Clarke, on the other hand, was having none of this, and reclaimed
pole, only to have Parente bounce back at him. While all this
was going on, Marko Asmer (Hitech Racing) moved up to 4th,
attacking the circuit with great enthusiasm. How long this
yo-yoing at the front could go on was anyone's guess, with
the Avon tyres apparently good for about twelve laps before
they would cease to work properly
While we were speculating
as to how long grip would last once it came in, many people
were still trying to get some warmth into the rubber so they
could start setting times. We were, in fact, still waiting
for what could be considered proper times from quite a few
people.
We didn't have to wait for Parente, though. He was again on
pole, and again Clarke answered him. Jelley, meanwhile, was
3rd, while Annala, still the fastest National Class runner,
was now 5th. It was a long way from over at the front, needless
to say, and again Parente found some more speed. Kane was
still hanging around the top five, in 4th, although he was
looking very wobbly as the speed increased. That looked like
it was going to be a bit of a problem, as Clarke upped the
ante, and barged his way into the 1.14s. Suddenly, it looked
as if Dirani was on for pole, when he set the fastest time
of the session through the first sector; it didn't happen
though, because he got caught up in traffic and found he had
Parente slowing just ahead of him and had to back off. Parente's
team-mate, Charlie Kimball, was looking good too, and got
up to 5th before being booted back down a place when Asmer
started his own fight back. He followed it up a lap later
by going to pole, with Mike Conway (Fortec Racing) slotting
in right behind him. The Hitech/Fortec battle was turning
nasty, when Parente managed to elbow his way between the two
of them. Kane was sliding back down the order now, though
he wasn't having as much trouble as Senna, who might have
been fastest in a straight line through the speed trap, but
was having a great deal of trouble with the rest of the circuit!
Two other drivers who were out of the running at this stage
were Tim Bridgman (Hitech Racing) and Ronayne O'Mahony (Fortec
Motorsport), both of whom had left it rather late to decide
to come out of the pits, and were now paying the price for
that tardiness. It was about to get worse, too. Josh Fisher
(Team SWR) got into difficulties at Sunny and crashed out,
causing a red flag. Just before the flags came out, he'd set
his personal best first sector time and looked likely to be
at the top of the National Class by the end of the lap. Instead,
he was in the barriers, the front and back ends of the car
looking pretty second-hand.
As everyone returned to the pits, the order was Parente, Conway
(who'd had to abort a flying lap when Fisher went off), Asmer,
Dirani, Bakkerud, Clarke, Kimball and Kane. James Walker (Fortec
Racing) was 9th, ahead of local hero, Charlie Hollings (Promatecme
F3), who now headed the National Class. 2nd in class was Salvador
Duran (P1 Motorsport), the Mexican struggling with his car's
handling. T-Sport's man, Ryan Lewis, was also struggling,
and was outside the top ten, not quite where he expected to
be. Jelley was 13th, ahead of the unfortunate Fisher, while
Annala was next, followed by Barton Mawer (T-Sport), Jonathan
Kennard (Alan Docking Racing), and Keiko Ihara (Carlin Motorsport).
Bridgman was 20th, ahead of Ricardo Teixeira (Carlin Motorsport),
Nick Jones (Team SWR), Cheong Lou Meng (Edenbridge Racing)
and O'Mahony.
Anyway, after the mess was cleared away, the session restarted
with 16 minutes left to run. Clarke was not keen to go out,
and was holding back in the pits, waiting to see if it was
worth going out. It might well not have been, as it turned
out. The air had warmed up slightly, though it was hardly
enough to make anyone feel warm, and that combined with the
fact that the tyres had got very cold, and were also in the
main past their best by now, meant that it was likely that
most people were wasting their time out there. A series of
ragged-looking laps were produced by a succession of more
or less desperate drivers, and the results were neither fast
nor pretty.
Bridgman went off at the exit to Clervaux, dropping his wheels
in the dirt. Senna, meanwhile, was 10th but was scrabbling
around in a less than elegant manner. Asmer joined in by spinning
at Hawthorn and had to sort himself out, while Lewis threw
himself in the gravel at Clervaux. It was pretty clear that
the grip really was going away. Just as it seemed no one would
improve, Bakkerud slipped into 4th, his time only slightly
better than his earlier best. It proved it could be done,
however. His time demoted Dirani to 5th and although there
were 10 minutes left, it was likely that would be the last
improvement.
Elsewhere the miss-steps continued, with Jones going off at
Clervaux, Clarke dropping his wheels in the dirt and Walker
going very wide. Common sense started to get the better of
some people. Kimball pitted, clear in his own mind that there
was nothing more to be done, while Senna, Conway and Dirani
also gave up the chase. There really was no point in it unless
you'd still got some mileage left in your tyres. That meant
the only likely improvers were Bridgman and O'Mahony. With
five minutes to go, Parente was still on pole, but Bridgman
finally made it into the top ten. He was one of the few drivers
still out on the track, and Parente, and Clarke both climbed
out of their cars and Kane wandered back into the pits. It
was just as well there weren't many cars out, because Jones
got into a spin at the Hairpin, wrecking the laps of anyone
near him, but it really wouldn't have made much difference.
Jones had done the most laps of the session, with Ihara not
far behind in terms of quantity, but it had done neither of
them much good.
And so, when the chequered flag came out, it was Parente who
claimed pole again, despite having collected an errant pheasant
en route to the fastest lap. Conway remained 2nd from Asmer,
Bakkerud, and Dirani (whose car would need a lot of work on
its clutch between sessions), Clarke, Kimball (in need of
a new engine), Senna, Kane, Bridgman and Walker. 11th was
Hollings, the National Class pole man, from Lewis (with a
misfire), Duran (who crashed out and damaged his Lola's suspension
towards the end), Jelley, Mawer, Annala, Fisher, Kennard,
O'Mahony and Ihara. Teixeira, Jones and Cheong occupied the
last places, the Macanese having missed testing when he ran
into transport difficulties getting to the UK. Apparently
the flight ran into trouble, the oxygen masks dropped down
and the crew believed they were going to crash. All in all
a day at Croft seemed a lot less stressful!
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