British
F3 International Series, Round 17, Nürburgring, Germany,
September 2nd/3rd 2005 © Lynne Waite and Stella-Maria
Thomas
Weather:
Warm, sunny.
Race
Report:
There's always at least one very odd race each season, and
it's possible that Round 17 was it. There are a number of
drivers who look likely winners, but most people would not
necessarily have included James Walker (Fortec Motorsport)
among them. However, that was exactly what happened this morning
at the Nürburgring. With Alvaro Parente (Carlin Motorsport)
on pole, we might have expected another victory for the series
leader, but it was not to be.
First off, the start procedure was changed without anyone
bothering to inform the drivers, the race going live before
they'd even had a chance to line up properly. Parente got
away smoothly and looked as if he was about to produce another
demonstration drive, but when he went to change up to 3rd
gear the clutch slipped, and he immediately lost all the ground
he'd made up. Meanwhile, Mike Conway (Fortec Motorsport) had
shot forward into the lead, only to get whacked from the rear
by Marko Asmer who was barging his way up along the inside
in a desperate attempt to salvage something from this race.
The result was that Conway's team-mate, Walker leapfrogged
from 6th on the grid into the lead, scything past Conway at
the second turn. It was, he said later: "like a Formula
Ford Festival start". Whatever the true horror of it
all, once the dust settled, the Fortec cars were 1st and 2nd,
Parente was 3rd and Dan Clarke (Double R Racing) was revolving
into the gravel trap, having been helped there by Asmer. Asmer
didn't get away unscathed either, dropping back to 7th, behind
Christian Bakkerud (Carlin Motorsport) who'd made another
of his trademark lightning starts, but ahead of Charlie Kimball
(Carlin Motorsport) who was none too impressed to be trapped
behind the Estonian when he was busy trying to defend his
own chances of stopping Parente taking the championship. He
managed to pass Asmer but holding him off was a whole other
kettle of fish. Meanwhile, Bruno Senna (Double R Racing) was
also slipping back down the order, having been passed by Stephen
Jelley (Menu Motorsport), the Englishman jumping from 17th
to 9th by following Tim Bridgman (Hitech Racing), who got
all the way up to 5th before he found there was nowhere left
to go.
In the National Class, Salvador Duran (P1 Motorsport) was
leading once again, though he was caught up with a number
of the Championship Class runners, like Senna. He decided
discretion was the better part of valour, and simply let them
go, allowing him to concentrate on keeping his series lead
intact. Jonathan Kennard (Alan Docking Racing) had dropped
right back at the start when he got boxed in, which left Charlie
Hollings as the most immediate threat to the Mexican's lead.
In fact, before long, the worst threat came from a Championship
Class runner, Karl Reindler (Alan Docking Racing), who kept
getting in the way and was going way too slow for Salvador's
liking. Meanwhile, Nick Jones (Team SWR) pitted at the end
of the first lap, and would stay there for a good long time
before emerging not that far ahead of the leaders.
Afterwards, there was some discussion about jump starts, but
with the mayhem that the start procedure turned into, it was
almost impossible to decide who was guilty and who wasn't,
so nothing more was said. And really, it was something of
a miracle that they all got through Turn 1 and lived to fight
another day.
With Walker now comfortably in the lead, Conway was being
harassed by Parente, but was being pretty determined about
closing the door in the Portuguese's face. Behind them, Danilo
Dirani (P1 Motorsport) was looking keen to catch up with the
third placed runner, and was doing his level best to reduce
the gap between them, while behind Bridgman, Kimball and Bakkerud
were battling fiercely for position. That let Asmer get through
again, for 7th, and he then set about grabbing 6th from Bakkerud.
A corner later he lost out again, after he went too wide.
Bakkerud didn't need telling twice, and then suddenly Kimball
was all over the number 12 car again. Most of the action seemed
to centre around the Carlin cars, since Parente was all over
Conway's rear wing again as they came up fast behind Jones.
They lapped the Championship Class runner easily, but it was
pretty much the end of any real challenge Parente was prepared
to offer, preferring instead to maintain a watching brief,
and see if he could provoke Conway into a mistake.
Someone who was provoked into a mistake was Senna, the Brazilian
deciding he wanted to pass Jelley at a place where there really
wasn't room. Having forced the issue, Senna duly ran out of
room and clipped Jelley's rear wheel, damaging his own front
wheel in the process. He had a brief gravel-filled moment
and then staggered round to the pits and into retirement.
Half a day after Double R Racing had been celebrating their
first front-row lock out their drivers were now looking rather
sorry for themselves. And so they all settled down now to
a somewhat processional run to the flag, though Dirani was
edging closer and closer to Parente, who just couldn't get
that mistake from Conway. However, the championship leader
kept his cool, and resisted the temptation to try anything
rash.
If you wanted excitement, you could amuse yourself by wondering
when Walker would actually appear on the timing screen (his
transponder wasn't working properly), or you could watch what
Asmer was up to. He'd finally found a way round Bakkerud,
and that left the Dane trying to hold off Kimball again. Kimball,
on what he called a damage limitation exercise, finally found
a chink in his team-mate's armour, and the two of them indulged
in a side-by-side battle for a couple of corners, which included
a slightly alarming piece of late braking by Bakkerud, before
Kimball managed to get away for 7th.
The only other excitement came from watching Kennard, who
hacked his way past Barton Mawer (T-Sport), his team-mate
Juho Annala (Alan Docking Racing), and finally a somewhat
disgruntled Hollings, who was not pleased to lose 2nd. As
if it wasn't bad enough being constantly beaten by Duran,
now Kennard was doing it as well!
When the dust settled, it turned out that only a Carlin driver
can now be champion. Parente has a 105 point lead over Conway,
and there are 105 points up for grabs. Even if Conway won
every race and set five more fastest laps, he can only equal
Parente's points score, and the Portuguese would be champion
because he would have more race wins to his name. Kimball
could theoretically still take the title, but he's 72 points
behind now, in 2nd overall. It's now just a matter of waiting
to see what happens this afternoon.
So a somewhat stunned-looking Walker came home to his first
race win since his karting days, with Conway 2nd and Parente
3rd. Dirani was 4th, from Bridgman, Asmer, Kimball, Bakkerud,
Clarke and Steven Kane (Promatecme). Jelley slipped out of
the points after Senna's attack, and Duran headed home Michael
Herck (Junior Team Racing), Ryan Lewis (T-Sport), Reindler,
Kennard, Hollings, Annala, Mawer and Ronayne O'Mahony (Fortec
Motorsport). Josh Fisher (Team SWR) was 21st, from Cheong
Lou Meng (Edenbridge Racing), Keiko Ihara (Carlin Motorsport)
and Jones.
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