15th
Marlboro Masters, Circuit Park Zandvoort, The Netherlands
June 11th/12th 2005
© Lynne Waite and Stella-Maria Thomas
Race
Report
Weather: Cold, dry, windy.
The
morning warm up promised yet more of the ASM steamroller effect,
with Hamilton once more apparently effortlessly dominant,
though Sutil did manage to spin into the gravel before the
warm up was over. He wasn't alone; Ross Zwolsman (Ross Zwolsman)
managed to rotate in the middle of the track on his outlap,
which is a bit embarrassing for a local
Far more serious
was Steven Kane's accident at Tarzan. Arriving at full speed,
he went straight off into gravel and came to an abrupt and
painful halt in the tyre barriers. He then had to be extracted
from the car and was taken to hospital, bruised and battered.
The car was damaged beyond repair, but it was academic anyway,
because the doctors refused to pass him fit to race. And so,
everyone moved up a space on the grid.
Actually, it might well have been possible to write the report
for the 15th Marlboro Masters before it even started. ASM
F3 have dominated this race for the last few years, and in
practice they showed no sign that this year would be any different.
In addition they have crushed the opposition in the 2005 Euro
Series to such an extent that by the time most of the runners
got here, they already expected to be beaten. Qualifying was
a relative walkover, and Lewis Hamilton was in front almost
from the moment the lights turned green at the end of the
pitlane, signalling the start of the untimed sessions on Saturday
morning. Anyone who thought they were in with a chance of
leading this race were rapidly disabused of that notion as
soon as the lights on the gantry went out, and Hamilton streaked
off the grid, the grey car trailed by its sister-car, with
Sutil at the wheel. The Manor Motorsport car of Lucas di Grassi
was right with the German, the Brazilian keen to try and make
an impression on at least one of the ASM runners if he could.
At the rear of the grid, Keiko Ihara (Carlin Motorsport) was
last before they even made it to Tarzan, while the first retirements
came on the very first lap too. They were Ferdinand Kool (JB
Motorsports), who fell victim to a broken gearbox before he
could go anywhere much, and Ryan Lewis (T-Sport) who went
off at the Marlboro Bend, and was most likely a victim of
his own over-enthusiastic attacking style! As Hamilton progressed
untroubled at the front, the whole thing started to take on
a "watching paint dry" fascination, where you knew
nothing was going to change, but you kept on watching just
in case. Sutil began to lose ground, and was holding di Grassi
up, while Paul di Resta in the other Manor Motorsport was
fighting Kohei Hirate (Team Rosberg) for fourth place. In
the face of the Mercedes engine's superior fire-power there
wasn't a lot the Japanese could do, and by lap three the Scot
was through and shadowing di Grassi. And so it would remain
at the front, despite back markers, sand on the track, and
anything else much really. The real battle was a little further
back, and it took it a while to take shape. Before it did
there were a number of incidents, involving a wide variety
of drivers.
Dan Clarke (Double R Racing) was the next to bite the dust,
spinning out almost before anyone had noticed he was there.
Esteban Guerreri (Team Midland Euro Series) also decided he'd
had enough on lap 2, and ended his race in a handy gravel
trap. The two were not related.
We weren't done with drama yet, either. By lap 4, Bruno Senna
(Double R Racing) had completed the perfect end to the perfect
day for his team boss, Anthony "Boyo" Hieatt, and
was out of contention, meaning the team had managed a total
of 6 racing laps. James Rossiter (Signature-Plus) ran into
the rear end of the Brazilian, almost inevitably in the Marlboro
Curve, and they were both out on the spot.
As Hamilton pulled inexorably away from Sutil, who was busy
trying to hold off di Grassi, the battle for the "best
of the rest" was hotting up, with Giedo van der Garde
(Team Rosberg) battling with Marko Asmer (Hitech Racing) and
Franck Perera (Prema Powerteam) for 6th place. They were joined
in short order by Hannes Neuhauser (HBR Motorsport), Alvaro
Parente (Carlin Motorsport), Loïc Duval (Signature-Plus).
Sebastian Vettel (ASM Mücke Motorsport), Charlie Kimball
(Carlin Motorsport), Mike Conway (Fortec Motorsport), Christian
Bakkerud and James Walker (Fortec Motorsport). This mob ran
round in a high speed train for a large part of the race,
despite a rate of attrition early on that caused a lot of
wincing in the pits. The trouble was no one could find an
overtaking spot, which meant that van der Garde and Asmer
eventually broke away, while the rest of them ran in procession,
albeit at very high speed. A little further back, Greg Franchi
was getting tired of being behind rookie Alvaro Barba (Hitech
Racing) and made what can best be described as a very muscular
move on the Spaniard at Tarzan. It paid off, but there was
little hope of him getting much further unless he could find
a way past Nico Verdonck (Team Midland Euro Series). He couldn't;
he tried repeatedly but it just wouldn't stick. It was entertaining
but ultimately rather pointless, as they ended up scrapping
over 20th place.
After that, things seemed to settle down rather, though Walker
and Bakkerud came uncoupled from the train on lap 10, when
Walker tried to go round the outside of the young Dane, only
to have Christian fight back. As the two of them went round
Tarzan side-by-side, with Walker on the outside, the inevitable
happened, when Walker wouldn't give way to a somewhat optimistic
move on Bakkerud's part. Walker's car was pushed into the
air, landing squarely in the gravel traps. Bakkerud couldn't
avoid going in as well, and by the time the dust cleared they
were shaking their fists at each other from behind the Armco!
That reduced the numbers somewhat, and also brought out both
the yellow flags, and the dreaded Zandvoort white trucks to
tow the wreckage away. It was interesting that most of the
first fourteen drivers didn't appear to reduce their pace
at all, despite the flags and a lot of desperate waving from
the marshals. They were fortunate no one was hit, and no one
collected the breakdown trucks. It's singularly irresponsible
behaviour and it seems no one has learned much from Monaco,
with the possible exception of Hamilton, who did reduce his
pace.
The broken cars were taken away with alacrity, and the corner
was soon back to normal, just in time for Parente to exit
the group as well. It was also round about the time you would
have expected the tyres to start going off, a feature which
caused a few problems last year. However, there appear to
be no cracks in the ASM armour these days, and Hamilton had
been trying to look after his tyres from the start. A brief
wobbly moment for him at Tarzan was the result of sand being
thrown onto the track by the breakdown trucks, rather than
any reduction in Kumho adhesion. There was to be no respite
there for everyone else. Some of the front runners were now
starting to break away from the train too, with van der Garde
pretty much out on his own, leaving Asmer to lead the pack.
Behind the group Atila Abreu (ASL Mücke Motorsport) was
losing his hold on the scrapping bunch too, as he seemed to
be having trouble locating his gears when he needed them.
They were there - he just had to hunt for them, the graunching
noises as he arrived at Tarzan being truly horrible to hear;
oddly, it didn't seem to have slowed him down at all, at least
until the final lap or so, and the didn't lose any places.
Moreau also lost touch a bit when he started running very
wide at Tarzan, a sign perhaps that all was not well with
his tyres. He was starting to take almost as odd a line as
Barba, who kept arriving almost sideways, as if the presence
of a corner had surprised him. What Barba was doing was the
sort of thing you usually see in a Formula Ford race here,
but not a Formula Three race. Still, he's pretty inexperienced
and he'd never been to Zandvoort before, so maybe the Hitech
boys should just be grateful they got the car back in one
piece. Actually, it wasn't a good day for the Spaniards in
general, because with ten laps to go, the last retirement
came, when Alejandro Nunez (HBR Motorsport) went out of the
race. He hadn't been challenging for any significant position,
but it was a shame anyway. With five laps left to run, it
looked like Barba had plans to join his compatriot on the
sidelines, when he was tripped up into one of those classic
Tarzan spins. However, he managed to pull himself together
and went on his way, last but one, ahead of Ihara who was
starting to be lapped by the leaders.
He then got in Hamilton's way, causing a certain amount of
gesturing, but eventually got the message of the blue flags,
letting the ASM car through without causing further disgruntlement.
With the closing stages of the race now upon us, Hamilton
was being very careful. Sutil was now forced into a very defensive
mode, when di Grassi began to look very threatening in his
mirrors; maybe an upset was possible. Certainly di Grassi
was pleased to be so close, and although he never did find
a way round, afterwards he said he felt as if he'd won.
And so, inevitably it seemed, ASM won the 15th running of
the Marlboro Masters of F3, Hamilton making the sinuous track
through the dunes his own this weekend. With Sutil in 2nd,
di Grassi 3rd and di Resta 4th, it was a Mercedes-engined
lockout. In addition, Hamilton and di Resta lifted the Nations
Cup for Britain, and everyone else was left to wonder why
they'd bothered to turn up. In 5th was Hirate, despite a couple
of desperately sideways moments towards the end. Van der Garde
was 6th, with Asmer 7th, the highest placed of the British
F3 series runners. Behind him, in very close formation as
they had been from the start were Perera, Neuhauser, Duval,
Vettel, Kimball, Conway and Moreau. Poor Ihara was lapped
by the lot of them pretty much in one go, which must have
been rather unnerving for her. Abreu was next, from Ho-Pin
Tung (JB Motorsport), Zwolsman, Marco Bonanomi (Prema Powerteam),
Stephen Jelley, Verdonck and Franchi (who were also still
glued together), Thomas Holzer (AM Holzer Rennsport) and Ronayne
O'Mahony (Fortec Motorsport). Barba and Ihara both finished
a lap down.
Afterwards Hamilton was justifiably delighted. "After
the first few laps I had a fantastic gap for the lead, but
I knew there was a long, long way to go. If I could just save
my car for the first few laps, l knew I could pull out into
the lead. I tried to make my tyres last because it's a very
long race and I think I did it perfectly. I had a 2.7 gap
and I tried to keep it at that and keep consistent. I knew
if I could keep it like that it's hard out there, so I knew
Adrian and the others would be making mistakes and I just
had to make sure I didn't. I don't think the weekend could
have been better for me. I had a fantastic race - and a fantastic
season so far. I have to say thank you to the team. The reason
we are so fast is because of the fantastic mechanics. They
do seem to be very, very capable .I didn't make any mistakes
in that race, and it was a long race. The tyres were starting
to go off towards the end, but I looked after them really
well at the start."
Sutil, too, was delighted with his result. "I think from
both of us it was very good. I started with no pressure and
was getting better and better, and finally it was a good race
for sure. I'm happy to be second at Marlboro Masters the best
race in the world and for Lewis I'm very happy for him he
was faster this weekend but it will be me next time. Of course,
I'm with the best team, and we have the best people, so it's
much easier to show what I'm capable of."
Di Grassi was in far more buoyant mood than he had been on
Friday after getting so close to Sutil. "Here at the
Masters it's all about qualifying and yesterday was a bit
disappointing. The Mercedes engines have more downforce and
I knew it would be very, very hard to overtake, because we
don't have that sort of downforce. At first corner I was just
hoping for him to make a mistake, but Adrian drove well. I
was a little bit more consistent than him, which allowed me
to catch up. I had a good setup of course, but in the end
they were just that second quicker than we were. I think I
have more of a chance against ASM now. The thing is a few
weeks ago in Monaco we were two seconds lap slower. Of course,
in the championship it will be very hard to catch them, but
we would like to end the season as the only team able to beat
ASM. However, you can't be sad to be on the podium, like I
said, for me it is like a victory to be behind ASM. We weren't
quicker than them, but we are much closer."
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