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Ginetta Junior star Robertson Secures Scottish Podium.

Charlie Robertson pleased the home crown at Knockhill as he secured a hard fought podium during round fourteen of the 2011 Ginetta Junior Championship, his sixth of the season and a result which helps consolidates his top three Championship position.

Robertson was delighted to secure a rostrum finish at Knockhill, the fourteen year old from Aberfoyle – who is now a resident of Whyteleafe, Surrey – produced two impressive performances during the two action packed encounters at the 1.3 Mile Scottish track. He was disappointed after finishing fifth in the opening race but that disappointment turned to a smile after round fourteen, after his podium finish.

“It’s great to be on the podium at Knockhill”, he commented, “It’s been quite a hard weekend, we’ve been consistent time-wise with our pace but qualifying just didn’t quite go to plan and that was our main problem really. I was a bit disappointed with race one but to finish the weekend on the podium in race two is really good.”

Robertson started off the weekend by lapping the challenging Scottish track third fastest during two of the three test sessions held on Friday, 2 September he continued the same level of performance during the short free practice on Saturday morning. Qualifying later in the day didn’t go to plan however as he could only post times good enough for a fourth row start.

HHC Motorsport driver Robertson was confident of making some forward progress from his qualifying result – he lined up eighth for the opening race, albeit only 0.6s off Pole Position. Robertson was soon caught up in a scrap at the lower end of the top ten but he was able to make decent progress up the order.

Dicing with the more experienced Tom Howard and Jake Giddings over sixth position, the race was neutralised after eleven laps after Giddings exited the race at Clark Curve and made contact with the barriers.

Sitting sixth under the Safety car, Robertson broke into the top five on the first racing lap after the Safety Car period at the expense of Niall Murray, the 2010 Ginetta Junior Ireland Champion. The youngster then remained fifth until the chequered flag at the end of lap seventeen and his pace was comparable to that of race winner Seb Morris – his fastest lap of the race was a 1m02.517s.

Sunday’s round fourteen was the highlight of the weekend for Robertson as he brought his car home in third from seventh on the grid. The second race was the more robust race out of the two with plenty of incidents and position changes.

Having held his position early on, Robertson was soon on the move and on the second lap, he had moved himself into the top five before moving into fourth a couple of laps later. Fourth would become third when Tom Howard, who was lying second, had to pit for a drive through penalty.

The Safety car was deployed on the seventh lap and once the caution period was over, Robertson read the restart perfectly as he attacked Sennan Fielding and moved past him for second on the run from Leslie’s to Scotsman corner.

There was more drama to come on the tenth lap as Robertson was pitched into a spin at Real Radio Hairpin, an incident which relegated the fourteen year old to eighth and it appeared that his podium hopes were all but over.

Undeterred, the youngster maintained his composure and over the following two laps, he recovered from eighth to third and he managed to pull out a gap over those who were chasing him. As in the opening race, the pace he showed was impressive as the youngest driver on the British Touring Car Championship package lapped the Knockhill circuit just 0.2s slower than the fastest race lap time – his best time in race two was a 1m02.469s.

“I had a bit of contact at the hairpin with (Sennan) Fielding which dropped me back and then I was surprised I got back through so quickly”, said Charlie after race two, “The others were fighting a lot though so that really helped me out.”

Next up for Robertson is a trip to Northamptonshire and the Rockingham Motor Speedway over the 17/18 September, for rounds fifteen and sixteen of the Championship.

Morris Retains Substantial Points Advantage after Knockhill Victory.

Seb Morris secured his tenth victory of the season in the 2011 Ginetta Junior Championship up at Knockhill, Fife as he took his podium tally to eleven podium finishes in fourteen races.

Leaving Scotland, Welsh racer Morris had an advantage of exactly100 points and with six races of the season remaining, the fifteen year old has moved one step closer to securing the main Ginetta Junior title to go with his success in the Ginetta Junior winter series back in November.

Marford resident Morris delivered a tremendous performance in the Hillspeed run car during Saturday afternoon’s round thirteen to secure his eleventh victory of the season from second on the grid – he secured the lead after pressurising early race leader George Gamble into a mistake at the chicane.

Once in the lead, Morris set about building up an advantage and by the start of the ninth tour, he had opened up an advantage of three seconds before the Safety Car was deployed and Morris lost his advantage.

The Safety Car was withdrawn at the end of lap sixteen and Morris was able to pull away over the final lap to bring the Hillspeed car home first, with an advantage of 1.1s over second place Gamble.

“I just tried to keep my head, not focus on what was going on behind me and instead concentrate on my own lap times – I treated it like a qualifying run really once I got the lead”, he said, “I pulled away well and then the Safety Car came out! George really heated his tyres up well before the re-start, I was a bit more conservative, and he did catch me up a bit. But I knew I had it in hand.”

Aiming to replicate his round thirteen performance in round fourteen, Morris, who is backed by the Liberty Properties and Legat Owen had a much less straight forward race as he ended up in the mid pack tussles which compromised his race.

Having lined up on the front row of the grid once again, Morris held second on the first tour before a moment on lap two saw him drop back to eighth and with plenty of work to do to work his way back up the order.

Lap seven saw the Safety car deployed and this offered Morris the chance to recover a podium finish. At the restart, Morris sat sixth and the following lap, Morris was able to take advantage of the multi car tangle at the hairpin which promoted Morris to fourth.

With the podium back in sight, Morris challenged Niall Murray for third but it was the Welshman who came off worst at the hairpin the following lap as he was bundled down to sixth position – his final finishing position.

With just three race weekends left, Morris isn’t assured of the title but his three figure lead means he heads to Rockingham over the 17/18 September in a very healthy position

Zamparelli does the Double at Thruxton.

Dino Zamparelli (Antel Motorsport) produced the perfect result during the penultimate race day of the 2011 Protyre Formula Renault BARC Championship at the high speed Thruxton circuit in Hampshire.

Heading to Thruxton, Bristol’s Zamparelli lead the way by a single point from Josh Webster (Fortec Motorsport) but after a brace of lights-to-flag victories, Zamparelli has opened up a nineteen point advantage with just the season finale at Silverstone to go.

Backing up his two Thruxton wins, Zamparelli also secured Pole Position for both races as well as the fastest lap in each to round of what could be his best ever race weekend.

At the beginning of round nine, the first of two races at Thruxton, Zamparelli got away cleanly from Pole Position but Kourosh Khani (Scorpio Motorsport) made an even better start as he jumped from the third row and into second place up at the complex, ahead of James Thorp, Matt Mason and championship contender Webster.

The Iranian driver was overturned by Thorp on the third lap of the race and from that point onwards, he slipped down the field to ninth. Thorp (MTech Lite) was coming under pressure from Webster behind but the pressure was alleviated at mid distance after the Safety Car was called for after Zaamin Jaffer and Jack Dex came together at the exit of the Complex.

Dex locked up and this left the Indian racer with nowhere to go and the result was plenty of damage to both cars – the marshals did their best to clear the track and allow the race to get back underway. It wasn’t completed in time for the racing to resume and the race result was declared after eight laps.

Second place finisher in round nine, Thorp said afterwards: “I made a good start but Kourosh made a better one and got through into second place. I passed him after three laps, then had pressure from Josh (Webster) but the Safety Car came out and the race stopped.”

Behind Webster, who rounded out the podium positions was star performer of the weekend, Matt Mason for MGR Motorsport. Before Thruxton, his best race result was a sixth, but round nine saw him qualify in the top three before posting the second fastest lap of the race en route to fourth overall. Better was to come in the second race for Mason…

Fifth was Steven Durant in the RPD Motorsport car while the top six was completed by the second MGR Motorsport car of Glasgow’s David Wagner – Wagner brought the car home inside the top six from tenth on the grid.

Apart from the incident involving Jaffer and Dex, Hector Hurst (Scorpio Motorsport) came to grief on the opening lap as did Spanish driver Victor Jimenez, who had a moment up at the chicane.

Another of the title contenders, Archie Hamiton, saw his hopes ended after an opening lap puncture.

Round Ten: Zamparelli Wins as Mason Secures Maiden Podium.

As in the opening race, Zamparelli lined up on Pole Position and he drove to another untroubled Thruxton victory – his fourth victory of the season – with an advantage of over four seconds from Mason, who delivered great pace in the MGR Motorsport car to secure his and the team’s first podium finish.

Once again, as in the opening race, Mason posted the second fastest lap of the race – just 0.3s slower than Zamparelli’s best time – as the first year Protyre Formula Renault BARC driver made it a dream weekend for his MGR Motorsport team. He headed to Thruxton lying tenth overall, he left Hampshire lying seventh.

“My season is all coming together now”, said Mason, “We were really fast here after being somewhat off the pace last time out in Croft. I’m now looking forward to Silverstone and having a really strong finish to the championship.”

Webster once again completed the podium finishers in third, his seventh podium finish from ten races and with this, he kept his Championship hopes alive when the series heads to Silverstone over the 14/15 October. Despite the double podium finish, he was disappointed that he wasn’t able to challenge for the victories after two poor getaways.

He said: “It’s enough points to keep the title fight alive so Dino hasn’t won it just yet. Silverstone is a really good track for me and my team, Fortec, so there will be another good fight for the podium places – but I’ll be going there to win.”

Durrant rounded out his strongest weekend since the opening rounds of the season at Donington Park as he brought the car home fourth overall having lined up seventh. He finished ahead of Khani, Hamilton, Thorp and Hurst.

Sixth in the points despite missing the Thruxton races is Kieran Vernon – he was on duty in Scotland, racing in the Porsche Carrera Cup GB.

The final word of the weekend went to double race winner and Thruxton dominator, Zamparelli: “It might have looked easy from the outside but being in front all the way was actually hard work”, said Zamparelli after round 10, “It’s been a great day for me with two wins so couldn’t be better and I must thank my team for giving me such a good car. I’m in a strong position now and go to the finale at Silverstone with a clear lead in the championship. Two more wins and the title is mine.”

Rounds eleven and twelve of the 2011 Protyre Formula Renault BARC Championship, the final event of the season takes place at Silverstone over the 14/15 October, supporting the final race weekend of the 2011 Dunlop MSA British Touring Car Championship.

As it currently stands, the season finale for the Formula Renault BARC season will be televised on ITV4, ITV4 HD and online at itv.com/touringcars.

CRS Racing Secure British GT Championship lead after 1, 2 finish at Rockingham.

CRS Racing was at the fore as they secured a 1, 2 finish during the second race of the weekend at the Rockingham Motor Speedway. The #11 CRS Ferrari 458 of Andrew Tate and Alex Mortimer lead home the #10 car of Jim and Glynn Geddie, and it now the Geddies who top the drivers’ Standings with 106.5 points.

Tate has been slowly building up his speed in the car throughout the season and it was soon only a matter of time before he secured a victory alongside the 2007 Champion Mortimer.

“I got a clean start, though I couldn’t believe how fast the Porsche was off the start,” said Alex, “Big thank you to the CRS guys, the set up was fantastic. My job was to keep the tyres as good as possible for Andy.”

Once the pit stops were cleared, Tate rejoined the race with a slender lead over the rest of the field and he was pushed all the way to the flag.

“The best bit was seeing the sign that said last lap,” he smiled. “Alex is a fantastic driver and I’ve had a lot of help from my driver coach Glynn Geddie. The team did a great job. All thanks to CRS and also to Alex.”

Having left Spa-Francorchamps last time out just two points shy of the Championship lead, the Geddies will head to the three hour race at Donington Park in three weeks time with a slender five point advantage at the top of the Championship. After that, there is the two hour season finale at Silverstone.

“All credit to the CRS team for their hard work,” said Glynn. “Obviously, taking the lead of the championship has turned this into a great weekend for us.”

“We weren’t happy this morning,” added Jim. “Things went wrong, we made a few mistakes, but we’re delighted with this afternoon.”

The battle for the overall honours in the British GT Championship will be as hotly contested as ever over the closing rounds.

Earlier in the day, during the wet opening race, the Geddies came home twelfth while Tate and Mortimer were classified fifteenth in conditions more suited to ducks than British GT racing cars!

Next up for the team is the Autosport Six hours of Silverstone, round five of the Intercontinental Le Mans Cup and the fourth round of the Le Mans Series. The action gets underway this weekend.

No Luck in Scotland for Jackson.

A tough trip to Scotland for Mat Jackson has hampered his efforts of becoming the 2011 Dunlop MSA British Touring Car Champion – as he saw an eight point advantage overturned and into a twenty three point deficit, and down to third place in the standings as the series heads into the final three weekends’ of the season – at Rockingham (17/18 September), Brands Hatch Grand Prix (1st/2nd October) and Silverstone National (14/15 October).

The three race weekend’s left in the 2011 season are all circuits Jackson has won at before – Silverstone has seen him win three times in his career (2008 and twice in 2009), and he said: “I really like the final three circuits on the calendar and have had wins at all of them before and it’s wins I really need from now on. The grid is becoming more and more competitive all the time so it will be tough but I know I’m in the right car and with the right team to get the job done.”

Three DNF’s in the three Scottish rounds is the sort of luck which Jackson has never encountered in his racing career, but despite the setback, he and the team refuse to give in and the chase to the Honda Racing drivers.

The opening race saw him suffer a late race puncture after contact with a rival – Jackson managed to avoid a heavy accident and reversed his Airwaves Racing/The Money Shop #7 Ford Focus out the gravel at Real Radio Hairpin.

Race two had seen Jackson just set the fastest lap of the race on his charge back up the field before a front wheel broke, which caused damage to the car. He had risen up from nineteenth to fifth in the second race.

Starting from the back in the final race, Jackson had fought his way up the field and was lying seventh when the field bunched up at Real Radio Hairpin and contact with the Ford Focus of Tom Chilton saw Jackson’s weekend brought to a premature end. Earlier in the race, he had claimed three spots in one move around the outside of the Hairpin.

“I’ve never known bad luck like this in all my years of racing” says Mat. “Realistically I can’t see the Honda boys giving up a lead like that now but we’ll never give up. The pace of our car has been terrific this weekend. Even in qualifying with maximum ballast on board we were still a close seventh fastest and in the races… well I think everyone saw just how good it was and I was particularly proud of the move I put on those three drivers.”

Having arrived at Knockhill in the lead of the Championship, a single Championship point for the weekend, having set the fastest lap in race two was scant reward for Jackson, who has also seen his Independents’ Drivers’ Championship lead cut as well – he has a narrow five point lead over James Nash while the team leave Scotland with a single point lead in the Independent Teams’ Championship.

Jackson will aim to bounce back at Rockingham over the 17/18 September, the venue for rounds twenty two, twenty three and twenty four of the season.

Rockingham Provides New British GT Race Winners.

Rounds seven and eight of the 2011 Avon Tyres British GT Championship saw a brace of new race winners etch their name into the winners’ roster while the Championship lead also changed hands after the two races at the Rockingham Motor Speedway.

The two races were held in differing track conditions – the Beechdean Aston Martin pairing of Andrew Howard and Jonny Adam came out on top in the wet opening race while the dry second race saw Andrew Tate and Alex Mortimer lead home a CRS Racing 1, 2 as team-mates Jim and Glynn Geddie finished second. With their podium result, the Geddie’s now lead the Championship.

Round Seven: Tyre Choice Paves the Way for Beechdean Victory.

Andrew Howard and Jonny Adam secured a famous victory during the wet opening British GT race of the weekend as they brought home their Aston Martin DBRS9 home in first position, with an advantage of forty one seconds over David/Godfrey Jones in their Preci-Spark Mercedes AMG SLS.

Round seven started in confusing and extremely dramatic fashion – Pole Sitter Mike Guasch and his United Autosports Audi R8 LMS struggled to get off the line and thus dropped down to back of the field, and then more than half the field realised that they had made the incorrect tyre choice. This meant that they had to crawl round the 1.9 mile Rockingham circuit – if they hadn’t spun out of contention or slithered off the circuit.

Beechdean and Preci-Spark had chosen wisely – Howard had ventured out on the formation lap on slicks but made the call to switch once on the grid, after seeing how slippery the track was – and it was the Mercedes that lead into the banked turn one as the Scuderia Vittoria Ferrari 458 of Michael Lyons and the sole Trackspeed Porsche of David Ashburn fell back.

Howard, in the Aston Martin was in the lead before leaders reached in the infield and from there, he started to pull away from the Mercedes.

Lying third after also starting on wets was the Stark Racing Ginetta G55 of Ian Stinton and Ginetta boss Lawrence Tomlinson must have been delighted to see three of his cars inside the top five – Jody Firth in the Century Motorsport G55 was fourth while leading GT4 runner, the Scuderia Vittoria G50 was lying fifth.

The cars which had chosen to start on slicks on the damp, slippery track were soon in even more bother as the rain started to fall again, just a few minutes into the race. They all had no choice but to pit and change to wets, with Ashburn being the first driver to switch and minimised the damage in the process.

After just six laps, Howard had opened up a seven second advantage and had already put a lap on Guasch. After ten laps, the gap had been extended to over ten seconds. What wasn’t obvious though was the fact that the DBRS9’s windscreen wipers had stopped working and it was only the pace of the car which was keeping the screen clear.

The GT3B Ferrari 430 of John Dhillon had started at the rear of the field but in just a few laps, he had moved into the top six and when he handed the car over to Aaron Scott, the duo were lying seventh overall.

The opening laps and the weather had turned the order upside down and once the pit stops had taken place, drivers like Allan Simonsen, Matt Griffin and Alex Mortimer were all well outside the top ten and at least one lap down on the leaders.

Twenty eight minutes had gone when Howard came in to hand the car over to Adam, having completed a flawless stint, this left David Jones leading by thirty three seconds from Firth. Jones pitted five minutes later and this left the Beechdean Aston leading by eleven seconds. Adam repeated the form of Howard and set about pulling away from the pack.

As the race continued, the conditions continued to change. Phil Keen soon got a grasp on the ever changing track conditions and he soon moved ahead of the Stark racing Ginetta and set about closing down Stefan Hodgetts in the #28 Ginetta.

Keen, at the wheel of the #1 Porsche caught the #28 G55 at Deene on lap twenty nine and dived down the inside but Hodgetts had the door closed and contact was the end result. Both cars spun but were undamaged and continued.

Simonsen had taken over the Rosso Verde Ferrari Scuderia from Hector Lester while lying down in fifteenth but he recovered to snatch sixth away from Charles Bateman on the final lap.

Adam had reduced visibility to contend with for the closing few laps but he was cheered across the line by the team at the end of the thirty sixth lap.

“Lucky it was wet for the warm-up because that was the first time I had ever driven the car in the wet all the time I’ve had it. First time I have raced it in the wet,” said Andrew Howard. “Thank God it did rain for the warm up otherwise we wouldn’t have had a clue. We got a good set up and the car felt really balanced. We went out on slicks on out lap and changed on the grid. There was that much difference. It’s a big day, really cool; and its Jonny’s birthday.”

Finishing a lonely second was the Mercedes SLS; seventeen seconds clear of the Trackspeed Porsche.

“I didn’t think there was a choice when it came to the tyres,” said David Jones. “This place is slippery enough in the dry! I thought those who started on slicks were bonkers, all of them.”

“We lost about three quarters of a lap because we started on slicks and had to change, otherwise we could have maybe had a win,” said Phil Keen, after his first race in the Porsche. “The wipers stopped working half way through my stint, so I couldn’t really see where I was going.”

The Century Motorsport Ginetta G55 came home fourth, the result giving the team and marquee a huge fillip. “I knew we had good pace in the wet but it took so long to get temperature into the tyres,” said Jody Firth. “It was a very bitty sort of few opening laps but once the tyres came in it was OK. Then the car totally steamed up and I couldn’t see a thing. I just had to do my best.”

Top Ferrari in the race was the GT3B MTech 430 which finished fifth overall. This gave Aaron Scott an unexpected result, while the GT4 honours went the way of Dan Denis/David McDonald in the Scuderia Vittoria Ginetta G50.

“We made the right choice on tyres by sticking to the wets because it started raining pretty much as soon as the race got going,” said Denis. “It was great because both the Lotuses were on slicks and had to pit; we were about a lap ahead when I came in and David did a good job to get it home.”

“I struggled a bit because the windscreen wipers stopped working so I was struggling to see where I was going,” added David McDonald. “Thankfully I had enough of a lead and I did not have to worry too much.”

Coming home second and third in GT4 were the two Lotus Sport UK cars, Freddy Nordstrom/Leyton Clarke led home the Ollie Jackson/Phil Glew car.

The Speedworks Motorsport Corvette Z06R of Ron Johnson/Piers Johnson was the sole retirement as it suffered diff failure during the first lap, while the second Trackspeed Porsche of Gregor Fiskin/Tim Bridgman failed to take the start after losing an engine during the morning warm up.

Round Eight: Another New British GT Race Winner.

The second Rockingham race provided the second new winner in British GT in as many races as Andrew Tate celebrated his first podium in style after sharing the CRS Racing Ferrari 458 with 2007 Champion, Alex Mortimer.

The professional driver kept the car in close contention during his stint – he never allowed early race leader Phil Keen to escape – Tate actually had the harder job as he had to manage a healthy but not insurmountable advantage while rarely having his pursuers in sight.

Compared to the opening race of the weekend, the second race started on a bone dry track and under late afternoon sun. Matt Bell took up Pole Position in the absence of the engineless Trackspeed Porsche. The Audi R8 LMS driver backed the whole field up before making a great start as the lights turned green.

Keen, however, made an even better start and was into second by turn one and then the race lead by the end of the opening lap. Mortimer had also gained a position during the opening lap and then spent the next thirty five minutes harrying race leader Keen, never letting up for a moment as they negotiated the traffic.

Throughout the opening half of the race, there were battles and duels all down the field and the Ferrari 458s were much more effective in the dry than the wet, as Glynn Geddie and Matt Griffin were making progress in their Italian machines – before their progress was halted after being issued with drive through penalties for not observing the track limits at the exit of Tarzan.

Allan Simonsen was also given the same penalty – this just helped the Rosso Verde’s drop down the field as the Danish driver was unable to live with the pace of the newer cars.

Before his drive through, Griffin and Bell had been locked in combat over the final podium position, with the Ferrari on the tail of the Audi for several laps of the 1.9 mile Rockingham Motor Speedway. The United Autosports driver remained cool under pressure and was still ahead when the Irishman took his penalty at the mid way point of the race.

In GT4, Phil Glew had been the early leader in the Lotus Evora and he was unable to pull out much of an advantage over the ABG KTM X-Bow while two penalties for not respecting the track limits meant that Jake Rattenbury/Josh Wakefield in the Century Motorsport Ginetta G50 were left in third at the end of the race.

The majority of the mandatory pit stops came towards the end of the second race pit window. Keen pitted his Trackspeed Porsche at the last possible moment and Mortimer pitted four seconds later. Both stops went well but with the Porsche having a five second success penalty for the earlier result; it was Tate who held the slender advantage over Ashburn as the pair of them exited the pit lane with twenty two minutes of the race remaining.

Everyone was expecting the 2010 Champion to take the lead sooner rather than later but this wasn’t the case – on his outlap, he spun on School straight and lost himself ten seconds and thus gave the advantage to Tate.

Over the next few laps, the advantage between Tate and Ashburn was reducing by a second to two seconds a lap and by the end of lap thirty, the gap was down to seven and a half seconds. Two laps later and the Porsche returned to the pits to have some bodywork removed after the spin and this dropped Ashburn down to sixth.

Jim Geddie suddenly found himself second in the second CRS Racing Ferrari 458 but was involved in a battle with race one pole sitter Mike Guasch in the Audi. The American driver appeared to be quicker but lap after lap, his attempts to pass at Deene were rebuffed.

This allowed Duncan Cameron and Michael Lyons to catch up in their Ferrari’s and with just five minutes left on the clock; it was a four way fight for second.

Having fought for so long, ultimately it was the Audi which lost out after a mistake at Gracelands allowed the two Ferrari’s past. Lyons continued to push Cameron for what had become the final step on the podium. Lyons sneaked through for third at Tarzan but Cameron was back ahead by Brook, having got the better drive out on the hairpin.

Up at the front, Tate was controlling the race from the front and he completed the final two laps without making an error. He crossed the line 3.866s ahead of Geddie to secure a dream 1, 2 result for the CRS Racing team.

“I got a clean start, though I couldn’t believe how fast the Porsche was off the start,” said Alex Mortimer, who had clinched his BGT championship-win at the same circuit four years earlier. “Big thank you to the CRS guys, the set up was fantastic. My job was to keep the tyres as good as possible for Andy.”

“The best bit was seeing the sign that said last lap,” smiled Andrew Tate. “Alex is a fantastic driver and I’ve had a lot of help from my driver coach Glynn Geddie. The team did a great job. All thanks to CRS and also to Alex.”

The 1, 2 finish for CRS Racing was their first for almost three years and Jim Geddie took a well deserved second place finish.

“All credit to the CRS team for their hard work,” said Glynn Geddie. “Obviously, taking the lead of the championship has turned this into a great weekend for us.”

“We weren’t happy this morning,” added Jim. “Things went wrong, we made a few mistakes, but we’re delighted with this afternoon.”

Holding onto third and the final podium position was Cameron in the MTech Ferrari while Lyons rounded out a Ferrari 458 top four – and Cameron joked: “It’s amazing how being in P4 and seeing P3 right ahead of you makes you put your foot down!”

Having fared well during the wet opening race, Jonny Adam and Andrew Howard could only finish tenth in the Beechdean Aston Martin, although their cause wasn’t helped by the additional fifteen seconds they had to spend in the puts after their race one success.

The Preci-Spark Mercedes of Godfrey/David Jones finished second while the Rosso Verde Ferrari, piloted by Hector Lester finished eighth in what could be its final outing.

Neither of the Ginetta G55’s finished the second race – the #28 Century Motorsport car suffered mechanical problems on the opening lap while the #25 Stark Racing car retired later into the race.

The second half of the race saw the GT4 battle change completely. The early pace setters, Lotus Sport UK and their Lotus Evora pulled off at Tarzan after twenty six laps, giving the advantage to David McDonald in the #50 Scuderia Vittoria Ginetta G50. The double penalty for the Century Motorsport G50 allowed Peter Belshaw to retain his second position and with it, the GT4 Championship lead.

The British GT Championship is sponsored by UK tyre manufacturer Avon Tyres and is further supported by Sunoco Racing Fuels, Anglo American Oil Company and OAMPS.