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DOUBLE TOP FOR
PALMER AT RAINY CASTLE COMBE
3 October 2009:
Chrissy Palmer's 24th-round win was a masterclass in wet-track
driving, the 18-year-old gaining the lead on the opening lap -
after losing pole advantage to the impressively fast-starting Dan
Cammish - and holding on to it all the way to the chequered flag
despite seeing his hard-won lead diminished by a brief
interruption from the safety car.
Once he'd dealt
with Cammish, who had nipped to the front as early as Folly
corner, Palmer's superiority in the damp was such that he'd built
a one-second lead by the end of the opening lap. By lap six it was
up to six seconds, with James Cole now his closest pursuer after
the champion-elect had stolen second from Cammish.
With several cars
having spun off, notably the Van Diemens of Garry Findlay and
Fabio Gamberini at Quarry, race directors brought the safety car
into play for a lap to clear the debris. This was a gift for Josef
Newgarden, who was running fifth, having fought back from 10th
after a second-lap spin, and for Josh Hill, who had started from
the back with a 10-second penalty because of a technical
infringement in qualifying.
Newgarden nailed
the restart to pass both Alex Jones and Cammish, then slotted into
second before the eighth lap had ended by passing a cautious Cole.
Driving like a man possessed, Hill meanwhile leapt from eighth to
fourth, and then dived down the inside of Cammish at Camp Corner
next time around to slot into third and claim his second podium
finish of the season.
That settled the
top three, but there was still plenty of excitement to come. A
spin by Cammish saw him slip to sixth behind Cole and Dan's KMR
team-mate Jones. Then, as Cammish tried to repass Alex through
Quarry on the penultimate lap, their Spectrums touched and both
spun out.
Felix Fisher was
the grateful recipient of fifth place, the Somerset driver making
up for a warming-up lap spin in the works Juno, with Ben Barker
sixth and the sole Van Diemen finisher, ahead of Daniel Erickson,
whose Spectrum was handed a contentious stop/go penalty for an
alleged track infringement.
Thanks to Cammish's
demise, eighth-placed Josh Benson was the Scholarship Class victor
by a 10-second margin from Kieran Vernon, who was at the wheel of
an Enigma Motorsport Mygale for the day. Dan de Zille, Jordi
Cunill and Zaamin Jaffer completed the finishing order.
Race 2
Palmer made a better getaway from the pole this time to lead Cole
and Newgarden into turn one, with Josef lifting second place from
Cole with a brave move around the outside at Camp at the end of
the opening lap.
Josef was
determined not to let Palmer get away with this one, the JTR
driver closing the Jamun man down over the next four laps and then
nipping past for the lead through the Esses on the fifth tour. But
Chrissy was every bit as resolute and there followed one of the
toughest and closest battles for victory that has been seen all
season - a fitting end to a great championship year.
By lap seven
Newgarden had eased into a 1.2s lead. Palmer whittled away at the
American's advantage lap by lap, posted the best lap of the race
on lap 11, and then bettered his own mark next time around and
repassed his rival out of Tower Corner into the bargain. Chrissy
clung on to the lead for the final two laps, with Josef backing
off only on the final lap to allow his rival a 1.1s victory.
Third-placed Cole
tried to join the fight but spun at the Esses mid-race. The new
champion got going again but placed only ninth; ironically it was
his worst finish of the season.
Having failed to
finish race one, Garry Findlay's championship third position was
under threat from Palmer. Garry responded in style, making a great
start in his Van Diemen and passing Cammish for fourth just after
mid-distance. Cole's problem promoted Findlay to third in the race
and secured Garry's overall championship third into the bargain.
Erickson, Barker
and Hill also found their way past Cammish to finish fourth, fifth
and sixth respectively. Cammish came home seventh overall and, for
the 17th time this season, first in the Scholarship Class. Jones
stayed ahead of Cole for eighth, with Rogier De Wit, Cunill and
Patrick McKenna completing the top 12.
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