MALVERN
DOMINATES OULTON PARK OPENER
ROUND 4,
OULTON PARK 23 APRIL 2011: Scott Malvern put the
disappointments of a chequered season-opener at
Silverstone firmly behind him at Oulton Park International
Circuit today by taking a clear, and almost completely
untroubled, victory during the fourth round of the Dunlop
MSA Formula Ford Championship of Great Britain.
Thoroughly
dominant in qualifying, taking pole position for all three
of the weekend's races, the Jamun Racing 22-year-old made
a great start to this afternoon's 11-lap encounter and saw
off some early attention from Dutch team-mate Jeroen
Slaghekke to notch up his second win of 2011.
"Obviously
Silverstone wasn't brilliant for us but we still got a win
there," said Ilford-based Malvern. "Today, I got
my head down at the start and was able to build a gap.
Oulton is a circuit I really enjoy and this is a great
start to the weekend."
Championship
leader Slaghekke, winner of round two at Silverstone,
increased his points advantage to 14 with his third podium
from the first four races. With Nick McBride finishing a
close third, the Australian just 0.174 seconds adrift at
the flag, round four also meant a rostrum lock-out for
Jamun.
In the
Scholarship Class, Cavan Corcoran kept up his faultless
start to the year with his fourth win on the bounce and
with it the fastest lap. Ahead of Easter Monday's fifth
and sixth rounds of the championship, the 17-year-old from
Matlock in Derbyshire holds a perfect tally of 124 points
- more than 40 clear of his closest challenger.
Qualifying:
During this morning's 20-minute qualifying session,
Malvern came into the picture at the halfway point,
hitting the top of the times just prior to a session
stoppage due to a huge accident for Jamun's Jake Cook.
Caught out
by a sudden gust of wind along Lakeside, the Rotherham
17-year-old's Mygale was pitched into a roll but he
luckily emerged unscathed. The car wasn't quite as
fortunate and the resulting damage unsurprisingly
prevented Cook from taking the race start - a real shame
as his best time at that point still ended up being good
enough for fourth fastest.
At the
resumption, Malvern stamped home his authority with some
searing laps and into the final couple of minutes the 2010
vice-champion had a 0.6 second gap to Slaghekke. On his
final lap, the series leader halved the deficit but
Malvern was untouchable.
McBride
qualified third quickest, 0.3 seconds further adrift, with
the luckless Cook fourth on the times, JTR's Dan De Zille
fifth and LMS runner Antti Buri sixth. Australian Geoff
Uhrhane rued a problematic gearbox which seriously
hampered his pace and meant the round three race winner
was able to post only the seventh best lap. Corcoran took
the Scholarship pole.
Round four:
As the lights went out for the first of the Easter
Weekend's trio of Formula Ford races, Malvern made a great
start with fellow front-row man Slaghekke getting too much
wheelspin but still able to hold McBride at bay through
Old Hall with De Zille, Buri and Uhrhane running in grid
order too.
Further
behind, Fluid's Matthew Parry ended his race all-too soon
with a visit into the barriers at the first corner
following a mid-pack tangle. His Van Diemen would be going
no further and the same was true of Jesse Anttila's Ray
which was tipped into the barriers half a lap later at
Hill Top - a bad day for the Finn after driveshaft
problems in qualifying.
No red
flags were necessary for either incident and so the race
continued without break. At the front nothing looked
likely to immediately change but fifth placed Buri most
certainly had his sights set on challenging De Zille.
As Uhrhane
helped to push the Finn along, the pair began to apply
some serious pressure to De Zille and on lap five his
defence finally cracked with Buri slicing through on the
inside at Cascades. Uhrhane tried to take advantage of the
delay for De Zille too but his team-mate held firm along
Lakeside and through Island Bend.
Rather than
being able to pull away though, Buri came back under
attack almost instantly although De Zille slipped behind
Uhrhane three laps later when the Australian delivered a
terrific move on the brakes into the chicane.
Back with
the lead trio, Malvern managed to build a sizeable cushion
and in the end he took the flag by 2.5 seconds, setting
the fastest lap of the race in the process on the
penultimate tour with a time of 1m 40.515s (96.41mph).
Slaghekke
had his mirrors filled with the similar red Mygale of
McBride and over the line they were separated by just
0.174s. Buri managed to pull away from the battling JTR
duo of Uhrhane and De Zille, the latter coming back at his
team-mate on the final lap but not able to find a way
through.
"It
was quite a tough race", said Slaghekke, "Scott
did an excellent job getting ahead at the start and he was
able to pull a gap and control it. I'm quite happy with
second place though."
Third
placed McBride added: "Oulton's much more of a
driver's circuit than Silverstone, it's very challenging.
It's a good result for the team, it's great for them to
have a one-two-three."
Spike
Goddard, the third Australian in the field, headed up the
second pack in seventh place for Jamun with Cliff
Dempsey's American runner Neil Alberico in eighth - the
highest placed Ray and first of the non-Mygale drivers.
Frenchman Philippe Layac was ninth for Enigma ahead of
Luke Williams.
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