| BEST-YET
FIELD GATHERS FOR FORMULA FORD
14 March, 2008:
The British Formula Ford Championship is set for its most
competitive, exciting and unpredictable season in recent memory.
That's the view of seasoned series watchers awaiting with keen
anticipation Oulton Park's opening rounds of the Ford-backed
championship on Easter Monday (24 March).
A grid of 25
Duratec-engined Formula Fords is expected at the Cheshire circuit,
and it's not only the biggest ever first-event gathering of such
machinery but also a field offering the greatest depth of talent
and the strongest international flavour in recent years.
Championship-winning youngsters from England, Scotland, Northern
Ireland and Wales are facing talent of equal stature from
Australia, Brazil, Denmark, France and the Netherlands,
underlining Formula Ford's status as chief supporting event to the
British F3 International Series and reinforcing its position as
Formula 3's leading feeder series.
At stake for the
youngsters is the chance to win one of the most prestigious prizes
in world motorsport and perhaps the opportunity to add their names
to those of F1 greats like Senna, Schumacher, Hakkinen, Mansell,
Hill and Button in the Formula Ford hall of fame.
David Addison,
Britain's leading circuit commentator and the voice of Formula
Ford on Sky Sports, can't wait to see what will happen: "It's
absolutely wide open, with potentially as many as 12 different
drivers who could win a race and probably eight of those who
should do so.
"There are
young British drivers with really great talent making their debuts
and going up against some with two or even three seasons
experience; there's a returning Formula Ford Champion; an
Australian Formula Ford Champion; and exciting young talents from
Brazil and Europe. It's great to see such an impressive entry and
Formula Ford back where it belongs, providing great racing and
attracting drivers from all over the globe."
Leading the field
into battle is the super-strength four-man squad from Jamun
Racing, the Kent team bidding to win its fourth consecutive
British Formula Ford title, using the latest chassis from French
manufacturer Mygale.
Jamun's drivers are
reigning Australian Formula Ford Champion Tim Blanchard;
Northern Ireland FF1600 Champion Wayne Boyd; Club Formula
Ford North-West Champion James Cole; and Brazilian Victor
Correa, who has a string of kart titles to his name as well as
the 2007 Formula Sao Paulo single-seater championship crown.
Joe Tandy Racing -
last year the only team consistently to challenge Jamun's
dominance - returns with three new drivers and a switch to Mygale
chassis. On the driving strength are Matt Hamilton, a race
winner in Formula Palmer Audi last year; Frenchman Philippe
Layac, who has a year's experience of Formula Ford under his
belt already; and Dutch driver Rogier de Wit, a frontrunner
from the Benelux FF series.
Another team
fielding Mygales is Getem Racing, with another Dutch youngster, Chris
Maliepaard, on the squad and its other car being handled by
one of the pre-season favourites, Linton Stuteley. Linton
is the only driver on the grid with recent UK experience of
winning in a Duratec-engined Formula Ford; he was fourth in the
championship in 2007 and placed third in last October's Formula
Ford Festival.
There are many
teams determined not to let the Mygale men have it all their own
way, however. Among their number is mighty Comtec Racing, which
returns to the championship it won in 2000 and 2002 with a new,
in-house chassis design and a team led by '02 champion Westley
Barber. Talented Brazilian kart star Francisco Weiler -
just 16 and the youngest in the field - will race the second
Comtec while Jamie Jardine will pilot a 'semi-works' third
car prepared by ACER Motorsport.
The pickings have
been slim in recent seasons for once-dominant Van Diemen, but
experienced Formula Ford and F3 team Fluid Motorsport Developments
plans to set the record straight for the Norfolk chassis builder
in 2008 with a squad led by Danish karting prodigy Marco
Sorensen and by 2006 Scholarship Cup winner David Brown.
Brown ended his '07 season on a high note with fourth in the
Formula Ford Festival.
Last year's
Scholarship winner, Matt Dobson, will be flying the Van
Diemen flag also with the help of the Inter Motorsport team, as
will the Myerscough College entry, Alex Jones.
Kevin Mills Racing
is another team to switch chassis for 2008. The
Gloucestershire-based outfit will be fielding two of the
Australian-built Spectrum machines, one to be driven by Australian
FF Championship frontrunner Glen Wood and the other in the
hands of Adrian Campfield, who is embarking on his second
full Formula Ford season.
A late entry for
Oulton is that of Adam Batch, a leading British Super 1
karting competitor for the last three seasons; he will drive a
works Ray.
Other confirmed
entries for the coming season include those of experienced Formula
Fordsters Matt Payne and Garry Findlay. Championship
newcomers Felix Scott, Daniel Walker and Chrissy Palmer
will join Alex Jones in pursuing Scholarship Cup honours.
"It's an
incredibly exciting line-up," says Sam Roach of championship
promoter RacingLine. "As well as several proven race winners
at this level there is a host of talent coming in from other
directions, and I for one am not sticking my neck out just yet to
say who I think will emerge on top…
"It's great
also to see new chassis and drivers from as far afield as Brazil
and Australia, whose arrival underscores the international
prestige of the British Formula Ford Championship."
British Formula
Ford is this season supporting British F3 at all but one of its UK
dates. It will additionally feature alongside British GT at
Knockhill, with A1GP at its sole British round, and will also take
in a visit to the Belgian Grand Prix circuit of Spa-Francorchamps.
Five double-header meetings and five events featuring three
Formula Ford races combine to provide a gruelling 25-round
championship. |