| DONINGTON
WINS FOR NEWGARDEN, PALMER, ERICKSON

19 July, 2009:
The battle for the lead of the MSA Formula Ford Championship of
Great Britain came alive at Donington Park this weekend, Josef
Newgarden closing to within 17 points of season-long series leader
James Cole, with Newgarden, Chrissy Palmer and Daniel Erickson
sharing the Donington victory spoils.
There were
celebrations also for reigning Formula Ford Champion Wayne Boyd,
who underlined the promise he displayed so often last season with
a masterly victory at Donington in round 12 of the Cooper Tires
British F3 International Series. It was his maiden Formula 3 win.
Race 1
Following in the wheeltracks of his countryman Mark Webber, who
won his maiden Grand Prix a week ago, Australian Erickson claimed
his first MSA Formula Ford Championship of Great Britain race
victory on Saturday with a dominant pole-to-chequered flag
performance in his Kevin Mills Racing Spectrum.
Having annexed the
pole by a quarter of a second, 21-year-old Erickson repelled an
early attack from Ben Barker's Van Diemen as they blasted away
from the startline, and he pulled into a clear lead by the end of
the first lap. His getaway was aided by the absence from the race
of the cars which should have started from row two - the Mygale of
championship leader James Cole and the Van Diemen of Garry Findlay
- which collided on the warm-up lap.
Barker's hopes of
keeping in touch with dashing Dan were soon quashed by assaults on
his position by Alex Jones's Spectrum and Josef Newgarden's
Mygale. Jones made it past Barker on lap three, with Newgarden
diving past both of them to snatch second for himself through
Redgate Corner next time around.
By the this stage
Erickson was two-and-a-half seconds clear and, try as he might,
Newgarden couldn't breach the gap by race end, though he did
reduce Daniel's advantage to 1.6s. "That was awesome,"
said Erickson of his first victory. "I didn't get the best of
starts but I was able to hold off Barker and then I managed to get
a bit of a break and hold on to it."
"I wish I
could have gotten the win," said Newgarden. "It was
definitely possible but when you get a gap in Formula Ford it's so
difficult to close it down. But second is very good for me in the
championship, particularly with Findlay and Cole failing to
score."
The KMR team's
delight at its first win of the season was more than doubled by
Jones claiming third - his first podium result - and the other
Spectrum, that of Daniel Cammish, taking fourth as well as the
Scholarship Class win. "It's been a long time coming,"
said Jones. "I'm really happy for the team. It's been a
fantastic day for Kevin Mills Racing."
Chrissy Palmer
battled up from 12th on the grid to fifth by lap five, but could
not find a way past Cammish to progress further up the
leaderboard. Barker slipped to sixth, finishing well ahead of the
battle for seventh, Snetterton victor Jordi Cunill beating Josh
Hill to the honours. Kieran Vernon, Fabio Gamberini and Liroy
Stuart finished next up, with Jerseyman Dan de Zille 12th - his
best result - for the Minister International team. Pat McKenna
recovered from a lurid first-lap spin at Goddards to take 13th.
Race 2
Sunday morning's race saw another good start from pole-sitter
Erickson, but his hopes of making another getaway were dashed by a
two-lap safety car period necessary to remove Liroy Stuart's
stricken Mygale from the grid. After the restart Daniel held on in
front for a lap before Cole snatched the lead through the Goddards
chicane.
Next time around,
Erickson, pursued by Newgarden, Findlay and McKenna, charged past
Cole, bumping the championship leader down to sixth.
The leading
protagonists crossed the line five abreast at the end of lap 11,
Newgarden then overhauling Erickson for the lead through McLeans.
Josef pulled clear by nine-tenths over the last two laps, posting
a new lap record on the penultimate tour.
With McKenna
spinning away his hopes of a podium finish, Cole staged a
brilliant fight back to third, then snatched second from Erickson
near the end. "That was a good race," said James.
"I was sixth at one point and I thought that that was it, so
second is a great result. I want to win every race, but I can't.
You have to take what points you can, when you can."
Newgarden,
savouring his fifth win of the season, said: "That was the
toughest race of my career, and what a way to come back from a
disappointing qualifying… I'm ecstatic, and so happy for the
team."
Fluid team-mates
Findlay and Barker completed the top five, with Palmer sixth ahead
of Jordi Cunill, and Fabio Gamberini an excellent eighth in his
Van Diemen to bring to an end Dan Cammish's 13-race Scholarship
Class winning streak. Cammish was right behind for ninth, with
Alex Jones 10th.
Race 3
Chrissy Palmer drove an absolute peach of a race in the
rain-affected 15th round of championship to secure a richly
deserved victory - a stunning effort from ninth on the grid which
gave the Jamun racer his second win of the 2009 season.
At the start, and
with all drivers electing to run on treaded tyres due to a rain
shower prior to the off, pole-sitter Newgarden got away well to
lead on the run to Redgate as Findlay held on to second ahead of
McKenna.
Cole made a rapid
getaway to pass fourth-placed starter Hill but the best start of
all came from Palmer who, from the fifth row, rocketed up the
order into third on the first lap. This pushed Cole back to fifth,
behind Findlay, who lost some ground after his initial spurt.
Into lap two
Newgarden already held a very handy two second advantage over the
chasing back which, by the time they reached Redgate, was led by
the seemingly unstoppable Palmer, who took the place with a great
pass around the outside of McKenna.
The instant he got
into second, Palmer began to lap quicker than fellow Mygale runner
Newgarden and the American started to come under huge pressure as
the laps ticked by. Into the fifth tour, his lead had been cut to
just seven tenths of a second and, a lap later, Newgarden headed
Palmer by only 0.2s.
At Goddards on lap
five the inevitable pass came, Palmer moving ahead of Newgarden
for the lead as McKenna continued to hold on to the final podium
place ahead of Cole - who took fourth on lap three - Van Diemen
runner Findlay, and Hill. The Scholarship Class, meanwhile, was
comfortably headed by the Spectrum of Cammish in eighth overall.
Even though Palmer
had convincingly moved into the lead early on he simply couldn't
shake off Newgarden who, at the end of lap seven, was a mere 0.392
seconds behind and just over a second clear of McKenna.
The Safety Car had
to be deployed at the beginning of lap nine following an accident
at Hollywood for Luke Williams a lap or so earlier. At that point
the order of the top eight was Palmer, Newgarden, McKenna,
Findlay, Cole, Hill, Erickson and Cammish.
The restart came on
lap 11 with just over two minutes remaining on the clock and
Newgarden was fully aware this would probably offer him his best
chance of retaking the lead. Diving to the outside of Palmer on
the run to Redgate, he was unable to make the attempt count and
had to tuck back in behind through Hollywood and down Craner
Curves.
Into the final lap
of racing, Newgarden again had a look at Palmer going into the
first corner and then remained tight to his tail through the Old
Hairpin, Schwantz and up to McLeans. At Coppice, the JTR driver
looked very well placed to enjoy a great slipstream and although
he pulled out to try to pass Palmer on the run to Goddards, the
latter held on for an excellent win.
McKenna rounded out
the podium with a great drive to third place, keeping Findlay at
bay in fourth and Cole in fifth. Erickson finished in sixth place,
after passing Hill on the final lap, with Cammish eighth and a
clear Scholarship Class winner.
Palmer said:
"That was the best race I've done all year. I got an awesome
start and by the first corner I was up to fourth I think. It
really was a lot of fun, to win like that makes it even more
special."
Scholarship Class
victor Cammish commented: "That was a hard race, it's the
first ever wet race I've had in cars so that was certainly an
experience. It's obviously great to win the class, I'm pleased
with how things went." |