| Rounds
2 & 3: Oulton Park 5 April 2010

GREAT SCOTTS ON
TOP AT OULTON PARK
Scott Malvern
won the second round of the Dunlop MSA Formula Ford Championship
of Great Britain today at Oulton Park to accelerate into the
championship lead, with Scott Pye stealing the show in round three
to clinch his second win of the weekend.
Pye and his Jamun
Racing Mygale had won Saturday's first race while Malvern was held
up behind Tio Ellinas in the early stages, but in race two Cliff
Dempsey Racing driver Malvern took advantage of a first corner
incident involving Pye to claim a victory of his own.
Pye didn't make a
great getaway and came under threat at Old Hall from his Jamun
team-mate Josh Hill. With Pye on the outside, Hill appeared to
make contact with another car and spun into Pye, eliminating both.
That left Malvern needing only to keep his head to lead a
three-car, race-long battle to the flag.
Malvern's Ray, the
Spectrum of Daniel Cammish and Antti Buri's Enigma-run Mygale
broke away at the front and enjoyed a fabulous and clean contest.
The trio was separated by little more than inches for much of the
11 laps. Cammish almost found a way round the outside of Malvern
with four laps to go, but the leader's defence remained solid.
"In the first
race, I'd have loved to have been up there," said Malvern,
"but it took a while to pass Tio and I was never going to
catch Scott after that. The second was a dream for me, and
definitely something we've been working hard for in the last few
weeks - especially after the big accident last week that wasn't my
fault."
The unfortunate
Cammish developed a fuel pick-up problem and was denied a podium
finish. First Buri slipped by and then Kieran Vernon took
advantage on the run up to Lodge for the final time. Cammish
reached the line in fourth, just a fraction ahead of James Tucker,
who made it two Fluid Motorsport cars in the top five. This was
some recompense for the team's first-race dramas, which saw two of
the Van Diemens clipping a tyre wall and retiring.
Jesse
Anttila and Emil Bernstorff were delayed on the hectic first
lap and fell down the order, while JTR's Tio Ellinas was forced to
start from pit lane after stalling and missing the green flag lap.
The Cypriot drove a storming race through the field to claim
eighth at the chequered flag.
Ellinas became part
of another tremendous race-long, multi-car dice. Jake Cook came
out on top of it in sixth in his Mygale after trading places with
Bernstorff. Luke Williams battled his way to seventh and was again
the clear winner in the Scholarship Class in his Juno. Philippe
Layac and Jesper Egebart hung on to the back of the train to
complete the top 10.
Another early
incident, on the approach to the Shell hairpin on the third lap,
dropped Zaamin Jaffer's Ray down the order and eliminated Ville
Kivinen's Van Diemen.
With Pye and
Malvern still to duel directly, the third and final race of the
weekend lined them up alongside each other on the front row - and
that was about as far apart as they got.
Pye made a frantic,
wheel-spinning start, but was able to move to the outside in time
to block off Malvern and lead into the first corner. But Malvern
was determined and began to challenge for the lead as early as the
first lap. There was nothing to choose between them for the
duration and Malvern tried time and again to put his car in a
position to attack. But Pye's defence was excellent; he made his
Mygale as wide as possible and claimed the optimum line at each
and every turn.
Malvern kept the
pressure on to the final lap, but there was nothing he could do
and Pye scored his second win of the weekend by just 0.120s.
"The car was perfect and my times were consistent," said
Pye. "But Scott was right on my gearbox so I had to make the
car as wide as possible. I was confident that I could keep a gap
in the high speed stuff, so it was just about defending the rest
of the lap. I'm ecstatic. Obviously it was a goal to win all three
races, and you're never happy with a DNF, but to come back like
this is sending me home on a high."
Behind the leaders,
an even bigger fight for third erupted. Hill resisted the advances
of Buri for several laps but slipped down the order mid-way
through the race and left the Finn in third, but at the mercy of
all three Fluid Motorsport Van Diemens. Anttila and Vernon took
their turns at hounding the back of the Enigma Motorsport Mygale,
with Tucker in close attendance too.
Buri held his nerve
to earn his second podium of the weekend, ahead of Anttila and
Tucker, with Hill completing the top six. David Ellesley's Spirit
took the Scholarship Class honours in the final race, in 14th
place overall, after early class leader Williams retired three
laps in.
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