Victory and British GT Championship Lead for Mullen and Niarchos
26
August 2006
Tim Mullen took the chequered flag in his Scuderia Ecosse Ferrari 430
at Brands Hatch today to secure win number 8 in the 2006 Avon Tyres
British GT Championship, a win he dedicated to his cousin Irish Three
Day Event Champion Sherelle Duke who died last week competing in Southampton.
GT3 was won by Leo Machitski and Jonathan Cocker in their regular Barwell
Motorsport Aston Martin after their switch to a Tech9 Porsche at Rockingham
a fortnight ago. With championship leaders George MacKintosh and Sam
Blogg finishing in 4th place, Machitski is just 1.5 points behind the
Lotus Cadena pairing with two races remaining.
Bradley Ellis and Alex Mortimer celebrated their third GTC win of 2006
in the Team RPM Porsche 996. In the championship battle 2nd placed Ryan
Hooker closed the gap to 3rd placed Jonny Lang and Matt Allison to just
4 points.
At the green Hines and Niarchos led the rest of the 28 car field towards
Paddock Hill for the first time with Hines his pole position advantage
to move into the lead as they dropped down Paddock towards Druids. The
Cirtek GT2 Porsche of Adam Jones was right up behind Niarchos but in
turn had the Aston Martin of Jonathan Cocker filling his rearview mirrors.
At the end of the opening lap it was Hines from Niarchos and Jones but
Cocker got alongside the 3rd placed Porsche and passed Jones on the
run up to Druids as it appeared the Cirtek Porsche was having a problem.
Jones dropped further back as he exited Druids and a trip to the pits
confirmed the loss of 2nd and 3rd gears. The Cirtek mechanics got to
work and the Porsche regained the track but a few laps later Jones retired.
At the end of lap 2 Hines had a 1 second lead over the Ferrari, with
Jonathan Cocker leading GT3 in 3rd place with Richard Hay in the Damax
Ascari in 4th. Behind them Ryan Hooker (#3 Trackspeed Porsche), Bradley
Ellis (#96 Team RPM Porsche) and Jonny Lang (#5 Trackspeed Porsche)
were nose to tail and on lap 3 Hooker dropped back to 3rd in class out
on the circuit as he was passed by his rivals. Until lap 6 Lang held
off the pressure from Ellis but on lap 7 the RPM Porsche moved into
the lead of GTC and 5th overall. Ellis then got a welcome helping hand
from the Trackspeed GT3 Porsche of David Ashburn who was working his
way back up the field. On lap 8 Ashburn passed Jonny Lang, which gave
Ellis the opportunity to move ahead.
The two leading GT2 cars were opening up a lap gap from Cocker but Hines
couldn’t shake off Niarchos. Jonathan Cocker was in turn moving
well ahead of the Ascari of Richard Hay as the pitstop window approached.
On lap 14 the cars started to come in for their compulsory stops but
Cocker stayed out for as long as possible and on lap 15 hit the front
as Hines and Niarchos came in. On lap 22 with the pitstops complete
Tom Kimber-Smith now at the wheel of the Panoz was lapping the backmarkers
with Tim Mullen in the Ferrari less than 2 seconds behind. The next
lap changed the order at the front of the field. As Kimber-Smith and
Mullen approached the flying Ian Flux in the Rollcentre Mosler. On lap
23 the Panoz and the Mosler clashed and Mullen went through into the
lead, crossing the line five seconds ahead of Kimber-Smith.
In GT3 Leo Machitsky in the Barwell Aston was consolidating the lead
handed to him by Jonathan Cocker, but Richard Stanton, now at the wheel
of the Damax Ascari was coming under pressure from Danny Watts in the
Trackspeed Posrche and on lap 28 found himself looking at the rear bumper
of the Porsche 997 GT3.
In GTC the fastest car on the track was the #81 Team Tiger Marcos with
Chris Beighton now piloting the car through the field. The four time
class winner’s charge came to an end after a clash with Bill Tunney
in the David Dove Racing Ferrari and then a lap later the car pulled
off at Surtees in a cloud of smoke. Alex Mortimer, who taken over from
Bradley Ellis in the RPM Porsche had a 2 second lead over Phil Keen
(#3 Trackspeed Porsche) and Matt Allison (#5 Trackspeed Porsche).
As the race reached the final few laps Mullen now had a commanding 14
second lead over Kimber-Smith, the only two cars on the lead lap. Leo
Machitsky brought the Aston Martin home at the head of GT3 while Ian
Flux, recovering from his earlier clash with the Panoz, overtook Danny
Watts on the penultimate lap to take 4th place overall and third in
GT2.
Tim Mullen took the chequered flag to take the 8th win of the season
for Scuderia Ecosse and taking the lead in the drivers and team championships
with four races remaining.
Tim Mullen (GT2 Winner, Scuderia Ecosse Ferrari 430): "It all got
a bit chaotic for a while and it was quite tight in the race. Fluxie
(Ian Flux) was a lap down and he was certainly getting right in the
way of the battle. I think it initially helped me catch up to Tom (Kimber-Smith)
and then it was close for a while and he made a mistake with a backmarker.
I got alongside him down the back straight, he squeezed me and put me
onto the grass. I went to go down the inside and he moved across and
we made a wee bit of contact, which made him go sideways but I didn't
actually make him spin. I don't know why he actually spun off. But it's
a good win and I'd like to dedicate it to my cousin who died last week
when riding a horse, this one’s for her."
SRO
See 2006 series calendar for British
GT Championship
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Keeps British GT Championship Dream Burning