SEAT aims for the BTCC Title at Brands Hatch
18
September 2006
SEAT could clinch the Dunlop MSA British Touring Car Championship Manufacturers'
title for the first time at Brands Hatch this weekend - but with
up to 26 cars racing in the biggest BTCC field for a decade, merely
avoiding other people's accidents and reaching the chequered flag
unscathed will be deemed a success around the tight and undulating 1.3
mile Indy Circuit.
The last time SEAT Sport UK raced at Brands Hatch was back in April,
when it won all three BTCC races at the Kent track and scored a memorable
clean-sweep of victories. The SEAT Leon's superior chassis clearly
works well there, and anything approaching the results achieved earlier
in the season would give SEAT the BTCC title in only its third year
of competing.
With the top cars lapping the shortest circuit in the BTCC calendar
in less than 50 seconds, finding an unobstructed lap on Saturday to
qualify well will be extremely important - especially as three
incident filled races on Sunday are virtually guaranteed. SEAT has qualified
first and second in the two previous BTCC races (at Snetterton and Knockhill)
and on a Brands Hatch circuit that's difficult to overtake on,
it will be aiming to monopolise the front row once again and exploit
the Leon's superior handling characteristics with a clean track
ahead - until lapping back-markers comes into play! SEAT showed
great race pace during its last visit to Brands Hatch, with James Thompson's
best racing lap of 49:235 just 0.009 seconds slower than Yvan Muller's
lap record, which the Frenchman set back in 2001.
Newlywed Jason Plato won at Brands Hatch in April and will be spearheading
the team's assault again - watched for the first time by
his new wife, Mrs. Sophie Plato! Jason's SEAT Leon has been completed
rebuilt following his Knockhill shunt, which bent every panel on the
car, apart from the rear-left corner.
As James will be racing for the Spanish SEAT Sport team in the FIA
World Touring Car Championship in Istanbul this weekend, Darren Turner
will come straight from a great performance at Knockhill for his first
ever back-to-back BTCC race meetings. Having had two second place results
taken away from him in Scotland, Darren is aiming to win, and this time
keep, some more podium silverware.
SEAT arrives at Brands Hatch 92 points ahead of Vauxhall in the Manufacturers'
standings. With just three races at Silverstone remaining after this
weekend, and a maximum of 81 points available at each race meeting,
SEAT can actually lose ground to its nearest rival and still win the
title on Sunday.
Jason said: "I've never been happier in my life than I
am right now, so I'm really looking forward to going to Brands
Hatch and starting my first race as a married man! We're on the
verge of winning the Manufacturers' title for SEATand we can still
win the Teams' cup, but the job's not over yet and we have
to remain very focused. The Leon works well around the Indy Circuit
and earlier in the year we completely dominated the race meeting. But
the racing's extremely close at Brands Hatch and it's easy
to get caught up in somebody else's accident - and it's
all too easy to get punted into a wall and score no points, as happened
to us there in April 2004.
"Qualifying on Saturday will be very important and one of our
main aims heading into the weekend will be to get on pole. I think Darren
and I have a very good chance of repeating what we've done at
Snetterton and Knockhill recently and qualify first and second. When
we've had a good qualifying session this year we've had
a good race day, and when we haven't race day has been very difficult.
So Saturday's qualifying session is just as important to us as
race day is, and in many ways I'd say it's even more important.
We've had an awful lot of bad luck this year and we're still
leading the Manufacturers' Championship, so I'm pretty confident
that we can achieve something very special this weekend.”
Darren said: "I haven't been back to America to race in
the ALMS since my last BTCC outing, so it's not like I'll
have to dial my way back into the SEAT Leon like I have had to do, so
coming straight from racing it at Knockhill will be a big help. It's
my first back-to-back British Touring Car race, so I'm really
looking forward to Brands Hatch. We know the Leon works well around
the Indy Circuit, so maybe we can have the same qualifying performance
that we had at Knockhill and a little bit more luck in the races.
"Brands Hatch always makes for close racing and close lap times,
so I don't expect an easy ride down there at all. Knockhill was
the first time I'd driven a touring car in the wet and I really
enjoyed it, so even though I'd not one hundred percent in tune
with the car yet, I'm learning all the time and there is less
and less I'm unfamiliar with. I haven't raced at Brands
Hatch since 1998, but the circuit hasn't changed and it won't
be a problem. The main thing at Brands Hatch is to score Manufacturer
points, but if an opportunity comes up for me to win a race I'll
grab it.”
The BTCC race weekend at Brands Hatch begins with two 40 minute free
practice sessions on Saturday 23rdSeptember, starting at 09.30 and 11.50,
followed by a 30 minute qualifying session starting at 15.20. Rounds
25, 26and 27 of the BTCC take place on Sunday 24th September, with the
three 24 lap races starting at 11.20, 13.20 and 15.50.
SEAT
See series calendar for British
Touring Car Championship 2006
Related Story 03.09.2006 - Plato
Wins his Final Race as a Single Man