Plato Holds BTCC Lead After Bruising Snetterton Races
29
July 2007
Jason Plato continues
to lead the Dunlop MSA British Touring Car Championship after a bruising
race meeting at Snetterton in Norfolk. Having been hit off the track
at the first corner of the opening race, Jason recovered from 17th
to finish 8th in Race 1, scored a podium in Race 2 and challenged for
the lead in Race 3 before finishing 14th. His SEAT Leon showed the
battle scars of a hard-fought day, but with nine rounds of the 30 race
series remaining, Jason holds a 14 point lead in the Drivers’ standings.
It
was an equally frustrating day for Darren Turner, who ran as high as
2nd and scored three top 10 results, but ended the day with a battered
Leon and the feeling that more could have been achieved. Their combined
points tally over the weekend has nevertheless enabled SEAT Sport UK
to maintain its lead in the BTCC Teams’ Championship and keeps
SEAT’s strong challenge alive in the Manufacturers’ table.
Round
19
Jason made a fantastic start from the fourth row of the grid to power
between Darren and Fabrizio Giovanardi (Vauxhall Vectra), who started
on row three. As he turned into the first corner, Riches, in 6th place,
Matt Neal (Honda Civic) drove into the side of him, pushing the SEAT
Leon off onto the grass. Jason rejoined the track in 17th and over
the 18 lap race came back to finish 8th.
Darren had a clutch problem
on the start line, and was initially embroiled in a close race for
6th place with Mat Jackson, before the BMW driver pulled away. On lap
six Giovanardi overtook Darren exiting The Esses, and as the SEAT driver
lost momentum, Mike Jordan (Honda Integra) also went passed. Thereafter,
Darren was in a close battle with Jordan, eventually getting through
when Jordan made a mistake at the end of lap 14. As Jason closed, Darren,
Jordan and Jason took to chequered flag nose to tail in 6th, 7th and
8th places.
Colin Turkington won the race, but was later excluded when
his BMW was found to be underweight.
Round 20
Both SEAT Sport UK drivers made a good start from where they
finished the previous race, but Fiona Leggate (MG ZS) and Chris Stockton
(Lexus IS200) collided on the run down to Riches and the Safety Car
was deployed. At the restart on lap six, the 18 lap race had been extended
to 21 and Jason followed Darren before overtaking him on lap seven
to move up to 5th. Jason, Tom Chilton (Vauxhall Vectra) and Jackson
were then side-by-side coming down the long Rivett Straight, at the
end of which Chilton spun in front of Jason, forcing the Leon driver
onto the grass and dropping him to 7th.
Jason did his best lap of the
race on lap 14 as he moved back up to 5th and was closing on Neal and
3rd-placed Darren when the Safety Car came out again; this time for
Erkut Kizilirmak (Astra Sport Hatch) to be rescued from the field adjacent
to Sear Corner. During this period, Gordon Shedden (Honda Civic) retired
from 2nd place with gearbox problems and only three racing laps remained
when the race resumed. In a straight race for the line, Giovanardi
won, while Neal stole 2nd on the final lap, Jason claimed a podium
finish in 3rd, one place ahead of Darren.
Round 21
With the top six
from the previous race randomly selected to start the third and final
race at Snetterton in reverse order, Darren and Jason lined up together
on the second row, with the BMWs of Tom Onslow-Cole and Jackson ahead
of them.
Jason made a great start to overtake Darren on the race to
Riches, and the two SEAT Leons slotted in behind the two BMWs. Jason
made a move on Jackson at Sear Corner on lap three and they were side-by-side
down the Revett Straight; but it was a fantastic move at the Bomb Hole
on lap seven which finally saw Jason go through. He then challenged
Onslow-Cole for the lead, but as Jason had been pushing hard, his front
tyres began to go off and the last three laps were a struggle.
It all
came to a head at The Esses on lap 16, when Jason was sandwiched between
Jackson and Giovanardi. Jason drop from 2nd to 4th, Jackson ran a long
way out onto grass and drop from 3rd to 7th, Giovanardi move from 4th
to 3rd and Neal drove through them all unscathed to come from 5th to
2nd. And that is the order in which they finished, behind race winner
Onslow-Cole.
Darren dropped to 9th by the end of the race, and was left
wondering if his SEAT Leon was off-song, as he’d been unable
to defend his position and had been “a sitting duck” as
rivals overtook at will.
SEAT Sport UK
See series calendar for British
Touring Car Championship 2007
Related Story 17.07.2007 - BTCC Wins for Shedden and Plato at Wet Donington