British GT’s monster supercar entry sets course for Snetterton

British GT’s monster supercar entry sets course for Snetterton

> De Haan/Cocker lead early Barwell one-two
> Record number of manufacturers and entries in GT4
> Entry list: Snetterton

 

A new season of British GT continues this weekend at Snetterton where 36 cars will tackle another two 60-minute sprint races.

 

Oulton Park’s 2019 curtain raiser produced a mix of first-time and repeat winners, while glorious sunshine and a strong supercar entry resulted in one of the championship’s best-ever attended events. Both are hopefully assured again this weekend when 13 GT3s and a record 23 GT4s descend on Norfolk.

 

 

GT3: ALL EYES ON BARWELL

 

Barwell Motorsport’s Lamborghinis always win at Oulton. Five victories in the last four seasons attest to that. So it’s no surprise to see its drivers lying first and second in this year’s championship after the opening round.

 

The problem, for its rivals at least, is that Barwell’s Lamborghinis aren’t too shabby around Snetterton either!

 

Sam De Haan and Jonny Cocker’s breakthrough victory at Oulton sees them lead team-mates Adam Balon and Phil Keen by seven points at this early stage. However, that win also ensures a 10s Pitstop Success Penalty must be served during the first of Sunday’s races, while the second Huracan – which, in Keen, features Snetterton’s most successful-ever British GT3 driver – competes handicap-free. Cocker, by comparison, has only won once at Snetterton, which came all the way back in 2007.

 

It’s not often that TF Sport has a bad day. But that’s exactly what happened at Oulton where the reigning Teams’ champion’s two new Aston Martins mustered just eight points between them.

 

At least Snetterton provides two more opportunities to bounce back. And having won the last three races there, albeit with the old V12 Vantage, TF Sport couldn’t have picked a better venue at which to reset. One of Adam’s three Snetterton victories was achieved with TF Sport, while Mark Farmer and Nicki Thiim claimed two poles and a win there 12 months ago.

 

2017 champions Rick Parfitt Jnr and Seb Morris rekindled their bromance after a year apart by winning Race 1 at Oulton, and head to Snetterton without a Pitstop Success Penalty. The JRM Bentley duo are 10 points behind De Haan and Cocker but, as Morris pointed out post-Oulton, have a higher total and smaller deficit than at the same stage of their title-winning season.

 

Ollie Wilkinson and Bradley Ellis were the best of Aston Martin’s contingent at Oulton where Optimum Motorsport’s Silver Cup crew became the first to score an outright podium with the new V8 Vantage. Separate qualifying sessions should theoretically give one of its drivers an edge in Q1 when they go up against a predominantly Am entry, while no Pitstop Success Penalty also marks them out as contenders. And, if you like omens, try this one for size: Ellis scored his last overall and class British GT victories at Snetterton in 2008 and ’14, respectively.

 

ABBA Racing, Richard Neary and Adam Christodoulou head to Snetterton buoyed by a maiden British GT podium, while both Century BMWs were also in the mix at Oulton Park. Indeed, Dominic Paul and Ben Green’s sheer consistency means they’re in a group of five crews from second to sixth covered by 10 points.

 

They’re joined by a new GT3 entry this weekend in the form of WPI Motorsport’s Lamborghini Huracan GT3 EVO, which replaces the GTC-spec Porsche Michael Igoe and Adam Wilcox drove at Oulton.

 

Elsewhere, injuries sustained by Ian Loggie in a cycling accident have ruled out RAM Racing’s Mercedes-AMG, while G-Cat’s debut has again been postponed due to delays outside of the team’s control. It’s hoped both will be in action at Silverstone.

 

 

GT4: TIGHT AT THE TOP!

 


Consistency vs one hit wonders: that’s the scenario atop the GT4 Drivers’ Championship where five crews are separated by just four points following an unpredictable season opener at Oulton. And providing any sort of form guide is made even more difficult by the fact none of this weekend’s 46 drivers has ever won a British GT race Snetterton.

 

Still, here goes…

 

HHC’s Dean Macdonald and Callum Pointon plus Multimatic duo Seb Priaulx and Scott Maxwell currently lead the way by dint of one win apiece. However, their failure to score in the second and first races, respectively, has kept the chasing pack hot on their heels.

 

It’s advantage McLaren in the first of Sunday’s contests when Macdonald and Pointon compete Pitstop Success Penalty-free, unlike their Ford rivals. A 570S has also won on each of British GT’s three previous visits to Snetterton, while the current-generation Mustang makes its debut there this weekend.

 

Two points further back are Invictus Games Racing’s Steve McCulley and Matthew George who secured Jaguar’s first British GT podium for 22 years at Oulton. David Appleby Engineering has transformed the F-TYPE SVR over the winter into a car capable of mixing it with GT4’s established order, while its drivers also top the early Pro/Am standings. McCulley makes way for Paul Vice this weekend as part of the project’s ongoing remit to rehabilitate injured ex-service personnel.

 

Balfe Motorsport’s McLaren also picked up a Success Penalty for finishing second at Oulton. However, its drivers – Graham Johnson and Michael O’Brien – won’t complain too much after ending the weekend three points shy of top spot despite qualifying 21st and 13th in class!

 

Two more 570Ss complete the overall top-six courtesy of HHC’s Tom Jackson/Luke Williams and Tolman’s James Dorlin/Josh Smith. Tolman, whose second entry also performed strongly last time out, won at Snetterton 12 months ago to extend McLaren’s recent run of success there.

 

Aston Martin once again has the numerical advantage thanks to its seven GT4 entries. However, its strength in numbers failed to materialise at Oulton where two fifth place finishes, courtesy of TF Sport and Beechdean AMR, were the best its new V8 Vantage could muster. In truth, only a late incident denied Kelvin Fletcher and Martin Plowman a podium in Race 2, although that misfortune at least comes with the bonus of racing Pitstop Success Penalty-free in Snetterton’s opener.

 

The longer mandatory pitstop time served by all GT4 Silver Cup entries means several more Pro/Am contenders should be fighting at the sharp end this weekend. Only a brake issue denied Team Parker’s reigning class champions Nick Jones and Scott Malvern overall victory at Oulton, while the likes of Track Focused’s Mike McCollum and Sean Cooper plus Fox Motorsport’s Mark Murfitt and Michael Broadhurst will be hoping for better luck following a tricky first weekend.

 

The same goes for reigning Teams’ and Drivers’ champions Century Motorsport who failed to score a point at Oulton. They now head to Snetterton where the BMW M4 claimed its first-ever British GT victory last season.

 

British GT4 records will also be broken this weekend subject to all 23 entries and nine manufacturers contesting Race 1. Both are one more than the existing records, which were established in 2018.

 

The new benchmarks are thanks to GT Marques’ 2019-spec Porsche Cayman, which makes its maiden appearance in the hands of Chris Car and Carrera Cup GB front-runner Dino Zamparelli, as well as Steller Motorsport’s new Audi. Richard Williams and Sennan Fielding hand the R8 LMS GT4 its long-awaited British GT debut.

 

 

LIVE COVERAGE

 

Both British GT races will be shown live on the championship’s Facebook page, Twitter account and website, plus SRO’s GT World Youtube channel, this Sunday.

 

Equally, a selection of support races will be streamed live on britishgt.com/live throughout the day. It’s also the place where international fans can watch restriction-free coverage.

 

 

SNETTERTON TIMETABLE

 

Saturday 18 May
09:30 – 10:30: Free Practice 1
11:40 – 12:40: Free Practice 2
15:50 – 16:00: Qualifying – GT3 Am
16:04 – 16:14: Qualifying – GT3 Pro
16:18 – 16:28: Qualifying – GT4 Am
16:33 – 16:43: Qualifying – GT4 Pro

Sunday 19 May
09:00 – 09:10: Warm-up
11:10 – 12:10: Race 1
15:25 – 16:25: Race 2

 

 

LAP RECORDS

 

GT3 – 1m48.498s – Phil Keen – Barwell Motorsport Lamborghini Huracan GT3 – 2017
GT4 – 1m58.650s – Will Tregurtha – HHC Motorsport Ginetta G55 – 2017

 

 

PITSTOP SPECIFICS

 

Race 1 Pitstop Success Penalties – GT3
10s – #69 Barwell Motorsport Lamborghini – Cocker/De Haan
07s – #8 Team ABBA Racing Mercedes-AMG – Neary/Christodoulou
05s – #99 Beechdean AMR Aston Martin – Howard/Sorensen

 

Race 1 Pitstop Success Penalties – GT4
10s – #15 Multimatic Motorsport Ford – Maxwell/Priaulx
07s – #20 Balfe Motorsport McLaren – Johnson/O’Brien
05s – #44 Invictus Games Racing Jaguar – Vice/George

 

Pitstop windows (both races)
GT3: 22-32 minutes
GT4: 28-38 minutes

 

Minimum pitstop times (pit-in to pit-out)
GT3: 75s | GT4: 110s

 

All Silver Cup-entered GT4 cars will serve an additional 14 seconds and carry 20kg extra ballast.