![]() ![]() Elsewhere in Racing
Updates from the Rest of the Racing World By Mark Alan Jones and David Wright, Australia
Atlas F1 Magazine Writers
Advice: The points tables for most series covered by Elsewhere In Racing are available here. Individual series are linked to their corresponding points table after each report.
Enge Zone
For the first time Tomas Enge leads the International Formula 3000 Series outright in 2002. Enge bolted away from the grid to an untroubled victory in Hungary. Enge was pursued home by the Coloni team in their best ever team performance, but the star was Enge, the elder statesman of the class with one hand on the trophy.
When the lights went out Enge immediately moved clear and on the hardest circuit in racing to overtake, overtaking was never an issue. At the end of the first lap the Arden International car was almost two and a half seconds clear of the Colonis. Mauricio was fourth ahead of Bourdais, Bjorn Wirdheim, Mario Haberfeld and Tiago Monteiro. Sperafico had made a dreadful start and was tenth while Antonio Pizzonia spun Rob Nguyen who had exploded off the line.
Mauricio's good run didn't last and he pitted for fresh rubber on only the second lap. The top order settled with gaps gradually appearing amongst them. Monteiro dropped to eleventh but reclaimed a top ten position after Rodrigo Sperafico spun off. Both Sperafico twins were trying hard as Ricardo fought to overcome his dreadful start. Ricardo was now eighth whilst Rodrigo had dropped to fifteenth.
Enge was now controlling the lead from the front. The gap to Toccacelo fluctuated back and forth; the Italian never really threatened the Czech. The gap was out to five seconds with four laps to go when Pizzonia dived at Haberfeld in an ultimately misguided attempt to take sixth position. The Petrobras car rolled into turn 9. Ricardo Sperafico capitalised and jumped into the points. A gaggle of cars had formed together behind Patrick Friesacher who was in ninth. When this group arrived at the scene there was further carnage with Rodrigo Sperafico and Derek Hill ending Durango's day early. Hill slid into the wreckage of Pizzonia's car without hitting any of the nearby marshals.
With only twenty points left in the championship there are only three names left. Enge now leads Bourdais by a mere two points. Thirteen points from Enge is Pantano. Pantano is still a mathematical chance but with two drivers ahead of him, his chances are slim.
Result of International Formula 3000 Championship, Round 10 of 12, Hungaroring, Hungary:
Standings: Tomas Enge 51, Sebastien Bourdais 49, Giorgio Pantano 38, Rodrigo Sperafico 20, Antonio Pizzonia, Mario Haberfeld and Bjorn Wirdheim 18, Ricardo Sperafico 14, Patrick Friesacher and Enrico Toccacelo 10 etc.
Formula 3000 points distribution
Da Matta Makes It Six
Cristiano Da Matta continued his run as king of the road courses as he took his sixth win of the year, winning the 220 mile event at Road America. Pit strategies came into play at various stages during the race, most position changes place due to pit stops rather than passes on the track, while one of the few attempts to pass ended up taking two cars out of the race.
Tracy made the best of the restart as Alex Tagliani pressured da Matta for third. Down the field drivers tried to make moves on each other but most were unsuccessful. Most of the field dived in on lap fourteen to make their first stops, the rest of the drivers stopping in the next lap or two after making early pit stops during the caution, da Matta dropping to fourth and Tagliani to fifth while Kenny Brack jumped from fifth to third. Further back in the field Christian Fittipaldi made his second stop on lap nineteen as he worked a different strategy to some of the leaders.
Kenny Brack made his next pit stop on lap 24, dropping from third to tenth, while leader Paul Tracy made his stop a lap later, resuming eighth. Only the top four made their stops on lap 28, as the rest of the field had already made their second stops. The top two of Junqueira and da Matta held on to their places, while Tracy displaced Brack for third in the same place he did on lap one thanks to his hot tyres. Servia passed Dario Franchitti into turn one on lap 30 as most of the field circulated in the same positions, using strategy to make moves on other drivers.
Lap 36 and Brack made his third stop, dropping from fifth to seventh, Tracy again stopping a lap later dropping from fourth to sixth as other drivers down in the field made their third pit stops around this time as well. After having a good run up through the field, Servia retired from sixth on lap 36 with a lack of fuel pressure, even though post-race it was discovered there was still fuel in the tank. Junqueira joined the drivers breaking from the 14 lap cycle, stopping on lap 39, dropping from the lead to fourth, giving da Matta the lead for the first time in the race.
The race restarted on lap 43, Kanaan taking fourth from Franchitti as they crossed the line for the restart, Franchitti retiring later on that lap. Carpentier was the first driver to make his last stop on lap 46, Michel Jourdain stopping a lap later as the top three continued to run close together, Kanaan dropping a bit further back. Canada Corner was about to claim another victim as Shinji Nakano went too deep under brakes and bunkered his car in the gravel, bringing out the third caution of the day.
Everyone who hadn't made their last stop took their opportunity under the caution, Tagliani taking second from Junqueira during these stops. The race restarted on lap 53, da Matta edging away as Junqueira looked for a way past Tagliani. As they began the last lap the gap da Matta had opened up had disappeared, the top three running as one. As close as they were, no-one was close enough to make a move, the top three crossing the line covered by just one and a half seconds. Despite his early off, Michael Andretti kept running and finished in tenth place, though two laps behind.
Result of FedEx CART Championship Series, Round 12 of 19; Road America, Wisconsin, United States:
Standings: Cristiano da Matta 143, Patrick Carpentier and Bruno Junqueira 101, Dario Franchitti 85, Christian Fittipaldi 82, Alex Tagliani and Michel Jourdain Jr 80, Michael Andretti 77, Paul Tracy 69, Kenny Brack 68 etc.
Jarrett Goes Back-To-Front
Dale Jarrett made a run from the back to the front, winning at Michigan despite an early excursion on to the grassy infield. A fellow Ford runner almost pulled off a dramatic win however, Jeff Burton just failing to hold on as his overheating engine cost him speed over the final few laps. Sterling Marlin had an engine stay good after two races where they didn't, giving him a top ten finish to keep him in the lead of the title race.
The race restarted on lap 15, and was soon led again by Harvick when he passed Earnhardt down the backstretch on lap 16. Not much happened before the next caution came out on lap 29 for debris on the track, more pit stops taking place with Harvick retaining the lead. The race restarted on lap 33, Earnhardt taking the lead back from Harvick on lap 52. There was time for cars to make stops under green, which saw Matt Kenseth take over the lead, before debris again led to a caution on lap 82.
The race restarted on lap 86, with the battle for the lead hotting up soon after, Earnhardt taking the lead from Kenseth into turn one on lap 89, before Kurt Busch took the lead coming out of turn four on lap 90, but this didn't last long at all, Earnhardt taking the lead back at the other end of the straight into turn one on lap 91. Lap 93 and Busch again took the lead coming out of turn four, with Ryan Newman joining Busch as they broke away from the chasing pack.
After running with Busch, Newman eventually took the lead around twenty laps later through turn four. Again the field made green flag stops, and again Kenseth took the lead after the completion of them, just before Hut Stricklin brought out the next caution on lap 134 after hitting the wall. Kenseth led the field at the restart but the caution lights were on again on lap 142 after Steve Park spun into the wall on the front straight after losing control exiting turn four, Jerry Nadeau also spinning in the mayhem.
Most but not all cars pitted, and of those that did, some took two tyres while others took four, jumbling up the order further. Jeff Burton led at the restart by being one of those not to pit, with Robby Gordon getting ahead of Burton just after the restart but not being able to hold on to the lead. Earnhardt did the same thing to Burton on the next lap before he made it stick on lap 170, while Jarrett restarted 17th after taking
four tyres.
Up front Burton was back fighting with Earnhardt, getting alongside at the start of lap 177 and completing the pass as they exited turn four on that same lap, just as Tony Stewart joined the battle. Eventually Burton and Stewart broke away as Jarrett continued his climb on fresh tyres, Jarrett moving up to fourth just as the caution came out on lap 186 after Derrike Cope hit the wall.
A few cars made a stop, but most of the leaders stayed out. The race restarted on lap 190, Burton getting a good restart as those chasing battled with each other. As they started lap 193 Jarrett moved up to second, and began closing in on Burton. As they exited turn four on lap 196, Jarrett took the lead, going on to take the win. Burton's overheating engine cost him more places, dropping to fourth at the end, blowing up on the cooldown lap. Jeff Gordon had another so-so day, finishing 19th after running in the top ten at one stage, while Ryan Newman's good day turned sour when his engine did the same, finishing on the lead lap but in 31st place.
Result of NASCAR Winston Cup, Round 23 of 36; Michigan Speedway, Michigan, United States:
Standings: Sterling Marlin 3094, Mark Martin 3051, Jimmie Johnson 3034, Tony Stewart 3010, Jeff Gordon 2944, Ricky Rudd 2926, Rusty Wallace 2903, Bill Elliott 2858, Matt Kenseth 2799, Dale Jarrett 2785 etc.
Brilliant Bright
Things went right for Jason Bright at Winton, winning both races and the round on a day when a couple of things didn't go HRT teammate Mark Skaife's way, Skaife finishing fifth overall, his worst performance for the season. HRT's TWR Australia sister team, Kmart Racing, also had a good day, Todd Kelly finishing second overall and Greg Murphy fourth as the drivers of the TWR Australia cars fill the top four places in the championship ahead of Marcos Ambrose in the first Ford.
Up front the top five were bunched together. Mark Skaife was the first of the leaders to make his compulsory stop, stopping on lap three, several other cars further down the field stopping at the same time. Next to stop were Bright and Murphy on lap four, Bright emerging in front of teammate Skaife who attacked his teammate immediately. Todd Kelly then stopped on lap five, resuming in front of both Bright and Skaife, Bright sneaking through soon after while Skaife got alongside and even nosed ahead, but Kelly held on.
Lap seven and Ambrose came in, and came out behind Bright and Kelly who were fighting with each other, but just in front of Skaife.
Tony Longhurst was now the leader, but stopped on lap ten to hand the lead back to Bright. Before the stops it was Skaife, Ambrose, Kelly, Bright, Murphy - now the order was Bright, Kelly, Ambrose, Skaife, Murphy. And apart from Ambrose moving past Kelly on lap 28 thanks to help from a backmarker, there were no more changes in the top ten until the finish, as the top three edged slightly away from Skaife who fell into the clutches of Murphy. Further back in the top ten there were also some close battles, but passes weren't able to be made there either, Bright going on to take the win.
Race two began in a similar fashion to race one, with Bright beating Ambrose into turn one followed by Skaife, Kelly, Murphy and Tander, and another crash through the turn one and two esses, John Faulkner hitting the wall on the exit hard. There was further mayhem at turn three, involving several cars including Cameron McLean, Jason Richards, Glenn Seton and Craig Lowndes.
Ambrose, Murphy and Tander stopped on lap nine, the trio coming out of the pits behind Kelly in the order Murphy, Ambrose, Tander. Bargwanna led a lap before pitting, and Paul Morris led a few laps before he pitted and gave the lead to Bright. The cars were a little more spread out than in race one, but still circulating in similar times. The safety car came out on lap 16 after Wayne Wakefield spun into the turn three gravel, the race resuming on lap 18. This allowed two Castrol cars to pounce on Rick Kelly in sixth, Russell Ingall passing cleanly at turn three while Steven Richards drove Kelly off the track at turn four, dropping Rick Kelly to 13th. Meanwhile Skaife was back up to ninth thanks to other drivers making their pit stops.
Lap 21 and another safety car period after Paul Radisich suffered a flat tyre, leaving him stuck in the gravel. The race resumed on lap 22, with the leaders still nose to tail, Bright leading Kelly, Murphy, Ambrose, Tander, Ingall and Richards. Steve Owen made himself known in his first drive for Briggs Motorsport, pushing Glenn Seton off the road, earning himself a penalty. Again like race one, there was no change of place in the top ten after lap 18, in fact the top fourteen didn't change. So Bright continued on to make it two from two, and take HRT's first round victory at the circuit, a surprising statistic considering HRT's dominance of the series for most of the last seven years.
Result of V8Supercar Championship Series, Round 8 of 13; Winton, Australia:
Standings: Mark Skaife 1775, Jason Bright 1096, Greg Murphy 1002, Todd Kelly 946, Marcos Ambrose 941, Steven Richards 791, Craig Lowndes 722, Garth Tander 643, David Besnard 619, Russell Ingall 556 etc.
V8Supercar points distribution
Trauma And Triumph
The Grand Prix of Mosport became yet another 1-2 victory for Audi, but the victory this time came at a price. Defending series champion Emanuelle Pirro crashed the #1 Audi heavily in one of Mosport's fast right-hand sweepers.
"The accident happened just before my second scheduled pitstop. I wanted to lose as little time as possible on my way to the pits. I came on the dirty line and crashed into the tyre wall. It was a heavy impact, but I am okay," said Pirro later. Pirro was unconscious when he was extracted from the car but was soon released from hospital with no injuries.
Qualifying suggested a close fight between Audi and Cadillac. Frank Biela took pole position in the #1 Audi with a time of 1:07.169, half a seocnd faster than Rinaldo Capello in the sister car. Johnny Herbert was third, but had to work down to a time 1.2 seconds behind Biela, with JJ Lehto and Eric Bernard mere tenths behind in the Cadillac Northstars. Panoz was struggling, having to put in an all night repair to the #50 car after Jan Magnussen crashed in practice. David Brabham was sixth fastest, over two seconds from Biela, the Panoz team having their position within the field usurped by Cadillac. Bill Auberlen crashed the #51 car in qualifying and would have to start behind the LMP675 Intersport MG-Lola of Jon Field.
Biela led the field around to the end of the first lap followed by Capello, with Johansson and Lehto in close company. Biela was setting a cracking pace and was amongst the GT cars on the fourth lap. Capello was keen to pursue his own agenda and took the lead on the tenth lap. Soon after Capello clashed with Jorg Bergmeister in the second Alex Job Racing Porsche 996. Bergmeister pitted for repairs as pieces of Porsche bodywork were left on the track, causing Andy Pilgrim to have an off in the GTS Corvette.
Elsewhere on the track, Marino Franchitti ran up the back of Mark Neuhaus under brakes into turn two, the big heavy Viper damaging its nose on the rear of the Lola-Judd. The yellows came out and the cars dived for the pits. Emmanuel Collard pitted while the pits were officially closed, earning him a 72 second time penalty. Kristensen now in #2 led the field out of the pits with Lehto second and Pirro third. Just after the restart Brabham was off in the Panoz. As the race ploughed into the second hour, Steve Knight pitted the last of the MGs with the a major oil leak.
Johnny Herbert was now struggling a little. A stop-go penalty had been given to the Champion Audi after contact with Emanuelle Naspetti had sent the Olive Garden Ferrari backwards into the barriers. Naspetti had little damage to report. This wasn't the only such inter-class contact with Kristensen and Johnny O'Connell having side-by-side contact, but both cars kept their class leads untroubled. Not long afterwards O'Connell's Corvette lapped the second in class Saleen of Franz Konrad.
Runaway GT series leader, Sascha Maassen put that lead in doubt when the Alex Job Porsche 996 thumped the wall in turn nine. Maassen was able to continue, surprisingly, pitted for a look at the car and was waved back out on the track only to have the driver's door blow off at speed. Having been spared the yellows by Maassen getting restarted they came out shortly afterwards for Tony Burgess. Burgess had hit the wall in turn one and slid along the barriers for some distance.
With less than ten minutes left, the bunched field was under green again with Kristensen a lap up on Herbert who was a lap on Angelelli. Fourth and another lap behind was Magnussen, who led in Bryan Herta and Eric Bernard on the same lap. Pirro and Biela were classified 22nd behind the Intersport Lola-Judd that finished tenth.
Just ahead of the Viper was the leading LMP675 car, the Team Bucknum Racing Pilbeam-Nissan of Chris McMurry, Bryan Willman and Jeff Bucknum. They finished four laps clear of the Lola-Nissan fielded by Essex Racing for Melanie Paterson and Howard Katz. There were no other finishers in the class with third being attributed to the Archangel Lola-Ford who broke an engine in the third hour.
With problems striking both Alex Job cars, the Racers Group Porsche 996 of Kevin Buckler and Brian Cunningham took the class victory and 13th outright. They finished three laps clear of the battle for second that ended when the two Porsches clashed on the last lap. The Orbit Porsche of Leo Hindery and Peter Baron took second whilst the Alex Job Porsche of Sascha Maassen and the rather ill Lucas Luhr extricated itself from the sand to take third.
Kristensen has confirmed his lead in the title chase, and moves further away with the troubles befalling Biela and Pirro. Herbert now has snuck past the #1 Audi drivers to tuck in behind Capello in the standings. But at this stage, the Champion Audi lacks the pace to be able to haul that points lead back in. The ALMS teams now have a month's break prior to the Laguna Seca round.
Result of American Le Mans Series, Round 8 of 11, Mosport, Canada:
Standings, LMP 900: Tom Kristensen 165, Rinaldo Capello 162, Johnny Herbert 142, Frank Biela 136, Emanuele Pirro 135, David Brabham 125, Jan Magnussen 120, Bill Auberlen 115, Stefan Johansson 112, Bryan Herta 104 etc.
Standings, LMP675: Jon Field 148, Ben Devlin 136, Jeff Bucknum 117, Chris McMurry 114, Bryan William 113 etc.
Standings, LMGTS: Ron Fellows 184, Johnny O'Connell 174, Andy Pilgrim 160, Kelly Collins 159, Marc Bunting 120 etc.
Standings, LMGT: Sascha Maassen 163, Lucas Luhr 162, Timo Bernhard 139, Jorg Bergmeister 138, Kevin Buckler 134 etc.
Double Dutch
After some time on the bleachers, the FIA Sportscar series gathered itself at Dijon for the replacement round after two rounds were earlier cancelled. Ahead of a thin SR1 class field, Racing For Holland scored an expected but still impressive victory. A victory after Val Hillebrand damaged the Jan Lammers Dome in practice with a large shunt. Second though was a bit of a surprise, taken by a second Racing For Holland Dome driven by Felipe Ortiz and Beppe Gabbiani.
Lammers recorded pole position ahead of a SR1 field of only four cars. With the Courage, Durango and S & M teams all absent the Pescarolo squad led by Jean-Christophe Boullion shared the front row with Felipe Ortiz in third. Ralph Moog would put the Eventus Motorsport Lola-Ford in ninth position, but in the end failed to start because of electrical problems. The SR2 Lucchini Alfa of Mirko Savoldi shared the second row.
At the start Lammers bolted away from the field and was never headed. He handed the car to Val Hillebrand who took it to the finish to win by a lap. The interest initially was in the battle for second. Boullion was second initially but five laps into the race Gabbiani dived underneath and immediately gapped the Courage. Gabbiani almost threw it away though when he arrived in the pits too quickly and missed his pit bay. After giving himself a drive through penalty for no reason, Gabbiani made the stop at the second attempt and Felipe Ortiz rejoined the race without losing second.
Lammers and Hillebrand have a stranglehold on the championship, and the only real hope Boullion has of taking the title from them is if the series replaces its other cancelled round. 25 points behind with only 40 on offer looks too much for the Pescarolo team to bridge.
Result of FIA Sportscar Championship, Round 5 of 7, Dijon-Prenois, France:
Standings, SR1: Jan Lammers and Val Hillebrand 82, Jean-Christophe Boullion 57, Didier Cottaz and Boris Derichebourg 38, Olivier Beretta and Sebastien Bourdais 35, Mauro Baldi 32, Vincenzo Sospiri 24, Franck Lagorce 22 etc.
Standings, SR2: Mirko Savoldi, Piergiuseppe Peroni, Sam Hignett and John Stack 60, Gianni Collini and Fabio Mancini 50 etc.
FIA Sportscar points distribution
Back In The Swing
James Courtney regained the lead he had lost in the British Formula 3 Championship after scoring a fourth and a win in trying weather at Britain's best drivers' circuit, Oulton Park. With Robbie Kerr unable to best Courtney in either of the two races over the weekend he now sits two points behind Courtney. Renault development driver Heikki Kovalainen won the earlier of the two races.
Courtney got the jump in the second race to pull rapidly away in the dry. The Jaguar test driver was soon slowed by a failed clutch while driving slowly behind the safety car. The safety car was out after an off track excursion eliminated the cars of Ronnie Bremer, Rob Austin and the Scholarship cars of Billy Asaro and Adam Carroll.
Courtney came under pressure from Scholarship class steerer Robert Dahlgren with Robbie Kerr and Kovalainen close behind. The Australian was able to resist the chasers and held on for an impressive victory. The stunning drive of Dahlgren in the 2001 model car came to nought though when he was disqualified for a technical infringement. This made Kerr second and Kovalainen third. Fourth then became another Scholarship car, Clivio Piccione, who had earlier been eighth in race one.
Courtney now leads by two points from Kerr, with Bruce Jouanny over fifty points behind in third. Despite having missed two rounds, and the new found form of the Renault-powered Fortec squad, the race has become a race in two. The series re-gathers itself in two weeks at Snetterton.
Result of British Formula 3 Championship, Rounds 19 and 20; Oulton Park, Great Britain:
Standings: James Courtney 221, Robbie Kerr 219, Bruce Jouanny 154, Michael Keohane 142, Heikki Kovalainen 138, Mark Taylor 118, Fabio Carbone 93, Alan van der Merwe 92, Rob Austin 78, Richard Antinucci 58 etc.
British Formula 3 points distribution
Puras, who scored the team's only victory last season in Corsica, was dropped in favour of young Frenchman Sebastien Loeb this year but will return for the Trier-based event, which begins on Friday.
Citroen said in a statement: "Jesus Puras will take part in the Rally of Germany and will substitute for Thomas Radstrom.
"Radstrom went off the road violently in the penultimate stage of the Rally of Finland and after further medical checks his doctor discovered he has suffered two broken ribs. He obviously could not recover (in time)."
Puras currently drives a 2001 version of the Xsara WRC in the Spanish Rally Championship, which he leads having won six times this season.
Report provided by Reuters
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