Caterhams: Walker still the man to beat
Reigning Caterham R300 Superlight Championship Jonathan Walker showed that he won’t be given up his crown without a fight in the opening round at Silverstone.
April showers brought out the weather forecaster within every R300 competitor and team at the opening round on Easter weekend. On Saturday morning, the cars had an extended wait in the collecting area for qualifying due to a delay in the previous session; long enough for a big black cloud to live up to its promise. Whilst some frantically pulled off anti-roll bars to offer a little more compliance in the wet, others consulted seaweed and the fabled ‘licked finger held in the air’ which suggested the track would dry during qualifying.
Seaweed and moist digits were right.
As the track dried, the pitwall timing screens went berserk. Provisional pole went to just about everyone who crossed the line, making it hard to keep track of who was where. Pit-boards were several positions behind reality by the time the drivers saw them. Eventually, towards the end of the session, four names started to repeat themselves at the top, Fowell, Brannan, McMillan and Taylor, but it was newcomer McMillan that took the first pole of the year, with both Brannan and Fowell less than a tenth behind and in the dying seconds, Jamie Ellwood jumped from twelfth to fourth. Four new drivers making up the top four places.
A first attempt to run a race was made in deteriorating conditions on Saturday afternoon, but within two laps, championship hopeful Paul Wilson was already in the wall on the hangar straight. Seconds later, a melee ensued at Becketts. Andrew Harrison-Sleap had spun backwards across the grass, depositing him back on the track facing the wrong way, right in the firing line for a desperately unfortunate Dean Wilkin. As Harrison-Sleap’s car became mobile again, though not under its own steam, it was tagged by the left rear of Gordon Sawyer. When the three cars came to rest the drivers emerged unscathed, but with time fast running out and conditions no better, stewards declared the race abandoned.
Blue skies greeted the drivers back to the revised Silverstone Bridge GP circuit on Easter Sunday. The circuit already had a disarming new look thanks to a wilderness of gravel at Woodcote where the used to be a grandstand. With work was still underway around the circuit, grass runoffs had been replaced by peat bogs and with the aid of wayward GT and Superleague cars, the track was now a fully-fledged rallycross circuit.
Andy McMillan, head of the well-established but new to R300s McMillan Motorsport team, was unfazed by the conditions and set about building a small margin from pole, but was quickly caught by reigning champ Jon Walker who carved through the squabbling front runners to find him. Firmly believing that the race isn’t won on the first corner, but quite possibly on every corner after that, Walker launched a smoking torpedo down the inside of McMillan at Vale without the success. Moments later, the pair arrived at bridge and the DPR Motorsport driver thought he saw his opportunity. Unfortunately, his Avon tyres thought otherwise and elected to down-tools at the prospect of being told to cling on through bridge at an impossible speed. Walker collected McMillan and the pair speared through the gravel trap of the complex, emerging seventh and ninth respectively.
This left former Roadsport sparring partners Paul Brannan and Trevor Fowell to take up the lead, with their Fauldsport team-mate James Sharrock third in his familiar dayglo orange car. But whilst the duo argued over first spot, McMillan and Walker were far from done.
Walker, who had been least disadvantaged by the gravel safari, reached the lead fight within two laps, dispensed with the upstarts quickly and set about building a cushion helped by those behind refusing to give up places to anyone else. Whilst Walker cruised ahead, McMillan found the leaders shortly after and also squeezed past while they were pre-occupied, though they were alerted to the threat this time and it took him a little longer.
Further down the field, Jamie Ellwood was being hampered by his lack of time in the car. With virtually no practice, the six-times champion was having a Schumacher-esque comeback time, having dropped from fourth to ninth; handling woes afflicting his performance. Despite also having just stepped into the car, former Roadsport ace, David Pearce was having no such bother and had battered his way to fourth. However, inexperience of the R300’s brake pedal emerged at Vale and despite Paul Brannan’s assistance in slowing down, Pearce’s trophy hopes ended in the gravel trap. A furious Brannan was spun down to seventh, sustaining a large gouge out of the left rear tyre and some minor bent suspension parts. Amazingly, he kept going at a front-runner pace and was ultimately rewarded with sixth for his determination.
SPY Motorsport team-leader Peter Young gave a strong performance throughout the race to take fifth place (promoted through the Pearce/Brannan clash), a little behind Ambitions Racing’s Ollie Taylor. Taylor had a brief glimpse of the podium, but fractionally ahead of him was the fastest man on the track, Trevor Fowell. Fowell pushed Andy McMillan to the very end, but the pair had no chance of catching Walker who by now was ten seconds, an eternity in Caterham racing, up the road and driving to victory.
Although the 2009 champion has made his mark on the 2010 campaign, the newcomers didn’t make it easy for him and things are set to get even closer as the series moves to Oulton Park. Walker benefits from the most experience behind the wheel of an R300, yet his Silverstone lap record was taken from him by one of 2010 inductees and if it hadn’t been for their coming together at Bridge, McMillan would surely have been a contender for the win. Ellwood’s eighth place finish belies the fact that it was only the third time he’d driven the car, so he will only be getting faster. Good performances from Mark Shaw, David Walley and Mark Blackburn suggest that as experience grows the title fight will be on...
Championship Standings (after 1 round)
1 Jonathan Walker – 20pts
2 Andrew McMillan – 18
3 Trevor Fowell – 18
4 Ollie Taylor – 16
5 Peter Young – 15
6 Paul Brannan – 14
7 James Sharrock – 13
8 Jamie Ellwood – 12
9 Mark Shaw – 11
10 David Walley - 10
Next round: 15 May, Oulton Park
Watch Caterham R300 Superlight highlights on Motors TV (Sky Channel 413, Virgin Media 545) in 2010.
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Published 06/04/2010 18:44
Latest News Caterham UK Series
.jpg) British race car manufacturers Caterham and Lola have joined forces to create the brand new Caterham Lola SP/300.R and are planning a one-make series in 2012 for the thoroughbread racer.
The car is Caterham’s first monocoque race car and will be powered by a two litre, 300bhp Ford engine. It will be capable of reaching speeds of 180mph and will be available to customers at £60,000.

The calendar for next season's Caterham Superlight R300 championship has been revealed.
The series will open at Oulton Park over the first weekend in April before taking in a further six rounds over the course of the season. The closing event runs at Silverstone's International South circuit on October 22/23.
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Trevor Fowell won his third Caterham R300 title in succession with a brave drive at the Donington Park circuit.

James MacLachan clinched the Caterham Supersport championship with pole position and two wins at Oulton Park in the penultimate round at the weekend.

R300
Fleury’s fastest, but Fowell’s the master…
Paul Fleury upset the apple cart on Saturday morning when he put his car on pole ahead of the usual suspects, by just 0.002s. In fact, just a single second covered the top 21 cars on the grid.
[Caterham UK Series news]
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