Paddock Motorsport put on a spirited display during the British GT season finale at Brands Hatch last weekend, with both its cars showing the sort of pace that brings big points, even if circumstances conspired against them.
Mark Smith and Martin Plowman enjoyed a superb start to the final two-hour race of the year, running comfortably in the fight for the top six before some damage led to a seized door on their McLaren GT3 during their pit stop, and a desperately unlucky penalty then robbed them of an outright top-10 finish.
Likewise, the Mercedes-AMG GT4 of Ed McDermott and Matt Cowley excelled across the race, gradually picking up places until the crew found themselves not only in the battle for a breakthrough GT4 Pro-Am podium, but potentially a class win before their hopes were dashed when the #12 was caught in a collision late on.
Regardless of the results, Paddock Motorsport still heads into the winter break having enjoyed a strong 2024 British GT season. This year marked the team’s biggest entry ever, with three cars and six drivers. From those the team has celebrated two GT4 podium finishes and established itself as a regular challenger to the outright top six. Smith and Plowman have also enjoyed a strong run-in, finishing inside the top five in the GT3 Pro-Am class in each of the last two races helping them to ninth in the class championship. Despite the non-score in the finale, McDermott and Cowley round out the year eighth in GT4 Pro-Am.
Brands Hatch represented one final chance to push for big scores, and neither car wasted that initially as Smith made a blinding start to vault from 11th on the grid up to eighth. Even though he lost out to a rival BMW when he was baulked by GT4 traffic around the Druids hairpin, Smith showed consistent pace and was soon duelling with newly crowned Silver-Am champion Shaun Balfe’s Garage 59 McLaren. Balfe went for a lunge into Graham Hill corner but collided with the side of the Paddock McLaren, and that would have consequences when Smith brought the car in for its mandatory stop.
As he and Plowman attempted to switch seats, the McLaren’s door jammed shut after the hit, forcing the crew to complete their change via the wrong side of the car, sliding across the chassis from the passenger door. That cost vital time, with Plowman emerging in 10th to rejoin the race. A disrupted second half littered by full course yellow caution periods meant he never really got the chance to attack those in front, and things took a turn when the car was handed a drive-through penalty when Plowman accidentally clipped the rear of a GT4 car in front that had braked unexpectedly heading onto the pit straight. The #9 would finish 11th overall, but that did at least mean the car brought home some points due to some non-scoring guest entries ahead. It also put them fifth in the points-scoring Pro-Am order, which on reflection is a fine result, it just should have been more.
The Mercedes-AMG GT4 also endured a dramatic race. McDermott took the start and began to rise up the order as he too picked cars off one by one. The car made its way inside the top five in class before McDermott stopped to hand to Cowley, and a slick change got the car out and up to fourth in class, right behind the rival Mahiki Racing Lotus. With a first podium, and even the class leader, in sight, Cowley pushed as hard as he could until a rare error entering Stirlings sparked a collision that would rule the car out. Still, there’s no denying the progress the crew has made across recent races.
Paddock Motorsport will now reset and begin planning for the 2025 campaign, but not before it has rounded out the GT Cup season at Snetterton this coming weekend.
Mark Smith from the GT3 team said: “It felt like we put a few things together this weekend and made some really good progress. We struggled a bit with performance in qualifying but the car felt great in the race and I opted for a run down the inside of the first corner this time after the recent bad luck we’ve had being pushed wide avoiding other people’s accidents in recent races, and that worked nicely so I could pick up a few spots. We were going well and set for a real fight until I got the hit on the door, which I didn’t think anything of at first as it didn’t feel like much and the fight overall was really fun. But then the door wouldn’t open at the stop. I was hoping the team could muscle it open, but then I was thinking ‘Ahhhh, man… I gotta go out the other side!’. That was a stretch, to say the least, especially when my radio was still connected and pulling me back in! But you have to laugh. No doubt we deserved more, but I’m not done with this yet and I want to come back, do more testing, and fight for the results we want.”
Ed McDermott of the Mercedes-AMG GT4 said: “It’s such a shame how the weekend ended, especially with a podium and maybe even a win in sight, but this is all part and parcel of racing. It’s disappointing, but you have to take the positives and the big one here is that we’ve shown when we get a relatively clean go at things that we can do a proper job and fight for trophies. I made good progress in my stint and Matt kept us moving forward and things so nearly came our way. I’m pleased with the progress we’ve made across the second half of the season, and today again shows we finished the year fighting for podiums.”
There will be further news about Paddock Motorsport’s plans for 2025 released shortly.