Strong pace ultimately went unrewarded for Paddock Motorsport in the latest two rounds of the Intelligent Money British GT Championship at Snetterton last weekend (17/18 June), as a potential GT4 podium and GT3 top-five finish slipped away.
Martin Plowman and Mark Smith showed that they could be a force to be reckoned with early in the weekend with some eye-catching speed in practice, but their GT3 charge was stymied by bad luck in qualifying that left them recovering in the two one-hour races in Norfolk.
Similarly, the team’s GT4 pairing of Kavi Jundu and Tom Rawlings put themselves in contention for a possible Pro-Am class podium on Saturday with their speed, but misfortune would follow them around during Sunday in their quest for a podium finish.
The team benefited from further testing at the Norfolk circuit in the lead up to the fifth and sixth rounds of the 2023 season, and it appeared to be showing as the Paddock Motorsport cars closed the gap to their rivals on a hotly-contested Friday and once more in Saturday’s practice sessions.
The GT3 McLaren 720S Evo in particular looked to be purring from its refresh at Donington Park, and Plowman showed the car’s pace with a strong second practice that left the car inside the top six throughout, pushing the usual championship frontrunners ahead of qualifying later that afternoon.
Buoyed on, what followed would be gut-wrenching for the GT3 pairing as Smith was forced to pit during his 10-minute run for a wheel that cracked on its way back to the pit lane. In the safety of the Paddock Motorsport mechanics, the team worked wonders to re-align the front corner and put their driver back into the session, albeit with half of Plowman’s new set of tyres attached, denying the Pro driver a fresh-tyre run in his own qualifying segment. Smith was blocked on his best lap as he and Plowman mustered what felt like an unrepresentative 13th and 12th in Pro-Am on the grid for Sunday’s two respective races.
The GT4 session brought much brighter results, Jundu and Rawlings sitting third and fourth in their Pro-Am class with the latter getting to within a second of the fastest car.
Attentions turned to race day where the threat of rain thankfully held off ahead of the opening one-hour contest. From 17th overall on the grid, Smith made an electric start to the race and climbed two places in the opening corners to signal his intent.
With attack mode firmly engaged, further overtaking moves on John Ferguson and Mark Sansom elevated the GT3 McLaren to 11th place by the time Smith’s stint came to an end just before the halfway mark, handing over to Plowman, who gained more ground through fast work from the Paddock mechanics in the pit lane. Battling their way up the order in the closing stages, Plowman and Smith were dealt a cruel hammer blow when the crew were handed a one-second stop/go penalty for their mandatory pit stop being fractionally too short, dropping the car to 10th in Pro-Am by the chequered flag.
In GT4 it would be a tough race for the McLaren Artura pairing of Jundu and Rawlings. Recovering from a spin in the opening half hour of the race, the car came home seventh in Pro-Am despite showing signs of their promising pace earlier in the weekend late on.
Race two later that afternoon again required a recovery drive in GT3 with Plowman this time taking the job of starting the 720S Evo. Handing the car over to Smith inside the top 10 overall, the latter maintained a consistent pace to bring the car home ninth in Pro-Am, while the GT4 charge was ended far too soon after suspension damage from early contact brought Rawlings into the pits for an unwanted early retirement.
Martin Plowman said: “I think on Sunday we maximised the result based on Saturday’s qualifying. Mark did an amazing stint in race one to put us right into contention before the unfortunate penalty in the pit stop. We had a top-six finish on the cards where we feel we’ve been on true pace. Everybody in GT3 was really close, which made it more difficult to overtake easily, so it’s a shame we didn’t have the results in qualifying to prove our pace.”
Mark Smith said: “It was interesting to try to learn this track in a fast car. It took a few corners to get used to how hard to actually push it, but once I got it figured out it gave me confidence to remember that technique. I dropped my times before qualifying but then we had the wheel problem and traffic, which put us back. The races showed what we were capable of, and like Plowey said we could have finished much higher in the final result.”
Kavi Jundu said: “It wasn’t our best weekend, but the story of the season has continued in that we’ve been qualifying really well. We think that top three is where we should be, but we haven’t quite been able to convert it in the races. We were unlucky with the issue in the second race, and in the first I think the set-up caught me out. In Portimão hopefully we find a turn in luck and get that podium. Once one comes it could be like buses!”
Tom Rawlings said: “Our overall pace in the races was good. I had a good start in race two and gained places, then we lost some again but got a nice gap going on the Mustang behind. After that, there was a bit of contact at the start that not only set us back, but it made the car wiggle a bit and snapped a lower suspension arm, which we couldn’t do anything about. I’m already looking forward to Portugal now, and hopefully we can go there and get the good result that we’re due.”
The British GT Championship next travels to Europe and the Portimão circuit in Portugal for a three-hour race over 22/23 July.