From being flooded by the great British weather, to being rammed early in the race and even cruelly robbed of a finish late on, Paddock Motorsport battled against pretty much everything the Silverstone 500 race weekend could throw at it.
Safe to say the second Intelligent Money British GT Championship event of the season was an eventful one, with the showpiece three-hour Silverstone 500 race proving to be as dramatic as it was unpredictable for Paddock’s twin McLarens.
A fifth-place finish for Kavi Jundu and Tom Rawlings aboard the Artura GT4 was the highlight, with Mark Smith and Martin Plowman managing extensive damage to their 720S GT3 for virtually the entire race distance before the car finally succumbed in the closing moments.
This was a weekend that never quite settled down from start to finish. Having shown solid pace during pre-event testing, Saturday proved a near total washout, with qualifying eventually having to be abandoned due to rivers of rainwater running across the track and standing water making it too dangerous for the cars to run. That meant the grid for Sunday’s race had to be set by combining each driver’s fastest time from second practice, which was the first blow to Paddock’s hopes as both cars had spent that session concentrating on long-run pace rather than outright speed. It meant Smith and Plowman would start from P14, with Jundu and Rawlings P8 in GT4 Pro-Am.
Regardless, the potential was there to push forward in the race. However, the second blow was struck by another McLaren, which plowed into the rear of Smith’s car as he took avoiding action when a Porsche had been spun out in front of him early in the race. Smith had been working his way up the order and hovering around the top 10 at that point, but extensive damage to the McLaren’s rear diffuser made the GT3 a real handful from then on.
Smith and Plowman continued to push as best they could, and their consistency helped them manage both the aero issue and a worsening oil leak and climb the order toward what would have been an against-all-odds points finish when Plowman rejoined for the final stint running eighth. However, he was forced to park the McLaren a lap early when the oil finally ran out. They were eventually classified 11th in class – unjust reward for the team’s efforts.
The GT4 crew had a more positive outing, with both Jundu and Rawlings staging a great fight through the order. A superb middle stint from Jundu got the car as high as fourth in class as he and Rawlings again ran on the fringes of a podium finish for a second successive event, but a late stop-go penalty earned for a short pit stop set them back to fifth at the flag. It was solid points at least.
GT3 driver Martin Plowman said: “It’s been a disappointing weekend all-round really, but we have to look at the positives, which were that we continued to fight and so nearly earned some points, despite carrying a lot of damage for over two hours of racing. Mark was so unlucky to get hit early in his stint and that gradually destroyed the aero balance of the car so we were really struggling in the late stages. But the way Mark handled the car and managed to drive around the limitations brought on by the damage was seriously impressive. We managed to stay in the mix for points, then right before the finish, just when we had a decent result in sight, we got an engine oil warning and had to stop the car. It’s gutting, but we’ll come out fighting again at Donington Park.”
GT4 racer Kavi Jundu said: “I feel like our entire garage needs some good luck blessings at the moment! Obviously, it’s not been an easy weekend, but during that race we were making real forward progress and the pace in the middle of the race felt pretty good. I was up into P4 and with the podium runners right in sight, and then a penalty cost us and another good result slipped away, which was a huge shame. Hopefully our luck can change for the next race.”
The next round of the Intelligent Money British GT Championship takes place at Donington Park on May 27/28.