Both Paddock Motorsport’s GT3 and GT4 crews produced battling displays to be proud of during the opening Intelligent Money British GT Championship round at Oulton Park last weekend.
Mark Smith and Martin Plowman recovered from a tricky qualifying on Saturday to fight on to a brace of top-10 GT3 finishes on Easter Monday to bag some championship points, while GT4 crew Kavi Jundu and Tom Rawlings impressed with both their speed and two fourth-place finishes in the GT4 Pro-Am category.
Both cars showed their potential across Saturday’s free practice sessions, with Plowman and Smith registering times just outside the top 10, despite working through setup options. Likewise, Jundu and Rawlings marked themselves out as ones to watch in GT4 Pro-Am early doors by topping the opening session.
With a capacity 36-car entry, including eight world-class factory GT3 drivers, qualifying was always going to be a tight-run thing. Smith recovered from a spin in his session to put the GT3 15th on the grid, while Jundu put the new Artura GT4 10th overall. But with unpredictable weather on the way for Monday’s races, there was plenty of scope for both to improve.
As it turned out, the opening race of the weekend threw pretty much a full season’s worth of variables at the field across the course of a single hour, with multiple rain showers hitting the circuit and making tyre choice a gamble. Despite the challenge, both the GT3 and GT4 crews made forward progress across two impressive performances.
Smith took the wheel of the 720S GT3 and opted to start the race on wets from P15 on the grid. However, when the track began to dry he pitted to switch to slick rubber, putting the car to the back of the order. Smith spent the remainder of his stint scything through the GT4 traffic and made it up to 12th in class when the official pit window opened and he dived in to hand to Plowman. Still fitted with slick tyres, Plowman headed out and put on a charge, using all of his experience to hang onto the car as the rain descended again. The showers caught many others out, bu Plowman held on and even made a late dive past James Kell to snatch ninth at the flag.
The GT4 crew had an even more dramatic outing, and were hugely unlucky to miss out on a place on the overall GT4 podium. Jundu opted to start from the pit lane to give the crew the maximum amount of time to make the call to fit slick tyres. When he did join the race he was right at the back but, as the track dried out and the slicks came into their operating window, Jundu flew up the order, picking off multiple cars to run second overall by the time he pitted to hand to Rawlings. However, the safety car was called to recover a stranded GT3 just as Jundu stopped and when Rawlings attempted to rejoin, the safety car was passing the pits meaning Rawlings was held by a red light on the exit. Had he been able to leave the pits three seconds earlier, the car would have gained a lap and been a sure second overall. Rawlings still put in a great drive to claim sixth overall and fourth in the Pro-Am class.
Race two was a calmer affair, with the entire grid opting for wet Pirellis as steady rain fell ahead of the race. Plowman started 13th but got his elbows out early, quickly picking off a handful of cars to run eighth. However, when Plowman pitted at mid-distance the car was blocked in the busy pit lane when Smith tried to rejoin. That cost a couple of places, but when Smith did get out he put on a charge of his own, quickly making his way back up to eighth before engaging in a great battle with Shaun Balfe’s Barwell Lamborghini, despite being nudged wide at Hislops. Smith eventually worked his way past Balfe for seventh, but was set back again when he was forced to take avoiding action by a car braking unexpectedly early in front of him. Regardless, eight was a superb result for his Oulton Park debut.
Things were trickier in GT4. Rawlings qualified the Artura a superb third overall and second in Pro-Am, but come the race the crew struggled with the balance of the car. Rawlings fought hard to try and hold third, but was eventually swamped, with he and Jundu finishing 11th overall, but only just missing the Pro-Am podium as Jundu hassled Chris Salkeld’s Century Motorsport BMW for the final class podium spot, only missing out by 0.2s at the flag.
Mark Smith said: “Wow, what a ride Oulton Park turned out to be! I’m really happy with how we finished the weekend and with my first experience of the track. I felt like we were unlucky with the tyres in the first race, but fortunately Martin made up of some of that and we still got some points. In race two I felt we both drove really well and could have been further up had somebody not braked a lot earlier than I expected. But I’m still really happy. I’ve already had a day at Silverstone, so I’ve got 40 laps in the book there already, so we’ll see what we can do at the next round.”
Martin Plowman said: “For the first weekend of the season I’m really happy. To see the progression we’ve made across the weekend, with both cars, was really pleasing for me. When it rained, Mark Smith was man of the match for me. He’d never driven in the wet, never been to Oulton Park, yet beat some much more experienced drivers and had some really good pace. For me the car felt like it was on rails in that last race, and I could be really aggressive and make some great progress early on and that set up Mark to do his thing. There was no pressure on him, but people’s eyes lit up watching him chase people down like he did. It was superb.”
Kavi Jundu said: “It’s been two slightly bitter-sweet races for us. We started on the back foot in race one with the late change in tyres, and it was very tricky to get any heat into the slicks at the start, but as the track came to the car I had a great time working my way through the pack, and then we just got so unlucky with the timing of the safety car. We didn’t really have the balance in the car for the first half of race one, but we managed to pull it back and we were inches away from a class podium at the end. It’s all solid points and we learned a lot about a brand-new car in all conditions. We can build on this for the rest of the season.”
Tom Rawlings said: “It’s been quite a frustrating weekend for us, purely because we’ve had great pace in the car but the luck just wasn’t with us this time. In race one we missed the overall podium due to the timing of the safety car, which was such a shame. Then in race two our tyre pressures were a bit too low and I was losing temperature and grip with every lap, which made things really difficult. But as a positive we’ve had really good performance in the car and we know there’s real potential here, so we’ll be going all-out for a top result at Silverstone.”
The next round of the Intelligent Money British GT Championship takes place on the Silverstone Grand Prix Circuit on May 7/8.