Paddock Motorsport will return to the GT Cup Championship this season, fielding a single McLaren 570S GT4 for experienced racer Tim Docker and rising sportscar star Gordie Mutch.
Paddock has been a regular in the GT Cup ranks since its formation in 2021 and will continue its presence in the series with the proven 570S GT4. The team will twin the programme with its commitments in the Intelligent Money British GT Championship, where it is running both GT3 and GT4-spec McLarens.
Docker, from Stourbridge, makes his racing return this season after a curtailed 2022 campaign. He was a GT Cup podium finisher in both 2021 and 2022, Britcar Class 4 champion in 2019 and Britcar Driver of the Year in 2018, all preceded by experience in TCR (UK), the VW Racing Cup and the Volkswagen Automotive Group Trophy. A back injury sustained during a testing accident at Snetterton kept him out of action for much of 2022, but he is now fully recovered and raring to compete again. Having previously been coached by Paul O’Neill, Docker will be looked after by seasoned GT4 competitor Jordan Albert this season.
Mutch, from Lockerbie, is gearing up for his first GT Cup season and brings with him a significant racing pedigree. He won last year’s Praga Cup UK contest sharing a high-powered R1 prototype with YouTube star Jimmy Broadbent, the pair taking an impressive six race wins on their way to the crown. Before that Mutch was also a McLaren Driver Development Programme Shootout Finalist in 2021, a Spa 6 Hours class winner, a multiple race winner in the Ginetta GT5 Challenge and Junior Saloon Car Championship, plus also has a national Super One karting championship to his name.
Docker and Mutch will now join forces to handle the 3.8-litre twin turbo V8 570S in the GTH class, which caters for GT4-spec machinery, and the pair have their eyes firmly set on challenging for the championship.
Tim Docker said: “I’m really looking forward to getting back in action in the GT Cup this year, and unquestionably the ambition is to go and win the GTH Championship. I first raced a McLaren 570S GT4 back in 2021, and it’s a great car to drive. Last year started very well and we were running third in the championship after the opening two rounds, but then the accident happened and that was me out for the year, which was very frustrating. But I’ve had time to recover and regroup and the chance join Paddock Motorsport is a very exciting one. Hopefully I can pick up where I left off by being in the mix for the class title from the very start. Gordie and I have done a couple of test days and he’s a great guy; highly ambitious, very enthusiastic and very quick! I think we’ll make a very strong partnership this season.”
Gordie Mutch said: “I’m very excited to take on a new challenge in GT Cup this year, to have the opportunity to build another strong Pro-Am partnership, and to fight for the GTH title. Testing the Paddock Motorsport McLaren 570S GT4 on the media day earlier this month was the first time I’ve been in a GT4 since the McLaren DDP Shootout, and it felt very natural to be back at the wheel of this car. Last year was quite a successful year for me, to win a championship alongside a driver you’ve helped develop is very special, and there were some incredibly talented drivers in the Praga Cup field despite it being a new series. I’m sure I can have similar success here in GT Cup. Tim had a great start to his 2022 season before the accident ended what was a promising run of form, but he’s come back strong in testing, and I know he’ll be fighting for the win just as hard as me. I can’t wait to get started with this partnership!.”
The opening round of the GT Cup Championship takes place at Donington Park on April 1/2 as part of a seven-round championship, with each race weekend featuring a mixture of sprint and endurance races.