Alex Walker and Adam Hatfield came seconds away from yet more British GT Championship silverware for Paddock Motorsport’s McLaren Artura GT4, on an otherwise tricky weekend for the team at Snetterton (13/14 July).
A pair of hour-long races awaited the Paddock Motorsport trio in Norfolk, Walker and Hatfield coming closest to celebrations after another fighting performance in the GT4 Silver category. After two podiums in recent British GT rounds, the Artura scored a brace of fourth-place finishes at Snetterton to continue its push in the class points.
Paddock’s other two crews were less fortunate across the double-header. A spin in both races hampered the progress of its McLaren GT3, driven by Martin Plowman and Mark Smith, while the Mercedes-AMG GT4 duo of Ed McDermott and Matt Cowley beat race one disappointment to end Sunday with a season-best result of fourth in Pro-Am.
The three Paddock crews returned from the European event at Spa-Francorchamps focused on adding to a growing trophy haul, with two Snetterton sprint races to sink their teeth into. Rain threatened during both Saturday morning practice sessions, but a dry track greeted the drivers for Qualifying in the afternoon.
Smith was first up in the 720S and set a time good enough for sixth in GT3 Pro-Am, Plowman backing that up with ninth on his run. Of the GT4 teams, the #11 Artura bagged a pair of top-five starts in the Silver category, while McDermott and Cowley planted the Mercedes-AMG sixth and seventh in Pro-Am respectively for the races.
Race one on Sunday did not start as planned for the GT3 entry of Smith, after he suffered a minor spin on cold tyres following a three-wide squeeze at the Wilson hairpin. Left with work to do, the McLaren fought its way from the back of the pack up onto the fringes of the top 10 to claim eighth place in class by the finish.
In GT4 it was much more promising. Hatfield started the Artura and kept pace with the battling pack, handing over to Walker in a top-six position in Silver. The latter then moved ahead of Zac Meakin’s similar McLaren before catching and passing Erik Evans’ Ford Mustang for fourth in class, finishing just three seconds shy of what could have been the car’s third consecutive podium. The Mercedes-AMG duo were less fortunate despite a positive start, with a stop-go penalty in the second half of the race dropping them to sixth in Pro-Am.
A frenetic second race again proved a mixed bag. GT4 ended with positives for both crews, Hatfield chasing a class podium after an inspired opening stint by Walker to move the Artura up into fourth before handing across to Hatfield. After a safety car closed things up inside the final 20 minutes, Hatfield pushed hard but was limited to fourth in class, just under two seconds from the podium places.
A super effort from Cowley and McDermott rewarded them with a season’s best result of fourth in Pro-Am, bringing some much-deserved points to the Mercedes side of the garage. Paddock’s GT3 McLaren was limited to a solid seventh in Pro-Am, after Smith was punted into a spin in the second half but recovered well to score enough points to keep himself and Plowman inside the top-10 in the class championship.
The recent consistency of the #11 Artura has also boosted Walker’s standing in the GT4 Silver championship, with him now running third in the points with two rounds remaining.
From the Artura GT4 crew, Alex Walker said: “Fourth in Silver in both races is good points for us towards the class championship, but I think we could have had a bit more in the end. Sometimes it goes your way and sometimes it doesn’t. There were a few situations on track where you just need one or two small things to fall your way and it makes it a completely different day. It’s good that we’re actually disappointed to finish fourth, and that shows how far we’ve come since the start of the year. We’ll big ourselves up, keep developing and see where we are next time. It will be a battle in the Silver championship, but if we take it race-by-race, we’ll stay in the mix and keep the fight going.”
Mark Smith from the McLaren GT3 team said: “We were fighting oversteer in the car this weekend, as there wasn’t much grip out there. We struggled to get the car into the right window really, and made some major changes that gave us some oversteer in Qualifying. Our race pace was much better though. We were a bit twitchy with low grip at the first corner in race one, and maybe I should have been more cautious as that needed to be managed. Our team’s pace is right around fifth in race trim, so Donington’s a track we know well and have a set-up that we’re happy with, so we should be able to be competitive there.”
Matt Cowley of the Mercedes-AMG added: “There’s positives to definitely take away this weekend. Second race especially was a tough one, but we had a good start and made up a lot of ground early on. We were a bit heavier than a few of our rivals which meant we just ate our tyres towards the end. We hung on though and Ed did a really good job in his stint to get our best finish of the season and fourth in class. We’re heading towards that podium, and Paddock have been doing a great job with the car, everybody is gelling together and we can hopefully celebrate soon.”
The three Paddock Motorsport crews will now return to Donington Park for the penultimate event of the British GT campaign, in a two-hour race held across 7/8 September.