Personal best for Paddock in epic Silverstone 500 showdown

Mark Smith and Martin Plowman scored the best-ever Silverstone 500 finish for the Paddock Motorsport team, holding off intense pressure late on to bag eighth place overall after a determined performance.
Despite nursing fading brakes toward the end of British GT’s three-hour seasonal showpiece, Smith and Plowman successfully held off the attack of the title-chasing Barwell Motorsport Lamborghini to secure the result, with Plowman using every bit of his experience in the nail-biting closing stages to bring it home.
It capped a fighting performance as the team enjoyed great consistency across a challenging race that featured three Safety Car periods and a heap of drama.
Paddock began the weekend by dialling the McLaren 720S GT3 Evo into the Northamptonshire circuit’s fast sweeps across both Free Practice and Qualifying on Saturday. Despite changing track temperatures making it tough to refine the car’s balance, Qualifying proved a highlight with Smith producing a great lap to go eighth fastest in the opening session. Plowman then backed that up against the Pro field ensuring the #9 McLaren would start inside the top 10 for Sunday’s race.
When the lights went out, Smith made immediate progress by working his way up a place to chase the Orange Racing McLaren. Despite repeatedly closing in on his rival, Smith began to struggle with front-end grip in the dirty air and was forced to hold station until the first of the caution periods cued the opening round of pit stops. A clean service by the Paddock crew got Plowman installed and the car back out in great time, with Plowman running as high as sixth during his opening stint. The race’s second Safety Car was called when a Ferrari was dumped into the gravel and the team again reacted, pitting for a second time with the race under reduced speed.
Smith kept up the pressure for a top-six finish, successfully staying clear of trouble and showing consistent pace before the braking issue gradually began to rear its head. Smith drove superbly to limit the damage, before taking advantage of one final caution period to complete the car’s final pit stop. Despite Plowman being delayed by a red light at the end of the pit lane when attempting to rejoin, he filtered back out in the middle of a tight fight with both Barwell Lamborghinis.
While the worsening braking problem meant hauling in the #1 car would be impossible, Plowman defended exceptionally against the #78 in the hands of Finnish driver Patrick Kujala, with the Lamborghini rarely ever more than a few tenths behind. Despite a tag from the rear also damaging the car’s diffuser, and Plowman having to constantly manage the ailing anchors, he held on for seventh at the flag. Even with the car being moved back a place by a post-race time penalty, eighth overall was a big result in the year’s toughest race. Made better by the fact the car scored points for seventh, due to the race-winning BMW being a guest entry.

Mark Smith said: “It was a really fun race and I was pleased with both how my stints went and that we came away with a really strong result. During my stint I got into some good fights, but I was really struggling with the aero wash when I caught the Orange Racing McLaren and just couldn’t get by… you feel the front grip just going away when following closely around the fast corners here. Then we could feel the brakes starting to get away from us as the race wore on, but Martin did a superb job to hold off the Lambo at the end when we were really struggling. So, a personal best for us, in what is a really demanding race. It’s a definite positive to build on.”
Martin Plowman added: “To come away from the toughest race of the year with our best-ever result here is always a positive. After Friday it felt like we’d taken a bit of a step back on performance, so that’s something we have to address, but the way the team pulled together and read this race was really positive. We stayed penalty-free throughout and Mark drove two really good stints, attacking when he could and managing the car when the brakes started to drop off. Near the end the pedal was just getting longer and longer so I was having to wind the brake bias gradually further back, and even then every time I braked it was pretty sketchy, which made the fight with the Lambo so tough. Overall, we have to be happy with this result and it shows we can definitely push forward for the remainder of the year.”
Paddock Motorsport is next in action at Brands Hatch where it will make its debut in the McLaren Trophy Europe this coming weekend.










