Paddock Motorsport left the opening round of the British GT Championship with plenty of positives, despite the weekend throwing more than a few challenges at the team.
The GT3 crew of Mark Smith and Martin Plowman showed flashes of great pace, and finished what turned out to be a truncated opening race with a well-deserved top-10 finish, while rookie pairing Blake Angliss and Alex Walker bagged a strong pair of fifth place finishes to start their campaign with solid points.
Those results did come against a backdrop of disappointment though, with the new Mercedes-AMG GT4 of Ed McDermott and Matt Cowley having to be withdrawn after a major technical failure early on Saturday. The car shattered its propshaft during practice, and although a spare was sourced and fitted on Sunday, further engine issues prevented the car from running.
Down to the twin McLarens for race one, both cars put in a fighting display in extremely tricky conditions that made the first race almost more about survival than progress. The grid formed up under persistent rain, with all cars on wet-weather Pirellis and the prospect of thick spray reducing visibility to a few metres at best.
Smith was disappointed in his first qualifying of the year, starting the GT3 Evo from 13th in the monster field after not quite hooking up an ideal lap. Angliss climbed aboard the Artura GT4 to make his British GT debut, starting from sixth in class.
The race began behind the safety car in the worst of the conditions, before releasing the cars in anger a few minutes later. Smith immediately looked to move forward, picking up a place when the J&S Racing Audi swapped ends through turn one. Smith then began to pressure the RAM Racing BMW M4, but was caught out when the M4 braked early into Hislops, forcing Smith to jump on the brakes and narrowly avoid the rear of the BMW as he skated down the escape road. With grass in the radiators from the incident, rising temperatures prevented Smith from making progress, as did a lengthy full course yellow period called to recover a stranded GT4 car. He eventually handed across to Plowman, but with the tyres lacking bite and racing action limited over the closing laps, a safe 12th was the limit for the pair.
Angliss and Walker weren’t shy in getting involved, with Angliss getting stuck in despite the conditions and dicing with multiple cars across his stint. He flew past the CWS Ginetta at the start and then climbed all over the rear of the Race Lab McLaren before having his own progress stunted by the FCY. He pitted for Walker, who rejoined equally determined to push further up the order. Walker despatched the rival Artura with a fine move and then chased down the RAM Racing Mercedes-AMG, shadowing it across the line to secure a fine fifth place.
Race two would provide a different challenge, and also a highly frustrating finish. Plowman excelled in his qualifying segment, putting the #9 McLaren GT3 Evo a fine sixth on the grid. However, this early promise was tempered when Plowman was rudely elbowed wide through the first turn, dropping a wheel of the sodden grass and losing momentum. That meant he was swamped down to 12th on the first lap, and had all the hard work to do over again. But in truth he never got the chance, as racing was neutralised first thanks to a multi-car tangle in the GT4 pack, and then again for virtually the entire second half of the race following barrier damage inflicted by a wayward Aston Martin GT3 and then a rival McLaren breaking down on track. It meant neither Plowman nor Smith really got a chance to get into the fight their qualifying pace had deserved, and eighth in class was all they could do.
It was a similar story for the GT4 crew, with Walker qualifying the Artura GT4 fifth in class, he then made a solid start to the race, only to be caught behind the melee sparked when a Century Motorsport BMW M4 was tipped around at turn one, scattering the pack and damaging a handful of cars. Walker did brilliantly to avoid damage, slamming on the brakes to avoid the accident ahead. However, the lost ground would take a lot to recover.
Walker then engaged in a great fight with Gordie Mutch’s Lotus, with Mutch diving past into Hislops only for Walker to snatch the place back through Cascades a lap later. He was fifth in class when he handed to Angliss, who rejoined for what would become a frustrating finish where everybody was unable to make progress. Still, two top-fives on their British GT debut was a superbly promising return for the young pairing.
Martin Plowman of the McLaren GT3 team said: “It’s been an up-and-down weekend. It’s a huge shame the Mercedes-AMG couldn’t run, and we’re really looking forward to seeing Ed and Matt in action at Silverstone. Then we showed some really strong qualifying pace for the second outing only to get unlucky at the start and be set back, and then have any chance of fighting back taken away by the full course yellows. It’s a shame, but it is what it is. We’ve already got our eyes on fighting back at Silverstone.”
Blake Angliss of the GT4 crew said: “It’s been a big weekend of learning for us, but I’m pleased with the results and the progress we’ve made. Alex and I have worked really well together and in some ways racing the car for the first time in the mixed conditions has been really useful because then all of its movements and feelings are exaggerated in the wet. It’s been a great challenge. I really enjoyed getting stuck into the fight in race one, but race two was frustrating for us with the way it finished. But we’ll go away, reset and look to Silverstone.”
The next round of the British GT Championship takes place at Silverstone on April 27/28.