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FERRARI HILL CLIMB CHAMPIONSHIP |
ROUND
14 : CADWELL PARK : 15 OCTOBER 2005 report by Graham Easter |
The FHCC started the Club's 2005 competition calendar way back in March
at Loton Park and were the last to finish, nearly seven months and 14
meetings later. Traditionally, the Series has finished at the MAC Curborough
but this year the final round was at Cadwell Park in Lincolnshire. This
circuit is the most picturesque in the country, winding through woodlands
and swooping up hill and down dale; the full circuit was to be used with
the exception of the famous "mountain".
This was a fitting venue for a dramatic finale to the Series. Twice runner-up
Richard Prior (348ts) had led for most of the year, but veteran former
Champion Geoff Dark had inexorably hauled him in and taken the lead by
just one point at the previous round. Prior was once again the only driver
to compete in all the rounds and had by far the most points, but only
the best seven scores count, which meant that he had to take the maximum
points at Cadwell to win the Series. Anything less and Dark would take
the title.
The millions following the Series via this website already know that a
Performance Equaliser Percentage or PEP is applied to even out the performances
of the various tipos taking part but longer, faster venues inevitably
favour the more powerful tipos. Prior was really going to struggle against
the the likes of Jon Goodwin, Chris Butler and David Tomlin (355s), the
later having raced a superkart at the venue and Nick Taylor, whose 348GTC
doesn't give much away to the 355s. Nick is also an experience circuit
racer with knowledge of the venue, which would help in deciding third
place between himself and Butler.
For once, the happy-go-lucky Prior had undertaken some pre-event preparation,
attending a track day on his Ducati so at least he knew which way the
corners went. Now he just had to remember that the Fazza won't go round
corners if you just lean into them, and that there was about 5ft of it
to his left!
There was a big entry of 18 cars for this last round, but there were two
non-starters and two drivers having been turned down - moral here, get
your entry in early! Most of the field stayed in a posh hotel nearby and
had a 16 course nouvelle-cuisine type dinner which went on interminably;
one luminary of the Club proclaimed that he wanted "proper food".
A less well-heeled breakaway faction stayed in a simple English pub and
enjoyed simple English pleasures like steak and chips and Elvis songs
- helpfully joining in once the racers had been safely tucked-up in bed.
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Next morning the track was very greasy after overnight rain, which can't
have helped the Championship contenders' nerves. At the hairpin, some
interesting lines were taken by Andy Holman (Mondial QV), John Day (328)
and Mike (I've beaten Poggie twice you know) Spicer (328). Richard Prior
was all over the place, but Chris Butler looked smooth and under control,
though Ali said he could try harder. However he emerged the quickest,
a little ahead of Nick Taylor. Under torture, Chris later admitted that
he'd learned the circuit with an in-car Caterham video he found on the
web!
Jon Goodwin provided a new entry for the "Racing Drivers Book of
Excuses" by having to wind his window down and haul in his flapping
racing number plate which was about to take off into the Lincolnshire
countryside. Conditions improved considerably for the second runs and,
as expected, Nick Taylor was on top, but Prior had the PEPs lead by 0.1
seconds!
In the lunch break the competitors collected their thoughts and philosophised
on racing and life in general, as is their wont. Andy Grier said it was
a sure sign winter was coming on as squirrels had started to store acorns
in the footwell of the family 328 again. It was suggested that perhaps
David Tomlin found Fazzaing a bit tame after karting and maybe if he wrestled
an alligator on the way round it would give a beneficial adrenaline charge.
A spectating Christian Mineeff said that when he took his points win at
Harewood an eagle had flown in through an air vent. I thought eagles were
huge with feathers, not small with yellow and black stripes, but he's
an FOC director, so he must be right.
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The track was dry for the first competition runs and the tension built
as the field ran through, calculators whipped out to try to work out times
after PEPs. Geoff Dark logged a 109.60sec run, which was 108.50, after
his 1% had been taken off and this was within striking distance of Nick
Taylor's corrected practice time of a mid 107. Jon Goodwin set the early
marker for the class win by knocking 3 seconds off his practice time to
record 105.91. Chris Butler needed to beat Nick Taylor to take third in
the Championship and rose to the challenge, whopping almost 3 seconds
off his practice time to record 104.31 which gave him the lead and which
was quicker than Taylor's practice time.
David Tomlin was off the new pace with a 106.14, but his 355 had been
breathing heavily for some time and was now beginning to consume oil at
an alarming rate. Soon, we were holding our breaths for Richard Prior's
run - the sound of squealing tyres indicated that he'd overcooked it somewhere,
but he still crossed the line pointing the right way. He'd been lucky
to get away with a huge tank-slapper in the chicane. The last runner was
Nick Taylor who looked quick and sure enough went fastest, his time was
quickest at 103.22. With trembling digits we worked out that this would
give him maximum points points by a quarter of a second from Prior and
that the Championship would go to Dark!
The meeting was running quite slowly and it was getting colder all the
time as the Ferraris came out for the final runs. Andy Holman still improved
a bit, but Geoff Dark by only two-hundredths. Richard Allen (328) knocked
2 seconds off and Mike Spicer a second and a half to win the battle of
the 328s by just four-hundredths. Jon Goodwin was slower and took to the
grass after the finish - he'd been busy looking at his time on the circuit-side
display. Pauline Goodwin, out in her 360 Spider shopping trolley, was
slower but still ended the season as she'd begun it, by winning the "Fastest
Lady" Award - this was no consolation to PG as she wants to beat
the blokes. Maybe it's time they gave up such an anachronistic trophy
anyway.
Lorraine Hitchman (328) was slower as was husband Chris (355), but patriarch
Peter was quicker, just losing out in the Mondial t battle to Mark Buckland.
Chris Butler was just sixth hundredths slower, David Tomlin improved,
ending up fourth overall. Andy Grier made a good improvement, and then
it was Prior's turn to go for the Championship. With everything to do,
he turned in a faultless run to record 105.10 which would give him the
win by seven tenths from Taylor and with it the title - if Taylor did
not improve on his second run - the very last of the year.
His 348GTC was already howling round, and everyone held their breaths
as it crossed the line - much slower at 108.09! Prior had won the 2005
title! It later emerged that Taylor, locked in his own battle with Butler,
had overcooked it and clipped some kerbs, but his first run time gave
him the outright win, 17 points and third place in the Series; Butler
and him ended up with the same number of points but Taylor took the place
after a count-back that went all the way down to their 8th best result.
It doesn't get much closer than that.
Richard Prior was ecstatic, having finally clinched the Championship after
being runner-up for the last two years and all were delighted for him.
At the same time, everyone felt sad for Geoff Dark who had run him so
close.
So, another season of this highly popular and successful Series came to
its dramatic conclusion, with just the FHCC Presentation Dinner to look
forward to before the long winter of rebuilds, careful setting up, data
analysis, physical training and testing at Paul Ricard - well maybe not.....
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Click here for
the results and points.
Click here for the Final Championship positions.
Click here to return to the Ferrari Hill Climb Championship page.
John Day retired |
Lorraine excecuted a chassé turn at the hairpin on P1 |
Andy Holman's Mondial QV was just over a second behind... |
...Peter Hitchman's more powerful "t"... |
...but Mark Buckland emerged on top on the Mondial maelstrom! |
The
328 still poorly, PG was out in her shopping trolley |
Andy
Grier was part of a grouping of three 328s... |
...as
was RA, who was giving his classic racer a gallop.... |
...and
Mike Spicer, here demonstrating "compression" (Copyright retained by Steve Wilkinson Photographic) |
Chris
Hitchman finished the year just outside the Championship top ten |
Geoff Dark drove valiantly but was out-gunned on this fast course |
Nice
atmo shot of Gooders plunging |
Tomlin's
355 makes smoke |
Richard
Prior... (Copyright retained by Steve Wilkinson Photographic) |
...got
the chicane... (Copyright retained by Steve Wilkinson Photographic) |
...a
bit wrong... (Copyright retained by Steve Wilkinson Photographic) |
...on
his first run... (Copyright retained by Steve Wilkinson Photographic) |
...as
these pics show, but performed faultlessly on R2 to take the Title (Copyright retained by Steve Wilkinson Photographic) |
Chris
Butler tied on points in the Championship... |
...with
Nick Taylor, who took third on their 8th best score! |
pics by Dave Clark, Steve Wilkinson Photographic (e-mail him to buy hi-res prints), Graham Easter & CMdigicams |