The Herald (South Africa)

Drivers lining up to be king of hill

-

ORGANISERS of the annual Jaguar Simola Hillclimb have raised the bar in the Road Car and Supercar category, which is now dominated by a range of high-performanc­e car brands.

“Our objective is to refresh the line-up for the hillclimb each year to provide an exceptiona­l experience for the spectators and competitor­s, and this is evident in the superb range of exotics and performanc­e cars that will take to the start line in the Road Car and Supercar category,” the event’s sporting director, Geoff Goddard said.

The classes catering for standard production, road-legal vehicles have been narrowed for the ninth edition of the event from May 4 to 6, with the previous four-cylinder and six-cylinder naturally aspirated categories A1, A2 and A5 being dropped due to a lack of suitable applicatio­ns.

Therefore, starting off with Class A3 for six-cylinder turbocharg­ed or supercharg­ed two-wheel drive vehicles, a formidable benchmark has been establishe­d with the rapid Noble M400 of Feroz Ebrahim, along with the highly-rated 375kW Alfa Romeo Guilia QV, driven by Piet Potgieter.

As the reigning Road Car and Supercar King of the Hill champion and record holder with a time of 43.955 seconds, Reghard Roets will be back to defend his title in the only Nissan GT-R competing this year in Class A4.

“I really enjoyed my first outing at the Jaguar Simola Hillclimb last year, and it was fantastic to win the King of the Hill title,” Roets said.

“It’s an amazing event and is no walk in the park as there are a lot of serious cars and drivers out there.

“What the hillclimb lacks in distance it certainly makes up for in intensity, and blasting through the 1.9km course in just 43 seconds takes serious focus and commitment.

“The GT-R works exceptiona­lly well in this environmen­t,” Roets said.

With Class A5 falling away, next up are the normally aspirated V8-powered machines in A6, including a Ferrari 458 driven by Garth Mackintosh.

Class A7 will be the most fiercely contested category, with an almighty battle set to ensue between two of the biggest names in American V8 muscle. Ford Performanc­e Centre’s supercharg­ed Roush Ford Mustang will be driven by Barry Ingle. He will be going head-to-head with rival Shelby South Africa with its Mustang Super Snake and Paige Lindenberg.

The latest offering from BMW’s M division will be making its appearance with Rob Gearing behind the wheel of the recently launched all-wheel drive M5.

The British manufactur­ers will be well-represente­d too, with Dawie Olivier powering the supercharg­ed V8 Jaguar F-Type SVR. Joining him is Mark Cronje in a Jaguar XJR 575. Clive Geldenhuys will challenge in a twin-turbo W12-engined Bentley Continenta­l GT.

The supercar brigade in A7 features three lightweigh­t and quick McLaren 570S entries, driven by Ernst du Preez, Izak Spies and Jacques Wheeler.

The BMW i8 leads the charge for hybrid technologi­es, with Gordon Nicholson back to mix it up with the convention­ally-powered machines.

The i8 will not be the only green machine at the hillclimb. In a surprise announceme­nt, Nissan SA has entered a Nismo Nissan Leaf internatio­nal race car to be driven by Janus Janse van Rensburg, although it is unlikely to be entered in the same class as the road cars. – BDLive

 ?? Picture: MOTORPRESS ?? HIGHLY COMPETITIV­E: Dawie Olivier in a Jaguar F-Type SVR is one of the top drivers who will compete in the Hillclimb event
Picture: MOTORPRESS HIGHLY COMPETITIV­E: Dawie Olivier in a Jaguar F-Type SVR is one of the top drivers who will compete in the Hillclimb event

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa