Motorsport News

BROWNING ON A CHARGE TO OULTON PARK GLORY

Two very different junior races inches hire

- Ginetta Junior By Stephen Lickorish

The only similarity between the two Ginetta Junior contests was that Luke Browning won both on the road. But in one race he was stripped of the victory, the other he won by a mammoth 11 seconds. And while one race was a snoozefest, the other was a chaotic thriller.

The opening race was the dull one. Browning resisted title rival Adam Smalley’s attempts to grab the lead at the start and that was how it stayed to the finish. Except that Browning’s Richardson Racing car failed post-race scrutineer­ing ( see Racing News) and Smalley was handed the win from Elite Motorsport team-mates Fin Green and Louis Foster.

Race two was different. There was more action in the opening half a lap than in the whole of the earlier encounter.

Smalley jumped front-row starter James Hedley into Old Hall but this proved to be a bad move as by the hairpin he was facing the wrong way – the victim after contact with James Taylor sent an out-of-control Hedley clattering into him. This dropped Smalley and Hedley out of contention.

The next lap it was Taylor – who had earlier missed out on third in race one after jumping the start – and Patrick Kibble’s turn to tangle at Old Hall as they fought for second. This dropped Kibble out of the lead fight.

On lap four it was Taylor, Ruben Del Sarte and Green’s turn to collide at the chicane. This dropped Taylor and Green out of contention.

With a host of cars out of contention, Browning scampered into the distance and by the flag was over 11s clear.

When asked if that makes up for the race one disappoint­ment, he smiled: “Yeah it does. To win by that margin was something on my bucket list.”

Behind were those tiny number of cars that had stayed out of trouble. And a move at Lodge on Greg Johnson with three of the eight laps to go sealed second for Foster. Despite starting all the way down in 11th place.

“I was disappoint­ed with qualifying after taking a pole and fastest lap at Thruxton,” admitted Foster. “Finishing third yesterday was good but finishing second today was great – the race was just manic, there was a lot happening! I had nothing to lose but was surprised to take second.”

Johnson held on for third from Del Sarte, Jonny Wilkinson and a recovering Smalley after a frenetic contest.

After the uneventful opener it was further proof that calm is definitely not the Ginetta Junior norm.

 ?? Photos: Jakob Ebrey ?? Browning soon pulled away from chasing pack Smalley inherited the opening win
Photos: Jakob Ebrey Browning soon pulled away from chasing pack Smalley inherited the opening win

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