Motorsport News

SEBASTIANI­SECURESF3C­UP TITLEINSTY­LEATOULTON

- Photos: Rachel Bourne

CF Racing’s Jacopo Sebastiani sealed the F3 Cup championsh­ip at Oulton Park with yet another convincing display; a second place and victory in the season finale confirming him as champion, 34 points ahead of runner-up Shane Kelly.

A strong weekend at Brands Hatch last time out meant the Italian’s intention to not play the numbers game was evident from the start as he took pole position for race one. But it was the impressive Cian Carey that won the opening race to secure his first win of the season, hooking up the start brilliantl­y to storm into second by Old Hall Corner. He inherited the lead at the end of the opening lap after Wade Eastwood pulled into the pits to retire with an engine issue. Sebastiani had made an uncharacte­ristically poor getaway and slipped back to third which then became second after Eastwood’s retirement.

With drizzle falling and the pack electing to stay on slicks save for two runners, conditions were now treacherou­s and the title was wrapped up midway through when Shane Kelly could not avoid Robbie Watts’ sideways moment at Cascades and spun into retirement. The order up front remained unchanged with Sebastiani finishing behind Carey in second, safe in the knowledge that the position would be enough to give him the title.

Consistent all season and only finishing off the podium four times in 18 races, the F3 Cup champion was determined to finish on a high in race two; he pulled clear from pole to secure a lights-to-flag victory with Carey and Kelly completing the podium.

Both VAG Trophy outings were affected by yellow and red flags as Simon Walton took the honours in race one. Starting from pole, the Audi driver pushed the fast-starting Paul Taylor wide at the first corner and controlled the pace superbly to win despite the emergence of the safety car midway through, courtesy of Callum Jenkins crashing around the back of the circuit while battling with Matthew Wilson and Kenan Dole for third.

A red flag in race two could not stop Brayden Fletcher winning from pole. Richard Morgan got sideways at Old Hall Corner collecting Matthew Evans and the chaos descended into Cascades with Jenkins and Peter Davies also unable to avoid the melee. Fletcher nailed the restarted race and was untouchabl­e until the flag. Owen Walton and Wilson completed the podium after a race-long battle with Dole, Ben Wallace, Kyle OwenBradsh­aw and Simon Walton; the six drivers covered by two seconds at the finish after numerous collisions with each other.

Callum Mcdoughall and Ben Simonds (Caterham Supersport) won the MSVT Trackday Championsh­ip with a fourth place finish and a retirement for Class S champion Darren Goes. Eventual winners David Gardner and Chris Mills had surrendere­d the lead in their BMW M3 to Goes in the early stages but the result for Mcdoughall and Simonds was confirmed when SEAT Leon driver Goes suffered a delaminate­d tyre and crashed into the barriers at Cascades midway through.

John Lyne inherited the MSVT Trackday Trophy win after Dean Hyde crashed at Cascades late on while leading, causing a red flag stoppage. Lawrence Davey and Toby Hotston had started from pole, but surrendere­d the lead to Hyde after the stops, the latter pulling clear until the error that gifted the win to Lyne in his Volkswagen Golf.

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