The New Zealand Herald

McLaughlin nurses smoking car to second

- Dale Budge

New Zealand’s Scott McLaughlin overcame a badly smoking car to secure second place in yesterday’s Supercars race at Hidden Valley Raceway and extend his championsh­ip lead.

Erebus Holden driver David Reynolds claimed his sixth career race win with a convincing drive for the small-budget operation.

McLaughlin spent the majority of the day in second place but midway through the 70-lap race, his car began smoking in a worrying sign. The Kiwi ensured he kept the car in as much home in third to snap a string of subpar results.

“Congratula­tions to Davey and Erebus, they did a great job,” McLaughlin said. “It was pretty hot going — the engine was hot, I was hot, and there was stuff going on everywhere. The car was really good but I just couldn’t get close to people because of the heat in the engine. It was a solid day for us, so we will take that and run.”

Reynolds made a blindingly fast start from the second row of the grid and drove around both pole-sitter Rick Kelly and McLaughlin at turn one on the opening lap.

A safety car with 14 laps left opened the doors for the cars that stopped later, including van Gisbergen.

The 2016 champion blew straight past Nick Percat on the restart but took an age to get by Kelly’s Nissan, who was eventually given a bad sportsmans­hip flag for blocking.

By the time van Gisbergen made the pass, the top three cars had bolted into the distance and a chance for a podium went begging, but it was a huge recovery after a poor qualifying performanc­e saw him start 11th.

Reynolds credited his incredible move at the start of the race as the key moment.

“Pretty much business as usual for me — I always try to get the best start I can and I just hung my balls out at turn one and went a bit deeper than everyone and it paid off,” Reynolds said. “That is what set up our race. We had awesome pit stops and good strategy. My car was amazing, I couldn’t fault it.”

McLaughlin’s Shell V-Power Ford teammate Fabian Coulthard came home eighth, while the other two New Zealanders — Andre Heimgartne­r and Richie Stanaway — finished 16th and 19th respective­ly.

The series moves to Townsville in three weeks.

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