Weekend Herald

Gilmour happy despite sack

- Eric Thompson

I knew it couldn’t last forever, so I rode the wave for as long as I could.

Emma Gilmour

Rally exponent Emma Gilmour had a bitterswee­t end to her 2023. The New Zealander became the first woman to become a full- time driver for McLaren in their Extreme E category, but after two years at the iconic racing brand she is no longer required.

“This opportunit­y was still amazing despite what happened [ no drive in 2024],” Gilmour told the Weekend Herald. “To be the first woman to race for McLaren, and the first woman to leave McLaren, is not too bad a record to have.

“Going to Goodwood and driving Denny Hulme’s CanAm and other great experience­s has been surreal. I still can’t believe it really happened and it’s been such a fairy tale to have been involved with McLaren.

“With Extreme E, I got to see amazing parts of the world that many people don’t. I always knew it couldn’t last forever, so I rode the wave for as long as I could and thoroughly enjoyed it all. No regrets.”

Gilmour and co- driver Tanner Foust have driven together since the team’s launch in 2022 and in that time achieved a couple of podiums. Their best championsh­ip finish was fifth in season two and the Kiwi is chuffed with her results racing for NEOM McLaren XE.

“It was a bit of a frustratin­g season this year. We finished last year with quite a bit of momentum and for whatever reason this season just didn’t happen as we hoped.

“I don’t know if it was the new format, which took a few things out of your control. You needed to have a really quick car off the line and we never really got that sorted and were always battling a bit.

“We still managed to get a podium in Scotland, so that was a positive.

“The car was feeling really good in the build- up to the Sardinian round until it rolled over on me. The problem was you never really got much time to sort the car out and if it wasn’t quick straight away you were on the back foot.

“Being the third season now, all the teams were pretty well matched and a lot depended on what ball draw you got. Speed didn’t really come into too much, more depended on your group draw,” said Gilmour.

Not one to take rejection lying down, Gilmour is now focusing on next year with a full- on assault of the New Zealand Rally Championsh­ip in her Citroen C3 Rally 2 car.

Rather than trying to fit the NZRC around her former internatio­nal commitment­s, Gilmour will be aiming to improve on her best finish of second place ( three times over the years) in the series.

“I haven’t done a full New Zealand rally campaign for a very long time and I’m really looking forward to it, especially in a competitiv­e car like the Citroen,” she told the Weekend Herald. “I bought it after the New Zealand round of the WRC and Hayden Paddon has been running it for me.

“My first event in it was the Otago rally where we finished fifth in it.

“We were supposed to do the last two events this year, but with my head injury [ Extreme E rollover] we decided not to do them.

“I’m really looking forward to racing the whole championsh­ip next year and hoping for a good result.”

 ?? Photo / LAT Images ?? Emma Gilmour is no longer required at McLaren.
Photo / LAT Images Emma Gilmour is no longer required at McLaren.

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