Khaleej Times

Red Bull race begins in Abu Dhabi

- Anjana Sankar anjana@khaleejtim­es.com

abu dhabi — Thousands of eager residents thronged the Abu Dhabi Corniche on Friday as the 2017 Red Bull Air Race season kicked off in the Capital.

The sight of the world’s best pilots taking to the skies to perform gravity-defying stunts has made it an annual spectator sports in Abu Dhabi’s sporting calendar for last 10 years.

The season-opening Abu Dhabi race is the 75th in the illustriou­s history of the Red Bull Air Race World Championsh­ip.

The qualifying rounds on the first day that started at 3pm was a scorcher with 14 daredevil pilots blazing through a particular­ly fast track.

The Czech Republic’s Martin Šonka soared to the fastest time in Qualifying at season kickoff — his first Qualifying win since joining the World Championsh­ip in 2010. Šonka’s time of 52.097 in the changeable desert winds just edged out the USA’s Michael Goulian (52.458) and Kirby Chambliss (52.500).

Germany’s Matthias Dolderer comes into Abu Dhabi as the man to beat after claiming his first World Championsh­ip in 2016, a title that, in his words, he’s “on a mission” to defend. Last year, Dolderer started his charge to the championsh­ip with a second-place finish in Abu Dhabi. Šonka and the rest of the 14-pilot field don’t intend to let him seize early momentum this time, and an uncharacte­ristic penalty by the usually consistent Dolderer left him 11th in the Qualifying field.

“This is a very fast track and every little mistake counts, so you have to fly smoothly, and we’re entering the pull ups at a very high speed, so it’s easy to over-G,” said Šonka, who is in pole position, will face Slovakia’s Peter Podlunšek in Race Day’s opening Round of 14.

“We are happy not just with the result, but to prove to ourselves that we can fly fast and consistent­ly with no penalties or mistakes — we have to do the same tomorrow.”

An Ardent Red Bull race fan, 62-year-old Billy Mantuano from Philippine­s, has not missed a single championsh­ip in the last decade. “This is my tenth year watching the daredevil pilots in action. This is

This is a very fast track and every little mistake counts, so you have to fly smoothly, and we’re entering the pull ups at a very high speed, Martin Šonka,

one event I never miss,” Mantuana told Khaleej Times. He said ten years ago, there used to be hardly a few hundred spectators on the corniche. “Every year the number is increasing — proof that the race is getting popular,” said Mantuana.

Brigida Mayuga, 53, another hardcore race fan, said it is nothing less than Formula 1 on the skies. “Every time I watch the pilots gyrate and do acrobatic stunts, I cannot stop to wonder how they do it,” said Mayuga.

In this pure motorsport, the aim of the pilots is to traverse through an aerial circuit featuring 25-metre-high, air-filled pylons. Using the most agile and lightweigh­t racing planes, pilots hit speeds of 370km/hr while enduring gravitatio­nal forces of up to 10G as they navigate a low-level slalom track. The final race will be held today.

 ??  ?? spectators eagerly watching the performanc­e of the participan­ts of the championsh­ip. The final race will be held today at abu dhabi corniche.
spectators eagerly watching the performanc­e of the participan­ts of the championsh­ip. The final race will be held today at abu dhabi corniche.
 ?? Photos by Ryan Lim ?? Participan­ts in action during the qualifying round of the masterclas­s category of Red Bull air Race on the day one at abu dhabi corniche on Friday. —
Photos by Ryan Lim Participan­ts in action during the qualifying round of the masterclas­s category of Red Bull air Race on the day one at abu dhabi corniche on Friday. —

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