Autosport (UK)

GT4 HEARTBREAK FOR HUTCHISON/MCKAY IS A CENTURY TRIUMPH

- ROB LADBROOK

Century Motorsport celebrated its second British GT4 win in succession, with Jack Mitchell and Aleksander Schjerpen capitalisi­ng on heartbreak for the Equipe Verschuur team of Finlay Hutchison and Daniel Mckay.

Hutchison and Mckay looked untouchabl­e around the fast sweeps of Silverston­e as they found “the perfect balance” in their Mclaren 570S GT4 – a car that has notably been difficult to set up to find the operative tyre window.

But the pair nailed it, taking pole on

Saturday and also looking unbeatable for the first two hours on Sunday. And then things took a turn for the worse.

Hutchison admitted to “messing up the start… really, really badly” and slipped back to fourth as the fast-starting Lewis Proctor shot his Mclaren into the lead from seventh on the grid on the first lap.

Undeterred, Hutchison fought back to secure the lead again shortly before handing over to Mckay, who consolidat­ed the advantage to the best part of 20 seconds. Hutchison then took over again and continued to romp clear. That was until his front-right suspension gave way, robbing the crew of a 35-second lead and a sure victory.

With the long-term leaders out, a frantic battle behind took on more significan­ce. Ben Tuck/ben Green led the way in the sister Century BMW M4, but slipped back to third after serving their 20-second success penalty from their win last time out.

That handed the lead to Mitchell/schjerpen, who had kept things clean to climb up the order, having lost time with a radio glitch early on.

“We did qualifying laps for the best part of two-and-a-half hours, but it feels mega to win,” said Mitchell of the race.

Jordan Albert brought the Mclaren he shares with Proctor home in second, defying its extra 15s in the pits, to replicate its result from the last race.

The fight for third was a thriller. Tuck held on gamely on worn tyres but succumbed to both

Matt Nicoll-jones/will Moore’s Academy Aston Martin and the HHC Ginetta of Callum Pointon/ Patrik Matthiesen in the closing laps.

Matthiesen then launched an audacious lunge up the inside of Nicoll-jones as the pair ran into Woodcote for the last time and got the place on the road, only to have the positions reversed after contact.

Kelvin Fletcher/martin Plowman recovered from a time penalty for contact with Charlie Fagg’s Mclaren to finish sixth and win the Pro-am division after what Plowman labelled “the best stint of my life” in the RJN Nissan 370Z.

 ??  ?? Schjerpen and Mitchell made their way up the order to steal the win
Schjerpen and Mitchell made their way up the order to steal the win

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