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            Race Report continues...  Similarly,  the suggestion that we might gain some advantage by heating his fuel was, after  some debate, discarded on the grounds that it was stupid (although given that  Big Ron had seen fit to protest the likes of Williams on the grounds of fuel  temperature, it was probably worth a try…).   Joking aside, however, many commented that his  points lead was actually relatively small, and there were some very quick drivers snapping at his  heels. Julian really needed to be  there to take points from these guys. And  so race day dawned. Driving up from a grey but generally dry Sussex, the  road surfaces became noticeably damper as the miles went by. At the circuit,  grey but dry had been exchanged for grey, cold and decidedly damp. Nice weather  for ducks…. and possibly Keith Jarvis.  Out on the circuit, the track was still  wet from Thursday’s drizzle. The Indy circuit had been in use since 9am by  several sessions of Hamilton-wannabe Juniors, but in the gloomy, overcast  conditions of raceday morning, it was unclear whether they had been able to get  a dry line going. Oh well, time for the grown-ups to show them how to do it! Sign-in,  suit-up, brief, lucky-dip. Walking across the pitlane to the waiting karts, all  surfaces were still decidedly wet. Here and there stood small, cold puddles. Summer  seemed a long time ago. | 
            In the kart, the comforting rumble of the idling engines,  and the faint suggestion of heat seeping through the back of the seat were  soothing, and it occurred to some that summer had been a long time ago…  in 2006, to be precise. So much for global warming. Chocks  away, visors down and out onto the track for practice. It was immediately  apparent that the Juniors might as well not have been there for all the  difference they had made to the track surface; the dark, shiny tarmac was  slippery pretty-much everywhere.  Folk busied themselves with the all-important  tasks of discovering where, if anywhere, there was grip to be had, and how much  grunt their individual machines possessed.  For ten minutes, the process of  twitching and sliding around the circuit went on, but as the chequered flag  came out, the track surface was as frustratingly slippery as it had been at the  start. Numerous spins and collisions were reported, the kart of easyJet’s Kevin  Cracknell being one of many to see combat. “I spun at the exit of Turn 1,” he  reported afterwards, “and got hit so hard I thought we were going to merge  karts! I’ll be billing them for the damage to my underpants…”  Kevin was not  Turn 1’s first victim of the day, and ‘The Big Corner’ would take many more  scalps before the hour was out. It was, it appeared, going to be another of those races | Amazingly, two of the Championship  protagonists had pulled the lowest numbers in the pre-start lucky dip, giving the  front end of the race 1 grid a particularly steely-eyed, square-jawed look.  On  pole was championship leader Julian Berry, with bmi’s Keith Jarvis, second in  the title race and proven rainmeister alongside him. Turn 1 was going to be very interesting.  The marshals called the  first karts down from the back straight to the start line, and the grid began  to form-up. In the sales office portakabin, the Daytona sales team downed  headsets and gathered at the windows ready for the start – a 26-strong grid  getting away together was going to be a spectacle not to be missed.  Outside, karts proceeded one-by-one  through the turn 6-7-8 ‘stadium section’.  For those at the front in particular,  the forming-up process seemed to take an eternity.  As the seconds ticked by,  the two columns of karts grew and yet still there were more waiting on the top  straight.  Finally, number 26 wound its way through the 6-7-8 complex, onto the  main straight and into position at the back of the left column.  Marshals ran  down the lines making final checks.  |    This was it.  No more waiting.  Crunch time.    Race 1, Lap 1, Turn 1, all on best behavior...
    Lap 2, getting confident...
    but Mark Perry (4) runs out of grip and is off the circuit.  Or is he just having a breather?
 
        
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              Green  lights. The pack roared off the grid as one, the two neat lines dissolving into  a furious, random mass, weaving and jinking.  At the front, it was immediately  clear that neither Keith nor Julian would be taking chances in the first few  moments; Julian was holding his place, resolutely keeping to the right-hand  side for the inside line to Turn 1, Keith just over his left shoulder.  Immediately  behind, Rein Zwolsman (EZY), bmi’s Mark Perry and Clare Jarvis were holding on.   In close formation they surged down to turn 1, all on the right-hand side of  the track for a defensive line into the corner.  Just behind, unexpected  development no.1 was taking form; easyJet’s Mike Wood had been pleasantly  surprised at his kart’s performance off the line and, exploiting the clear  left-hand side of the track, he moved up from sixth to third in the run down to  Turn 1. | 
               Entering the Big Corner, Mike was just behind KJ but both front row men  were hugging the inside of the corner, and the rest of the track was clear.  Keeping to the centre, Mike twitched and slithered his way around the outside  of both and into the lead, scarcely able to believe his luck. Further  back, the predictable Turn 1 midfield carnage was unfolding, some losing out  but others taking the opportunity to make early advances.  Already on the move  were Justin Undery, Richard Weber and Nick Pascoe from ninth, 14th  and 21st respectively.  And if there was plenty of talent at the  front of the grid, there was just as much at the back; from grid spots 24-26,  Roberto Gaitanis (bmi, back after a long absence), Perry Musty (BA) and Kevin  Cracknell (easyJet) would be a triumvirate to reckon with. | Perry  in particular was making huge early gains. Having weighed his options on the  start line, and decided the omens were not especially promising, Perry had  mentally snuggled down for a long pedestrian trudge up the field.  Everything  changed in Turn 1. Post–race analysis showed that he was comfortably quicker  than anyone else in race 1, his best   tour being a 1:06.736 on lap 17….over 0.4s swifter than the next-fastest  driver.  He made up ten places on the first lap and more on the second, before  the karts began to spread out and his victory rate reduced to one per lap until  lap 8.  Now in sixth, he was nevertheless a long way behind the leaders and had  to bide his time and reel-off a steady string of quick laps. Eventually, fifth  place became his and fourth quickly followed.  |     Unfortunately we can't see the kart number to shame this spinner at the exit of Turn 1... but he wasn't alone.
 
        
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              Tantalized now by the whiff  of victory, Perry was up to third after a few more laps. But 20 minutes was  nearly up, and he was unsure who was still ahead of him. In fact, it was Justin  Undery, with Keith J just behind, and Keith’s distinctive blue overalls were a  useful marker. Thundering  down the main straight for the last time, Keith must have been aware that Perry  had suddenly appeared in his 6 o’clock, and that this could only mean trouble.   Sure enough, after scrabbling through turn 1 together and onto the short  straight, the back end of Keith’s kart twitched momentarily into turn 2 and  Perry was up to second.  Only Justin was now ahead, but he was right there, only  feet away. Through turn 3, onto the uphill straight, brake desperately late for  the left-hand turn 4.  Get it running straight, then slither through the  right-hand turn 5 and onto the back straight. Across the circuit, the finish  line marshal had the chequered flag ready. Concentrate. Stay on the power as  long as you dare, then hard on the anchors for the turn 6 right-hander, control  the slide… | 
              Perry was all over the back of his BA colleague. Hammer down out of  6, let it run wide to the left of the track, then keep your boot in and muscle  it round to the left through 7.  The back end of Justin’s kart steps out. No  time to think.  Point the kart at the inside of 8, dab of brake to point it  round to the right, clip the apex, now pedal-to-metal as you exit, allowing the  missile to drift to the left-hand side of the straight and across the line. Confusion.  With karts 9 and 2 having started the final tour in first and second places  respectively, the arrival of Perry’s no.25 at the front next time around did  not register initially.  As the marshals assumed there had been some sort of  computer problem, it was left to the drivers involved in the battle to confirm  that yes, Perry really had taken the lead and the win in the last corner of the  race.  Breathtaking stuff.  | But  what of the others?  The race 1 track/kart combination did not agree with Julian  Berry, and Keith Jarvis passed him early on for second.  Keith set off after  Mike Wood, who was also beginning to struggle; on lap 3, Mike half-spun at turn  4 and Keith was into the lead. In turn, Keith came under pressure from Justin  Undery and eventually relinquished the lead to him, although it was a hard  scrap.  At the flag, Justin was in second place having come from ninth on the  grid, with Keith 0.26s behind.  A strong drive from Richard Weber brought him  home fourth after starting 14th, 3.39s ahead of easyJet’s Kevin  Cracknell who monstered his way up from 26th.  Kevin just managed to  take the place from Alex Sanderson, the gap between them being 0.50s at the  finish. There were good results also for Roberto Gaitanis (ninth after starting  24th) and Nick Pascoe (12th from 21st on the  grid). |     Race 2, Lap 1, Turn 1. New karts and cold tyres but more confidence...
    ... perhaps too much confidence...
    ...and Turn 6 claims Claire Jarvis (5). Or did she just spot a bargain in a shop window and turned back...
    Turn 6 was one of more unpredictable corners, and the newly relocated Race Control hut is positioned
perfectly to catch and penalise those overly optimistic moves.
 
        
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              Race  2, then.  A Cracknell / Musty front row, with Jarvis and Berry starting from the back, and lots of  talent in between.  It seemed that the circuit might be drying out slowly at  long last; the vast majority of the personal fastest laps in the 17-lap race 1  were set on lap 14 or later.  Sure enough, an examination of the laptimes at the  end of the second race would reveal that everybody had improved, some of them  dramatically (ThomsonFly’s Daniel Hess was quicker by 3.445s and Ian Wilson of  bmi found 4.059s, to name only two). But lap 1 of race 2, with its cold tyres  and unfamiliar machinery, is always a time for circumspection. A tricky call,  especially if you’re at the front. At  the green light, Kevin hugged the right-hand side of the track, intending to  force Perry wide through Turn 1 while assessing his own kart’s strengths and  weaknesses.  But it was not to be. Entering Turn 1 on the inside, Kevin became  aware of Perry alongside him halfway through the corner, evidently finding grip  in the middle of the track. The pair were very close throughout the rest of the  lap, but by the end of the first tour Perry had a small lead, and he spent the  rest of the race pulling away bit-by-bit.  Twenty minutes and eighteen laps  later, he took the flag for his second win of the day, Kevin still in second  place but now 7.8s behind. A dominant performance. | 
              Interestingly,  while Perry improved his fastest lap by 1.677s to 1:05.059, a number of folk managed  to go quicker still, although Perry’s sheer metronomic consistency won the race  in the end. Kevin was one of four who got into the 1m04s bracket with a  1:04.875, as was Richard Weber who charged home in third after starting 14th,  achieving a 1:04.876 fastest lap in the process. Julian  Berry found the combination of new kart and improving track much more to his  liking. Starting 26th and last, he engaged in a ferocious battle  with KJ from the start. Both improved their quickest laps by over 3s in the  course of a race-long battle, and at the flag they finished fourth and fifth,  Julian eventually leading Keith home by 0.7s.  Interesting  things were going on elsewhere too. Home in eighth was Nick Pascoe, Nick taking  a ‘laid-back’ approach to the race due to hinged pedals set in the ‘long’  position. Despite this, he still shaved 2.883s off his best time for race 1…  made you wonder what might have been possible had he spotted the problem  earlier.  Nick  finished 1.6s ahead of Alex Sanderson, who was up from 20th grid  spot. A creditable performance in itself, but what really got your attention  was the sheer blistering pace of the man.  With a quickest race lap of 1:03.677,  he was the only driver to get below 1m04s, and was getting on for a full second  faster than the next quickest charioteer (Keith Jarvis, with a 1:04.539). This was fearsomely quick given the  conditions, and you had to wonder what might have been possible had he kept it  on the island a little more.  | As it was, Alex was the first to admit to a number  of excursions into the jungle. The most impressive was a real show-stopper,  Alex leaving the track at the outside of Turn 8 and burying the kart into the  tyres up to its steering column. “Rome  wasn’t built in a day,” offered a marshal helpfully, as he extricated Alex from  his predicament.  Sensibly following the example of Roger the Cabin Boy, Alex  smiled and said nothing. John  Tarmar made up two places to finish tenth, improving his race 1 laptime by  2.918s in the process, and pipped Justin Undery to the post by a mere 0.17s.  Justin came through the field from 18th and went 1.879s quicker than  he had in race 1.  New boy Hans Der Boven from easyJet was really getting to  grips with Sandown at the end, starting 19th and coming home in 12th  at the finish, and chucking it round in 1:05.472 at the end… 3.880s quicker  than in race 1. So,  another tricky race came to an end, and with it the championship. There was a  tense interval while final numbers were crunched, and we had our result. Julian  had done enough in the first four rounds to secure the title, but it was a very  close-run thing.  Keith’s 94 points from this round boosted his championship  score to one behind Julian’s, and if he’d managed another couple of points here  and there over the course of the year, well…. As  Murray Walker used to say, ”’If’ is ‘Formula 1’ spelt backwards”. Yeah right.  See you next year.  |     Event 5 Podium Ceremony
Richard Weber (bmi) 3rd, Perry Musty (BA) 1st, Kevin Cracknell (easyJet) 2nd
    2007 AirlineKarting Championship
L-R - Organisers Mike Wood (easyJet) 6th and Richard Weber (bmi) 3rd,
Julian Berry (Virgin) 1st, Keith Jarvis (bmi) 2nd, Kevin Cracknell (easyJet) 4th.
Justin Undery (BA) 5th (not in picture)
     Race Result, Round 5  Friday 26th October 2007. Decidedly Damp.  
      
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 | 
 |  | Race 1  |  | Race 2  |  | 
 |  
        | Posn. | Driver | Airline |  | Grid | Finish |  | Grid | Finish |  | Points |  
        | 1 | Perry Musty  | BA |  | 25 | 1 |  | 2 | 1 | 
 | 100 |  
        | 2 | Kevin Cracknell   | easyJet |  | 26 | 5 |  | 1 | 2 | 
 | 95 |  
        |  | Richard Weber    | bmi |  | 14 | 4 |  | 13 | 3 | 
 | 95 |  
        | 4 | Keith Jarvis  | bmi |  | 2 | 3 |  | 25 | 5 | 
 | 94 |  
        | 5 | Julian Berry  | Virgin |  | 1 | 7 |  | 26 | 4 | 
 | 91 |  
        | 6 | Justin Undery  | BA |  | 9 | 2 |  | 18 | 11 | 
 | 89 |  
        | 7 | Alex Sanderson   | BA |  | 7 | 6 |  | 20 | 9 | 
 | 87 |  
        | 8 | Roberto Gaitanis  | bmi |  | 24 | 9 |  | 3 | 7 | 
 | 86 |  
        | 9 | Mike Wood  | easyJet |  | 6 | 11 |  | 21 | 6 | 
 | 85 |  
        | 10 | Nick Pascoe  | BA |  | 21 | 12 |  | 6 | 8 | 
 | 82 |  
        | 11 | Mark Perry   | bmi |  | 4 | 8 |  | 23 | 14 | 
 | 80 |  
        | 12 | John Tarmar  | Exec |  | 15 | 16 |  | 12 | 10 | 
 | 76 |  
        | 13 | Peter Rogers  | Virgin |  | 10 | 10 |  | 17 | 17 | 
 | 75 |  
        |  | Andy Holmes    | BA |  | 13 | 14 |  | 14 | 13 | 
 | 75 |  
        | 15 | Mike McCann  | bmi |  | 11 | 13 |  | 16 | 15 | 
 | 74 |  
        | 16 | Hans der Boven  | easyJet |  | 8 | 17 |  | 19 | 12 | 
 | 73 |  
        | 17 | Tim Parrett  | BA |  | 12 | 15 |  | 15 | 20 | 
 | 67 |  
        | 18 | Claire Jarvis  |  |  | 5 | 18 |  | 22 | 19 | 
 | 65 |  
        | 19 | Ed Ashfield  | easyJet |  | 19 | 24 |  | 8 | 16 | 
 | 62 |  
        | 20 | Ian Wilson  | bmi |  | 20 | 25 |  | 7 | 18 |  | 59 |  
        | 21 | Wouter de Muijnck  | Thomson |  | 18 | 23 |  | 9 | 21 |  | 58 |  
        |  | Rein Zwolsman  | easyJet |  | 3 | 21 |  | 24 | 23 |  | 58 |  
        |  | Simon Boxall  | 
 |  | 17 | 20 |  | 10 | 24 |  | 58 |  
        |  | Ben Whitby  | 
 |  | 16 | 19 |  | 11 | 25 |  | 58 |  
        | 25 | Steve Watson  | XL |  | 22 | 22 |  | 5 | 26 |  | 54 |  
        |  | Daniel Hess  | Thomson |  | 23 | 26 |  | 4 | 22 |  | 54 |  |