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A1 Team Great
Britain dominated today's free practice sessions at Sepang
circuit in hot and humid conditions, as round three of the
2007/08 A1GP World Cup of Motorsport season kicked off in
Malaysia.
23-year-old Oliver Jarvis set the pace, clocking an
outstanding lap of 1m49.459s on worn tyres around the 5.54km
circuit, slashing New Zealand's lap record of 1m53.343s which
was set by Jonny Reid at last year's A1GP Sepang event in
November 2006.
Jarvis was pleased with his team's start to the weekend but
is adamant there is still work to be done and is targeting a
strong qualifying performance tomorrow afternoon:
'It was a reasonable day. I would've liked a bit more pace
early on in the session with the new tyres but I'm very happy
with the lap time set at the end - for the age of the tyres it
was fairly fantastic. But tomorrow's when it really counts and
the guys will sit down tonight and analyse the data and
hopefully we'll come back even stronger tomorrow.'
Switzerland's Neel Jani, whose driving style suits the
smooth and flowing Sepang circuit, finished the day second
fastest, just under half a second off the British car. Jani
took over from Rahel Frey who was in the Swiss car this
morning for the rookie session. Frey set the 13th quickest
time and became the fifth female to drive an A1GP car during a
race weekend.
France's Loic Duval set the third fastest time of the day
while the fourth spot was taken by current championship leader
New Zealand's Jonny Reid, closely followed by China and
defending champion Germany in fifth and sixth place
respectively.
Home nation Malaysia's Alex Yoong had a difficult session
this afternoon and was not able to improve on 17th place due
to the session being yellow flagged when Pakistan's Adam Khan
spun off towards the end of the hour.
Commenting on his performance today and his team's chances
this weekend, Yoong said:
'We're losing quite a bit of time through the middle sector
- the medium and high speed corners are where we're struggling
a bit. I was pleasantly surprised to see how much grip there
is out there and they've done a good job resurfacing it - it
doesn't feel at all like the track we had last year. We made a
couple of changes to the car during the session in the right
direction but there's still a lot of work to be done
overnight. I don't think today's time is truly representative
of where we are and we should be able to improve that quite a
bit tomorrow. There are still a couple of things we can
improve on the car for sure. I am feeling more confident since
Brno but I'm not going to count my chickens before they've
hatched and we've got to keep pushing and hopefully keep
improving throughout the weekend.'
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