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2007 saw the closest finish of any national motor racing championship in Europe,
with nine drivers fighting it out for the title of Avon Tyres British GT
Champion over the final two races of the 14-round season. Team RPM’s Alex
Mortimer and Bradley Ellis were triumphant after securing a double win at
Rockingham but the ultimate winner was the British GT championship, which had
been transformed by the move to GT3 at the start of the year.
2008 promises to be even better with
at least 27 cars from Ferrari, Aston Martin, Dodge, Porsche, Lamborghini, Ascari
and Ginetta taking part in the 14 races on 8 of the UK’s top circuits. New for
2008 is the GT4 class, which replaces GTC, and is aimed at large production cars
with lower power/weight ratios than that of GT3. With cars from Aston Martin
and Ginetta committed to the new category and other marquee set to join the grid
later in the year, GT4 has already picked up the mantle from
GTC.
Team RPM are back to defend their 2007
title with a pair of Viper Competition Coupés. BTCC race winner Paul O’Neill is
joined by Steve Clark in the number 1 Viper after they both had a one off outing
at Croft last season for the team. The second Viper is in the capable hands of
Nick Foster, who is joined in the cockpit by British GT race winner Oliver
Bryant.
Chad Racing make a welcome return to
British GT with a pair of Ferrari 430’s. Guy Harrington and Ben de Zille Butler
are swapping their Aston Martin V12, in which they won two races in their debut
season and so nearly won the overall British GT crown, for a Ferrari V8 and are
confident of more race wins and another shot at the championship in ‘08. After
a year in the Team RPM Porsche, Peter Bamford and Matt Griffin have once again
teamed up, but this time in the second Chad Racing
Ferrari.
Liverpool based FIA GT3 Championship
winning team Tech 9 is running a Lamborghini Gallardo for former European
Ferrari Challenge Champion Oliver Morley and BTCC and British GT race winner Tom
Ferrier in British GT this season. Last season Ferrier, along with teammate
Matt Harris, wrestled the underpowered Porsche 997 to a podium finish at
Rockingham, so expect him and Morley to revel in the extra pace provided by
Italian supercar.
A-Tech Racing is the first of the new
teams in British GT this year and the BTCC front running team don’t do things by
halves. BTCC and Porsche Cup racer Richard Marsh is joined for the season by
Anthony Reid, who in his long career has, amongst other things, won the BTCC
Independents championship, the Japanese GT Championship and finished
3rd at Le Mans. Delays in delivery of the team’s Ferrari means
Marsh and Reid will probably miss the season opener at Oulton
Park..
The 2007 season was a bitter sweet
experience for Phil Burton and Adam Wilcox. Bad luck seemed to dog them for
most of the season but when things went well the pair were right on the pace,
with pole positions and podium finishes their reward. The VRS Motor Finance
team have already had a season with the Ferrari 430, which will give them an
advantage on Burton’s home circuit of Oulton Park.
When 2006 British GT Champion Chris
Niarchos launched his own team at the Autosport Show in January everyone knew it
was going to nothing less than a full on assault on the British GT title. Three
CR Scuderia Ferrari 430’s will line up on the grid with three of the most
promising driver pairings on the grid. 2007 Porsche Carrera Cup GB champion
James Sutton is joined by British F3 National Class race winner Michael Meadows
in car 14. Reigning European Ferrari Challenge Champion Michael Cullen is
joined by fellow Irishman Paddy Shovlin in car 15, and in car 16 2006 British GT
Vice Champion Luke Hines will race with Formula Renault UK race winner Jeremy
Metcalfe.
Cadena Motorsport is back for another
crack at the British GT championship with British GT3 race winners Barrie Whight
and Gavan Kershaw once again teaming up in the bio ethanol powered Aston Martin
DBRS9.
ABG Motorsport have stepped up to the
GT3 class this season with a single car entry for 2007 GTC Vice Champion Aaron
Scott and Craig Wilkins. The team received their Viper Competition Coupé
earlier than most and have been conducting extensive testing over the winter.
The Team Modena Lamborghini Gallardo
made a later than expected entry into the 2007 championship, however when it did
make its debut at Snetterton it certainly got noticed, breaking the lap record.
New lap records at Brands Hatch and Silverstone proved the car had the pace if
not the reliability. Expect that to have changed over the winter and the 2008
entry will be driven by Adam Jones and Piers Johnson, with Caterham graduate
Rachel Green subbing for Jones at some events in 2008.
The sole Ascari entry is hard to
ignore. Twin brothers David and Godfrey Jones really made their mark in 2007
with the Team Eurotech Preci Spark run Ascari KZ1R and ended the year with an
outside shot of the overall title. With no change at the team for 2008, expect
this car to be quick out the box at Oulton Park.
Hector Lester won four races in 2007
in the Christians in Motorsport Ferrari 430 but even he would admit that this
was largely due to the fact he chose his racing partner very wisely, with Tim
Mullen and Allan Simonsen sharing the duties. However this is a team sport and
Hector Lester did a sterling job throughout the year, bringing the car home to
take the chequered flag on more than one occasion. This season Allan Simonsen
has once again teamed up with Hector Lester, with the expectation of more
success in 2008.
David Ashburn and Richard Williams
will take to the wheel of the Trackspeed Porsche 997 S, the only representative
for the Stuttgart marque at Oulton Park. The 2008 modifications to the Porsche
have helped level the playing field with the rest of the grid. Oulton Park
should suit the car’s characteristics as it was the track that saw the only win
for a Porsche last season.
The fourth Viper Competition Coupe on
the 2008 grid has been entered by Team Trimite Brookspeed, with the identity of
James Gornall’s co-driver still unknown. The Team Trimite Viper was a front
runner on more than one occasion in 2007, so expect more of the same this
year.
The final GT3 entry is a pair of
regular faces in their regular car but with a new team. Donington Park race
winners Tom Alexander and Michael Bentwood are back at the wheel of their trusty
Aston Martin DBRS9 but this year the car will be run by Derby based
22gtRacing.
With eight cars entered for the GT4
category, the scene is set for a great debut season for the new class. 2007
British GTC Champion Jamie Smyth has joined forces with his arch rival from last
season Andrew Howard at Beechdean Motorsport. The team unveiled their Aston
Martin N24 at the Autosport Show and the intention is for a second entry to join
the number 99 car later in the season.
Reigning British GT Champions Team RPM
quickly committed to the new class by announcing they will be running three
Ginetta G50’s in 2008 for Steve Tandy, Phil Bailey, Joe Osbourne, Michael
Broadhurst and James Harrison.
New teams for 2008 include Rob Austin
Racing, with the former Ginetta and British F3 front runner running his own team
in British GT for the first time. Ian Stinton makes a welcome return to the
championship having missed the 2007 season. He will be joined by Neil Clark in
the Stark Racing run Ginetta G50. The final G50 entry is by IMS for Ginetta
stalwarts Matt Nicoll-Jones and Stewart Linn.
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