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Bamber scores clean sweep in Hamilton
Earl Bamber has scored a clean sweep of the Toyota Racing Series events at the Hamilton 400.
Bamber,
17, was fastest in testing, took pole in dominant form in the two
qualifying sessions and won both races. It was his first clean sweep
of the 2008 season and included a new race lap record of 1:23.4252 that
also becomes the fastest lap on the new Hamilton 400 street circuit.
His form underscores the young driver's sheer talent and marks him as a name to watch in future years.
Behind Bamber at the finish was Cambridge driver Nic Jordan, who equalled his best finish in the 2008 series.
The
race was interrupted by two safety car periods, the second for a
spectacular smash when Bamber's team-mate Mitch Cunningham spun into a
tyre stack protecting the concrete safety wall.
Cunningham,
who had yesterday followed Bamber home to give the International
Motorsport team its only 1-2 race result of the season, had earlier
spun , dropping out of fourth place. Running last, he slid sideways
exiting the same right hand corner and hit the tyre stack, the impact
breaking the car in half and bringing out the safety car.
"It
was a real soft hit actually, the tyres absorbed a lot of the speed,
and I was surprised to see the back of the car roll past me afterward,"
Cunningham said afterward.
Despite
the two safety car periods, Bamber drove a perfect race, defending an
early challenge from Australian Nathan Antunes and only putting the
Tradezone car off the fast line once when the tail flicked out over a
"ripple" median on cold tyres after the second safety car period.
"The
surface this morning was pretty slippery, and it was hard to get
temperature into the tyres because the track was so cold. I just had
to guide the car back into line and not worry about anyone getting
close."
At the start, Bamber
lined up with 2008 champion and season-long rival Andy Knight alongside
him. It was Bamber who got the clean start and took the lead at the
first corner, Knight's car slewing sideways under acceleration.
Antunes was through into second place early in the second lap, but
Knight was able to fight back and re-take second.
Bamber had stretched out a two second lead by lap two and posted a 1:25.3 second lap in the process.
Behind
him, Knight was engaged in a duel for second with Antunes, Nic Jordan
taking fourth when Mitch Cunningham had his first spin.
With
these two focussing on their own battle, Bamber extended his lead out
to 4.6 seconds and was able to concentrate on looking after his car.
"In
qualifying I went out hard and used all the kerbs to set pole, but you
can't do that all race long with these cars. The surface itself is
quite punishing, even without using the kerbs tha cars are bottoming
out all round the lap. Lots of people have had problems after jumping
these kerbs this weekend, it's an easy way to break suspension."
The
other Australian racing this weekend, Jason Bargwanna, was making his
first appearance in TRS and fought his way up from 12th to ninth but
would fade at the closing laps of the race.
Mitch
Cunningham's accident and the safety car laps that resulted closed the
field up, placing Bamber's lead under threat from second-placed Andy
Knight.
When the track
had been cleared of debris and the race re-started, Knight was caught
out by Antunes at Turn 1 and subsequently by Nic Jordan, dropping back
to fourth and finishing the race in that position.
It was an elated Bamber who cruised through for the win ahead of Nic Jordan, with Antunes scoring third overall.
The
Hamilton 400 is the first street race for the bio-fuelled Toyota cars.
They reach a top speed of 230 km/h down the front straight, dropping
to just 60 km/h at the hairpin. The average speed in Bamber's
record-setting lap was 147 km/h - six km/h faster than the V8 Supercars
that ran in warmer conditions later in the day.
The lap record is expected to stand as the outright lap record for the inaugural Hamilton 400.
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