Starting from second on
the front row, Jotun’s all-Norwegian pairing, running in only their
second race together, found themselves a place down by the end of the
opening lap with both Victory boats ahead of them, with Qatar 96, the
pole sitters trailing in fourth. By the end of lap six, with both Jotun
and Victory 1 having taken one long-lap, they came into the start-finish
turn side-by-side. Jotun had the inside-line, held their nerve, went
tight in the turn and moved into second place.
Five
laps later, with the leading trio having completed both mandatory
long-laps, it was Victory 7 turn to feel the heat as Jotun bore down on
them - again as they approached the start-finish turn - and despite a
pair of back-markers in front of them, Jotun scythed their way through
the traffic - at one point coming together with Victory 7 - before
passing them on the outside of the turn to take the lead, going on to
win the 17-lap, 96.21Nm BMW Norwegian Grand Prix by 13 seconds.
Despite
a spectacular start, moving from fourth on the front row to lead at the
first turn and for 11 of the 17 laps, Victory 7 had to settle for
second place. Second spot for Victory 7 keeps the European title defence
alive, reducing the gap to team-mates Victory 1 to 13-points with one
race to go. And although their winning streak is now over, third place
for Victory 1 means they still have a commanding 21-point lead in the
overall title race.
For Qatar 96, despite the
advantage of starting from pole position, the race was lost at the
start, and the points’ gap that they had hoped to reduce between
themselves and the leaders has now increased.
Qatar
95 maintained their pole status throughout, finishing fifth ahead of a
solid performance by Tom-Barry-Cotter and Pal Virik Nilsen in Maritimo,
who were given a wild card entry by the event organisers, and proved to
be the strongest of the middle order. After a frustrating weekend beset
by technical problems, Foresti & Suardi went the race distance
picking up points in seventh place ahead of Roscioli Hotels Roma, who
despite limited time on the water this weekend due to repairs being made
to their boat, also picked up points with Carrasco gaining more
valuable race experience. But there was disappointment for Qatar 9 and
SeveneleveN, both retiring with technical problems.
BMW NORWEGIAN GRAND PRIX - results
1. Jotun 90 - IB Aarbakke (Norway) / J Tandberg (Norway) - 00.57.47,20
2. Victory 7 - A Al Mehairbi (UAE) / JM Sanchez (France) +00.13,30
3. Victory 1 - M Al Marri (UAE) / N Bin Hendi (UAE) + 00.22,89
4. Qatar 96 - H Al-Thani (Qatar) / S Curtis (England) + 00.26,19
5. Qatar 95 - A Al-Sulaiti (Qatar) / M Nicolini (Italy) + 01.40,78
6. Maritimo – T Barry-Cotter (Australia) / PV Nilsen (Norway) + 02.46,30
7. Foresti & Suardi 8 - K Selmer (Norway) / G Montavoci (Italy) + 1lap
8. Roscioli Hotels Roma 88 - S Carrasco (Spain) / D Cirilli (Spain) + 2laps
9. Qatar 9 - M Al-Nassr (Qatar) / L Nicolini (Italy) – dnf
10. SeveneleveN 18 - G Manuzzi (Italy) / N Giorgi (Italy) – dnf
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP POSITIONS - after round 4 of 8
1. Victory 1 - M Al Marri (UAE) / N Bin Hendi (UAE) – 80pts
2. Victory 7 - A Al Mehairbi (UAE) / JM Sanchez (France) – 59pts
3= Qatar 95 - A Al-Sulaiti (Qatar) / M Nicolini (Italy) – 48pts
3= Qatar 96 - H Al-Thani (Qatar) / S Curtis (England) – 48pts
5. Jotun 90 – IB Aarbakke (Norway) / J Tandberg (Norway) – 42pts
6. Foresti & Suardi 8 - K Selmer (Norway) / G Montavoci (Italy) – 32pts
7. Roscioli Hotels Roma 88 - S Carrasco (Spain) / D Cirilli (Spain) – 12pts
8. SeveneleveN 18 - G Manuzzi (Italy) / N Giorgi (Italy) – 7pts
9= Negotiator 50 - B Eker (Norway) / C Parsonage (England) – 4pts
9= Qatar 9 - M Al-Nassr (Qatar) / L Nicolini (Italy) – 4pts
(championship
points include bonus points allocated to teams for running engines for
two consecutive races - one point, per engine, per race)
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder