Julian 'Lewis' Berry Dances In The Drizzle

Race Report - Friday 28th September 2007

It was getting dark. Which would have been fine in some circumstances, but this was 10 o’clock on a Friday morning in September, and most folk would agree that sort of thing isn’t really supposed to happen. The clouds had lowered noticeably during the drive up to Esher, and now snippets of the previous evening’s TV weather forecast drifted back…”rain spreading west by lunchtime…”

Curses.

But wait a moment. Some of the characters in the Daytona clubhouse actually seemed to be relishing the prospect. Here was bmi’s Keith Jarvis in his blue kartsuit, a wide grin on his face. Over there was Keith Hull from XL, rubbing his hands in anticipation. BA’s Greig Montgomery prowled around, desperate to get started. These were people who had been at Round 2, the race where the heavens opened, sheets of water ran across the track surface, and the marshals had had to devise a cunning plan for removing a duck from Turn 1 without the RSPB finding out.

Maybe the excited buzz was all down to the shared experience of the July deluge. A sort of  Battle of Britain atmosphere / Blitz Spirit seemed to pervade the changing room, the only missing details being some sort of tin-hatted Air Raid Warden-type character, and signs declaring ‘Britain can take it’ and ‘business as usual’.

The clubhouse continued to fill. Across the car park and through the door they came in ones and twos, more and more of them, until eventually only one was missing. And then there he was, Astraeus’ Bruce Dickinson. “Sorry I’m late. I left Djibouti last night, got into Paris this morning and then brought it into Gatwick just now.”  Blimey. Talk about ‘Bombed but not beaten’!

The familiar pre-race routine unfolded. Race numbers were drawn, the Race Director was given his sheet of names and numbers and everyone adjourned to the TV for advice and pearls of wisdom from Martin Brundle.

Shortly after 11am, practice began. On lap 7, BA’s Nick Pascoe set the session’s fastest time, a 50.205sec affair. Half a second slower was Julian Berry, his 50.758s lap right at the end just shading Keith Jarvis’ 50.793s time set on lap 6.

Only these three got below 51s in practice, but things were very close indeed in the gaggle which followed them. Fourth- and eleventh-quickest drivers were separated by 0.45s. It looked as though we had the makings of a real scrap.

And so it proved. With the track still dry but rain threatening any minute, the field thundered off towards turn 1.

Already making headway were BA’s Justin Undery from 3rd on the grid, Alex Sanderson from 8th spot, and Keith Hull, picking-off early victims after starting 13th. And from near the back, Keith Jarvis and Virgin Atlantic’s Julian Berry began machete-ing their way forward from 15th and 18th respectively.

Those hoping for rain (and there were a few of them) had to wait several minutes for their prayers to be answered, and even then the first evidence came in the form of a mere few small spots on the visor. Initially, there was little tangible difference in the driveability of the circuit.

Gradually, however, the intensity increased, and although a dry line persisted in some parts, it became impossible to ignore the fact that other areas now required you to follow the ‘wet line’. Still, some folk were able to set a personal fastest lap as late as mid-race, bmi’s Gareth Evans putting in his own quickest on lap 13.

Bmi’s Richard Weber, and Messrs Berry and Pascoe all chose lap 12 to chuck in a really quick one, Nick P’s being a 50.007s affair, fastest of the meeting.

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Unfortunately for Nikolayevich, he was by this time carving his way back up the field after being summoned to the pits for a severe pointing-at, the result of an overly-physical attempt to pass Keith Jarvis. “I no longer required his presence in front of me,” Nick grinned in the pub later, “So I decided to remove it!” Sadly, Nick forgot Martin Brundle’s handy hint about mid-race invitations to the pit lane, and a time-consuming ‘frank exchange of views’ took place. Nick started 17th and finished 12th, but his pace suggested that a much higher placing had been on the cards in race 1. 

Meanwhile, speed and consistency were paying-off for a number of familiar names, and the top four at the end of race 1 were Alex Sanderson (from 8th on the grid), with Justin Undery a mere 1.33s behind (up from 3rd), then Julian Berry and Keith Jarvis (from 18th and 15th respectively).

It was all impressively close further back as well. NATS’ Justin Dillon sacrificed a pre-late shift lie-in to do battle at Daytona, and took 6th in race 1 by 1.21s from Keith Hull (up from grid spot 13). In turn, Keith fended-off Tim McDermott, who had charged through from 16th and was behind Keith by 0.97s at the flag.

Greig Montgomery beat bmi’s Duncan Hope to the flag by the width of a bmi payslip (0.17s, since you ask), and Neil Lake from LHR Approach finished 13th, 0.39s ahead of BA’s Perry Musty, who was 0.35s ahead of Bruce Dickinson. Sixteen of the nineteen drivers were on the same lap at the end. Desperately close stuff. 

Into the pits they came for the kart-swap, and a chance to swallow some water and a couple of mouthfuls of chocolate while exchanging race 1 war stories. Only a few minutes, but enough for the steady drizzle to eliminate what remained of the dry line, and for tyres to lose their heat.

The appeal from the Race Director over the PA for drivers to take it easy during the first couple of laps had a ring of hope to it, rather than expectation, and was no doubt heeded by all until their wheels touched the track.

Out of the pit lane, round the Turn 8 right-hander and onto the grid, some weaved and slid their karts in an attempt to discover whether there was any grip to be had at all. Probably futile, bearing in mind that Turn 8 is relatively slow, while the monster that is Turn 1 is generally approached at about 55mph in the dry.

Still, better to be doing something at a time like that. Much better than simply sitting in your kart, the gaping maw of Turn 1 foremost in your mind. Wondering what fate awaits you there, where the tarmac curves out of sight. Hero or zero….?

Green lights. The field surged off the grid, two lines until passing the last cone, then a melee of  karts down the straight, everyone looking for gaps, watchful for spinners, desperate to capitalize on early opportunities. Rapidly into the lead went Julian Berry from second on the grid, followed through by Pascoe, McDermott and Jarvis.

An infinite number of driving lines through Turn 1, some making it, some losing it and being collected by others. Exiting the corner, immediately into Turn 2, tighter, slower and more slippery, some had got safely through the first one only to lose it here. Now the equally tight left-hand Turn 3  and then onto the straight, uphill to Turn 4.

Through the 4/5 left-right hairpin complex and onto the top straight they streamed, before braking for the tight right-hand Turn 6 and slipping and sliding through the 6/7/8 ‘stadium section’. End of lap 1.

We lost Julian Berry, temporarily, almost as soon as he gained the lead. Exiting turn 1, his kart swapped ends and the field roared past. He would not be down for long and was rapidly back in contention, but the race win was not to be his.

Step forward Perry Musty, the BA regular scoring the win in steadily deteriorating conditions. After a difficult race 1, he started race 2 from 8th on the grid, halfway towards the back. But he was fast and consistent, took the lead, set fastest lap and scampered off into the distance. After 21 laps, he took victory by the enormous margin of 27s from second-placed Tim McDermott.

Nick Pascoe was another 10.2s behind Tim at the flag. Julian Berry finished 1.9s further back, having done well to make up lost ground.

Keith Jarvis was the only other driver on the lead lap, but for much of the second half of the race he was part of a frantic three-way battle which also featured Richard Weber and easyJet’s Mike Wood, these two finishing close to Keith on the track but a lap behind.

Richard’s 7th place was one of the closer finishes in this race, the gap to Alex Sanderson being only 0.24s. Further back, Justin Dillon started 18th and was up in 12th at the flag, 3.09s ahead of Bruce Dickinson, and Bruce’s breathing space to BMed’s Trevor Brown totalled a mere 1.57s.

The results and trophy presentation were awaited eagerly, folk being unable to pinpoint an obvious winner at this stage. When the results were announced, the top step went to Julian Berry, his second consecutive victory. His determined recovery from the race 2 spin had achieved the desired result, and he had two points over both Justin Undery and Keith Jarvis, who tied on 93 (Justin’s highest finish was a second place in race 1, Keith’s a fourth in the same race, giving Justin the second spot on the podium). Tim McDermott missed the podium by a single point, and a total of six drivers finished with scores in the 90s.

Hard, close racing, in difficult, slippery conditions. Well done, everybody.

Race Result, Round 4

Friday 28th September 2007. Dry / Damp.

Race 1
Race 2
Posn.
Driver
Airline
Grid
Finish
Grid
Finish
Points
1
Julian Berry
Virgin
18
3
2
4
95
2
Alex Sanderson
8
1
12
8
93
Keith Jarvis
bmi
15
3
5
5
93
4
Tim McDermott
16
8
4
2
92
5
Justin Undery
BA
3
2
17
9
91
Mike Wood
easyJet
5
5
15
6
91
7
Perry Musty
BA
12
14
8
1
87
Nick Pascoe
BA
17
12
3
3
87
9
Justin Dillon
NATS
2
6
18
12
84
Richard Weber
bmi
9
11
11
7
84
11
Grieg Montgomery
BA
7
9
13
10
83
12
Duncan Hope
bmi
1
10
19
11
81
13
Keith Hull
XL
13
7
7
19
76
14
Bruce Dickinson

Astraeus

19
15
1
13
74
Neil Lake
NATS
6
13
14
15
74
16
Trevor Brown
bmi
4
17
16
14
71
17
Claire Jarvis
10
16
10
17
69
18
Ed Ashfield
easyJet
11
18
9
16
68
19
Gareth Evans
bmi
14
19
6
18
65