Poles for Gamble, Thiim, Maxwell and Malvern at Snetterton

Poles for Gamble, Thiim, Maxwell and Malvern at Snetterton

> Century’s BMW and TF Sport’s Aston share the GT3 spoils
> Maxwell makes it three from three for Multimatic before Team Parker’s Malvern sets new GT4 record
> Results: Qualifying

 

Century Motorsport’s Tom Gamble and TF Sport’s Nicki Thiim secured a British GT pole position apiece at Snetterton this afternoon, while Scott Maxwell (Multimatic Motorsports) and Scott Malvern (Team Parker Racing) shared the GT4 spoils.

 

GT3

 

Championship leader Sam De Haan set the opening session’s early pace before Gamble – making his British GT debut this weekend as a late replacement for Adrian Willmott – jumped to the top at half-distance courtesy of a 1m49.129s.

 

It was an especially impressive performance by Gamble considering his M6 was carrying double the usual Silver Cup ballast – 60kg – as a result of the late change in personnel.

 

Century’s maiden British GT3 pole position and BMW’s first since Snetterton 2015 was achieved by just 0.076s from Barwell’s De Haan who will serve the full 10s Pitstop Success Penalty in tomorrow’s first race for winning at Oulton.

 

Graham Davidson should have been the chief beneficiary of that having qualified third. However, a five-place grid drop for overtaking during a Safety Car period in Oulton’s second race means Barwell’s other Lamborghini driven by Adam Balon heads up row two alongside Team Parker Racing’s Glynn Geddie.

 

Optimum Motorsport’s Ollie Wilkinson, Balfe Motorsport’s Shaun Balfe and Century’s #3 BMW driven by Dominic Paul also move up one place at Davidson’s expense, while Michael Igoe qualified ninth on his British GT3 debut aboard WPI Motorsport’s new Lamborghini Huracan. Rick Parfitt Jnr rounded out a top-10 covered by one second.

 


GT3’s Pro session was even tighter at the top where Thiim made it two poles in as many visits to Snetterton by narrowly beating Keen.

 

The Dane set his 1m47.181s benchmark on his first flying lap before watching Barwell’s #72 Lamborghini twice come close to snatching pole. They were eventually separated by only 0.055s.

 

Jonny Cocker underlined Barwell’s pace by lapping just 0.090s shy of his Pro team-mate to complete a top-three that finished comfortably clear of a chasing pack headed by Seb Morris’ JRM Bentley. Adam Christodoulou’s ABBA Racing Mercedes-AMG and Rob Bell’s Balfe Motorsport McLaren share row three tomorrow, while the scale of Thiim’s achievement was highlighted by his TF Sport team-mate Jonny Adam qualifying only seventh.

 

Marco Sorensen, Ben Green and Jack Mitchell completed the top-10.

 

GT4

GT4’s first frenetic qualifying session saw the top-13 separated by less than one second but a familiar name on top of the pile: Scott Maxwell. The Canadian twice held provisional pole after initially slipping behind Josh Price’s #95 TF Sport Aston Martin before ultimately maintaining Multimatic’s 100% pole record at the start of 2019.

 

His second flying lap of 1m57.591s was 0.113s faster than Steller Motorsport’s Richard Williams whose late flyer aboard the new Audi also netted the team Pro/Am honours.

 

That late improvement came at the expense of Price and HHC Motorsport’s Callum Pointon who initially scrapped over second place. Just 0.034s separated them in the final reckoning, while Tolman’s Josh Smith finished fifth after lapping a tenth slower.

 

Mark Kimber was the faster of Century’s two BMWs en route to sixth ahead of HHC’s second McLaren driven by Luke Williams and Tolman’s Lewis Proctor. Fox Motorsport’s Mark Murfitt finished an impressive ninth overall and second in Pro/Am, while Alistair MacKinnon rounded out the top-10 in the second of Multimatic’s Ford Mustangs.

 

The afternoon’s second GT4 session proved just as competitive after 12 drivers lapped within a second. This time it was Scott Malvern who prevailed after the Team Parker driver’s third flying lap – the fastest in British GT4 history – finally deposed TF Sport’s Tom Canning.

 

HHC’s Dean Macdonald and Canning made the early running, the pair twice swapping provisional pole before the latter looked to have sewn things up. However, Malvern – who’d initially slotted into third – wasn’t finished, and duly banged in a 1m56.589s to beat the Aston Martin by 0.108s.

 

That time, as well as Canning’s, was quicker than the previous qualifying benchmark set by Ross Gunn in 2016.

 

Macdonald finished less than a tenth further back to share row two with Jordan Collard’s Tolman McLaren, while debutant Dino Zamparelli finished an encouraging fifth in GT Marques’ new Porsche.

 

Michaels O’Brien and Broadhurst were next up for Balfe Motorsport and Fox Motorsport, respectively, while Tom Jackson, Matt George and Seb Priaulx – who shares the championship lead with Macdonald and Pointon – completed the top-10.

 

Sunday’s first British GT race starts at 11:10 local time. Watch it live on the championship’s website and social media platforms as well as SRO’s GT World Youtube channel.