| 2004 
                    Avon Tyres British Formula Three Championship - Round 2,Donington Park, Leicestershire, April 3rd/4th
 © Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
 Qualifying:The weather was not looking at all good for the second qualifying 
                    session of the day at Donington. A short, sharp shower beforehand 
                    had served to make the track slippery but not actually wet, 
                    and with more rain seemingly headed for us at high speed, 
                    there was a feeling of urgency in the pit lane. Ernesto Viso 
                    (P1 Racing) went out early, took one look at conditions and 
                    dived straight back into the pits! He could hardly be blamed 
                    for that. Mind, getting into the pits wasn't that easy either; 
                    a Ferrari had expired during the GT session, and for some 
                    reason had not been removed. The result was that everyone 
                    had to jink round it. It hardly seemed a safe thing to do.
 His teammate, Adam Carroll, was not so shy. He was keen to 
                    repeat his pole claiming exploits of the morning, and was 
                    very soon on the pace again. Nelson A Piquet (Piquet Sports) 
                    didn't get into his stride quite as effectively, which left 
                    Carroll occupying pole, from di Grassi (Hitech Racing). He 
                    was soon displaced by Will Power (Alan Docking Racing), but 
                    Piquet wouldn't let things lie. He started his next lap in 
                    15th place and ended it on the 2nd row. Scholarship Class 
                    pace setter, Ryan Lewis (T-Sport) was well and truly on the 
                    pace, in 3rd overall, though there would be many reshuffles 
                    before it was all over. Clivio Piccione (Carlin Motorsport) 
                    was the next to try for pole, taking Will Davison (Menu Motorsport) 
                    with him. Fairuz Fauzy, in the second Menu car, was 3rd with 
                    Alvaro Parente (Carlin) now 4th. Danilo Dirani (Carlin) was 
                    again looking wild, as he had in the morning, but he set temporary 
                    pole. Dirani's time was only a 1.04, though, so there was 
                    clearly far more to come yet. Just to prove it, Piquet edged 
                    ahead again, from Carroll, while Danny Watts (Promatecme F3) 
                    dragged the Lola-Dome up to 3rd after the team found and replaced 
                    a broken hub, which had been badly affecting handling. Viso 
                    was showing every sign of wanting to join in again, and was 
                    now attacking ferociously, while Carroll demoted Piquet again. 
                    Lewis was keeping out of it, perhaps wisely deciding that 
                    the Championship Class struggle was none of his business. 
                    He was probably right; he dropped down to 9th.
 The weird thing about this session was that although there 
                    were only 23 cars out there, they were all bunched up and 
                    complaining of traffic. At least it proved that nothing much 
                    changes in Formula 3. And then we got close to another stoppage 
                    when the Fortec car of James Walker got stuck somewhere it 
                    shouldn't have been - at least this time the officials waited 
                    to see if they could shift the car first before red-flagging 
                    the session. And then the threatened rain started to fall, 
                    except that once again it wasn't raining properly, just spitting. 
                    The clouds looked unbelievably ominous though. Watts was taking 
                    no chances and dived straight into the pits, leaving others 
                    to wait it out.
 The Australians were scrapping over 5th, the decision just 
                    going to Power over Davison at this point, while Parente was 
                    still pressing on regardless. Piquet had moved back to 2nd, 
                    while Carroll pitted for new tyres. This would turn out to 
                    be the wrong decision, but he had to try. The rain was still 
                    threatening, but not actually hitting properly, though it 
                    was making life difficult. Stephen Jelley (Performance Racing) 
                    was now 2nd in the Scholarship Class, though he couldn't quite 
                    get on terms with Lewis, despite the latter dropping his wheels 
                    in the dirt regularly. Elsewhere, T-Sport's Karun Chandhok 
                    had to pit for a new damper spring. All of this didn't seem 
                    to bother Piquet, who saw his chance and took it, seizing 
                    pole from Carroll at the halfway stage. However, this was 
                    not over yet. Judging by the fact that Power was now 5th, 
                    from Parente, it was beginning to look as if you needed a 
                    name starting with P
 Marko Asmer (Hitech) wasn't blessed 
                    like that, but the Estonian was looking steady and getting 
                    on with the job, slotting into the top 10 as if he'd been 
                    there all his life. At the very top, Viso enjoyed a brief 
                    tenure on pole, but Piquet wasn't going to give ground to 
                    any South American. At least the Venezuelan was briefly the 
                    faster of the two P1 drivers, heading Carroll. Parente, Dirani, 
                    James Rossiter (Fortec), Power, Piccione, di Grassi and Fauzy.
 In the Scholarship Class, Barton Mawer (Performance Racing) 
                    took a turn in the lead but didn't get to keep it for long 
                    before Lewis took it back.
 After pitting for tyres, Carroll was soon back on the pace, 
                    as was Watts. Neither of them seemed to be a match for Parente, 
                    however, the Portuguese raising the bar significantly. Piquet 
                    didn't like that one little bit and, after a stop for fresh 
                    rubber, went out to try and take it back. With clumps of cars 
                    rushing round together, it wasn't easy to emerge safely from 
                    the pits, and Viso was stuck for quite a while just for the 
                    opportune moment. When he didn't find it, he settled for barging 
                    his way out, which is not the way to make new friends!
 With time running out, and the threat of a downpour ever-present, 
                    Parente increased his pace and started to really press on, 
                    only to end up skittering through the Redgate gravel as a 
                    result. Meanwhile, Watts was up to 7th, which was an improvement, 
                    over the morning's results. Although he's scheduled to be 
                    in the car until Knockhill, Watts needs to get results to 
                    keep the people at Lola interested.
 With 10 minutes left to run, the rain was still falling but 
                    it was also still negligible. Parente was still leading from 
                    Piquet, di Grassi and Carroll, but Carroll was showing signs 
                    of being about ready to slam in another very fast lap. However, 
                    he timed it badly, as the rain chose that moment to intensify. 
                    At the front, the Carlin boys were still on the same rubber 
                    they'd started the session with, which was beginning to look 
                    as if it could be an excellent strategy for them. Piquet, 
                    meanwhile, picked up the pace, while Davison also improved. 
                    No one was getting close to Parente though, and it seemed 
                    the weather was playing into the Portuguese's hands too. Viso 
                    was getting desperate now, and he dived into the pits for 
                    a change in tyre pressure and a wing adjustment, before returning 
                    to the fray to try and get on terms with Parente. It isn't 
                    going to be easy because Parente looks very comfortable and 
                    confident where he is, despite suggestions that he's more 
                    than a bit nervous. With less than 5 minutes to go, Fauzy 
                    hauls himself into the top 10 at last. Davison manages to 
                    move up the order too, as does Watts. It's all down to when 
                    they changed tyres. In 3rd place, Carroll pitted, giving up 
                    the attempt (whether of his own volition or on team orders) 
                    and promptly lost out to Piccione, and then to Piquet. He'd 
                    been 2nd when he pulled in and was now 4th. It wasn't a good 
                    decision. Watts, meanwhile, improved again to go 5th, only 
                    to end up getting pushed out by Piccione on the same lap that 
                    cost Carroll his place. With Dirani now 5th, Piquet snatched 
                    2nd from Piccione, and immediately afterwards slowed right 
                    down, clearly deciding there was nothing left in his Avons. 
                    The P1 pit call was not looking so clever at this point, with 
                    Carroll stuck in 4th and Viso a disappointing 10th. And that 
                    was it.
 Parente was on pole, from Piquet and Piccione, ahead of Carroll, 
                    Dirani, Fauzy, di Grassi, Power, Watts and Viso. Rossiter 
                    was 11th, from Davison, Chandhok, Andrew Thompson (Hitech), 
                    Asmer and Walker. Lewis had the Scholarship Class pole Jelley, 
                    while Ronayne O'Mahony (Fortec), Mawer, Adam Langley-Khan 
                    (Alan Docking Racing), Vasilije Calasan (Promatecme F3), and 
                    last - but not least - Ajit Kumar (Mango Racing).
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