| 2004 
                    Avon Tyres British Formula Three Championship - Round 16, 
                    Oulton Park, Cheshire, July 17th/18th
 © Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite
 Qualifying 
                    Report:Weather: Cloudy, track drying rapidly.
 Although it was warmer than it had been in the morning, it 
                    had rained shortly before the second Formula Three qualifying 
                    session of the day. Also, the track might very well have been 
                    drying steadily, but there were still some very worrying patches 
                    of standing water all over the place, and at Lodge, along 
                    with a patch of gravel lying around after a GT car hit a puddle 
                    and went straight on, there was also stream running straight 
                    across the tarmac. This looked like it could get interesting. 
                    The session had also been cut from the scheduled 30 minutes 
                    to 25, a fact that seemed to elude the guys at P1 Motorsport 
                    (or at least the one responsible for telling Adam Carroll 
                    how much time he had left before the end of the session).
 Once again, as seems to be his habit, the first driver out 
                    was Marko Asmer (Hitech Racing), the Estonian rocketing round 
                    to set the first real time of the session. Nelson A Piquet 
                    (Piquet Sports) was far more cautious, tiptoeing round and 
                    taking a good long look at the puddles, not wanting to get 
                    caught out by them. Fairuz Fauzy (P1 Motorsport) took a look 
                    too, and went straight back to pits, clearly not keen on what 
                    he found there. The conditions were very odd, and likely to 
                    get more so. You certainly wanted to be out there on wet weather 
                    tyres to start with, but equally clearly there would come 
                    a time when you wanted to swap to slicks, and if you timed 
                    it wrong you'd be in real trouble. Too soon, and you'd probably 
                    fall off, and too late and you'd miss out on your chance of 
                    a good time. It was going to come down to gut feelings and 
                    an ability to read the track conditions. As various drivers 
                    studied the conditions, we were treated to some very odd lines, 
                    Will Power (Alan Docking Racing) and Clivio Piccione (Carlin 
                    Motorsport) being among those who indulged in some very strange 
                    approaches to Lodge.
 James Rossiter (Fortec Motorsport) joined Fauzy in the ranks 
                    of those who were convinced that the best thing to do would 
                    be a setting change, and he promptly dived back into his pit 
                    area very early on. He re-emerged some time later, still on 
                    wets. Danilo Dirani (Carlin Motorsport) meanwhile, was the 
                    fastest man out there, setting a 1 minute 42 second target 
                    for the others to aim at. As ever in these sorts of conditions, 
                    Piccione was soon at the top of the order, though he was facing 
                    stiff competition this time out. Piquet, for one, wasn't about 
                    to roll over and play dead for anyone. The other front-runner 
                    at this stage was Carroll, the Northern Irishman really getting 
                    the hammer down to grab the lead from Piccione. Then Asmer 
                    fought back, going ahead by a mere tenth of a second. In the 
                    resulting reshuffle, most people headed for the pits, which 
                    made life a lot easier for those who stayed out. Karun Chandhok 
                    (T-Sport) was trying hard to get his uneven season back on 
                    track, and pushed Asmer down a place as a result. He couldn't 
                    hang on to it in the face of Piccione's efforts though. And 
                    just for good measure, it seemed Danny Watts (Promatecme F3) 
                    was also about to join in, the Lola-Dome driver now occupying 
                    7th place.
 Asmer came back at them all again, getting ahead from Piccione, 
                    Carroll, Piquet, Chandhok and Alvaro Parente (Carlin Motorsport), 
                    the Portuguese rarely showing well in the early stages of 
                    a session. With Piquet once more on a charge, they all had 
                    to move down again, in a sort of motorised game of musical 
                    chairs. Watts rocketed up the order to go 3rd, while Rossiter 
                    was beginning to put in his bid for the lead, though he was 
                    only 11th on his first flying lap out of the pits. Piccione 
                    dived in for a quick settings change, as did Andrew Thompson 
                    (Hitech Racing), but they were both back out again on wets 
                    very quickly. Fauzy also made another stop, returning to the 
                    track in no time at all, also still on wets. While Piquet 
                    pitted too, di Grassi followed him in to become the first 
                    man with the courage to change to slicks. With Asmer crawling 
                    round looking for a wet line, and Carroll deciding it was 
                    too early to change tyres, it looked like di Grassi might 
                    just have got it wrong, especially when his Dallara came skittering 
                    round, looking more than a little wild. With 10 minutes left 
                    to run, and the sky looking very dark and threatening, you 
                    needed to get your foot down, just in case it started to rain 
                    again.
 Both Piquet and Fauzy had obviously got the message, with 
                    Piquet now back t o provisional pole, and Fauzy going 2nd 
                    fastest on his first flying lap after his pit stop. Behind 
                    them Asmer and Watts were 3rd and 4th, ahead of Chandhok, 
                    Piccione, Carroll, James Walker (Hitech Racing), Dirani and 
                    Parente. However, Rossiter then grabbed 5th place and looked 
                    set for further improvements. There were still drivers running 
                    on slicks, but they were getting fewer by the minute. Power, 
                    however, seemed to want to stay on wets. He would regret it 
                    by the end of the afternoon.
 What happened next, though, caused a certain amount of jaw-dropping 
                    consternation, when Piccione re-staked his claim to pole by 
                    setting a time - on wet weather tyres mind - that was a stunning 
                    two seconds faster than anyone else. Just where he dug that 
                    out from was anyone's guess, but there was a stunned silence 
                    around the track as that piece of news sank in. And then everyone 
                    shook themselves and started looking for answers. Piquet was 
                    the first to respond, though 2nd was the best he could do 
                    to start with. The world briefly got a bit odd, as Marcus 
                    Marshall (Fortec Motorsport) went faster than team-mate Rossiter 
                    to claim 5th place, while di Grassi's slick tyres started 
                    to kick in, allowing him up to 3rd. Piquet's time was promptly 
                    bettered by both Thompson and Power, while Piccione sauntered 
                    round to the pits to change to slick tyres, unaware perhaps 
                    of the galvanising effect that his time had had on the rest 
                    of the field. Another driver now on slicks, was Chandhok, 
                    who'd decided that his wet weather Avons were beginning to 
                    pull themselves apart as a dry line developed.
 And just to prove him right, the sun suddenly broke through 
                    the clouds, just as di Grassi finally bettered Piccione's 
                    time. Parente was another on slicks and we were back to playing 
                    last man standing again. Watts put in a charge to grab 2nd, 
                    while Piquet, seeing the writing on the wall now, decided 
                    he's better join the slick-shod brigade, and quickly if he 
                    had any sense. Dirani was the next to improve, taking 3rd, 
                    though no one was safe yet. Piccione was busy having a wobbly 
                    moment or two, but he was soon on his way back up the order 
                    again, lurid slides or no.
 With only four minutes of the session, Piquet rejoined, which 
                    only served to focus everyone. Dirani edged into 2nd, ahead 
                    of Carroll, while Scholarship Class runner Stephen Jelley 
                    (Performance Racing) was 4th overall, ahead of main rival 
                    Ryan Lewis (T-Sport) by a long way for once. And this despite 
                    another slightly wobbly attack moment at Lodge, right in front 
                    of his watching parents!
 Jelley wasn't the only one being unsettled at Lodge. Rossiter, 
                    who was 12th, was also all over the place as he exited the 
                    corner. It seemed that slicks weren't ideal in these conditions, 
                    but then neither were wets. And now it was all change again, 
                    as Power went to 3rd and Parente began to close on di Grassi, 
                    the former now only thirty four thousandths of a second ahead 
                    of the Portuguese. Power fought back to grab pole, only to 
                    lose it again to a very determined Piccione. With Piquet now 
                    3rd, Fauzy wrote himself out of the equation when he spun 
                    off on the grass round the back and ended up pointing the 
                    wrong way.
 And then Thompson was 3rd, and we only had half a minute left 
                    to run. However, it was far from over. Power was now 4th, 
                    and Piccione had pole by three tenths of a second. However, 
                    he was edged out by Parente, who in his turn was bounced off 
                    the top slot by Piquet. This meant Dirani was 6th, Carroll 
                    6th and Thompson 7th now, but that didn't last, when Lewis 
                    bounced up the order to go 4th overall, only to get pushed 
                    to 5th by Rossiter's last gasp effort. Piccione gave it his 
                    all on his very last lap, taking pole. The only question now 
                    was could he hold it. In the Carlin camp there was a collective 
                    intake of breath as Piquet crossed the line. Would he take 
                    the pole away from Piccione? Well, no, but it was frighteningly 
                    close, Piquet ending the session in 2nd place, 0.002 seconds 
                    slower than the Monegasque driver. Parente grabbed 3rd with 
                    his final lap, leaving di Grassi in 4th, and Rossiter 5th, 
                    ahead of Power. Lewis claimed Scholarship pole in the end, 
                    and was 7th overall, while Dirani and Fauzy were between him 
                    and Jelley, the newly graduated artist getting his first place 
                    in the overall top 10. 11th overall was Chandhok, from Carroll 
                    (who'd been told there were three minutes left of the session 
                    when there weren't), Thompson, Asmer, Marshall, Walker and 
                    Watts. 3rd in the Scholarship Class was Ronayne O'Mahony (Performance 
                    Racing), ahead of Vasilije Calasan (Promatecme F3).
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