| 
                   64th 
                    Grand Prix Automobile de Pau, France - 29th/31st June 2004 
                    © Stella-Maria Thomas and Lynne Waite  
                   
                  Round 
                    7 - Race Report: 
                    Weather: Wet! 
                    With Coloni having temporarily withdrawn from the Formula 
                    3 Euroseries this season, and Swiss Racing Team missing this 
                    meeting after payment from sponsors failed to materialise, 
                    the last thing the series needed was to lose any more competitors. 
                    However, during the course of Sunday, the numbers were reduced 
                    still further. First, Alexandros Margaritis (Opel Team KMS) 
                    was disqualified from the meeting after his team breached 
                    parc fermè regulations and just for good measure the 
                    car was also found to be underweight during scrutineering. 
                    Then we heard that Daniel la Rosa (HBR Motorsport) wouldn't 
                    be racing, and that he had a doctor's note saying he was unfit 
                    to do so. That still left more than enough drivers to cause 
                    mayhem round the streets of Pau. 
                    The prognosis was not favourable. For one thing, it was raining. 
                    Not solid, heavy rain, but the fine drizzle that renders the 
                    track nastily greasy, and does nothing at all for a driver's 
                    chances of staying on the track if he makes the slightest 
                    mistake. So far this season, the Euroseries has been blessed 
                    with good weather; this would be the first time they would 
                    race on wet weather Kumhos, and no one knew how well the Korean 
                    tyres would perform. 
                    The organisers were taking no chances with the start, and 
                    the decision was taken to run the first three laps of the 
                    race behind the Safety Car, after which the 30-minute rule 
                    would apply, with the race ending with the last lap started 
                    inside 30 minutes, rather than the planned 24 laps. Using 
                    the Safety Car was meant to prevent problems at the start, 
                    however, it just delayed those problems instead. Eric Salignon 
                    (ASM Formule 3) promptly wasted his pole position by arriving 
                    at the first corner, Gare, doing "about 50 kilometres 
                    an hour more than anyone else." Needless to say, he went 
                    straight down the escape road and cannoned into the barriers, 
                    comprehensively destroying the suspension on his Dallara and 
                    putting himself out of contention. He also handed the lead 
                    to his teammate Alexandre Premat. 
                    Andreas Zuber (Opel Team Rosberg) was also out on the first 
                    real racing lap after a clash with Tom Kimber-Smith (Kolles) 
                    at Pont Oscar. "He tried to overtake me in the second 
                    corner after the start, despite the fact that there were waved 
                    yellows there. He pushed me off and that was that," said 
                    Zuber afterwards. There was rather too much ignoring of waved 
                    yellows going on throughout the weekend, and perhaps some 
                    scrutiny of driving standards wouldn't go amiss. This was 
                    by no means the worst incident of the meeting either
 
                    Loïc Duval (Opel Team Signature) managed to spin and 
                    derange the rear wing of his Dallara, but the Frenchman wasn't 
                    about to let that stop him. He continued on his way, demonstrating 
                    his quite remarkable car control, since the rear wing was 
                    now affording him very little in the way of down force. The 
                    incident also involved Roberto Streit (Prema Powerteam), though 
                    he too was able to continue. 
                    At the front, Premat settled in to lead from Green, with Robert 
                    Kubica (ASL-Mücke Motorsport/ADAC Berlin-Brandenburg) 
                    and Nicolas Lapierre (Opel Team Signature-Plus) fighting it 
                    out for 3rd, the Frenchman edging ahead of the Pole now they 
                    were allowed to race. Franck Perera (Prema Powerteam) was 
                    in 5th ahead of Bruno Spengler (ASL-Mücke Motorsport/ADAC 
                    Berlin-Brandenburg), who had to fend off a positively frenzied 
                    Nico Rosberg (Opel Team Rosberg), the latter trying everything 
                    he could think of to get ahead. Charles Zwolsman (Manor Motorsport) 
                    was next up, ahead of Duval, while Lewis Hamilton (Manor Motorsport) 
                    was trying to fond a way round the Frenchman after a somewhat 
                    less than impressive start. He'd made up for it by demoting 
                    Streit and was now looking for a way forward. At the back 
                    of the order, Marco Bonanomi (Team Ghinzani) was in trouble, 
                    managing to spin on the straight - he was able to get going, 
                    but he looked a little embarrassed and one has to wonder exactly 
                    what Ghinzani have done to deserve him. It's to be hoped he 
                    is making a significant contribution financially, because 
                    he appears to be a long way from competitive.  
                    A lap later and Rosberg was past Spengler, taking Zwolsman 
                    with him, and had set off in pursuit of Perera, who would 
                    prove strangely difficult to overtake, given the angle his 
                    rear wing was now at. One thing was becoming increasing obvious 
                    at this point; three laps behind the Safety Car were insufficient 
                    to warm up wet weather Kumhos - either that or the wets just 
                    don't work. Adrian Sutil (Kolles) had a quick off at Gare 
                    this time round, and Greg Franchi (Opel Team Signature) took 
                    a look at the barriers too, but was also able to get underway 
                    again, although he was now last but one (ahead of Bonanomi). 
                    He may have wished he hadn't bothered as it turned out. 
                    Meanwhile Giedo van der Garde (Opel Team Signature-Plus) was 
                    busy proving that Pau is not a good place for Dutchmen (see 
                    Robert Doornbos in previous years) and promptly went wide 
                    at Gare, a bit of the circuit Zwolsman seemed determined to 
                    fall off at too. As has been said before, there is absolutely 
                    nothing of any interest up the escape road at Gare, but you 
                    try persuading the average Formula Three driver of that! Van 
                    der Garde got moving again, only to spin once more, and to 
                    once again get going. It was a wonder he wasn't too dizzy 
                    to continue, but he immediately set about trying to haul himself 
                    back up the order. 
                    Someone who wasn't about to continue was Hannes Neuhauser 
                    (HBR Motorsport), who went off terminally at Pont Oscar on 
                    lap 7, while a lap later Franchi also exited the race permanently 
                    after he spun into the barriers at the exit of Gare and ended 
                    up against the wall pointing the wrong way. The marshals, 
                    bless them, exhibited extreme bravery as they pushed him back 
                    down the hill to a place of safety, in no way assured of protection 
                    despite the waved yellows their colleagues were employing 
                    at the entrance to Gare. 
                    At the sharp end of the field, Premat was leading by what 
                    looked to be a comfortable margin, except that Green was still 
                    second and had just set the fastest lap of the race. He seemed 
                    to be very interested in catching his teammate if at all possible, 
                    and was putting in quite an effort. In this he was aided by 
                    the fact that Lapierre was in no position to challenge for 
                    2nd, because he had his hands full fending off Kubica. The 
                    Pole was after a podium position, and Lapierre consequently 
                    had to absorb a lot of pressure. Another driver under pressure 
                    was Perera, who couldn't shake Rosberg, whatever he tried. 
                    He would finally lose the German/Finn - or whatever he wants 
                    to be - when Rosberg skated up the Gare escape road and stalled 
                    the engine. He was not at all happy when the marshals wanted 
                    him to get out of the car so they could crane it away to safety, 
                    and didn't so much climb as bounce out of the car, landing 
                    on his toes and apparently spoiling for a fight! He was finally 
                    made to calm down and sent back to the paddock a distinctly 
                    less than happy man. Afterwards he was somewhat more philosophical 
                    about the whole thing: "It was going really well. I was 
                    able to overtake easily and I was making good progress. And 
                    then I spun and couldn't restart the engine. That was the 
                    end of my race." 
                    The marshals at Gare were just drawing a deep calming breath 
                    themselves when it all got a bit exciting again. Bonanomi 
                    was off yet again, this time narrowly missing Eric Salignon, 
                    who had just been allowed to walk across the escape road so 
                    he could return to the paddock. It was a close run thing. 
                    Bonanomi would join him on the walk back, his car so badly 
                    damaged it was going no further. 
                    Perera wasn't about to be able to breathe easy in 5th place 
                    either, because no sooner had Rosberg gone, than he found 
                    Hamilton looking large in his mirrors. The young Englishman 
                    was busy proving why he is so highly regarded by the likes 
                    of Ron Dennis by putting in a storming drive from the midfield 
                    to threaten Perera (who is the current darling of Toyota). 
                    In the process of this pursuit, Hamilton set a new fastest 
                    lap, though he wouldn't get to keep it for long. Behind him, 
                    Spengler was still having an interesting race, this time when 
                    Duval spun and slewed across the track in front of him. The 
                    Canadian just missed becoming an innocent victim of someone 
                    else's accident, though he was happy enough to occupy 7th 
                    place while Duval recovered to fight back, making an attempt 
                    to get his place back a lap from the end. 
                    It was now nearly all over bar the shouting, but not before 
                    Kimber-Smith had another spin, probably not helped by the 
                    fact that he was somewhat short in the front wing department 
                    by then! He was so far back anyway that it made very little 
                    difference to the order of things, though it did leave Premat 
                    and Green with another car to lap before they were done. They 
                    could probably have lived without that, especially Premat 
                    who found that Green was gaining on him rapidly as they neared 
                    the 30-minute mark. Also towards the back, the battle Sutil 
                    had been having with Katsuyuki Hiranaka (Prema Powerteam) 
                    finally went to the Japanese in the final laps, after Sutil 
                    got a bit of a wobble on and fell back into Zwolsman's clutches. 
                     
                    With Green setting the fastest lap of the race, he still couldn't 
                    quite catch Premat, who had performed impressively to win 
                    Round 7 of the series. Green still leads the championship, 
                    simply by virtue of his consistency, but the others now seem 
                    to be getting their acts together. Lapierre held off Kubica 
                    for 3rd, while Hamilton was 5th on the road, ahead of Perera, 
                    Duval, Spengler, Streit and Hiranaka. Zwolsman was just outside 
                    the top 10, with Sutil, van der Garde, Kimber-Smith, Maximilian 
                    Goetz, Philippe Baron (Team Ghinzani) and Robert Kath (Opel 
                    Team KMS) bringing up the rear. 
                    Afterwards, Premat was a happy man: "I'm delighted to 
                    have taken my second win of the season. It was important to 
                    me not to damage my chances of success in the championship." 
                    Green looked exhausted, and had clearly been working hard 
                    to try and catch his teammate, though not at the expense of 
                    a podium position. "It was the toughest race of the season, 
                    there was hardly any grip out there. When I saw what happened 
                    to Eric, I decided I'd settle for bringing it home in second 
                    place." Lapierre, meanwhile, was happy with what he'd 
                    achieved, given the pressure he had been under: "I had 
                    a long battle with Robert Kubica. When I finally got away 
                    from him, the gap to the ASM boys was so big that I just concentrated 
                    on hanging on to my third place." He wasn't quite so 
                    happy about the slippery conditions he'd encountered: "The 
                    most difficult part of the track was the white painted parts. 
                    You know you have a lot of parts for crosswalking and there 
                    was no grip there. Our car is faster in the dry - we showed 
                    this yesterday and we had all sort of suspension problems 
                    in practice." 
                    Someone who wasn't happy later, however, was Hamilton after 
                    he was disqualified for a technical infringement. The scrutineers 
                    decided that his front wing was illegal. Manor Motorsport 
                    were sufficiently convinced that that was not the case that 
                    they protested (and when you have to pay a 6,000 € fee 
                    to do so you don't protest unless you're sure you're in the 
                    right). The results remain provisional until after the appeal 
                    has been heard. 
                    In addition, after Round 8, Premat was disqualified from the 
                    meeting for yellow flag infringements. Therefore, everyone 
                    else moved up a place, making Green the winner, from Lapierre 
                    and Kubica. 
                 |