Montanari
helps himself to pole
Originally
from the Principality of San Marino, Christian Montanari (Draco
Multiracing USA) took pole position in
the Principality
of Monaco, in the dying seconds of the session. He will joined
on the front row by Dutch driver Jaap Van Lagen (KTR). The
second line will be occupied by the Spaniard Adrian Valles
(Pons Racing) and Polish driver Robert Kubica (Epsilon Euskadi).
Four
drivers were ruled out of the meeting at the end of Thursdays
free practice , having failed to comply with the regulations
when yellow flags were shown: Pastor Maldonado, Matteo Meneghello,
Andreas Zuber and Colin Fleming. This meant that 26 cars lined
up on the grid for the two series of qualifying sessions.
In order to avoid too many cars being on the tight Monaco
circuit at any one time, drivers were split into two groups
(even and odd numbers), each series lasting 25 minutes.
In
the even-numbered session, the battle for supremacy quickly
turned into a duel between Robert Kubica (Epsilon Euskadi)
and Markus Winkelhock (Draco Multiracing USA). The German
bettered his best time from free practice on only his second
flying lap, in a time of 127802.
Jaap
Van Lagen (KTR) and Damien Pasini (Cram Compétition)
were unable to go any faster
but Australian Will Power
(Carlin Motorsport) managed to do so, moving to the top of
the timesheets in 127689. Tomas Kostka (Victory
Engineering) came to grief at Swimming pool, spinning and
then stalling in middle of the track. The red flag was brought
out, suspending the session so that the Czech drivers
car could be removed from the circuit.
When
the session resumed, Robert Kubica took provisional pole (126652)
while Power was unable to better his earlier time. Winkelhock
retaliated with a time of 126214
but
the German then ran into the barrier at Sainte-Dévote,
just after crossing the start-finish line! Kubica snatched
the top time back on the next lap. And then the Polish driver
was unseated from top spot by Van Lagen, who produced a stunning
lap of 125655. Milos Pavlovic (GD Racing)
grabbed the third quickest time, but his car then suffered
mechanical failure on the last corner, just like Sven Barths
car (Interwetten.com). On home territory, Nice-born driver
Damien Pasini managed an excellent 4th quickest time.
Adrian
Valles (Pons Racing) was the first to set a significant time
in the odd-numbered session. Enrico Toccacelo (Victory Engineering)
retaliated and the two men began a fine duel. Christian Montanari
(Draco Multiracing USA) then got involved in things, taking
the best time.
With
less than ten minutes to go to the chequered flag, the session
was red-flagged after Giorgio Mondini (Eurointernational)
went off at Massenet. No sooner had the session resumed than
Karun Chandhok (RC Motorsport) took his turn to slip up.
Frenchman
Tristan Gommendy confirmed KTRs good form by grabbing
the best time of the session in a lap of 125757.
But Adrian Valles came back straight away with a 125680!
Hampered by Bennani during his final attempt, Gommendy couldnt
improve his time, leaving Montanari the chance to sneak ahead
of everyone on the line, with a time of 125465
!
As
Montanaris time was the best overall from the two sessions,
the Draco driver will therefore start tomorrows race
in pole position. All drivers in the odd-numbered series will
start behind the polesitter. The even-series drivers will
line up behind Jaap Van Lagen.
Christian
Montanari: I didnt get a clear run on any
lap on Thursday during free practice. We had some minor problems
with the car that have been resolved. I am grateful to the
team because the car was perfect. This is the first time I
have raced at Monaco and I didnt expect to take pole
position.
Jaap
Van Lagen: The car was perfect, I really attacked
in the last few minutes. Monaco is totally unforgiving, any
errors are really punished, but there was just so much grip
out there
Robert
Kubica: I am not happy with our set-up. The end
result isnt that bad considering my lack of experience
at Monaco. I can improve during the race.
Milos
Pavlovic: At Zolder I was two seconds behind pole
position. Here, Im just a few tenths away, so I am very
pleased with my progress.
Markus
Winkelhock: I locked up the front left wheel and
the car pulled right at Sainte-Dévote. I could have
got pole position, I was feeling stronger lap by lap.
Simon
Pagenaud: I am very pleased with my qualifying session.
The practice I had on my games console paid off except
that the straights seem a little shorter in reality!
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