The Costa del Solway was
glorious in the afternoon sunshine on Saturday, watching the ebb and flow of
the Solway Firth with its glistening wave tops and listening to the backdrop of
rally cars going about their business. A cup of coffee in one hand and a soft
seat courtesy of the senior Gemmell encampment, life doesn't get much better
than that.
Then came Sunday and the drab dreichness
of Otterburn. For sure it can be a baking crucible sunken amongst the green
hills when the weather is fine, but when it isn't, it is most certainly not the
most hospitable place on the planet.
Mind you Saturday was worse, with torrents streaming down the service park and
across the military roads, so on that basis, Sunday wasn't too bad. Just wet.
And miserable. Apart from the action.
Like Solway, the rallying was good and
the competition was close, mostly, with our lot doing themselves proud. No-one
could live with young Taylor though. Peter was quick in changeable conditions
in the morning, but when it got really wet in the afternoon he moved up a gear
and disappeared into the mist and low cloud.
Rising to the challenge was Rory Young.
What a display he put on in this highly specialised speed-drome. He was as
quick as Taylor in the morning, but then lost out on the faster tests in the
afternoon. Not unexpectedly: "The morning stages were a bit more
technical," said Rory, "but I knew I would lose out against the
faster machinery later." Rory was the R5 sandwich between Peter and Stephen
Petch's world cars.
Equally impressive were the fourth and
fifth placed finishers. Both Alan Kirkaldy in the Mk2 and Gordon Morrison in
the Subaru were mighty impressive, gradually getting quicker as the day wore on
in these unfamiliar surroundings. Bob Grant made it four Scottish crews in the
top ten with Lee Hastings just finishing outside in 11th place nursing a noisy
gearbox.
After a heroic overnight effort
repairing the Solway ravages, Ross Auld was 15th and Gareth White 19th. Robert
Marshall finished 22nd, Alex McClelland 24th, Michael Harbour 26th and Gina
Walker, first time out in David Martin's Astra was a marvellous 30th overall
and 2nd in class. Greg Turner was last man home in his 206.
John Marshall, Scott MacBeth and Joe
Pringle all took some involuntary time off and went sightseeing off-route in
the Otterburn grasslands, Neil Thompson snapped his brake pedal, James Thomson
had a broken bolt in a cross member and Alan Cowan broke a driveshaft.
Results
1 Peter
Taylor/Andrew Roughead (Ford Fiesta WRC) 53m 51s
2 Rory Young/Allan
Cathers (Ford Fiesta R5) 55m 03s
3 Stephen
Petch/Michael Wilkinson (Ford Fiesta WRC) 55m 07s
4 Alan
Kirkaldy/Cameron Fair (Ford Escort Mk2) 56m 11s
5 Gordon
Morrison/Calum MacPherson (Subaru Impreza) 56m 30s
6 Daniel
Harper/Chris Campbell (MINI JCW WRC) 56m 48s
7 Michael
Glendinning/Charlie Sayer Payne (Subaru Impreza 12B) 57m 37s
8 Mark
Jasper/Don Whyatt (Ford Escort Mk2) 57m 39s
9 Bob Grant/David
O'Brien (Hyundai Accent WRC) 57m 53s
10 Richard
Clews/Ian Windress (Subaru Impreza STi) 58m 07s
No comments:
Post a Comment