Tag Archive | "circuit"

Dover Caribbean Invasion 09 | Photos

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Below are photos from the Dover Caribbean Invasion race meet. The event was organized by The Jamaica Race Drivers Club (JRDC). The highlights of the event included the first leg of the Caribbean Circuit Racing Championship. David Summerbell was the star of the day as he took top honours in the CCRC races. For photos from qualifying and practice please click here.

Dover Caribbean Invasion 09


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Dover Qualifying in Pictures

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Below are photos from the Dover International Race Meet Day 1 featuring cars from the Caribbean Circuit Racing Championship 2009. More photos to follow from Race Day 2, as well as videos.

Dover Qualifying


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Dover Carnival of Speed Results

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The Jamaica Race Drivers Club has issues the results for the Easter Dover meet dubbed Carnival of Speed. Please see the results below as well as photos from the awards ceremony.

AWARDEES – CARNIVAL OF SPEED MEET 2009

Class: Improved Production 45, 37, 33, 27.

Improved Production 45        Race 1
1st    Michelle Laidlaw
2nd    Walton Small
3rd    Brian Shorter

Improved Production 45        Race 2
1st    Chressmore White
2nd    Neil Blenman
3rd    Walton Small

Improved Production 37        Race 1
1st    Brian Foster
2nd    Rohan Clarke
3rd    Richard Chan

Improved Production 37        Race 2
1st    Brian Foster
2nd    Rohan Clarke
3rd    Ian Edwards

Improved Production 33        Race 1
1st    Peter Jaggon
2nd    Heath Causwell
3rd    Sebastian Rae

Improved Production 33        Race 2
1st    Peter Jaggon
2nd    Sebastian Rae
3rd    Heath Causwell

Improved Production 27        Race 1
1st     Gary Williams
2nd    David Anderson
3rd    Tedroy Burton

Improved Production 27        Race 2
1st    Stephen Bansie
2nd     Tedroy Burton
3rd    Victor Handal

Class: Modified Production 1, 2, 3.

Modified Production Class 1        Race 1
1st    Brian Foster
2nd    Don Gilbert
3rd    Orville Johnson

Modified Production Class 1        Race 2
1st    Don Gilbert
2nd    Gary Gregg
3rd    Mark Groves

Modified Production Class 2        Race 1
1st    Peter Jaggon
2nd    Tedroy Burton
3rd    Sebastian Rae

Modified Production Class 2        Race 2
1st    Peter Jaggon
2nd    Christopher Wright
3rd    Heath Causwell

Modified Production Class 3        Race 1
1st    David Summerbell
2nd    Doug Gore
3rd    Christopher Campbell

Modified Production Class 3        Race 2
1st    Doug Gore
2nd    Christopher Campbell
3rd    Gary Williams

Class: Motorcycles

Race 1
1st    Adrian Blake
2nd    Andre Norman
3rd    Christopher Kerr

Race 2
1st    Andre Norman
2nd    Christopher Kerr
3rd    Oneil Sheckleford

Class: Thundersport

Race 1
1st    Doug Gore
2nd    Christopher Campbell
3rd    Gary Williams

Race 2
1st    Doug Gore
2nd    Christopher Campbell
3rd    Stephen Bansie

National Supply Mechanic Meet Champion        Wayne Wallace

RaceJamaica.com Photos | Dover Carnival of Speed

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Photos from the easter Carnival of Speed Dover race meet on April 13, 2009, at Dover Raceway in St. Ann, Jamaica. Please click on the photos for a larger view.

Dover Carnival of Speed 09 | The Report

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Easter Carnival of Speed Dover report

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From motorsports writer Dean Corrodus

Photos by Shane & Omar Munroe.

Records are made to be broken (not the vinyl type though) and it was true to form that the Jamaica Race Driver’s Club’s season opening Carnival of Speed Easter race meet at Dover Raceway delivered on that expectation, with record attendance at the English speaking Caribbean’s most challenging circuit track.

Possibly the most successful meet to be run thus far under the watch of the JRDC, the event was declared open by Minister of Sports and Culture Hon. Olivia “Babsy” Grange, with Chairman of the Sports Development foundation David Mais escorting her. The huge, very colorful crowd observed a moment of silence for track founder Alfred Chen and also the couple Charmaine and Andre Jannierre, the latter a motorcycle racer who were both tragically murdered recently, after which the Jamaican national anthem was played to start a full 15 race schedule of exciting races.

Improvements to the parking areas and a new food court added to the continued development of the venue by the club ahead of the first round of the Caribbean Motor racing Championships set for May 24, when 18 Caribbean competitors are expected to swell the grids along with the increased number of local competitors seen at the track this meet.

Gore and Campbell.

Team Mobay Racing had another dominant event, with three of four Mitsubishi Lancer Evolutions performing well to take the race wins and sometimes second and third place as well in several races. Team leader Douglas “Hollywood” Gore in the Motor Sales & Service Ltd/Sherwin Williams Paints/Slam Condoms/Amsoil Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 5 led the charge with race wins in both Lime Thundersport headline races as well as the second Modified Production Class 3 (MP3) race and placing second in the first MP3 race, with Chris Campbell in the Campbell’s Wholesale Evolution 4 hot on his heels in 4 of the events, supported by Gary Williams in the Slowboy Racing Evolution 6 ½ sealing the deal, however his performance faded as the day wore on, with Guy Fraser suffering several problems on the weekend that took him out of all of the races.

Summerbell

David Summerbell in the Motor Sales & Service Ltd/Flow/AMS Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 8 won the first Modified Production Class 3 race, but was soon out of contention when his transfer case broke, sidelining him for the rest of the day. It was much the same for another big name; Peter “Bull” Thompson, whose E10 turbocharged Mazda RX7 suffered several problems as well, making the grid for only one event in which he ran off on the first corner when his right front tire failed and separated from the wheel causing him to retire and failing to complete the warm up lap on the second Lime Thundersport race with driveline issues. He was however able to show some of the new speed of his car when he was a part of the E10 trio that staged a demonstration during a break in the races.

Overall meet champion Peter Jaggon and his Honda CRX.

Outstanding performances were put on by Peter Jaggon in the IGL/Jaggon Gases/Horse P Racing Honda CRX to win the driver of the meet award with a perfect score of 20 points from his MP2 and IP33 race wins, Alan Chen in the Allied Construction turbocharged Toyota Corolla SR5 and Stephen Bansie in the Scotiabank Subaru Impreza WRX Sti. For many, these three drivers were the stars of the show, with Jaggon winning 4 of 5 races entered and retiring in the final Thundersport event when on a charge through the field, working his way from the back to 6th place before his battery clamp broke on lap 3 and his car shut down. Chen was 4th in the first IP33 race, but really shone in the second when after losing several places on the start, he charged through the field to cross the line side by side with Jaggon, really turning on the thrills and sometimes drifting his car through the tight corners!

Chen (left) and Bansie.

Bansie had qualified on pole for the IP27 race, but his intercooler pipe became disconnected, putting him out of the first race, but stormed from the back of the field in the second event to take 1st place and then he also had a third place finish in the 2nd Thundersport event.
The IP45 category was won by Michelle Laidlaw in a Honda Fit (Race 1) and Chressmore “Bolt” White in a Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution (Race 2). Walton Small featured in both events with a 2nd place in race one and a third place in race 2.

Improved Production 45 Race 1

1st Michelle Laidlaw

2nd Walton Small

3rd Brian Shorter

Improved Production 45 Race 2

1st Chressmore White

2nd Neil Blenman

3rd Walton Small

Defending IP37 champion Rohan Clarke in his Nissan Pulsar seems to have a challenge on his hands with Brian Foster’s Honda Civic getting the better of him in both races, with Richard Chan in a Toyota Corolla GT sedan being the fastest 20 valve engine competitor to finish 3rd in race 1 with Ian Edwards copping that position in race 2.
Improved Production 37 Race 1

1st Brian Foster

2nd Rohan Clarke

3rd Richard Chan

Improved Production 37 Race 2

1st Brian Foster

2nd Rohan Clarke

3rd Ian Edwards
Peter Jaggon started his dominance of the event with the 1st IP33 race and went on to win the 2nd one as well, with Heath Causwell in a normally aspirated 2000cc Mitsubishi Mirage RS and Sebastian Rae in a similar car but with a 1500cc turbocharged engine swapping 2nd and 3rd places in Race 1 and 2 respectively.
Improved Production 33 Race 1

1st Peter Jaggon

2nd Heath Causwell

3rd Sebastian Rae

Improved Production 33 Race 2

1st Peter Jaggon

2nd Sebastian Rae    3rd Heath Causwell

In the IP27 category, Gary Williams (Slowboy Racing/Team Mobay Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 6 ½ ) won race 1 ahead of David Anderson (Quik Cash Mitsubishi Lancer Evo 6 ½) and Teddy Burton (MAD Honda Civic turbo) , with Bansie winning race 2 followed by Burton and Victor Handal (Tile City Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 7)
Improved Production 27 Race 1

1st Gary Williams

2nd David Anderson

3rd Tedroy Burton

Improved Production 27 Race 2

1st Stephen Bansie

2nd Tedroy Burton

    3rd Victor Handal

In the Modified production Class 1 races, it was Brian Foster who copped 1st place in race 1 followed by Dr. Don Gilbert and Brown’s Town resident Nigel Edwards. In race 2 it was Gilbert’s turn to chalk up a win, with Gary Gregg returning to Dover after an absence of 7 years to place 2nd in his Maxxis Tyres/TSW wheels Honda Civic SIR, which he campaigned in the IP33 category as well. Team Mobay Racing’s Mark Groves aka “The Stig” placed 3rd in that event.
Modified Production Class 1Race 1

1st Brian Foster

2nd Don Gilbert

    3rd Nigel Edwards

Modified Production Class 1 Race 2

1st Don Gilbert

2nd Gary Gregg

3rd Mark Groves

Peter Jaggon in his Juici Patties/Jaggon Gases/IGL/ Horse P Racing Honda CRX won both MP 2 class races, with Teddy Burton/ Sebastian Rae and Christopher Wright (Horse P racing Honda Civic Coupe) /Heath Causwell (Windshield Centre Mitsubishi Mirage) in 2nd and 3rd respectively in races 1 and 2.
Modified Production Class 2 Race 1

1st Peter Jaggon

2nd Tedroy Burton    3rd Sebastian Rae

Modified Production Class 2 Race 2

1st Peter Jaggon    2nd Christopher Wright

3rd Heath Causwell
David Summerbell rocketed into the lead of the MP3 race 1 from Doug Gore and kept it to the drop of the checkered flag to win that event, with a hard charging Chris Campbell in 3rd. In race 2 it was an all Team Mobay Racing affair, as it was the turn of Gore to register a win, with teammates Campbell in second and Gary Williams in 3rd.

Modified Production Class 3 Race 1

1st David Summerbell

2nd Doug Gore

3rd Christopher Campbell

Modified Production Class 3 Race 2

1st Doug Gore

    2nd Christopher Campbell

3rd Gary Williams

In the Motorcycles Class, the results were mixed, with Adrian Blake winning the 1st race and Andre Norman the second. Past race winner Halquin Rodney had several spills and literally fell out of contention for a top spot.

Race 1 1st Adrian Blake

2nd Andre Norman

3rd Christopher Kerr

Race 2 1st Andre Norman

2nd Christopher Kerr

3rd Oneil Sheckleford

In the headline Lime Thundersport class, it was again mostly a Team Mobay Racing affair again, as Stephen Bansie was the only outsider to podium with 3rd place in the final race of the day.

Race 1 1st Doug Gore

2nd Christopher Campbell

3rd Gary Williams

Race 2 1st Doug Gore

2nd Christopher Campbell

3rd Stephen Bansie
In the Automotive Performance Centre Ltd. Toyota 20 valve Challenge Cup, Ivan Lee & Mark Groves emerged as the join early leaders, with newcomer Andre Forbes in 3rd .

APC Toyota 20 valve Challenge Cup
Car #       Name     Year    Make    Model    CC    Race 1   Race 2   Total

88    P37    R. Chang    1991    Toyota   Corolla GT    1587      4    0 4
77    IP37    A. Forbes    1992    Toyota   Starlet    1587    2.4    2.4 4.8
172    IP37    W. Small    1988    Toyota   Corolla    1587      1.6    0 1.6
109   IP37    I. Lee     1986    Toyota   Corolla GTS    1587    1.2 6
7.2
229    IP37    M. Groves    1991    Toyota   Levin     1587    3.6    3.6
7.2

Prize giving will be at the Talk of the Town at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston on Friday April 17, while the next race meet will be the first round of the Caribbean Motor Racing Championships on May 24 & 25 when eighteen top drivers from across the Caribbean will bolster the numbers of local talent seen at this past meet.

For further information, call Denisha Morgan at the JRDC office at 924-JRDC (5732) or visit the club’s website at www.jrdc.org and check out the updated photo albums and event reports page.



Foster

Clarke

Gary Williams

Gilbert
for more photos from this event please click here.

Matthew Gore to Participate in British GT Championship

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Matthew Gore

Matthew Gore

Matthew ‘Magnet’ Gore, the younger brother of Douglas ‘Hollywood’ Gore, joins Team 48, the first multi-racial racing team to perform in the British Gran Turismo (GT) races. The team’s name is homage to history – the first significant wave of Caribbean migrants to the United Kingdom was in 1948, travelling from the Caribbean on the SS Windrush Empire to Tilbury in Essex, England. Founded by Luther Blissett, Team48 will be supplying the drivers for the British GT campaign, which includes Luther himself and fellow ex-England international Les Ferdinand. Team 48 has also joined ranks with Team Modena from the United Kingdom and will be competing in the 2009 Avon Tyres British GT series. Team Modena will field two Lamborghini Gallardos for the event and for Team 48 to drive.

One of the Team Modena Lamborghinis that Gore will be driving.

One of the Team Modena Lamborghinis that Gore will be driving.

Matthew Gore and other teammates will be headed by Calum Lockie, ex-England international footballer, Luther Blissett, Les Ferdinand, Kevin Haggarthy and Darelle Wilson. From that pool of drivers, they will come up with the four to do the GT races. Both teams have been in talks for several months now and have brokered a three-year deal. The first stage of the three-year plan will be the running of a car for Team 48 at the historic Le Mans 24-Hour race.
The 2009 British GT Championship will be held over eight races taking in all the UK’s major circuits, as well as a visit to the renowned Spa-Francorchamps circuit in Belgium in May. It will be a mix of one- and two-hour races, each with a compulsory driver change.

The competitive series sees GT3-specification sports cars from Ferrari, Porsche and other classic marquees providing quality race action. Opening races of the 2009 season are at Oulton Park, Cheshire, April 11 to 13.

2009 PROVISIONAL CALENDAR

11/13 April Oulton Park F3/GT
25/26 April Donington F3/GT
02/03 May Silverstone F3
09/10 May Spa GT
30/31 May Rockingham F3/GT
06/07 June Hockenheim F3
13/14 June Knockhill GT
04/05 July Snetterton F3/GT
24/25 July Spa F3
15/16 August Silverstone F3/GT
29/30 August Bucharest F3
19/20 September Brands Hatch F3/GT

2009 Motorsports Provisional Calendar

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JMMC Events Calendar 2009

February

01 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #1
05 – Annual MBMC Awards
07 – Annual JMMC Awards
08 – JMMC Dexterity #1
15 – MBMC Dexterity #1
22 – Sprint #1

March

01 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #2
05 – MBMC members meeting
08 – Rally #1 (tarmac)
22 – Sprint #2

29 – MBMC Drivers 1 on 1

April

05 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #3
13 – JRDC Dover Meet #1
19 – MBMC Dexterity #2
26 – Rally #2 (tarmac)

May

03 – JMMC Dexterity #2
07 – MBMC members meeting
17 – MBMC Drivers clinic
24 – JRDC Dover Meet #2

June

07 – Sprint #3
21 – MBMC Dexterity #3
28 – Dexterity #3

July

02 – MBMC members meeting
04 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #4
05 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #5
12 – Sprint #4
26 – MBMC Drivers 1 on 1

August

02 – JRDC Meet #3
08 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #6
09 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #7
16 – Rally #3 (loose)
30 – MBMC Dexterity #4

September

03 – MBMC members meeting
06 – Sprint #5
20 – Dexterity #4
27 – MBMC Drivers 1 on 1

October

04 – Rally #4 (loose)
11 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #8
19 – JRDC Meet #4
25 – Dexterity #5

November

01 – Sprint #6
05 – MBMC members meeting
15 – Jamaica Karting Association Meet #9
22 – MBMC Dexterity #5

December

04-06 – Rally Jamaica
13 – MBMC Dexterity #6
27 – MBMC Drivers 1 on 1

Incredible Overtake

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Renault Megane Trophy

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Caribbean Circuit Racing Championship 2008

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The 2008 Caribbean Motor Racing Championship came to a thrilling close on Sunday, November 2, 2008 at the South Dakota Circuit in Guyana, when the third leg of the championship was held in front of a record crowd at the facility, which also saw an amazing 103 competitors perform on the day! Stuart Maloney of Barbados was crowned the Caribbean’s top circuit driver having amassed 54 points, finishing first in five of six races entered in the three event series. Team Jamaica consisting of drivers David Summerbell, Douglas Gore, Chris Campbell, Guy Fraser and Gary Williams walked away with the team championship at an elegant prize giving affair at The Pegasus in Georgetown, Guyana on Monday night.
Following an absence of many years from the regional sporting calendar, the Caribbean motor racing Championship was revived through the hard work of the member countries of Jamaica, Barbados, Guyana and St. Vincent and the Grenadines, with individuals such as Jamaica’s Hilary Jardine O.D., J.P., Capt. Marck Carey, Guyana’s Vishook Persaud, Barbados’ Kurt Seabra and many others working together to make the series a success.


Summerbell leading Gore.
Picture by Shane Munroe

The first leg of the championship was hosted in Jamaica on May 25 and saw Jamaica’s David Summerbell take the early lead, winning two of the three championship races on the day and finishing third in the last, driving the very potent Motor Sales & Service Ltd/Flow/Ciclon Energy drink/AMS Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 8, popularly known as TA1. He scored a total of 26 points, with Guyana’s Andrew King driving the Singer Mazda RX7 in second on 19 points and Douglas Gore in a Mitsubishi lancer Evolution 5 on 16points. Mark Maloney of Barbados driving the Red Bull Mazda RX3 was quite impressive in winning the third race in the championship after being plagued by repeated fires and an accident on the first attempted start of the race.


Stuart Maloney celebrates.
Picture courtesy of BARL.bb

It seems that Summerbell had all his good luck in Jamaica, as at the second leg at Barbados’ Bushy park circuit, bad luck was all the luck he could get as he failed to score a single point, falling victim to a series of mechanical maladies that included a blown turbo, losing a wheel assembly in qualifying/practice, and suffering damage to suspension/steering components in the second and third races. It was at this meet that the local boys shone, with Barbados’ Stuart Maloney driving the Automotive Art Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 5 being the class of the field and running away with the race win of all three events to score 30 points! His father, Doug Maloney, took the lead of the championship with 35 points after bringing home his turbocharged Audi Quattro Touring car to two second and a 4th place finish at this round, having a total of 35 points. At the end of the day, it was Jamaica leading the team championship, Barbados leading the driver’s championship, and the fear of God put into both nations heading into the third round in Guyana news spread of new equipment arriving in Guyana to even the score for the host nation of the 3rd and final round.

November 2 arrived and with it ominous dark clouds that started pouring their contents onto the flat South Dakota race surface, which literally put a damper on the morning’s first event. On the day before, Saturday, David Summerbell had qualified on pole position and signaled to all that he was serious about the championship, his car having been repaired before it was shipped from Barbados to Guyana by technicians from  American Motor Sports, the original builders of the car. He would receive a scare however, as he broke his gearbox on the day and was loaned Doug Gore’s spare box, as his was damaged beyond immediate repair. Stuart Maloney’s crew discovered a cracked intake manifold that was repaired overnight and restored the rightful amount of ponies to be unleashed on race day. Doug Gore was happy with the new race engine installed in his car, proud of the fact that his car was now the fastest it had ever been.


The start of the 3rd CMRC Race in Guyana.
Picture by Bryanmax.com

The first race was an all Stuart affair, as the Maloney offspring was well prepared and used his rain tyres and 4 wheel drive handling to good effect and won convincingly ahead of Gore and Summerbell, the latter again somewhat unprepared by not having proper rain tyres and suffering a puncture to boot! The second race again saw Maloney win, this time with Summerbell in second place on his way to setting a new track record and Jamaica’s Guy Fraser in third. The third race saw Summerbell jump ahead of Maloney and negotiate the first corner ahead of the field. He was to keep this lead until the end of the race, although challenged strongly by Maloney who was to falter with a broken prop-shaft and would finish in fourth.


2008 CMRC Champion Stuart Maloney
Picture by Bryanmax.com

Stuart Maloney thus finished with a total of 54 points from six races entered, as he was absent from the first leg in Jamaica and gained enough points from just the 2nd and 3rd rounds of the championship to walk away with the title. Jamaica copped the nation’s title and will look to the 2009 series which will again start with the 1st round of this now vibrant regional championship at Dover raceway in May.


2007 winner Doug Gore of Jamaica, handing over the CMRC championship trophy to Stuart Maloney of Barbados.
Picture by Bryanmax.com
Written By: Dean Corrudus