HAIGH BECOMES FIRST FEMALE TO CLAIM OUTRIGHT BRITISH GT POLE


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Flick Haigh became the first woman in British GT history to claim an outright pole position by posting the fastest time in GT3 Am qualifying at Oulton Park earlier today, while Barwell Motorsport’s Phil Keen starts Monday’s second race from top spot.

Meanwhile, debutants Equipe Verschuur set the fastest times in both GT4 segments but will start from the back on Monday after a mistake saw Finlay Hutchison and Daniel Mckay take part in the wrong qualifying sessions. Callum Pointon and Scott Malvern therefore start from pole in races one and two, respectively.

GT3 AM: HISTORY-MAKER HAIGH BEATS PARFITT JNR TO RACE 1 POLE

Flick Haigh enjoyed a day to remember at Oulton Park after beating reigning champion Rick Parfitt Jnr to Race 1 pole position on her British GT debut.

Parfitt Jnr’s Team Parker Racing Bentley set the pace initially but was beaten to top-spot by Haigh’s Aston Martin, which set a best lap of 1m34.769s. That was 0.130s faster than the Continental GT3, which finished two tenths up on Team Parker’s second entry driven by Ian Loggie.

Three more Aston Martins filled positions fourth to sixth, with Derek Johnston’s TF Sport V12 Vantage lapping 0.6s slower than Haigh’s pole time and just 0.017s quicker than returning double champion Andrew Howard. Jetstream’s example driven by debutant Graham Davidson originally took sixth ahead of Mark Farmer’s Vantage but now starts from the back as a result of speeding in the pitlane.

The first of Barwell’s Lamborghinis therefore lines up seventh with Jon Minshaw beating team-mate Sam de Haan.

GT3 PRO: NO STOPPING KEEN 

Phil Keen set a new British GT3 qualifying lap record in the second of the afternoon’s senior class sessions to claim pole for Monday’s second race ahead of Jonny Adam and Marco Sorensen.

The same Barwell Lamborghini had topped final practice earlier in the day and made good on that promise by lapping in 1m32.869s. That was a tenth under Seb Morris’ previous benchmark and ultimately 0.159s faster than Adam, who secured Optimum’s second front row of the weekend.

The Scot’s AMR factory counterpart Sorensen was just 0.009s further back in the first of TF Sport’s Aston Martins, while the second – driven by Nicki Thiim – was another half-tenth behind. 

Yelmer Buurman’s ERC Sport Mercedes-AMG took fifth but was less than 0.3s shy of Keen, and Callum Macleod backed up co-driver Loggie’s third place by claiming sixth for Race 2.

Darren Turner, Patrick Kujala and Maxime Martin completed a top-nine covered by a second, while Jonny Cocker bounced back from an accident in final practice to seal 10th after Barwell rebuilt their Lamborghini between sessions.

GT4 AM: POINTON INHERITS POLE AFTER EQUIPE VERSCHUUR’S MIX-UP

Callum Pointon sealed pole position on his British GT debut after a mix-up with Equipe Verschuur’s drivers saw Finlay Hutchison lose provisional pole.

Championship regulations require teams to nominate the drivers that will contest each qualifying segment in advance. Hutchison was scheduled to take part in the second session but was instead aboard his McLaren for the first 10-minute run, ensuring that he and co-driver Daniel Mckay forfeited their pole positions.

Instead it was Pointon, who originally qualified 0.2s shy of Hutchison, that took pole on his first British GT appearance with reigning class champions HHC Motorsport. His best of 1m42.919s was four tenths quicker than Tolman Motorsport’s fellow debutant Michael O’Brien and Ricky Collard, who is standing in for Century Motorsport’s designated full-season driver Aleksander Schjerpen this weekend.

Both BMW M4s line-up on row two thanks to Ben Tuck, who qualified just 0.022s behind Collard, while Academy Motorsport’s Will Moore and the second of Tolman’s Silver Cup McLarens driven by Lewis Proctor start fifth and sixth.

16-year-old Tom Wood heads up row four aboard Academy’s other Aston Martin, which starts alongside Kelvin Fletcher’s UltraTek Racing Team RJN Nissan.

GT4 PRO: MALVERN BENEFITS FROM MCKAY’S EXCLUSION

The same fate that befell Hutchison also ensured that Equipe Verschuur co-driver Daniel Mckay lost his pole position post-session to Scott Malvern, who instead topped qualifying for the first time in his British GT career.

The Team Parker Racing Mercedes-AMG had been just 0.052s behind Mckay in the provisional results thanks to its 1m42.394 but ended up sharing the front row with HHC Motorsport’s Will Burns after the latter lapped 0.112s slower aboard his Ginetta.

Jack Mitchell gave the #43 BMW its second third place of the day by beating HHC’s other Ginetta driven by Patrik Matthiesen and the UltraTek Racing Nissan of Martin Plowman, while Track-Club’s Ben Barnicoat was the first of McLaren’s classified entries in sixth.

Just 0.016s separated Tolman’s 570Ss driven by Charlie Fagg and Joe Osborne, who line-up on row four ahead of Jan Jonck’s Academy Motorsport Aston Martin and the Fox Motorsport Mercedes-AMG driven by Michael Broadhurst.

British GT’s two 60-minute races take place on Easter Monday


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