Paddon and
Ayling win first Asia Pacific Pirelli star driver qualifier
Young Kiwi
rally drivers Hayden Paddon and Brad Ayling are one step closer
towards winning a rally career-changing opportunity with the
Pirelli star driver competition.
The Pirelli-backed
‘star driver' scheme offers the eventual winners the
chance to contest six World Rally Championship events the
following season.
The worldwide
search for five young rally drivers from the 2008 and 2009
FIA regional rally championships will see one driver from
the Asia-Pacific, Middle East and Africa and two from the
European region offered the chance to contest identical Group
N or Super 2000 cars in the WRC. The cars will be supplied
and serviced under an FIA contract with a specialist preparation
company and competitors must be under the age of 27 on 1 January
in the year of the regional rally championship.
The NAC Insurance
Hella International Rally Whangarei was the first qualifying
event for the Asia Pacific region and 21-year-old Paddon and
26-year-old Ayling were joined by six other young Kiwi drivers
and one young Australian during the two-day rally.
Ayling was
a late entrant, not confirming his nomination for the Pirelli
competition until just before the rally, which ran over the
weekend of 7 and 8 June in Whangarei.
Paddon, on
the other hand, was widely regarded as one of the favourites,
along with Mark Tapper, to earn the points required to win
this first stage of the competition. Drivers were awarded
points based on their placing relative to other Pirelli entrants
for each of the rally's 15 stages; three for first, two for
second and one for third.
By scoring
the most Pirelli star driver points, Paddon and Ayling have
now won €5000 (approx. NZ$9600) towards the costs of
competing in what is essentially the Asia Pacific Pirelli
finale, Rally Malaysia, in October this year.
The full list
of entrants for the first 2008 Asia Pacific Pirelli star driver
qualifying rally (Rally Whangarei) was:
- Andre Meier,
age 19, Cambridge
- Ben Jagger,
age 18, Whangarei
- Brad Ayling,
age 26, Inglewood
- Brendan
Reeves, age 20, Wedderburn, Victoria, Australia
- Hayden Paddon,
age 21, Geraldine
- Kirsty Nelson,
age 18, Whangarei
- Mark Tapper,
age 27, Auckland
- Patrick
Malley, age 24, Auckland
- Sloan Cox,
age 16, Rotorua
Last year's
outright winner in Whangarei, Paddon said he was focused on
his relative position in the Vantage New Zealand Rally Championship
(NZRC) rather than the Pirelli competition during the event.
He finished second outright and moved into the lead on the
points' table, while also scoring maximum Pirelli points in
13 of the 15 stages.
"Now I've
got this opportunity to go to Malaysia, everything we do from
this point forward will be building up to that," said
Paddon, who changed to a left-hand-drive Mitsubishi Lancer
EVO IX this year and is clearly increasingly comfortable with
the new car every time he runs it.
Ayling, whose
father Dave Ayling won the national championship in 1990,
is now driving the Subaru Impreza contested by former New
Zealand rally champion Richard Mason. The 26-year-old said
he didn't think he was in with a serious chance in the Pirelli
competition but entered "... because you never know what
can happen in this sport. After we got the car's handling
sorted on Saturday, we felt we were in with a chance on Sunday."
Ayling had
five Pirelli points from Saturday's eight stages. With Paddon
on 22, Tapper on 11 and Sloan Cox on seven, Ayling was in
the right place to take the points on offer after Tapper's
rally ended late on Saturday after damage to his Mitsubishi's
oil cooler and Cox went off during Sunday's action.
"We stuck
with it and will definitely go to Malaysia. It's been tough
year so far so we'll focus on this," Ayling said.
Paddon's goal
is to win the Asia Pacific Pirelli star driver title in Malaysia,
but he doesn't underestimate the challenge in front of him.
"The competition
is going to be very tough; half the challenge is to complete
the rally," said Paddon, who has competed outside New
Zealand just once, in the UK, which he acknowledges is nothing
like the plantation roads and heat of Malaysia. He is considering
plans to contest one other event in Malaysia prior to the
main Malaysian Rally on 11-12 October. "We're going all
out to win this."
Amongst the
other contenders in the inaugural Pirelli star driver qualifying
round, Tapper was out with irreparable mechanical damage,
although the Auckland driver says he's going to Rally Malaysia
anyway.
"It's
a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for me, literally,"
said Tapper, who turned 27 just five weeks after the qualifying
cut-off.
Andre Meier
battled with Sloan Cox and Kirsty Nelson throughout the weekend,
working hard to finish second fastest three times. Cox, only
16 years old and impressing many with his professional demeanour,
scored Pirelli points in six of the first day's stages but
was out on Sunday having gone off-road. Nelson crashed out
on Saturday and, despite re-joining on Sunday, lost too many
opportunities for points. Patrick Malley was the only Pirelli
contender to earn points in a two-wheel-drive Ford Fiesta.
In a similar car, Ben Jagger acknowledged the chance of doing
well in the competition wasn't strong against all the drivers
in turbo-charged four-wheel-drive cars. "But we were
just happy to be involved," said the Northland teenager.
The only Australian
to have travelled to the Whangarei qualifying event, Brendan
Reeves, suffered a technical issue with his leased Ford Fiesta
which contributed to him being unable to score points in the
Pirelli competition. However the very professional young Australian
was enthusiastic about the Northland and Kaipara District
roads and the whole experience of contesting his first event
outside Australia.
Article
sourced from www.fiaaprc.com
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