Things then got worse in the mixed-conditions finale when Cook was slapped with 30-second stop-go penalty for not having his slick tyres bolted on in the prescribed time as the field made last-minute calls on the grid whether to start on dry or wet rubber. That consigned him to a lowly 20th at the flag. Damage carried over from her race two collision also put Edwards out early doors, leaving only Cammish to see the flag of the finale, albeit in 23rd, and last, place after mistiming a switch for slick tyres and choosing to play it safe rather than risk damage.
Hill gets a grip
That tricky final race gave Jake Hill another chance to shine. And boy did he make it count. Never one to shy away from a tyre gamble, Hill has grown mightily in both confidence and prowess during recent BTCC seasons and, with a much more proven chassis beneath him this year in the form of a Motorbase-built Ford Focus ST, he’s showing more than a few flashes of brilliance.
Finely judged drives to third place in both of the opening races were good, but his run to the final podium spot in the wet-dry-wet finale was sensational, and perhaps deserved more, had the weather gods been kinder.
With rain falling as the field lined up for the reversed grid, the majority of cars began the race on wet tyres – aside from a handful, led by Hill (starting ninth) and Tom Oliphant (on the front row). Both cars immediately went backwards as they struggled for grip at the start, with Hill dropping as low as 20th at one point. But then the rain eased and the quirks of Thruxton’s abrasive surface meant the slicks began working again, fast.
A new title contender? Jake Hill scored three third places to grab an early points lead
BTCC
Hill began to scythe his way up the order, lapping seconds faster than those ahead of him before he was soon on the tail of race-leader Sutton, who had pulled a fine move on Stephen Jelley’s BMW at Seagrave to snatch top spot.
This set up a scintillating battle as the wet-shod Sutton and slick-shod Hill skated around, exchanging the lead. Hill found grip through the faster, drier section at the rear of the circuit, whereas Sutton enjoyed better braking and traction out of the two chicanes.
The rain eventually returned in the final few laps, and Hill simply couldn’t live with Sutton’s extra grip and instead had to switch his attention to the charging Jason Plato behind – the Vauxhall just managing to get a better run out of the Club Chicane on the last lap to nip into the runner-up spot.