DanielRowe
scored an emphatic victory in the second Sasol GTC race at Aldo Scribante in
Port Elizabeth on Saturday, become the winningest driver in the series so far
this season. The Volkswagen Motorsport squad, racing in their own back yard,
also celebrated Mathew Hodges’ best finish of the season, while Keagan Masters
and Adrian Wood put in strong performances in the GTC2 class.
Qualifying was run in dry conditions after
Friday’s wet free practice sessions, leaving both drivers struggling to find a
racy set-up for their Jetta GTCs in qualifying. Rowe qualified fifth with
Hodges in eighth place. Masters put his Volkswagen Advanced Driving Golf GTi on
the GTC2 pole position with a handy margin of 0.6 seconds, while Wood took up
sixth spot on the starting grid.
The GTC field formed up with steady rain
falling: Hodges made a storming start and raced his Jetta to fourth position,
setting the second fastest race lap along the way. Rowe battled with engine
mapping set for dry conditions and struggled for pace before spinning to the
rear of the pack.Masters battled with a
lack of front end grip and finished the first race in an unaccustomed sixth
position. Wood ran a strong race in fourth position before being pushed of the
track by a GTC competitor but recovered to finish seventh after dropping to the
back of the field.
Race two saw Rowe start from the front row and
quickly passed Michael van Rooyen (BMW) for the lead. He was joined at the
front by Hodges and ran in team formation for several laps before Simon Moss
(Audi) passed Hodges. The thrilling cat-and-mouse race continued, with Rowe
soaking up huge pressure from Moss – who got eventually found a way past the
Port Elizabeth student. Undeterred, Rowe piled on the pressure and Moss
succumbed, spinning off the track. With Rowe once more in the lead, he defended
the advancing Moss to cross the line for his third victory of the year, more
than any other driver in the series.
Hodges had a bruising second race: he was in a
dog fight with Gennaro Bonafede (BMW), Robert Wolk (BMW), Johan Fourie (BMW) and
Moss.Positions changed continually over
the first four laps before Hodges broke away and moved into third, which
quickly became second position.
Hodges fought his way past Rowe, but Rowe
quickly responded and reclaimed the lead. With laps running out, Fourie hit
Hodges on the right rear corner, dropping the #57 Jetta down to fourth place at
the flag.
The racing action was as frenetic is GTC2.
Wood made a brilliant start and claimed the lead which he held until he went
off the racing line defending his position, losing his momentum and three
places. Masters drove a feisty race, working his way to the front before giving
best to Brad Liebenberg (Mini). He fended off a strong challenge from Devin
Robertson (Mini) to claim the runner-up position.
Volkswagen Motorsport manager Mike Rowe summed up
his team’s weekend: “It was a tough weekend for
everybody with changing conditions. Our car was great in damp and dry
conditions but we struggled a little when the circuit was very wet. Daniel
bounced back to win Race 2 at his home circuit which was great for him and the
Team. Mathew had his first decent race day of the season following a run of bad
luck.”
Volkswagen Motorsport heads inland for the
sixth round of the GTC Championship at Zwartkops Raceway in Pretoria on 18th
August.