Easthope The Master In Braga

press release

Henry Easthope proved to be uncompromising on the track in Braga, venue for the first Round of the U18 World Championship. After posting the best time in Qualifying Practice and dominating the Qualifying Heats, the Briton confirmed his supremacy in the Final against Charles Leclerc and Anthoine Hubert.

In the CIK-FIA Academy Trophy, another Briton, George Russell, won Race 1 before suffering a stroke of fate in the second confrontation. His compatriot Alex Gill was first past the chequered flag but excluded, leaving the points for victory – and a lead in the competition – to the Finn Joonas Lappalainen.

With a blue sky, sunshine and comfortable temperatures, the weather had decided to be kind for the opening of the third edition of the U18 World Championship (for those under 18 years of age) in Braga, Portugal. But to have a hope of shining under the sun it was first of all necessary to overcome the pitfalls of the Qualifying Heats to be among the 34 finalists out of 71 Drivers. It was then necessary to perform well in the two Prefinals, and particularly the second with its completely reversed starting grid. And after all of that, the winner had to be fastest in the 24-lap Final …

Henry Easthope (Sodi, above) was undeniably fast throughout the Portuguese weekend. In Qualifying Practice and in the Qualifying Heats, the Briton was never out of first place! His only fright came in the second Prefinal, contested from a reversed starting grid, when he was involved in an accident and relegated to the rear of the pack. He still managed to climb to 2nd on the grid for the Final, proving untouchable in the last confrontation, the most important. More than 3 seconds from the Briton, the battle for second place involved Charles Leclerc (ART GP) and the Frenchman Anthoine Hubert. After some superb overtaking manoeuvres, the Monegasque Driver, winner of the Academy Trophy last year, took the second step on the podium. In pole on the accumulated results of the two Prefinals, the Briton Ricky Collard, son of Robert Collard who races touring cars in Great Britain, slowly fell back but still scored points for 4th place after getting the better of his compatriots Benjamin Barnicoat and Sam Webster who like him were driving the ART GP chassis.

The Top 10 was completed by the Italian Marco Maestranzi (PCR), the Australian Joseph Mawson (Top Kart), poorly rewarded for his speed after having to abandon one of the Prefinals, the Dane Martin Mortensen (FK) and the Russian Georgy Antonov (MS Kart). Rarely among the leaders, World Champion Matthew Graham (Zanardi) had to indulge in damage limitation to take 11th place at the chequered flag, better than the Frenchman Jules Gounon, who had every hope of being in the Top 10 before a collision on the first lap. He finally finished in 19th place.

In addition to scoring points in the Final, Drivers had already banked some after the Qualifying Heats. After accumulating the two results, Henry Easthope leads the Championship ahead of four drivers on 3 points: Martin Mortensen, Charles Leclerc, Anthoine Hubert and Joseph Mawson. It promises to be a battle royal for the second Round of the U18 World Championship in Angerville (France) on the last weekend of August!

Rnk  No.  Driver  PRTIC  PRTA  PRTB  Points
1 23 Easthope, Henry G.  25 50 75
2 88 Mortensen, Martin Henckel  20 32 52
3 81 Leclerc, Charles  6 45 51
4 89 Hubert, Anthoine  8 41 49
5 49 Mawson, Joseph  16 33 49
6 61 Antonov, Georgy  11 31 42
7 38 Maestranzi, Marco  7 34 41
8 80 Collard, Ricky  38 38
9 41 Valtanen, Juho  13 25 38
10 79 Barnicoat, Benjamin  36 36
11 84 Webster, Sam  35 35
12 22 Petit, Hubert  5 28 33
13 20 Gounon, Jules  9 22 31
14 1 Graham, Matthew  30 30
15 3 Chaves, Henrique Jr  29 29
16 47 Savona, Federico  2 27 29
17 16 Mäntylä, Ville  10 18 28
18 17 Tiihonen, Niklas  26 26
19 2 Vivacqua C.De Olivie Thiago  24 24
20 87 Blom, Dave  23 23
21 93 Villanueva Suarez, German  21 21
22 27 Esmeijer, Janneau  20 20
23 91 Ruud Kjaer, Magnus  1 19 20
24 34 Van Moorsel, Jordi  3 17 20
25 52 Zemin, Andrea  16 16
26 92 Schandorff, Frederik  4 12 16
27 5 Larsen, Kasper  15 15
28 35 Affolter, Joel  14 14
29 33 Shaw, Bradley  13 13
30 54 Paskevicius, Paulius  11 11
31 44 Moilanen, Aatu  10 10
32 58 Berglas, Randy  9 9
33 50 Parsons, Jacob  8 8
34 78 Amweg, Severin  6 6
35 39 Marchetti, Enzo  5 5
36 21 Marchesan, Damiano  4 4
37 69 Vinolo Zalduegui, Jorge  3 3
38 8 Schramm, Kim-Luis  2 2
39 12 Azri, Nik  1 1

 

Academy Trophy: Victories for Russell and Lappalainen

Like the U18 World Championship, competition for the CIK-FIA Academy Trophy also began in Portugal. Selected by the Motor Sports Association (MSA) of Great Britain, George Russell and Alex Gill were among the favourites for the event. And true to form they cheerfully dominated the first Race! With the best start, from pole position, Russell was directly followed by his compatriot, fourth on the grid. Never more than a second apart, the two took a 7-second lead on those behind them, with Russell maintaining his lead to take the chequered flag. Behind the untouchable duo, the Finn Joonas Lappalainen just held off the Spaniard Javier Cobian for the last place on the podium. Penalised for jumping the start, the Belgian Amaury Bonduel fell back from 5th to 16th place, leaving Top 10 honours to the Norwegian Martin Ellegard, the Italian Mattia Drudi, the Australian James Abela, the French Driver Adeline Prudent (in 3rd place after two laps), the Frenchman Erwan Julé and the Dutchman Stan Pex. Second after the Qualifying Heats, the Pole Adrian Rozycki managed no better than 13th place.

As straightforward as the first Race might have been, the second was far from uneventful. First of all George Russell was unable to begin the warm-up lap, the Briton finally starting well behind the pack to finish 16th. So Alex Gill took control and throughout the Race resisted Joonas Lappalainen. However Alex was then excluded for a technical infringement (an unauthorised spark plug). Lappalainen therefore took the points for his win, and at the same time a lead in the Trophy ahead of the Spaniard Javier Cobian, second in Race 2, and the Norwegian Martin Ellegard, who took the points for 3rd place following Gill’s penalty. Amaury Bonduel was excluded for non-sporting conduct, so Adeline Prudent finished in 4th position ahead of the Dutchman Martijn Van Leeuwen, the Australian James Abela, the Frenchman Paolo Besancenez, the Estonian Frank Merilaht, the Swiss Felix Hirsiger and the Portuguese Bruno Oliveira.

So the next encounter is in Angerville, from 24 to 26 August, for the second round of a competition which will end in Bahrain on 10 November. It appears that some drivers will be looking for revenge when they arrive at the French circuit. What a show it promises to be!

Rnk  No.  Driver  PRT1  PRT2  PRTB  Points
1 128 Lappalainen, Joonas  41 50 91
2 114 Cobian, Javier  38 45 83
3 125 Ellegard, Martin  36 41 77
4 103 Russell, George  50 25 75
5 142 Prudent, Adeline  33 38 71
6 101 Abela, James  34 35 69
7 111 Julé, Erwan  32 30 62
8 107 Van Leeuwen, Martijn  21 36 57
9 120 Hirsiger, Felix  24 32 56
10 106 Pex, Stan  31 24 55
11 117 Oliveira, Bruno  22 31 53
11 112 Drudi, Mattia  35 18 53
13 132 Bale, Thomas Michael  23 29 52
14 141 Rozycki, Adrian  28 23 51
15 130 Merilaht, Frank  17 33 50
16 110 Besancenez, Paolo  15 34 49
17 118 Raucci, Giuliano  29 19 48
18 119 Hofer, Max  27 20 47
19 150 Moreira Laliberté, Kami  20 26 46
20 127 Tjader, Otto  30 15 45
20 104 Gill, Alex  45 45
22 134 Besler, Berkay  16 28 44
23 122 Dreyspring, Christopher  26 16 42
24 146 Zaharelis, Theodoros  19 21 40
24 113 Pillon, Enrico  13 27 40
26 138 Coffey, Nicole  14 22 36
27 109 Lessennes, Benjamin  18 17 35
28 108 Bonduel, Amaury  25 25
29 140 Maslennikov, Alexander  12 12
30 143 Florescu, Petru Gabriel  11 11
31 105 Henry, Odhran  10 10
32 129 Weckstrom, Alec  9 9
33 123 Lundgaard, Daniel  8 8
34 135 Maini, Arjun  7 7
35 137 Larry, Nicholas  6 6
36 102 Torregiani, Tazio  5 5
37 148 Cebulj, Mitja  4 4
38 116 Borrelli, Diego  3 3
39 131 Stanevicius, Lukas  2 2
40 124 Calvi, Melissa  1 1

 


Home

© kartsportnews.com