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VW Racing CUP
The Volkswagen Racing Cup in association with Hankook enjoys the
additional support of Augustus Martin, Castrol, ECM Vehicle Delivery,
Europcar, Experian, Milltek Sport, Mondial Assistance, Proximity London,
KW Automotive, Superchips, TNT Logistics, Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles
and Volkswagen Financial Services UK.
WINS FOR WOOD & CULLEY AT THRUXTON AS TAYLOR IS CROWNED

Culley,
no 10 in action
The Volkswagen Racing Cup in association with Hankook enjoyed a truly
grand 2006 finale at Thruxton this weekend, Golf R32 driver Paul Taylor
clinching the championship title and Steve Wood and Martyn Culley
claiming the victory honours in a pair of breathtaking races.
Wood broke through yesterday (Saturday) to give the Mk V Golf GTI its
maiden championship win, and local hero Culley pleased the Hampshire
crowd with victory in today’s tricky damp-weather 12th round.
Taylor led both races but finished neither on the podium, but his
Saturday fourth and seventh today earned the Hertfordshire man enough
points to settle the championship in comfortable style.
Taylor more than made up for a disappointing qualifying – he started
from ninth on the grid – by making an electrifying start to Saturday’s
race to seize the lead on the opening lap. His charge through the pack
had at least one unintentional side-effect; seeing him steaming up
behind, Lloyd Allard moved his Golf TDI over to block the
four-wheel-drive Golf’s progress and they brushed wheels, hard enough to
puncture one of Allard’s rears and end his race moments after it had
started.
Meanwhile, Brands Hatch victor Tony Gilham started from the pole for the
first time in his Beetle RSi and was chasing Taylor for all he was
worth, with Culley’s Vento VR6 close behind and Wood fourth, up from
sixth on the grid.
Lap two brought near disaster for Culley, who was pushed wide and on to
the grass up the fast Woodham Hill section. ‘I was fired on to the grass
at about 130mph and it was a scary moment,’ said Martyn. ‘Somehow –
perhaps it was my grass-track racing experience – I managed to hold it
together and get back on to the tarmac in time to brake for the Club
chicane.’ Culley’s problems were not yet over, however: his tyres, now
covered in damp grass, subsequently provided him with less grip than he
was expecting through the Noble left-hander and he spun at 100mph. He
ended the lap fifth.
Gilham snatched the lead from Taylor’s grasp on the fifth lap and held
on in front for another three laps until he was held up by a back-marker
through Club. ‘My Beetle doesn’t have the straight-line speed of some of
the other cars,’ said Tony, ‘and I need to keep up the momentum.
Unfortunately I was held up, and Steve Wood caught me and I couldn’t
keep him behind.’
Wood became the third different leader of the race on the ninth lap, but
Gilham was close behind and intent on revenge. Unfortunately for him he
was delayed by back-markers once more on the final lap and Wood was able
to achieve the win by 2.3s.
It was the first time Wood had seen a chequered flag wave for him –
although he was technically a winner at Thruxton two years ago, that
came after two cars in front had been excluded from the results for
technical infringements. ‘It’s a great feeling finally to see the
chequered flag,’ said 44-year-old Steve. ‘It was a really close and very
enjoyable race. I managed to get Tony into the complex after selling him
a bit of dummy and then pulled enough of a gap.’
Culley moved back into fourth on the sixth lap, then lifted third from
Taylor with two laps to go. Martyn’s dad, Barrie Culley, was a superb
fifth in his Vento – his best-ever result – ahead of Steve Chaplin’s
Beetle, whose sixth spot came at the expense of Caddy TDI pilot Peter
Wyhinny, who qualified an impressive eighth and was headed towards
sixth, and the pole for race two, when a collision with Chaplin sent the
Caddy to the pits with a broken driveshaft.
Michael McInerney followed up his strong Silverstone showing in the
Europcar Golf GTI to take seventh, ahead of 17-year-old Darelle Wilson
at the wheel of a borrowed Bora, his Beetle having suffered engine
problems last weekend. Andrew Smith returned to the championship in his
VR6 Golf and took ninth ahead of Mike Kurton’s Golf GTI, Damian Gray’s
Vento and Paul Lloyd-Roach, who had had to stop to change his Beetle
from wet-weather tyres to slicks. Steve Dorrell and Jamie Turner were
the final finishers.
Thruxton’s reputation as a car-breaker held true, with several
drivetrain related retirements. Alex Dziurzynski’s Corrado fell from
fourth with gearbox problems, similar trouble halting John Quartermaine,
Giles Lock and Ken Lark. Adrian Dziurzynski spun his Golf on the opening
lap and was collected by Joe Fulbrook’s Bora, while Max Power journalist
Nick Trott suffered clutch hydraulic problems in the Polo GTI. Craig
Inskip’s Golf stopped early with a blown head gasket.
Sunday's showery weather suited Taylor’s machine down to the ground
(leading at the
start - right)
and
it romped into its customary lead within a couple of corners, despite
starting from sixth on the grid. By first lap’s end Taylor had stolen a
2.7-second march on Culley Jnr, but Martyn found the track conditions
suiting his Vento more and more with each passing lap.
‘Dad and I had gambled on slicks and it didn’t look good when there was
a shower right before the start,’ said Martyn. ‘But as the track dried
the car got better and better.’ Taylor fought to maintain his advantage
but Culley whittled the gap away to nothing on the third lap and stole
past and into the lead at Church. Taylor soon after fell into Wood’s
clutches, and then Gilham’s to fall back to fourth.
Wood had opted for a full set of wet-weather Hankooks and, as the track
dried, he began to struggle to stay with Culley. Steve was soon under
threat from Gilham who, after seeing off a renewed challenge from
Taylor, was gunning for second. Tony’s Beetle found its way past the
Golf GTI with four laps to run; he finished 11.9s behind Culley.
But the result could all have been very different, for Culley had had a
slowly deflating tyre since before mid-distance. Yards after
victoriously crossing the line, Martyn had to pull off on his
slowing-down lap when the tyre let go. His Vento was brought to the
podium ceremony on the back of a recovery truck.
‘I’ve always gone well at Thruxton,’ said Martyn, ‘but never had much
luck here before. This is a great result and a superb way to end the
season.’ It was Culley’s second race win of the season and helped him
secure championship runner-up spot. Barrie Culley was sixth to add to
the family celebration.
Wood found himself in more and more tyre trouble as the race neared its
conclusion but managed to hang on to third, some 13 seconds ahead of
Allard, whose charge from the back of the grid was a highlight of the
race. Alex Dziurzynski, another rear-of-grid starter, placed fifth, with
Taylor finishing seventh behind Culley Snr.
Wilson looked set for a strong finish until he and Taylor got a little
too close for comfort at the chicane; the youngster backed off to take
eighth ahead of Adrian Dziurzynski, Lloyd-Roach, Fulbrook, Lark,
McInerney, Wyhinny, Inskip and Smith. Trott claimed 17th in the Polo GTI.
The Volkswagen Racing Cup in association with Hankook enjoys the
additional support of Augustus Martin, Castrol, ECM Vehicle Delivery,
Europcar, Milltek Sport, Mondial Assistance, KW Automotive, Superchips,
TNT Logistics, Turbo Dynamics, Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles and
Volkswagen Financial Services UK.
Provisional results 2006 Volkswagen Racing Cup round 11
Thruxton 30 September / 14 laps = 32.98 miles
1, Steve Wood, Ashleworth, Golf GTI, 21m 12.246s
2, Tony Gilham, Swanley, Beetle RSi, +2.291s
3, Martyn Culley, Basingstoke, Vento VR6, +7.523s
4, Paul Taylor, Great Amwell, Golf R32, +9.519s
5, Barrie Culley, Thatcham, Vento VR6, +52.525s
6, Steve Chaplin, Maisemore, Beetle RSi, +53.133s
Fastest lap Wood 1m 28.444s / 95.89mph
Round 12 / Thruxton 1 October / 13 laps = 30.63 miles
1, Martyn Culley, 20m 35.576s
2, Tony Gilham, +11.922s
3, Steve Wood, +21.142s
4, Lloyd Allard, Cheltenham, Golf TDI, +34.397s
5, Alex Dziurzynski, Exeter, Corrado, +34.968s
6, Barrie Culley, +38.565s
Fastest lap Gilham 1m 33.154s / 91.04mph
Provisional final championship placings
1 Paul Taylor 228 points; 2 Martyn Culley 200; 3 Lloyd Allard 198; 4
Tony Gilham 186; 5 Steve Wood 148; 6 Joe Fulbrook 132; 7= Martin
Rutherford & Alex Dziurzynski 96; 9 Adrian Dziurzynski 78; 10 Barrie
Culley 76 etc.
TAYLOR DOES THE DOUBLE AT SILVERSTONE
#
Race Start, Taylor already in the lead
The Volkswagen Racing Cup is all set for a grandstand finish following
twin wins at Silverstone yesterday (Sunday) for Golf R32 pilot Paul
Taylor, results which propelled him back into the championship lead.
But just 20 points separates Taylor and his chief title rival Lloyd
Allard as they head for the deciding rounds of the Hankook-backed
championship at Thruxton next weekend (30 Sept/1 Oct), with Golf TDI
racer Allard determined not to give up the fight.
Allard endured a character building time at Silverstone: he was forced
to start the first race from the back of the grid and then suffered
fuel problems in race two which cost him the championship lead.
Hertfordshire-based Taylor was in superb form at Silverstone in his
four-wheel-drive machine, winning both races - one wet, the other dry
- in great style, despite clutch problems which hampered his
performance and which, despite the greasy conditions, rendered him
unable to take advantage of his Golf's superior traction at the start
of race one.
Alex Dziurzynski, who claimed his maiden pole position in qualifying,
was the early pacesetter in his Corrado, but once Taylor had found his
form Alex was unable to hold on to the lead. Paul rocketed past and
into top spot on the second lap and, though Dziurzynski harried him
all the way to the chequered flag, Taylor collected his fourth win of
the season by a 3.7-second margin.
'The four-wheel drive was a definite help to me in these conditions,'
said Taylor. 'The car was superb, even though I did have some problems
at the start selecting the right gear.'
Dziurzynski's (pictured
below) attack was hampered in the closing stages by his need to
defend against the attentions of his Golf GTI-driving younger brother,
Adrian. "We should have agreed on team orders before the start!" joked
Exeter-based Alex. Adrian did not push the point too far, however, and
settled for third - his maiden podium finish.
Joe Fulbrook enjoyed a strong outing in his Bora Turbo to collect
fourth, just ahead of Tony Gilham's Beetle RSi. An excellent sixth
despite his relative lack of track experience was former British Rally
Champion Gwyndaf Evans at the wheel of the 'celebrity' Polo GTI.
Martyn Culley was pushed back to seventh by Evans with three laps to
run, his Vento VR6 beaten back into shape after suffering serious
damage last month at Brands Hatch. Relishing the new-found performance
of his rebuilt Golf VR6, Tony Harberman ended a long run of bad luck
with an excellent eighth, and collected second fastest lap of the race
for good measure.
The fastest man on the circuit was Allard. Lloyd fell foul of the
scales after qualifying when his ATMR-prepared Golf found to be just
shy of the required weight. He was put to the back of the grid, then
gambled on slick, dry-weather tyres, only to discover he had made a
major mistake.
'I pitted after the warming up lap to change back to wets,' said
Allard, 'and lost a lot of time.' He charged back through the field,
establishing the lap record for the class, on his way to ninth.
Ray MacDowall returned to the championship in a V6 Golf to take 10th
ahead of newcomer Damian Gray's Vento and 17-year-old Darelle Wilson's
Beetle RSi.
Sixth on the grid proved little handicap for Taylor in race two, his
Golf sprinting into the lead on lap one and away into a lead which it
never looked in danger of losing. Win number five was probably the
easiest of his season, and Paul was quick to praise his mechanics:
'The team did a great job for me this weekend and these two wins have
given me a big boost for the championship.'
Gilham, struggling for straight line speed throughout the weekend,
handled his Beetle well to stay in touch with Taylor, and to keep the
determined Alex Dziurzynski behind him for the duration to secure
second.
Third-placed Alex, meanwhile, was under intense pressure from Allard
in the closing stages, until Lloyd's luck returned with a vengeance at
the start of the last lap when his Golf started to splutter through
fuel starvation. He managed to make it to the line but dropped from
fourth to sixth.
Others in last-lap bother were Adrian Dziurzynski and Fulbrook, the
former with a race-halting gearbox problem and the latter with a
broken driveshaft. Joe pitted at the end but was credited with
seventh.
All of which promoted the remarkable Evans to fourth to collect the
new-for-2006 Polo GTI's best-ever finish, just ahead of Martyn Culley.
Martin Rutherford made up for a race one non-finish by taking eighth
in his Beetle, with the flying Michael McInerney recording his best
result of the year in ninth in the Europcar Golf GTI. Barrie Culley,
Steve Dorrell and Giles Lock rounded out the top 12.
The Volkswagen Racing Cup in association with Hankook enjoys the
additional support of Augustus Martin, Castrol, ECM Vehicle Delivery,
Europcar, Milltek Sport, Mondial Assistance, KW Automotive, Superchips,
TNT Logistics, Turbo Dynamics, Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles and
Volkswagen Financial Services UK.
Provisional results 2006 Volkswagen Racing Cup round 9
Silverstone 24 September / 10 laps = 22.49 miles
1, Paul Taylor, Great Amwell, Golf R32, 20m 40.649s
2, Alex Dziurzynski, Exeter, Corrado VR6, +3.769s
3, Adrian Dziurzynski, Exeter, Golf GTI, +4.102s
4, Joe Fulbrook, Maidenhead, Bora 1.8T, +9.996s
5, Tony Gilham, Swanley, Beetle RSi, +12.249s
6, Gwyndaf Evans, Dinas Mawddwy, Polo GTI, +12.565s
Fastest lap Lloyd Allard (Cheltenham/Golf TDI) 1m 50.201s / 73.46mph
(est rec)
Round 10 / 12 laps = 26.99 miles
1, Taylor, 20m 10.470s
2, Gilham, +1.657s
3, Alex Dziurzynski, +1.945s
4, Evans, +18.256s
5, Martyn Culley, Basingstoke, Vento VR6, +19.327s
6, Allard, +20.658s
Fastest lap Fulbrook 1m 39.372s / 81.47mph (rec)
Provisional championship placings
1 Taylor 202 points; 2 Allard 182; 3 Gilham 142; 4 Culley 140; 5
Fulbrook 128; 6 Martin Rutherford (Little Chalfont/Beetle) 96 etc
ALLARD AND GILHAM
ON TOP AT BRANDS HATCH

Two drama-filled Volkswagen Racing Cup events provided the Brands
Hatch Bank Holiday weekend crowds with thrills aplenty on Sunday (27
Aug), Lloyd Allard (Golf left front above)stealing into the championship lead with his
first-race victory at the wheel of the ATMR turbodiesel Golf and Beetle
driver Tony Gilham(Beetle no 34 above) claiming his maiden win in the second of the day's
events.
Erstwhile points leader Paul Taylor finished both races in second spot
and now trails Allard by just four points with four rounds remaining,
ensuring a grandstand finish to the Hankook-backed championship over the
coming five weeks.
In race one, Taylor's chances of a fourth victory at the wheel of his
Big Boys Toys-backed Golf R32 were dashed by an untimely safety car
intervention, the vehicle scrambled to control race pace after a
fourth-lap clash between the Golf GTI of Steve Wood and Darelle Wilson's
Beetle.(pictured
below)
Hertfordshire-based Taylor had done everything right, blasting past pole
sitter Allard (Cheltenham) on the run to corner one and stretching his
legs to build a two-second lead over the second placed car of local hero
Gilham.
But the safety car came into play for two laps while the stricken cars
of Wood and Wilson were removed to safety, and this had the effect of
bunching up the pack and cancelling Taylor's advantage at a stroke.
At the restart on lap seven, Allard, who held third after a tardy grid
getaway, was not slow to pounce. Lloyd dived through on the inside of
Graham Hill Bend to seize second from Gilham and then swooped alongside
Taylor into Clearways. The two Golfs raced doorhandle-to-doorhandle for
the length of Brabham Straight, Taylor forced to concede the lead as
they reached Paddock Hill Bend.
It was physical stuff: 'I'm not very happy,' said Taylor later. 'I had
two wheels on the grass and I've asked Lloyd to give me a bit more room
next time.'
Allard was quick to open out a breathing space and raced to his second
win of the season by a margin of just seven-tenths. 'I had a bad start,'
he said, 'because I could find no grip, and then I found myself stuck
behind Tony. Getting past him and then Paul was a bit of a hassle, but
it was a good fun race and I enjoyed it greatly.'
Swanley-based Gilham's hopes of depriving Taylor of second were thwarted
by red flags, which flew to halt the race on the 10th lap when Barrie
Culley's Vento slid off into the Paddock Hill Bend gravel trap and
tipped on to its roof. Culley - like Wood and Wilson - was unhurt but
his car was deemed to have come to rest in a dangerous place.
Joe Fulbrook and Martyn Culley duelled for fourth place throughout, with
Bora driver Fulbrook eight-tenths ahead when it counted. Adrian
Dziurzynski's Mk 2 Golf GTI claimed sixth, with Barrie Culley credited
with seventh despite his race-ending excursion.
Reigning Stock Hatch Champion Darren Blumson was an encouraging eighth
on his championship debut at the wheel of a Vento, with the Beetles of
Paul Lloyd-Roach, Martin Rutherford and Steve Dorrell ninth, 10th and
11th respectively. The battle of the Caddy vans was won by Giles Lock in
12th, with Peter Wyhinny's example 14th, just behind Steve Chaplin's
Beetle.
Motorsport News editor Jim Holder brought the Polo GTI home 16th on his
race debut, relieved to return it to the paddock without a scratch. 'I
put it all down to the car,' he said. 'It certainly wasn't the driver!'
Despite another safety car interlude and, again, a premature race
stoppage, the second race of the day was a real corker with several
changes of lead, plenty of drama and another new face in the winner's
circle.
By dint of his first-race sixth, Adrian Dziurzynski started from the
pole - his first - and led the early laps after a superb start. Taylor,
starting from fifth, made an even better getaway from the grid but found
his progress blocked by Dziurzynski, Gilham and Martyn Culley, three
abreast as they dashed for Paddock Hill Bend.
Dziurzynski's redoubtable Golf held the Regal Autosport/GIAC Beetle of
Glam at bay until lap five, despite intense pressure, but Adrian lost
out when Tony lunged up his inside into the Druids hairpin following the
conclusion of a brief safety car period, necessary to retrieve Jamie
Turner's beached Golf VR6 from the Clearways gravel trap.
Frantic lap five saw Culley demoted from third to sixth after he got
crossed up through Surtees, with Fulbrook, Taylor and Allard each taking
the opportunity to slice past the Vento.
Dziurzynski wasn't beaten yet, however: on the seventh lap he repassed
Gilham(pictured left)for the lead and even managed to pull a slight advantage, only
for his wretched luck to return a couple of laps later with the loss of
fourth gear. Gilham, Taylor and Allard all took advantage.
With four minutes still on the clock and three cars vying for victory,
there was every prospect of a grandstand finish. Alas it was not to be
for, just as in race one, the red flags flew after a Culley accident.
This time it was Martyn in the wars, a rear wheel shearing from his
Vento and sending it into a roll at the ultra-fast Westfield Bend.
Martyn was shaken but otherwise unhurt.
So the results were declared after nine laps, Gilham the popular victor
by the season's narrowest margin, just 0.29s, from Taylor, and with
Allard only six-tenths further behind for third. Gilham was generous
with his praise for his team: 'The boys have worked solidly for this for
three days and I can't thank them enough. It was a very hard race but
I'm well happy.'
…/more
Dziurzynski, disappointed at losing out on his maiden win, was consoled
by fourth place, his best-ever result, and the fact that it was the
first time this year he had finished both races in a weekend. Adrian's
brother, Alex, by contrast posted a double retirement at Brands.
Less happy in fifth was Fulbrook, who was bounced out of third two laps
from the end by Taylor, the R32 driver forcing his way past through
Surtees. Wilson, the youngest driver in the race at 17, battled his way
through from 21st on the grid to sixth by the chequered flag.
Rutherford claimed seventh ahead of Blumson, Wood, Lloyd-Roach and Ken
Lark's Corrado, with Wyhinny - his Caddy renumbered 50 for the weekend
in celebration of his milestone birthday - delighted with 12th. Michael
McInerney, his pace revitalised by a between-race engine change for the
Europcar Golf GTI, was 16th and Holder 19th in the Polo after a pit
visit for running repairs lost him two laps.
Provisional results 2006 Volkswagen Racing Cup round 7
Brands Hatch 27 August / 8 laps = 18.41 miles
1, Lloyd Allard, Cheltenham, Golf TDI, 16m 15.138s
2, Paul Taylor, Great Amwell, Golf R32, +0.716s
3, Tony Gilham, Swanley, Beetle RSi, +1.426s
4, Joe Fulbrook, Maidenhead, Bora 1.8T, +2.120s
5, Martyn Culley, Basingstoke, Vento VR6, +2.968s
6, Adrian Dziurzynski, Exeter, Golf GTI, +5.605s
Fastest lap Gilham 1m 44.675s / 79.13mph (est rec)
Round 8 / 9 laps = 20.71 miles
1, Gilham, 16m 48.569s
2, Taylor, +0.290s
3, Allard, +0.917s
4, Dziurzynski, +2.061s
5, Fulbrook, +8.084s
6, Darelle Wilson, Solihull, Beetle, +9.277s
Fastest lap Gilham 1m 44.469s / 79.29mph (rec)
Full results
www.msttiming.com/meeting.asp?source=bf3gt2006&event=63405
Provisional championship placings
1 Allard 158 points; 2 Taylor 154; 3 Culley 112; 4 Gilham 108; 5
Fulbrook 98; 6 Martin Rutherford (Little Chalfont/Beetle) 86; 7 Steve
Wood (Ashleworth/Golf) 76; 8 Craig Inskip (Northiam/Golf) 64; 9
Dziurzynski 54; 10 Wilson 42 etc.
Next rounds Silverstone, 23/24 September.
TAYLOR, CULLEY VICTORIOUS IN NORFOLK

A third race win for championship leader
Paul Taylor(above) and a maiden victory for Martyn Culley were
the highlights of the Snetterton rounds of the Volkswagen Racing Cup in
association with Hankook, watched this weekend (15/16 July) by a huge
crowd of spectators making the most of the glorious weather.
Just as he did at Oulton Park in April and at Donington Park in May,
Taylor secured a convincing victory in the first of the day's races at
the wheel of his Big Boys Toys-backed Golf.
His rivals are used to seeing the Hertfordshire driver take advantage of
the R32's four-wheel drive to sprint ahead in damp conditions, but this
time Taylor made it to the top step of the podium in the bone dry and
blistering heat.
Paul threw down the gauntlet in qualifying on Saturday, securing pole
position for the first time this season with a time two-tenths of a
second better than that of his closest rival, Bora driver Joe Fulbrook.
But with a bare second covering the top eight on the grid, Taylor's
advantage appeared slim.
Paul made a superb start, lighting up all four Hankooks and sprinting
instantly into a handsome lead over Berkshire's Fulbrook on the run down
to the tight Riches right-hander and on to a two-second lead over the
Bora man by lap's end.
Fulbrook's hopes of reeling in the leader took a blow within a couple of
laps when his second place came under pressure from the flying Golf GTI
of Exeter's Adrian Dziurzynski. Within a few laps Kent man Tony Gilham
and his Beetle joined the party, along with fourth-round victor Lloyd
Allard in his turbodiesel Golf, who had started 11th on the grid.
Fulbrook clung to second for nine of the 15 laps but had to give best to
Allard at the Russell chicane. 'Lloyd got it all sideways and I had to
back off to avoid hitting him,' said Joe, 'and then he was through and
away.' Added Allard: 'It was a scary moment and I was lucky to get away
with it. I'm grateful to Joe for giving me the room.'
By this stage Taylor was 3.6 seconds up the road and though Allard did
his best to catch the R32, too few laps remained for him to achieve it.
Taylor's winning margin was 2.3 seconds. He said: 'I made a good start
and tried to pull away, then fortunately everyone else seemed to be
having their own battles and I was able to keep clear. I'm very pleased
with my third win.'
Gilham, (pictured
right) his Beetle rejuvenated for this meeting by a new engine,
pinched third from Fulbrook at the Esses on the penultimate lap to
record his best-yet finish in the championship.
Gloucestershire driver Steve Wood gave his long-awaited new Golf GTI an
encouraging race debut, battling through from 10th on the grid to fifth
at the chequered flag, profiting from Ken Lark's problems - his Corrado
slowed a lap from home with a broken driveshaft.
Martyn Culley finished sixth in his Vento VR6, ahead of Craig Inskip in
a down-on-power Golf and Martin Rutherford, who was also suffering from
a lack of straight-line speed in his Citygate Beetle.
Barrie Culley's Vento was ninth, the hobbling Lark 10th, 17-year-old
Darelle Wilson 11th in his Beetle and Steve Chaplin, having his first
run in his new Beetle, 12th just ahead of championship debutant Paul
Wyhinny in his V6 Golf. Golf Plus magazine journalist Mike Breslin
brought the Polo GTI home 20th, delighted with the car's performance but
disappointed with his: 'I had to back off at the start to avoid a
collision and lost a lot of time, but it was great fun fighting back and
it's a brilliant little car to drive.'
Dziurzynski's strong run at the sharp end of the field came to a
disappointing end after 12 laps with a broken driveshaft. Paul
Lloyd-Roach was bitterly disappointed by his retirement with a
brake-less Beetle, coming as it did after securing seventh on the grid.
There was to be no repeat of Taylor's runaway performance in race two,
not least because of the reverse-grid rule which dictates the first-race
victor must start race two from sixth on the grid.
It was Basingstoke-based Martyn Culley's turn to start from the pole and
he and his venerable Vento - a veteran of 12 seasons of racing - made no
mistake at the green light, rocketing away to gain a useful lead over
his pursuers. There was confusion behind as Wood missed a gear and
received a tap from Gilham; Taylor seized his chance to shoot past both
and into second.
There was an even bigger drama at corner two, Sear, where Inskip - at
the wheel of a borrowed Golf GTI to replace his ailing car - mounted the
rear of Lloyd-Roach's Beetle and rolled. Craig was unhurt but his Golf
badly damaged, and Lloyd-Roach was forced to retire also. A lengthy
safety car period was required to clear the track of debris.
Culley timed the restart to perfection to rebuild his lead, this time
with Allard as his closest pursuer, Taylor having slipped back after a
brush with Wood's Golf at the Riches chicane.
Allard's pursuit was relentless but the diesel driver had no answer to
Culley's pace, Martyn clocking up a popular maiden championship victory.
'I'm over the moon,' said new father Martyn. 'I made the perfect restart
and everybody behind seemed more interested in tripping over each other
than in catching me.'
Allard was two seconds behind at the line, with Fulbrook third after
holding off a challenge from Gilham to claim his second podium of the
season. Wood was fifth ahead of Dziurzynski, Rutherford, Wilson, Lark
and Taylor, a gearbox problem further hampering the championship
leader's progress towards the end.
Chaplin, Michael McInerney, Breslin and Peter Wyhinny were the only
other finishers in what proved to be a race of attrition.
With the championship at the half-way stage, Taylor's overall points
lead is cut from 22 to 16. Rounds seven and eight take place at Brands
Hatch in Kent at the end of August.
The Volkswagen Racing Cup in association with Hankook enjoys the
additional support of Augustus Martin, Castrol, ECM Vehicle Delivery,
Europcar, Milltek Sport, Mondial Assistance, KW Automotive, Superchips,
TNT Logistics, Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles and Volkswagen Financial
Services UK.
Provisional results 2006 Volkswagen Racing Cup round 5
Snetterton 16 July / 15 laps = 29.28 miles
1, Paul Taylor, Great Amwell, Golf R32, 20m 29.410s
2, Lloyd Allard, Cheltenham, Golf TDI, +2.327s
3, Tony Gilham, Swanley, Beetle RSi, +4.498s
4, Joe Fulbrook, Maidenhead, Bora 1.8T, +5.476s
5, Steve Wood, Ashleworth, Golf GTI, +12.912s
6, Martyn Culley, Basingstoke, Vento VR6, +13.482s
Fastest lap Allard 1m 20.378s 87.42mph (record)
Round 6 / 13 laps = 25.38 miles
1, Culley, 20m 21.706s
2, Allard, +1.989s
3, Fulbrook, +11.607s
4, Gilham, +12.003s
5, Wood, +15.689s
6, Adrian Dziurzynski, Exeter, Golf GTI, +24.572s
Fastest lap Allard 1m 21.047s 86.70mph
Provisional championship placings
1 Taylor 114 points; 2 Culley 98; 3 Allard 89; 4 Martin Rutherford
(Little Chalfont/Beetle 1.8T) 72; 5 Wood 70; 6 Fulbrook 68 etc.
TURBODIESEL GOLF
ON TOP AT DONINGTON

Diesel power triumphed over petrol at Donington Park on Sunday (21
May), Lloyd Allard and his Golf TDI blasting to victory in the fourth
round of the Volkswagen Racing Cup. It was the first UK race win for a
diesel car since 2002.
Allard, grandson of Monte Carlo Rally victor and sports car marque
founder Sidney Allard, was in unstoppable form on the drying track and
was not to be denied his maiden championship victory.
The day's other big winner - apart from the atrocious weather - was Paul
Taylor, who won the very wet round three thanks in part to the superior
traction afforded by his four-wheel-drive Golf R32.
Hertfordshire-based Taylor, only fourth fastest in the dry qualifying
session, spent Saturday night praying to the gods of rain and was not
disappointed, streaming wet weather facing him and the other runners as
they lined up for Sunday's first race.
Predictably his R32 proved more than a match for the conditions, Paul
able to floor the throttle at the lights and rocket past front row men
Martin Rutherford and Allard as if their front-drive-only machines were
standing still. By the end of the first lap Taylor
(left) was nearly five
seconds to the good.
But though the task of reeling Taylor in might have been a daunting one,
Allard and his ATMR-prepared Golf were more than up for the challenge.
Cheltenham-based Lloyd twice claimed the fastest lap of the race during
his pursuit and, though hampered by an intermittent misfire, he was able
to prevent Taylor from romping away, crossing the line in second spot
less than seven seconds adrift. 'The weather played right into my
hands,' said Taylor. 'I had a good run and the car was perfect.'
Third place ought to have belonged to Adrian Dziurzynski. 'Didge' had
gambled on running slick, dry-weather Hankooks on his Mk II Golf GTI in
the hope of capitalising on a strong showing in qualifying. His bid
appeared to have paid off, Dziurzynski hanging on well to the leaders
until three laps from the end when he skated off into the Redgate Corner
gravel trap.
'I am so disappointed,' said Didge, from Exeter. 'The tyres were fine
when it was really wet, but it started to dry a little and the track
became greasier. I saw Rob Palmer bearing down on me and just overdid
it.'
Palmer was making his first appearance of the season in the Exeter
Diesels Golf and did a sterling job to climb from eighth on the grid to
fourth before Dziurzynski handed him third. He resisted perfectly a
last-corner attempt from Steve Wood to pass him, holding his line into
Goddards to secure his maiden podium finish.
Wood, still at the wheel of a borrowed Beetle RSi due to persistent
teething problems with his new Golf GTI, had tried to outbrake Palmer
but spun instead and lost fourth at the last to Craig Inskip's turbo
Golf. Martyn Culley recovered from an early misfire with his Vento to
take sixth, hard on Wood's heels.
Ken Lark put in the drive of the race to fight back from 20th after a
second-lap excursion into a gravel trap in his Corrado. 'I was well
stuck but I was determined to get the car out, I was that angry,' said
Ken. 'I waved away the marshals who came to help and managed to reverse
the car back on to the track.'
The bit firmly between his teeth, Lark carved his way through the field
and broke into the top 10 by lap seven. He picked off a further three
cars by the end.
Alex Dziurzynski claimed eighth in his Corrado, ahead of Barrie Culley's
Vento VR6, Tony Gilham's Beetle and the Europcar Golf GTI of Michael
McInerney. Paul Lloyd-Roach was 12th in his Beetle and Rutherford a
disappointed 15th, blaming his tyre choice and power delivery problems.
Among the disappointed non-finishers were Car magazine editor Jason
Barlow, whose strong run in the new Polo GTI came to an end in the
Craner Curves gravel on the penultimate lap, and Joe Fulbrook, whose
Bora's engine cried enough. Peter Wyhinny failed to make the grid after
ignition problems with his Caddy.
Taylor's prayers weren't completely answered, however - for the start of
race two the sun made a brief enough appearance to start drying the
track. Some of his rivals were tempted on to slick Hankooks, but Paul
stuck to grooved rubber, a choice he would later rue.
Taylor made his customary lightning grid getaway to overhaul front row
men Martyn Culley and Wood for the lead on the run to Redgate but was to
stay ahead for only two laps this time, the track beginning to dry
enough to lessen his four-wheel-drive advantage and to hurt his tyres.
Wood was the first to dislodge him from top spot, with Allard battling
past both Taylor and Wood to lead on the fourth lap.
Lloyd wasted no time in pulling out a lead, building his advantage to
more than three seconds with a blinding fifth lap, the fastest of the
race up to that point. A brief safety car hiatus, required to retrieve
Wyhinny's stricken Caddy from the circuit after it suffered a mechanical
problem, interrupted Allard's progress only briefly and he sailed on to
his first championship victory - and the first for a diesel since
Michael Neuhoff's Thruxton wins in 2002 - by a margin of two seconds.
'My tyres were almost gone towards the end,' said Lloyd, 'and I was
panicking a bit when I saw another car coming up behind. But it was a
brilliant race and I really enjoyed it. It's great to have won at last.'
It wasn't Wood who followed Allard home for second but Inskip, who had
overcome the struggling Taylor for third on lap nine and was promoted to
second when Wood slithered into a gravel trap at Redgate. 'It's good to
get on the podium again,' said Craig.
Expectant father Martyn Culley was third: 'I'd just like to thank my
wife for letting me go racing on the day she was due to give birth!' he
said.
Lark flew to fourth this time, ahead of Didge Dziurzynski, whose fifth
place was his best-yet championship result. A popular sixth was the
slick-shod Beetle of Darelle Wilson, the Solihull 17-year-old not only
scoring a personal best but setting fastest race lap into the bargain.
His rivals voted Darelle driver of the day.
Taylor slipped to seventh at the flag, with Grant Woodhatch eighth in
his Vento, Gilham ninth and granddad-to-be Barrie Culley 10th ahead of
Lloyd-Roach, McInerney and Barlow in the Polo GTI, which the journalist
rated a 'cracking good hot hatch' after his strong finish.
Those unlucky not to make the finish line included erstwhile
championship leader Rutherford, who spun into the pit straight wall at
the start; Andrew Smith, whose Golf did the same later in the race, and
Palmer, whose Golf was dealt a heavy rear-end blow by Alex Dziurzynski's
Corrado.
With four of the 12 rounds complete, Taylor is the new championship
leader with a 22-point advantage over Martyn Culley. Rutherford slips to
third overall.
Rounds five and six of the 12-round championship take place at
Snetterton in Norfolk in mid-July.
Provisional results 2006 Volkswagen Racing Cup round 3
Donington Park 21 May / 13 laps = 25.4 miles
1, Paul Taylor, Great Amwell, Golf R32, 20m 17.221s
2, Lloyd Allard, Cheltenham, Golf TDI, +6.568s
3, Rob Palmer, Exeter, Golf TDI, +20.557s
4, Craig Inskip, Northiam, Golf TDI, +26.713s
5, Steve Wood, Ashleworth, Beetle RSi, +33.062s
6, Martyn Culley, Basingstoke, Vento VR6, +36.990s
Fastest lap Allard 1m 31.602s / 76.92mph
Round 4 / 13 laps = 25.4 miles
1, Allard, 21m 07.620s
2, Inskip, +2.020s
3, Culley, +2.795s
4, Ken Lark, Peters Green, Corrado VR6, +5.008s
5, Didge Dziurzynski, Exeter, Golf GTI, +10.457s
6, Darelle Wilson, Solihull, Beetle RSi, +11.101s
Fastest lap Wilson 1m 26.982s / 81.00mph
Full results:
www.msttiming.com/meeting.asp?source=bf3gt2006&event=62005
Provisional championship placings
1 Taylor 84 points; 2 Culley 62; 3 Martin Rutherford (Little
Chalfont/Beetle) 54; 4 Inskip 50; 5 Allard 46; 6 Wood 42 etc
RUTHERFORD & TAYLOR THE VICTORS AT OULTON

Round one couldn't have got away to a worse start, with four cars
eliminated by a startline shunt. It was triggered when Lloyd Allard's
Golf stalled on the front row and, with cars spearing left and right to
dodge the stationary TDI, mayhem ensued. 'It was an awful moment,' said
Lloyd. 'The car just died on the grid and I had to sit there and brace
myself for the impact.'
The crash when it came was bad enough to wipe a rear wheel from Allard's
car and damage badly the Golf GTIs of Mike Kurton and Didge Dziurzynski,
with the Beetles of Steve Dorrell and Paul Lloyd-Roach escaping with
slightly less damage. Only Lloyd-Roach was able to make the restart,
after some hasty pit lane repairs.
Clearing up delayed the start by several minutes, long enough for the
weather to play right into the hands of Taylor and his four-wheel-drive
Golf. With a steady drizzle making the circuit surface increasingly
greasy, he found the conditions ideal and rocketed into the lead on the
opening lap from his fourth row grid position.
But Rutherford wasn't about to let Taylor have things all his own way,
posting fastest lap of the race on the second tour in his pursuit before
spinning away his chances next time around. 'It was just too wet for my
car's dry weather set-up and I tried to hard to catch him and spun,'
said Martin.
Newcomer Tony Gilham was next to hold second position in his Beetle, but
a misunderstanding with the Vento VR6 of Martyn Culley brought his race
to an end with a holed radiator and saw Culley slip well back.
Craig Inskip then lasted for a lap in second spot, until his Golf
whacked a kerb and broke a shock absorber. By the time Alex Dziurzynski
(pictured right)
inherited second in his Corrado, Taylor was long gone. 'They made it
very easy for me,' said Paul. 'They were just falling by the wayside. I
was very lucky with the weather; had it stayed dry, I doubt I would have
gone away like I did.'
Taylor crossed the line more than six seconds ahead of his closest
pursuer, Grant Woodhatch, who had powered his Vento past Dziurzynski for
second with two laps to run. 'It's my best-ever Volkswagen Racing Cup
finish,' said a delighted Grant, 'and it's very pleasing to finish top
two-wheel-drive runner.'
Dziurzynski was no less elated with third and the first podium finish
for his hitherto troublesome Corrado. 'Finally the car held together,
and I was able to have some good battles,' said Alex.
Joe Fulbrook's Bora survived a brush with another car to claim fourth
spot, some four seconds ahead of Steve Wood, driving a borrowed Beetle
after his new Golf GTI was unready for the season's start. Culley
recovered from his spin to take sixth, and Rutherford from his moment to
claim seventh, ahead of Peter Wyhinny's sold eighth in the Caddy TDI.
The Beetle of 17-year-old Darelle Wilson was ninth, his best finish,
ahead of Giles Lock's Caddy, Lloyd-Roach, Barrie Culley's Vento - which
was limping along with a standard gearbox after qualifying dramas -
Keith Wood in the all-new Polo GTI, Michael McInerney's Golf GTI and
championship debutant Jamie Turner in his Golf VR6.
Race two was no less exciting but thankfully rather less destructive.
Though there was no rain this time around, it didn't stop Taylor's R32
from rocketing into the lead once more on the opening lap, this time
from grid row three, with pole man Martyn Culley powerless to halt him.
It took the Vento man two laps to regain top spot as Taylor, with a bone
dry track to contend with, started to falter. 'It's just not a winning
car any more in dry weather,' lamented Paul.
Rutherford soon edged Taylor down to third and set about reeling in
Culley, whittling away at the gap with a succession of fastest race laps
and then nosing ahead once or twice until finally managing to make the
manoeuvre stick on lap eight, when he dived down the inside of Culley
through Old Hall. 'I could see him getting closer,' said Martyn, 'and I
knew that unless I was very lucky he would get me before the end.'
Rutherford crossed the line to claim his maiden Volkswagen Racing Cup
victory some two seconds ahead of Culley. 'I thought they'd never show
the chequered flag,' he said. 'This is my ninth season of racing and I
have more second place trophies than I know what to do with. I'm
delighted to have won at last.' Rutherford now enjoys a 10-point
championship lead.
Fulbrook demoted Taylor to fourth on lap five but could make no inroads
on the leaders, with Inskip battling through from the back of the grid
to fifth to show what could have been but for his first-race problems.
Steve Wood was a conservative sixth ahead of the storming Beetle of
Lloyd-Roach, Wyhinny, Lock and Woodhatch, who had had to start from pit
lane with a misfire. Barrie Culley, Keith Wood, Turner, McInerney and
Kurton completed the finishing order.
There was heartbreak for Andrew Smith, another back row starter, who had
wound his Golf VR6 up into an excellent seventh until sidelined by a
last-lap mechanical problem.
* The Oulton Park races were notable also for the introduction to the
championship of slick racing tyres from Hankook. The new tyres found
favour with all the competitors, including championship veteran Craig
Inskip: 'First impressions are very good,' he said. 'I had had little
opportunity to test with them but we've adapted well and the tyres have
impressed. I was shocked at how good they were from new and when cold.
We've still a lot to learn about setting up the car to get the best from
them, but I'm happy.'
Rounds three and four of the 12-round championship take place at
Donington Park next month.
Provisional results 2006 Volkswagen Racing Cup round 1
Oulton Park 17 April / 8 laps = 21.03 miles
1, Paul Taylor, Gt Amwell, Golf R32, 16m 27.826s
2, Grant Woodhatch, Midsomer Norton, Vento VR6, +6.463s
3, Alex Dziurzynski, Exeter, Corrado GTI, +7.646s
4, Joe Fulbrook, Maidenhead, Bora 1.8T, +8.469s
5, Steve Wood, Ashleworth, Beetle RSi, +12.662s
6, Martyn Culley, Basingstoke, Vento VR6, +30.606s
7, Martin Rutherford, Little Chalfont, Beetle 1.8T, +32.173s
Fastest lap Rutherford 1m 58.589s est rec
Round 2 / 11 laps = 29.61 miles
1, Rutherford, 21m 47.473s
2, Culley, +2.112s
3, Fulbrook, +15.071s
4, Taylor, +17.132s
5, Craig Inskip, Northiam, Golf GTI, +17.994s
6, Wood, +21.557s
Fastest lap Rutherford 1m 56.421s rec
Full results:
www.msttiming.com/meeting.asp?source=bf3gt2006&event=61505
Provisional championship placings
1 Rutherford 50 points; 2 Taylor 40; 3 Fulbrook 34; 4 Culley 32; 5
Wood 26; 6 Woodhatch 24; 7 Dziurzynski 18; 8 Peter Wyhinny 16; 9 Inskip
14; 10 Paul Lloyd-Roach 12 etc.
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