With a Formula Renault 2.0 Eurocup test drive and $10,000 for
the champion at stake, this weekend's final round of the
Toyota Racing Series (TRS) at Taupo will be a battle royale
between hungry teenagers Mitch Evans and Earl Bamber.
Aucklander Evans, 15, leads the series on 721 points after
four rounds while Wanganui's New Zealand Grand Prix champion
Bamber, 19, is second on 687 points.
But with three races over the weekend and 75 points available
to the winner of each, it is still anybody's championship.
The 34 points seperating the pair are just one more than is
available for finishing 10th in a race.
Points available for Taupo mean that mathematically
Auckland's Andrew Waite, fourth on 626 points, and
Taumarunui's Daniel Jileson, sixth on 529 points, are also
championship contenders.
Evans, a St Kentigern's College schoolboy who has never been
to Europe, said he had endured an "up and down season" but
said he has learnt what it will take to win the title.
"I've shown good pace but there have been a few dramas that
have cost me good results. I've learnt heaps in TRS, but the
main lesson is that you can't win every race.
"This weekend I need to be ahead or right behind Earl in all
three races - and make sure I don't make any mistakes," Evans
said. "We've got good pace so I just need to make sure we get
good results."
Bamber said after a sluggish start to the season, he would be
aiming to win all three races this weekend.
It wasn't until after winning the last race - the NZGP at
Manfeild, near Feilding in the Manawatu - that his doctor
diagnosed him as suffering from glandular fever since the
opening races at Teretonga, near Invercargill in January.
"Mitch has been doing a good job and has been on pole at
every race while my new team has been getting the performance
of our car sorted. At Taupo we need to be quick from the
outset," Bamber said.
"I'm feeling a lot more confident because we have developed
our setup and have found more pace.
"I've moved forward 30 places in the races over the season,
so I've done a lot of passing."
Both the ambitious teens have each won three races of 12 over
the first four rounds during a tense season. Evans clinched
the International Trophy title (contested over the four
International rounds in January and February) at their most
recent confrontation at Manfeild.
But Bamber upstaged him in a dramatic late charge to snatch
the coveted NZGP win at Manfeild in February.
The Renault 2.0 test in October will be similar to the
opportunity grasped by series winner Brendon Hartley in 2005.
The fully-funded one-off European test launched the
Palmerston North driver into a Red Bull junior development
squad contract and has led to his role as a reserve driver
for both the Red Bull Racing and Toro Rosso teams in Formula
1.
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.