The eighth round of the Sasol GTC Championship
saw Keagan Masters deliver a knock-out blow to his title rivals by taking his
Volkswagen Advanced Driving Golf GTi to a double victory in the GTC2 class
while teammate Adrian Wood banked two podium positions in his Kyocera
Volkswagen Golf GTi.
The bruising GTC class saw Daniel Rowe race
his Volkswagen Jetta GTC to a fourth and sixth place finish, while Mathew
Hodges’ run of bad luck continued after his Jetta GTC was forced into
retirement after a clash with a rival in the second race after banking sixth
place points in the first 12-lap race.
Rowe was well in the mix in Friday’s free
practice sessions with Hodges shadowing his teammate. When qualifying got
underway in cold and windy conditions on Saturday, Rowe took the fifth fastest
time and Hodges seventh. Keagan Masters missed pole position in GTC2 by 0.14
seconds while Wood slotted into third on the grid.
The first race of the day saw Rowe involved in
a frenetic, four-car battle for third position; positions changed several times
a lap in a high-speed game of musical chairs. When the chequered flag came out
to end a breathtaking race, Rowe was 0.9 seconds away from a podium finish.
Hodges picked up a puncture on lap three and circulated to sixth place.
The first GTC2 race was also one to have the
Cape Town crowd on their feet. Charl Smalberger (VW Golf GTi) led from start to
finish with Masters a coat of paint behind. In spite of a healthy championship
lead going into the race, Masters harassed the leader all the way to the flag.
Post-race scrutineering found Smalberger’s car to be underweight, the resultant
penalty promoting Masters into first place.Wood took a strong third place, behind Trevor Bland (VW Golf GTi),
giving VW a 1-2-3 result.
From third position on the inverted grid,
Hodges made a good start but while challenging Robert Wolk (BMW) for position
through turn four, Wolk collided with Hodges, the impact ripping the tyre from
the Jetta’s rim, leaving the luckless driver to retire. Rowe had a quiet race
in the sixth place.
Masters started from the back of the GTC2 grid
but within two laps had carved his way to fourth position. He hunted down
Smalberger and after two different attempts to get past the race leader, made
the move stick with three laps remaining. He opened a gap to the chasing pack,
again leading home a Volkswagen 1-2-3, with Wood ending ahead of Trevor Bland’s
VW Golf GTi.
“It was a difficult day for the team,” said
Mike Rowe, Head of Volkswagen Motorsport. “After our Kyalami showing earlier in
the month, we expected more from this race meeting. We will analyse the
imbalance the drivers experienced and come back strongly next month. Keagan
drove like a champion and is within sight of back-to-back titles, while Adrian
had a consistent day and earned a pair of podiums.”
Volkswagen Motorsport’s final appearance of
the season is at Zwartkops Raceway on 20th October.Masters needs just four points from 40
available to take the GTC2 title.