2002 Macau Grand Prix

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Race details
Date 17 November 2002
Location Guia Circuit, Macau
Course Temporary street circuit
6.120 km (3.803 mi)
Distance 30 laps, 165.27 km (102.69 mi)
First leg
Pole
Driver Italy Paolo Montin TOM'S
Time 2:14.995
Fastest Lap
Driver India Narain Karthikeyan Carlin
Time 2:14.058
Podium
FirstItaly Paolo MontinTOM'S
SecondFrance Tristan GommendyASM Formule 3
ThirdIndia Narain KarthikeyanCarlin
Second leg
Driver Italy Paolo Montin TOM'S
Fastest Lap
Driver France Tristan Gommendy ASM Formule 3
Time 2:14.036
Podium
FirstFrance Tristan GommendyASM Formule 3
SecondFinland Heikki KovalainenFortec Motorsport
ThirdJapan Takashi KogureMugen x Dome Project

The 2002 Macau Grand Prix (formally the 49th Macau Grand Prix) was a Formula Three (F3) motor race held on the streets of Macau on 17 November 2002. Unlike other races, such as the Masters of Formula 3, the 2002 Macau Grand Prix was not affiliated with any F3 championship and was open to entries from any F3 championship. The race was divided into two 15-lap aggregate legs: one in the morning and one in the afternoon. The driver who completed all 30 laps in the shortest time was declared the overall winner. The 2002 event was the 49th Macau Grand Prix and the 20th for F3 cars.

The Grand Prix was won by ASM Formule 3 driver Tristan Gommendy, having finished second in the first leg which Paolo Montin of TOM'S won. Montin lost the lead to Fortec Motorsport's Heikki Kovalainen at the start of the second leg. He held it until Gommendy in the faster car caught and passed Kovalainen at Lisboa corner after a restart on lap 12 and maintained the lead to win the race. Kovalainen took second position and the outright podium was completed by Takashi Kogure for the Mugen x Dome Project team.

The Macau Grand Prix is a Formula Three (F3) race that has been dubbed the territory's most prestigious international sporting event and a stepping stone to higher motorsport categories such as Formula One.[1][2] The 2002 Macau Grand Prix was the event's 49th edition and the 20th to be held to F3 rules. It took place on the 6.2 km (3.9 mi) 22-turn Guia Circuit on 17 November 2002 after three preceding days of practice and qualifying.[3][4]

Drivers had to compete in a Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA)-regulated championship race during the calendar year, in one of the seven national F3 championships that took place during the calendar year, with the best-placed drivers receiving priority in receiving an invitation to the race.[5] Four of the five major F3 series were represented on the Macau 30-car grid by their respective champions.[6][7] Robbie Kerr, the British champion, was joined in Macau by French title winner Tristan Gommendy, Italian victor Miloš Pavlović and All-Japan Formula Three winner Takashi Kogure. The only major winner of an F3 championship who did not compete in Macau for undisclosed reasons was German champion Gary Paffett.[7] Three local competitors, Jo Merszei, Michael Ho and Kit Meng Lei, who did not compete in any F3 championship in 2002, were invited to compete by race organisers.[8]

Practice and qualifying

The race on Sunday was preceded by two one-hour practice sessions, one on Thursday morning and one on Friday morning.[9] The first practice session in hot, humid weather, was delayed for ten minutes due to circuit officials repairing a tyre wall at Lisboa corner after practice for the local ACMC Trophy Race.[10] TOM'S Paolo Montin lapped fastest at 2:17.798 in the session's closing seconds. The rest of the top ten were Yuji Ide, Gommendy, Narain Karthikeyan, Bruce Jouanny, Heikki Kovalainen, Robert Doornbos, Kosuke Matsuura, Pavlović and James Courtney.[11][4] Katsuyuki Hiranaka was stranded across the turn at the Melco hairpin until marshals turned his car around. Fábio Carbone entered the corner too quickly, but he braked early to avoid a collision. Kerr hit the barrier at Fisherman's Bend, damaging his car's suspension and rear wing. Vitantonio Liuzzi went off the track and removed his car's left-hand corner.[10]

Kosuke Matsuura (pictured in 2007) was on provisional pole position after first qualifying but could not improve his time in second qualifying.

Qualifying was divided into two 45-minute sessions, one on Thursday afternoon and one on Friday afternoon. Each driver's fastest time from either session was used to determine their starting position in Sunday's race.[5][9] Matsuura  led the first qualifying session first with a 2:15.768 lap. Ide, who was eight-tenths of a second slower, waited until the final lap to take provisional second. Courtney pushed hard on his final timed lap to be the highest-placed rookie in third.[12] Montin had provisional pole before dropping to fourth and taking the escape road at Lisboa. The unwell Kovalainen was as high as second but finished fifth.[13] With five minutes to go, Gommendy collided with a barrier exiting Reservoir bend and bent his left-rear wheel bearing, denying him provisional pole.[12][13] Karthikeyan was seventh, Doornbos eighth, and the French duo of Olivier Pla and Johanny were ninth and tenth.[12] Renaud Derlot was the quickest driver not to enter the top ten. Following him were Richard Antinucci, Kogure and Pavlović, Marcel Costa, Carbone, Hiranaka, Alan van der Merwe, Hiroki Yoshimoto, César Campaniço, Ho, Lee, Tatsuya Kataoka, Kerr, Liuzzi, Cristiano Citron, Shinya Sato, Lei and Merszei.[4] The only driver not to set a lap time was Ronnie Bremer due to a crash at San Francisco Bend turn. Yoshimoto and his fellow Japanese Kataoka glanced a wall beside the track. Yellow and oil flags were needed for Van Der Merwe's accident into a barrier at Dona Maria Bend corner. Kit Meng's subsequent heavy accident left debris on the track and stopped qualifying for two minutes.[13] Kerr heavily damaged the rear of his car in an crash against the wall at Fisherman's Bend turn.[14]

Paolo Montin took his first pole position in his fifth appearance at the Macau Grand Prix.

Jouanny set an early lap that was good enough to lead the field until Montin improved it in the second 30-minute practice session. A brief rain shower fell on parts of the circuit, causing several drivers to aquaplane as they returned to the pit lane. They waited for the circuit to dry before returning to it. Ide briefly led before Karthikeyan and, later, Montin took over.[15] Despite a spin and lightly damaging his car's left-hand corner at Dona Maria Bend, Gommendy was fastest with a 2:16.569 lap.[4][16] He was followed by Kovalainen, Montin, Pla, Ide, Campaniço, Courtney (driving with a misfiring engine), Karthikeyan, Carbone and Kerr.[16] Pla lost control of his car late in the session and made minor contact with a barrier.[15]

The start of the second qualifying session was delayed for 35 minutes due to multiple accidents in the Guia Race of Macau's third practice session that left cement dust, oil and debris to be cleared by marshals. A suggestion in the paddock that second qualifying was reduced to half an hour was dispelled and the full 45 minutes were held.[17] Several drivers immediately began improving their laps and Montin led with a 2:14.995 lap in the 14th minute to displace Matsuura. He held it to claim pole position for the first time on his fifth appearance in Macau.[18] Gommendy's team adjusted his car and he joined Montin on the grid's front row in spite of him crashing into a wall on his last try at going quicker and prematurely ending the session with 1 minute and 50 seconds left.[17] Matsuura was the only driver in the top 26 not to improve his lap time and car problems left him third. Kovalainen moved to fourth and Karthikeyan got to fifth. Pla was the best-starting rookie in sixth.[18] Carbone was as high as fourth before coming seventh and Ide fell six places from his provisional grid slot to start eighth. Rounding out the top ten were Jouanny and Hiranaka.[17] Behind them the rest of the field consisted of Antinucci, Doornbos, Courtney, Bremer, Kogure, Kerr, Campaniço, Pavlović, Van Der Merwe, Costa, Derlot, Yoshimoto, Kataoka, Liuzzi, Lee, Citron, Ho, Sato, Lei and Merszei.[4] The session's only other disruption came as Bremer entered the outside of the Reservoir bend and lost control of his car. He crashed sideways into a barrier and inflicted heavy damage to his vehicle's left-hand corner and suspension.[17][18]

Qualifying classification

Each of the driver's fastest lap times from the two qualifying sessions are denoted in bold.

Final qualifying classification
Pos No. Driver Team Q1 Time Rank Q2 Time Rank Gap Grid
1 18 Italy Paolo Montin TOM'S 2:16.668 4 2:14.995 1 1
2 12 France Tristan Gommendy ASM Formule 3 2:16.855 6 2:15.657 6 +0.662 2
3 6 Japan Kosuke Matsuura Prema Powerteam 2:15.768 1 2:15.826 3 +0.773 3
4 21 Finland Heikki Kovalainen Fortec Motorsport 2;16.733 5 2:15.962 4 +0.967 4
5 1 India Narain Karthikeyan Carlin Motorsport 2:16.977 7 2:16.078 5 +1.083 5
6 11 France Olivier Pla ASM Formule 3 2:17.527 9 2:16.098 6 +1.103 6
7 22 Brazil Fábio Carbone Fortec Motorsport 2:18.955 16 2:16.158 7 +1.163 7
8 8 Japan Yuji Ide Signature Team 2:16.586 2 2:16.244 8 +1.249 8
9 26 France Bruce Jouanny Bruce Jouanny 2:17.556 3 2:16.244 9 +1.369 9
10 19 Japan Katsuyuki Hiranaka TOM'S 2:19.088 17 2:16.418 10 +1.423 10
11 27 United States Richard Antinucci Richard Antinucci 2:18.104 12 2:16.481 11 +1.486 11
12 30 Netherlands Robert Doornbos Team Ghinzani 2:17.156 8 2:16.549 12 +1.554 12
13 2 Australia James Courtney Carlin Motorsport 2:16.642 3 2:16.551 13 +1.556 13
14 36 Denmark Ronnie Bremer Ronnie Bremer 30 2:16.665 14 +1.670 14
15 15 Japan Takashi Kogure Mugen x Dome Project 2:18.546 13 2:16.955 15 +1.960 15
16 9 United Kingdom Robbie Kerr Alan Docking Racing 2:20.611 24 2:16.961 16 +1.966 16
17 5 Portugal César Campaniço Prema Powerteam 2:20.048 20 2:17.041 17 +2.047 17
18 17 Serbia and Montenegro Miloš Pavlović Target Racing 2:18.764 14 2:17.336 18 +2.341 18
19 3 South Africa Alan van der Merwe Carlin Motorsport 2:20.043 18 2:17.424 19 +2.429 19
20 31 Spain Marcel Costa Team Ghinzani 2:18.891 15 2:17.531 20 +2.536 20
21 7 France Renaud Derlot Signature Team 2:18.021 11 2.17.706 21 +2.711 21
22 20 Japan Hiroki Yoshimoto Now Motorsport 2:20.045 19 2:17.756 22 +2.761 22
23 33 Japan Tatsuya Kataoka Swiss Racing Team 2:20.538 23 2:17.896 23 +2.901 23
24 28 Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi Kolles Racing 2:21.471 25 2:18.432 24 +3.437 24
25 38 Hong Kong Marchy Lee Marchy Lee 2:20.441 22 2:19.056 25 +4.061 25
26 16 Italy Cristiano Citron Target Racing 2:22.024 26 2:19.875 26 +4.880 26
27 29 Macau Michael Ho Kolles Racing 2:20.368 21 2:20.682 27 +5.373 27
28 32 Japan Shinya Sato Swiss Racing Team 2:22.108 28 13:11.587 30 +7.113 28
29 35 Macau Lei Kit Meng Lei Kit Meng 2:22.354 29 2:23.041 28 +7.359 29
30 10 Macau Jo Merszei Alan Docking Racing 2:25.280 30 2:23.215 29 +8.220 30
110% qualifying time: 2:28.494[4]
Source:[4]
Bold time indicates the faster of the two times that determined the grid order.

Warm-up

A 20-minute warm-up session was held on the morning of the race.[9] Montin set the session's fastest lap of 2:14.494. Karthikeyan was four-hundredths of a second slower in second and Carbone was third. Kataoka was fourth-fastest; his fellow Japanese Kogure was fifth and Doornbos sixth. Kerr was seventh-quickest, Costa eighth and the Japanese duo of Ide and Hiranaka were ninth and tenth.[4]

Race

References

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