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OULTON PARK GOLD CUP 2020


Young guns star at HSCC Gold Cup meeting   Report and images by Paul Lawrence. Click to view Gallery.


Fine racing, an enthusiastic crowd, good weather and some outstanding performances made the Historic Sports Car Club’s Oulton Park Gold Cup, on 29-31 August, a great success.

One of the most prominent historic racing festivals of the season ran successfully within the current COVID-19 restrictions.

From a full 21-race weekend, stand-outs included double wins for young lions Benn Tilley (Classic Formula 3) and Pierre Livingston (Historic Formula Ford), while teenagers Horatio Fitz-Simon (Historic Formula Ford) and Samuel Harrison (Classic Formula Ford) belied minimal car racing experience to show tremendous pace.

Other highlights included a Thundersports victory for local ace Tom Bradshaw (Chevron B19), two Historic Touring Car victories for former rally driver Peter Smith (Lotus Cortina), a Road Sports double for Kevin Kivlochan (Morgan Plus 8 and AC Cobra) and a hard-fought Pre ’66 Jaguar win for Jonathon Hughes. On his first race in the car, Tom Smith took a mighty Aurora Trophy double in the Formula 2 March 742 of Richard Evans, while the return of the ex-Ronnie Peterson March 722 of Nick Pancisi was a real crowd pleaser.

Cam Jackson won three races, including Sunday’s two Formula Junior races which marked 60 years of the category at Oulton Park, and to celebrate this landmark Cam was presented with the famous Gold Cup trophy.


Benn Tilley won twice in Classic Formula 3
Benn Tilley took his F3 double in the ex-Rupert Keegan March 743 but had to work hard in the second race to overcome the fast-starting Ralt RT3 of Steve Maxted. In the concurrent URS Classic FF2000 contest, Ben Stiles survived a broken damper, and the challenge of Tony Hancock (Van Diemen RF82) and Callum Grant (Delta T78), to take two more wins.

Pierre Livingston had a breakthrough weekend in Historic Formula Ford, winning twice against tough opposition. On Sunday, the young student had to contend with a relentless challenge from Linton Stutely (Royale RP3) but held his nerve for a first win in the championship. On Monday he got the jump at the start and immediately broke the tow to his rivals and was able to race clear as Cam Jackson, Stutely and Tom McArthur battled for second.

The HSCC Thundersports grid was a real crowd-pleaser although gearbox problems in qualifying prevented Dean Forward racing the stunning McLaren M8F. His team went back to Huddersfield on Saturday night to collect the Chevron B19 of Jamie Thwaites and Forward started from the back of Sunday’s grid. Up front, Tom Bradshaw dominated the race as Forward battled up to fourth behind Steve Worrad in the Can-Am March 717 and James Claridge (Chevron B23). On Monday, Bradshaw was out on the first lap with broken drive pegs on a rear wheel and Goncalo Gomes took over Claridge’s Chevron to get the better of Forward as Martyn Donn (Coldwell) completed the podium.

Tom Smith had never raced the F2 March 742 of Richard Evans before the weekend but drove superbly to take an Aurora Trophy double. In the opening race, Dan Eagling led the chase in his GRD 273 as Callum Grant took third, first time out in his Formula Atlantic March 79B. On Monday, Eagling was an early retirement so Grant moved up to second in an impressive debut weekend in the car.

The man to beat in the FJHRA/HSCC Silverline Historic Formula Junior Championship continues to be Cam Jackson in his superb Brabham BT2 and he duly made it four wins from four races this season. Major rival Mark Shaw (Brabham BT6) retired from the opener and Clive Richards moved up to second in his Lotus 22.

Kevin Kivlochan had a great day on Sunday, winning both half-hour Road Sports races. In 70s Road Sports, Jeremy Clark out-qualified the Morgan Plus 8 but Kivlochan swept ahead on the first lap rush. The battle for third place was a highlight as John Williams (Porsche 911SC) and Dave Karaskas (TVR 3000M) had a race-long dice and traded the place several times before Williams narrowly took the place.

In the later Historic Road Sports thrash, John Davison chased KK’s AC Cobra early on before retiring with a sticking throttle as a contingent of Morgans packed out a bumper grid. Richard Plant (Morgan Plus 8) ran second for much of the race with Peter Garland’s similar car in pursuit and when Plant retired Garland moved up to second from the Lotus Elan of Jonathan Rose.

Contenders in the HSCC Historic Touring Car Championship had two races on Monday. In the opening race, Philip House led the field home but was handed a 10-second penalty for a false start and so Peter Smith took the win in his Lotus Cortina. Though he has driven rally cars at Oulton Park, this was Smith’s first race at the track and he battled up from eighth on the grid. Later, Smith won again but was almost caught on the line by Richard Belcher, who had worked his Cortina up from the back of the grid after retiring in the first race with a detached fan belt.

Later Touring Cars contested two races for the Dunlop Saloon Car Cup and there was victory in the first race for the fire-breathing Nissan R32 of Ric Wood. Jason Hughes (Vauxhall Vectra) pressed Wood hard in the first race and then won on Monday when Wood retired with a blown turbo and Simon Garrad had to ease his pace in his Nissan.

Andy Newall (Chevron B6) was the class of the Guards Trophy race and saw off the Brands Hatch-winning Chevron B8 of father-and-son Westie and Ben Mitchell, with Charles Allison third from another father-and-son pairing, Hugh and Mark Colman. In the GT division, pit stop penalties came into play but the final result was a win for John Davison (Lotus Elan) over John Spiers (TVR Griffith).

Fresh from a Formula Junior victory at Mallory Park a week earlier, Jonathon Hughes took a hard-earned victory in the hour-long Dunlop Historic Trophy for Pre ’66 Jaguars. For most of the race, Hughes was locked in combat with the similar E-type of Jon Minshaw but after a couple of moments under braking for Lodge, Minshaw eased his pace in the final laps.

There was some tremendous racing in the Classic Formula 1600 Championship, although the first race was lost after two red flags. Stuart Kestenbaum’s Crossle 20F flipped at Hislop’s after a tangle of wheels, but he was thankfully unharmed. When the re-started race was halted for another incident, the race was abandoned. Later on, the second race ran to plan and Cam Jackson (Van Diemen RF80) bagged his third win of the weekend by beating Mike Gardiner (Crossle 32F) by a tenth-of-a-second. Henry Chart (Van Diemen RF81) took third, but only after a big battle with Samuel Harrison (Royale RP29).

Rounding out the weekend was a grid of the Heritage Formula Ford Championship, with an open class added. Jordan Gronkowski won clearly as Tom Brown (Van Diemen RF91) won the Heritage division in second place.