Mason Day One Leader at Rally of Otago
Mason Day One Leader at Rally of Otago
Masterton husband and wife rally team
Richard and Sara Mason have a sizable 53.2 second lead in
the DriveSouth Rally of Otago after 10 high-speed stages
held mainly north of host city Dunedin.
Contesting
the third round of the 2012 Brian Green New Zealand Rally
Championship, powered by Brother, the event started with
three stages held south of the city on the Friday night with
Saturday’s seven high-speed tests located in northern
Otago.
In a day described by the competing crews as
New Zealand’s version of Finland with its high-speed
crests and jumps, the Mason’s extended their overnight
35.5 second leading margin after setting fastest time in a
total of six special stages. Timaru’s Chris West and
co-driver Chris Cobham won two of the stages and currently
sit second overall with Rotorua brother and sister pairing
Sloan and Tarryn Cox in third, 5.3 seconds behind
West.
“There was some crazy fast stuff,”
explained Richard Mason. “Although the average speeds
weren’t ridiculously high there were some very fast
sections – and that made it a real challenge to drive
ten/tenths. But the end result was everything we could ask
for really - we’re looking forward to tomorrow and
protecting our lead in the rally.”
Local Emma Gilmour
and co-driver Anthony McLaughlin set fastest time in the
mornings second special stage and is placed
fourth.
However it was a dramatic crash by
championship series leader’s Alex Kelsey and Raymond
Bennett that forced the cancellation of what was to have
been the morning’s second special stage – the 27.21km
Golden Bar. Seriously damaging their Subaru STI, the
assistance rendered by following crews forced the stage to
be abandoned. Kelsey and Bennett later thanked their rivals
personally for ensuring they were safe after they had rolled
more than 100metres from the road’s
edge.
“It’s never nice to come across a
competitor in trouble,” added Mason, who was first car on
the scene. “Along with getting to the car and making sure
they were okay we had to warn the cars following – while
also trying to notify the organisers. Everybody that turned
up worked as a well-oiled machine to help out – and I
guess shows the camaraderie in the sport. We were just glad
they were okay – as an accident like that is easy to come
by if you push too hard, or not hard enough – it’s so
easy to make a mistake.”
Kaipoi’s Marcus van
Klink and co-driver Dave Neill lead the two-wheel and
historic honours – after dropping much of his advantage in
a couple of spins around the Dunedin street super special
stage late in the day.
Phil Campbell and Venita
Fabbro from Tauranga are second in their Ford Fiesta with
the Hayabusa powered Starlet of Palmerston North’s Tony
McConachy and co-driver Simon Johnstone third two-wheel
drive of the championship cars.
Tauranga’s Dave
and James Holder finished fourth for the day in their Stella
Traffic Toyota Levin, having clean jumped their car across a
farm fence and in to the paddock before exiting through a
nearby gate.
Sunday’s remaining six special
stages take the crews south where they will cover a further
132 kilometres of flowing Otago gravel that concludes with
the 12.76km Waipori Gorge ‘power stage’.
The
crews then travel to Dunedin’s historic railway station
for a ceremonial finish at 3:10pm.
News and
information about the championship – including driver
profiles and team news – can be found on the website www.nzrallychampionship.conz,
or follow New Zealand Rally Championship on Facebook.
ENDS