Sievwright Blasting Panel Paint 2017 KartSport New Zealand National Sprint Championships
KartSport Southland's Invercargill Oil Shop Kart Raceway
Sandy Point Domain
Invercargill
Fri-Sun
April 14-16
2017
16-04-17
EVENT REPORT
HEDGE AND KINSMAN DO THE DOUBLE AT NATIONAL KART CHAMPS IN INVERCARGILL
Karters Daniel Kinsman and Callum Hedge came away with two class titles apiece at this year's Sievwright Blasting Panel
Paint KartSport New Zealand National Sprint Championships meeting in Invercargill over the weekend.
The Auckland pair were dominant in their respective classes at the biggest meeting on the New Zealand KartSport
calendar, held over three days (Fri-Sun) at the KartSport Southland club's Invercargill Oil Shop Raceway on Sandy Point
Domain.
Kinsman won the 2017 New Zealand 125cc Rotax Max Light title on Saturday and the New Zealand Senior 100cc Yamaha one on
Sunday while Hedge won the 2017 New Zealand Junior 100cc Yamaha title on Saturday then the New Zealand Junior 125cc
Rotax one on Sunday.
Making it particularly special for the Kinsman family, Daniel's older brother and Sodi Kart team teammate, Mathew, won a
title of his own on Sunday - the 2017 New Zealand Rotax DD2 one - and finished second to his brother in both the 125cc
Rotax Max Light class Final on Saturday and - after a titanic, race-long, battle with Christchurch driver Jared Cleghorn
only resolved on the last lap and with just two corners to go - in the Senior 100cc Yamaha Final, on Sunday.
"I'm stoked to win two titles and genuinely happy for Mat too," Daniel said afterwards.
Fair enough too, as Mathew came back from a spectacular gearbox blow in the Rotax DD2 class Pre-Final and back row start
in the Final to work his way to the front and eventually win the race from experienced Final pole man Ryan Urban, and
class young guns CJ Sinclair from Auckland, Sam Waddell from Tauranga and Ryan Yardley from Christchurch.
With his come-from-behind win Mat Kinsman also evened a score with brother Dan - the pair have now won seven national
sprint titles apiece.
Fellow Aucklander Ryan Urban did not go away from the meeting empty handed either, having already claimed his ninth NZ
National Sprint title in the 125cc Rotax Max class Final on Saturday.
It was a close-run thing, with Dunedin's Aaron Black and Palmerston North's Ashley Higgins closing ominously on the
final three laps, but Urban managed to stay in front until the chequered flag came out.
"I made a bit of a balls-up with my tyre pressures, so I am pretty happy with the result. I certainly didn't make it
easy for myself," he admitted afterwards.
In the other Senior class contested on Sunday, Open, the NZ title went to Palmerston North teenager Jacob Cranston,
after a drama-filled Final.
Christchurch ace Matthew Hamilton led out early on in a twin-engined kart he and his father John have developed over a
number of years only to retire after just six laps. That left fellow front row starter, former Southland man Mark Elder,
in the lead in his own, self-developed twin-engine kart.
He crossed the finish line with a comfortable margin on Cranston too, only to cop a 10-second penalty for a jumped
start, relegating him to fourth place in the results behind Cranston, Matthew Butchart from Nelson and Chris Cox from
Rangiora.
In the other Junior class contested on Sunday, Cadet ROK, the Final win and with it the 2017 NZ national sprint title
went to reigning South Island champion Louis Sharp after first-past-the-post Tom Bewley from the Hawke's Bay was
excluded afterwards over a technical infringement.
Emerson Vincent from Pukekohe did well to work his way up to third at the line then inherit second place after spinning
and dnfing the Pre-Final, meaning he started the Final from the back row of the grid.
The big story on the first day of competition on Saturday was young gun Dylan Drysdale's win - against class titans
Daniel Bray and Matthew Hamilton no less - in the 125cc/6-speed gearbox KZ2 class.
Hamilton, the defending class title holder and fastest qualifier this year, and former class champ and 2016 runner-up
Bray, shared the front row of the grid for the Final. But as the field lined up for the standing start Hamilton stalled.
Because the field was already under starter's orders Hamilton had to sit helplessly and watch as the lights went out and
the rest of the field ducked around him before he could get out and give his kart a push start.
"My mistake" he said afterwards. "We had the pace (as he proved by working his way back up to third by the time the
chequered flag came out) but it was not to be, so we will have to come back and try again next year."
With Hamilton out it looked initially like Bray would catch and pass class new boy Drysdale and go on to claim the
title. But with a clear track in front of him Drysdale eased away from his N-Zed Motorsport/GP Karts teammate (and team
boss!) Bray and - before they were caught and passed by Hamilton - Aaron Marr, James Blair and Bailey Paterson.
In the first of two Junior class Finals run on Saturday Callum Hedge claimed his first title win of the weekend with
victory in 100cc Junior Yamaha over defending title holder Jaden Ransley and young Auckland driver Ryan Crombie.
In the other (Junior class Final) Christchurch youngster Jacob Douglas earned himself a trip to the ROK Cup
International Finals in Italy in October by leading home Clay Osborne from Hamilton and 2016 South Island title holder
Zac Christensen in Vortex Mini ROK.
Douglas spent the early part of the race battling with poleman Dylan Grant from Auckland in the Final but Grant was
later excluded due to a technical infringement, elevating Osborne to second, Christensen to third and guaranteeing
Douglas his first NZ Sprint title and trip to Italy for the ROK Cup event later this year.
Finally the best performance by a locally-based KartSport Southland club member was put in by Geoege Keast from
Invercargill who finished fifth in 125cc Rotax Max Heavy and sixth in Senior 100cc Yamaha.
Ends