Milligan fastest, focussed on title

| Photographer Credit: Bruce Jenkins

Christchurch driver Jack Milligan has run fastest in today’s practice sessions for the final round of the 2017-2018 Toyota 86 Championship at Hampton Downs in the northern Waikato.

Throughout the three practice sessions Milligan swapped times with arch rival Tom Alexander as he has for most of this season, but his 1:15.754 set in cool air this morning stands as the fastest TR86 lap of the day. Former Cantabrian Alexander posted a 1:15.813 in the same session, with another Christchurch driver, Jaden Ransley, third on 1:15.927.

“I’ll take that, it’s good to get the speed right here and I’m pleased with our progress,” he said afterward.

“I’m focused on our car and making it the best weapon it can be, so I’ll leave other people to their own battles,” he said.

Like Milligan, Alexander says he is focused on getting his car’s set-up right for the coming races and won’t be drawn into ‘head games’ by other competitors.

Michael Scott, second in the championship, struggled all day with understeer which his crew were unable to completely tune out of his car. Major changes to set-up brought the car briefly as high as fifth fastest in the last of three sessions but he dropped to eighth as others went quicker.

Only three drivers – Milligan, Alexander and Jaden Ransley – managed to break into the 1:15 second bracket in the first session. No drivers managed to lap under 1:16 as track temperatures rose for the noon and afternoon sessions.

The final race weekend of the 2017-2018 Toyota 86 Championship continues on Saturday with qualifying in the form of two back to back sessions starting at 10:40 am, while the first race is at 3:48 pm (10 laps).

The final two races of the Championship take place on Sunday at 10:40 am (10 laps, partial reverse grid) and 3:18 pm (15 laps)

Mark Baker has been working in automotive PR and communications for more than two decades. For much longer than that he has been a motorsport journalist, photographer and competitor, witness to most of the most exciting and significant motorsport trends and events of the mid-late 20th Century. His earliest memories of motorsport were trips to races at Ohakea in the early 1960s, and later of annual summer pilgrimages to watch Shellsport racers and Mini 7s at Bay Park and winter sorties into forests around Kawerau and Rotorua to see the likes of Russell Brookes, Ari Vatanen and Mike Marshall ply their trade in group 4 Escorts. Together with Murray Taylor and TV producer/director Dave Hedge he has been responsible for helping to build New Zealand’s unique Toyota Racing Series into a globally recognized event brand under category managers Barrie and Louise Thomlinson. Now working for a variety of automotive and mainstream commercial clients, Mark has a unique perspective on recent motor racing history and the future career paths of our best and brightest young racers.

Related Stories

Join in the conversation!


Comments