Consistency pays for Paddock across challenging British GT season opener

Mark Smith and Martin Plowman beat the odds to bank a healthy points score across the opening race of the British GT season at Silverstone last weekend, with the Paddock Motorsport team overcoming a string of challenges to make the result possible.
An overnight turbo change was required to get the #9 McLaren 720S GT3 Evo race-ready for Sunday and, despite an ongoing battle to get the car back into its optimal performance window, Smith and Plowman fought their way from the back of the grid to finish ninth overall and an impressive fifth in the GT3 Pro-Am category.
The showpiece three-hour Silverstone 500 weekend began with the team adapting the McLaren's setup to the 3.6-mile track's fast sweeps. Despite strong pace in pre-season testing, a change of conditions on the day made this more difficult, forcing the Paddock engineers to revise a host of settings to try and restore a solid handling balance. While they succeeded, a different issue hamstrung the team’s qualifying efforts when a turbo cracked and required a full replacement.

The change of components meant the #9 would be dumped to the back of the GT3 field for race day, meaning Smith and Plowman would need to produce a mighty charge if they were to salvage anything from the weekend. Fortunately, Silverstone’s three hours are rarely straightforward, and some flawless strategy and consistent stints helped put Paddock back at the sharp end.
Smith took the start from 18th and immediately made progress, working his way up to 15th by the end of the first lap before settling into a tight battle with the Rodin Motorsport Ferrari and both the #90 Optimum and #69 Mahiki Racing McLarens. Smith got the better of all of them, surging up to 12th before handing to Plowman with a perfectly timed first stop under a safety car period.
While Plowman was installed and sent out on fresh Pirellis, the McLaren was still carrying an issue that sapped its straight-line speed. The team instead had to focus on maximising what performance it had, and Plowman continued the forward momentum until another caution period presented a golden opportunity for a second short stop.
The team timed the driver change perfectly and after some great pit work Smith rejoined in fifth, a place he held until relaying Plowman one final time inside the final 40 minutes. Had it not been for one final safety car benefitting rivals who had gambled on staying out, and a gaggle of slower GT4 cars baulking Plowman when racing resumed for a final time, the team could have walked away with what would have been considered an incredible result given the circumstances. As it was Plowman fought home ninth overall and fifth in Pro-Am. However, with some cars ahead being guest entries and not scoring points, Smith and Plowman actually bagged overall points for seventh, and fourth in Pro-Am, representing a solid score from an otherwise challenging weekend.
Mark Smith said: “Considering our car was probably the slowest GT3 on track, the result is incredibly positive. We’re not really sure what the issue is, and it certainly isn’t something we’ve had before but I know the team will investigate it and get to the bottom of it. The balance actually felt great, it was just that we couldn’t get the lap time that we’re a little confused about. But we did OK for not being able to go fast! It was an exercise in producing a clean race. We weren’t penalised for anything and the team did a great job on every pit stop, and that helped us bank some good points.”
Martin Plowman added: “It’s a positive result given what we had today. But we need to go back to the drawing board to work out why the car was out of the window. We started the weekend competitive and then little things snuck up on us and we struggled for race pace. We need to investigate as we had to swap engines before the season started anyway as a precaution, so we’ll leave no stone unturned in finding the weakness. While the speed was disappointing, the way we executed the race was superb. Operationally, it was probably the best we’ve done in our years of competing in this race, so we’ll happily take the points and move forward.”
Paddock Motorsport is next in action for the second British GT round at Oulton Park over May 23-25.













