Paddock beats the heat for another top-eight finish at Spa

Paddock Motorsport battled against soaring cockpit temperatures to almost better its best British GT Championship result of the season, again scoring a healthy handful of points in a race of attrition at Spa-Francorchamps last weekend.
With track limits and strategy proving critical in the enduring three-hour contest at the historic Belgian venue, both Mark Smith and Martin Plowman fought cooling issues to drag Paddock’s #9 McLaren 720S GT3 Evo home seventh in the GT3 Pro-Am class, in doing so recording the crew’s third top-eight overall finish of the season.
The ever-improving McLaren pair headed to the Ardennes with hopes of continuing the team’s current strong form following a run of victories in the GT Cup Championship and a host of points scores at the highest level in British GT.
Much of a warm Saturday was spent initially experimenting with set-ups on the 720S to get dialed into the huge 4.3-mile circuit. After curing some initial understeer issues that were holding the car back through the opening sector, Smith and Plowman secured ninth on the grid on combined times, but knew there was more to come as the setup of the #9 constantly evolved.
The temperatures rose for race day, literally, with track readings hitting in excess of 50 degrees by the time the lights went out for the three-hour race. Seven-time GT Cup race winner Smith took the wheel for the rolling start but was squeezed into La Source, the resulting contact deforming the McLaren’s front bumper and blocking the cooling system for the cockpit.
Despite the increasing temperatures around him, Smith went on the offensive, pulling off a superb pass around the outside of Alex Martin’s Lamborghini heading into Pif Paf for seventh. Having climbed two places on the opening tour, Smith’s early charge was briefly interrupted by a scary moment on the exit of the high-speed Blanchimont corner when a snap of oversteer sent him skipping across the gravel. He recovered and only dropped a single spot, handing to Plowman in eighth after the first hour.
A full course yellow to recover a stranded GT4 BMW would normally have presented an ideal opportunity to pit with the race at reduced speed, but with Smith still feeling the effects of his exhaustive mammoth first stint, the team had no choice but to stay out and go for an alternate strategy, running long in the hope a second late caution period would arise.
This brought the Paddock McLaren well up the order, with Plowman running third overall by the time the race restarted after the resulting safety car. Plowman zapped past the Blackthorn Aston Martin of Giacomo Petrobelli to grab second before stopping again to relay Smith, who had managed to recover from a spell of heat exhaustion.
Running out-of-sync meant Smith was put up against the pro drivers for his second stint, but held his own when duelling with the Barwell Lamborghini of Hugo Cook and Optimum McLaren of factory driver Marvin Kirchhöfer for several laps before the pros eventually found a way through.
With no further safety car to help the pair out in the late stages, Smith made his final stop to hand to Plowman for the run to the flag. Despite the troubles, the #9 secured eighth overall and seventh in Pro-Am after being one of only a few cars to remain penalty free across the race.

Mark Smith said: “That was a bit wild! Some good stuff… some bad stuff. I think my main contribution in that first stint was to not giving away a penalty like others were and keeping it on track. It seemed like the conditions were tough and I managed to save a loose moment at Blanchimont. I had to really adjust my approach to a bunch of corners, plus I bumped the Lamborghini at the first turn which affected our cooling system, so when I got out the car I was approaching heat exhaustion. I think we maximised what we had and considering what we came up against this is a good result.”
Martin Plowman said: “That was a hot day! Obviously, we lost the driver cooling after contact at the start, so the cockpit was ‘toasty’, as you might say! Mark got out and wasn’t feeling well so there was a point where he needed to be able to recover before his next stint. It was that that forced us to go off-sequence to the others around us. After my first half-hour in the car I could completely see why Mark felt like he did! I think it was an eventful day – we maybe didn’t have the ultimate pace and were playing catch-up with the setup for a fair chunk of the weekend, but I think we come away with a good result, some more points, and plenty to build on.”
Paddock Motorsport returns to the UK for the second half of the British GT Championship season, next contesting a brace of one-hour Sprint races at the Snetterton 300 circuit over the weekend of 12/13 July.










