Students Head For Historic Encounter
Steep learning curve on Sol Rally Barbados 2008
Eight students from the Oxford Universities Motorsport Foundation
(OUMF) are heading across the Atlantic on Tuesday (May 20)
on a
Virgin Atlantic Airways Boeing 747 to face the challenge of
a
lifetime - they will compete in Sol Rally Barbados 2008 (May
31/June
1), the region's biggest annual international motor sport
event.
Their 1965 Riley 1.5, which has already arrived in the island
on a
Geest Line freighter, is entered in the two-day event's historic
class, in which the opposition includes 1979 World Rally Champion,
Sweden's Bjorn Waldegard, and experienced local co-driver
Michael
Carrington in a Porsche 911. On seeing the entry list, the
enthusiastic OUMF founder and Riley driver Ding Boston said:
"I just
love the historic entry list! We'll have to frame it."
The third car
in the Group is a 1964 Austin Mini Cooper S, driven by Englishman
Steve Wood, with local co-driver Leslie Evanson.
The OUMF trip was initiated by respected British freelance
journalist Martin Sharp, who has been following motor sport
in
Barbados for nearly 20 years; he will again be among the European
media corps arriving Wednesday, having spent just one night
at home
on his return from last weekend's latest round of the World
Rally
Championship in Sardinia.
Sharp says: "I've met Ding at classic events in England,
and what
he's doing without any direct university or government funding
is
remarkable - I admire him for it. My early days were spent
on lathes
and milling machines in the Ford Apprentice School workshops
- all
that stuff gave me a great grounding on what's likely to work,
and
what obviously won't work, and it has stayed with me.
"I realised that, for a few of his students to see
what the
incredibly-resourceful guys in Barbados can do with metal,
machinery
and tools, would be worth so much more to them than theoretical
training. I'm just glad we've been able to pull it off, thanks
to
Greg Cozier, Barbados Rally Carnival and the Barbados Rally
Club."
OUMF is an independent, student-run initiative, providing
the
encouragement and facility for 'hands-on' engineering experience,
something almost completely lacking at either of the city's
two
universities. The students have restored the Riley at their
own
expense, and gained many practical skills in the process.
Boston, a mature Oxford Brookes electrical engineering student,
will have second-year automotive engineering student Jon Puliston
(Winchester) as co-driver; the service crew will comprise
Lars
Brisendal (Norway), Leo Brough (Swindon), Russell Cahill Smith
(London), Tom Dawson (Scotland), Joe Duffy (Dubai) and the
team's
sole female crew member, Hannah Byrd from Guildford.
Boston said: "Industry recognises OUMF as one of the
few
facilities where top undergraduates can bolster their theoretical
learning by gaining practical 'hands-on' engineering skills.
The
opportunity to go to Barbados is the most exciting we have
been
offered, and I believe will help secure the future of the
Foundation
- most important, though, it will provide on-going practical
training
for members of OUMF."
The Riley was found on e-Bay in 2004 - an abandoned wreck
in a
Scottish field - and rebuilt as a practical student project
in a
cowshed in Oxford. Since then, it has had five rally outings,
but Sol
Rally Barbados will be its greatest test . . . not to mention
the
small matter of taking Ding Boston on former World Rally Champion
Waldegard!
Greater support for marshals, thanks to Sol and the Barbados
Rally Club
The willingness of volunteers to give freely of their time
and
energies in support of Sol Rally Barbados 2008 was recognised
on
Thursday evening (May 15) during the final Marshals Briefing
in
advance of this year's event, as samples of the equipment
that will
be distributed to all marshals over rally weekend were handed
over to
the Stage Commanders.
Working together, the sponsors and the organising Club have
sourced both safety items - safety scissors, clearly-marked
bright
shirts and tabards and whistles - and equipment to made the
two long
days in the hot sun more comfortable to bear, including coolers,
caps
and umbrellas. In addition, the Club has invested in 12 tents,
which
will be stationed at stage starts and finishes, to protect
not only
the marshals and timing crews, but also their valuable equipment.
Come rally weekend, the marshals will also receive a number
of
products from event marketing partner B&B Distribution
to keep them
cool and refreshed.
Sol's Group Marketing and Communications Manager Aymara
Cummins
said: "The marshals and other volunteers are the backbone
of any big
motor sport event like this. Sol is very pleased to be able
to make a
direct contribution to providing for them in ways that will
help them
work more efficiently and in greater safety but, just as important,
in more comfort."
BRC Chairman Mark Hamilton added: "Our marshals who
work the all-
day stages will be at their posts for anything up to 12 hours,
so it
is only right that we should do our best to provide for them.
The
long-term commitment from Sol has given the Club a chance
to invest
in some capital equipment, which we can build on in years
to come."
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