Last weekend’s 2011 Renault Knysna Hillclimb formed the grand finale in the week-long Knysna Speed Festival, which was filled with all kinds of motoring competition ranging from karting to slot-car racing, car shows, a soap-box derby and more. Now in its third year, and with growing sponsorship, including that of title sponsor’s Renault, we’re pleased to see the event going from strength-to-strength in all areas.
Although held in October last year, this year the organisers elected to hold the event in May to capitalise on warmer and dryer weather. The strategy worked, with a weekend of sunshine and partly cloudy conditions for Sunday’s finals. As a result, spectators poured into a new and much improved parking area at Simola Resort to witness the action – 6 000 motorsport enthusiasts enjoyed the qualifying on Saturday alone.
Last year’s winner, Geoff Mortimer, returned to defend his title in his bright yellow Mitsubishi Evo IX, but with a pack of Nissan GT-Rs in the hunt for victory, including a TopSecret tuned R34 with 735 kW (1 000 Hp), it was never going to be easy. Saturday’s practice confirmed this, with Mortimer trailing by 0.205 seconds in second position in a Nissan GT-R sandwich. As the weekend progressed and the drivers got into their rhythms, the King Of The Hill title looked headed for one of three men – Mortimer, last year’s runner-up Wilhelm Baard, and Jade Gudzeit, who was just managing to keep his father, Des, at bay.
And so it proved to be…Just after lunch on the Sunday, the fastest cars in each class had a final run up the demanding and spectacularly fast 1.9 km Simola Hill, with Wilhelm Baard throwing down the gauntlet needing just 42.444 seconds to crest the hill. Father and son, Des and Jade Gudzeit, soon followed and while Des failed to break into the 42-second bracket, Jade managed a 42.659 second run, placing him in second position, two-tenths off Wilhelm. All eyes were on 74-year-old Geoff Mortimer as he lined up on the starting line to begin his run. Spectators held their breath waiting for announcer Roger McCleery to give his time – 43.108 seconds, good enough for a very respectable third place in a 80-strong entry list that featured some very serious machinery in 2011.
So a very emotional Wilhelm Baard became the third King Of The Hill, a highly popular climax to what has been an exciting festival of speed in the Garden Route’s award-winning town of Knysna.
Results | |||
Pos. | Driver | Car | Time (secs) |
1 | Wilhelm Baard | Nissan GT-R | 42.444 |
2 | Jade Gudzeit | Nissan GT-R | 42.659 |
3 | Geoff Mortimer | Mitsubishi Evo IX | 43.108 |
4 | Des Gudzeit | Nissan GT-R | 43.558 |
4 | Greg Parton | Nissan GT-R | 44.741 |
Renault South Africa also took the opportunity to launch their new GT-Line range of Megane models, as well as the Renault Clio Gordini RS and were well represented on the course, running two events within an event, in the form of the Brat Pack Challenge and Gordini Media Challenge. Mike Briggs, Geoff Goddard, Deon Joubert, Robbi Smith and Duncan Vos, known as ‘The Brat Pack’ in the days of SA’s national touring car championship during the 1990s, along with former SA Production Car driver Phillip Kekana, competed in Megane RS Cup cars over the weekend. Multiple champion Deon Joubert took top honours managing a fastest time of 49.710 seconds, followed by Mike Briggs (50.375) and Robbie Smith (50.690). The Renault Gordini Media Challenge saw local media racing up the hill in the new, blue, Renault Clio Gordini RS, with Ashley Oldfield from TopCar managing the fastest time of the weekend with 53.422 seconds.