27.8.13

3rd Annual Williams Challenge - Thunder Karting - Thruxton

20th October 2013 - reporter: John Williams
The 3rd annual Williams challenge was launched on a wet October weekend At Thruxton racetrack in Hampshire. In a departure from previous years, contenders exchanged fishing rods for driving gloves and took to the circuit for a day’s karting. And this year, some new players entered the fold: Judd’s mate Rob Douglas, Luke’s mate Chris Burnett and our own young nephew Paul Buxton.

On the Saturday we convened at our rented cottage in the Cathedral city of Salisbury and readied ourselves for the next day’s challenge the way all professional racing drivers do - with several pints of beer and a curry. We started in the well-recommended Cloisters’ pub for some lunch and a couple of pints, and here we picked up contender Adam Gibbs, the man who was soon to be married to our sister, Marie. For this reason Adam was subject to some special treatment throughout the weekend, but more on that later.

As we wondered through the damp streets of Salisbury looking for the next pub, Jake stumbled upon a sign. No, he literally stumbled upon a sign, much to the amusement of Adam and myself and a couple of old timers stood outside the nearest pub. He’d had 2 pints and a glass of red so we should have expected as much, but brother Jake’s inability to hold his liquor did not detract from him being an arbiter of fate – we’ve always said this. So we decided to head into that very pub outside which he stumbled. Inside it looked like a local pub for local people, but it also looked happy for our business and lent us some darts.

At this point more contenders arrived, Brothers Sam and Chris and Dad, and also brother Judd, fresh in from Dubai. As the night wore on, we found ourselves in several more bars, and at one point lost Adam, our future brother-in-law. There was worry that he’d succumbed to mother alcohol and was in a the cathedral grounds on his knees praying to Saint Chunder, or that he’d simply got the measure of us all in drunken disarray and simply done one. However it turns out that he had just gone to the shop for some chewing gum. So we ended up in a curry house, where Adam had song lyrics read to him, masquerading as good will speeches for the wedding, however the game was that if anybody should break into song on hearing these lyrics, they would have to drink. And this form of preparation is widely practiced in Formula 1 before any Grand Prix, so we knew we were on to a good thing.

The Racing
We arrived at Thruxton under dark ominous looking rain clouds, took our short training instruction and donned our race overalls. The clouds then emptied relentlessly for the next 4 hours. We headed out for our first practise session and all bravado and posturing of the night before was sent spinning into the crash barriers – It was clear slick tyres and a greasy track meant we were going to have to revise our ambitions; a fast lap meant simply finishing a lap.

After convening for a short break and wringing out the water from our racing gloves, we asked for some tactics from one of the stewards and headed out for the first timed practice. We faired little better this time as the rain continued to lash down, but with the help of the stopwatch, at least we could deduce who was doing the least shit and leverage a sense of one-upmanship from that.

So the results for practice 2:
In 4th place was brother Sam, a trained police driver no less. 3rd was brother Chris, 2nd was Chris Burnett and in 1st was Rob Douglas. Now the rules state that only a Williams by blood or marriage can win the Williams cup (of course others can attend, they just can’t win –seems fair, I know) so in front at this time was brother Chris, but it was very early stages.

Qualifying Heat 1:
Onto the first qualifying session for the actual Grand Prix and there is no let up in the rain; by now the track is starting to look like the lanes in Stolford, with huge areas of standing water. We headed off for more racing action again, punctuated by several crashes and spins and once out of the karts, we looked very much like we had gone fishing again this year (and all fallen in).

The Results: Rocketing up from last (10th) place in the practice session was Adam Gibbs, who achieved a brilliant 4th position. Next, making it up one position from practice to 3rd was brother Sam. Meanwhile, brother Chris, who had done so well in practice, had dropped from 3rd position to a disappointing 6th. But up the front, swapping places with each other from last time, were Rob and Chris in 2nd and 1st respectively.

At this point it’s worth noting that many of the contenders were starting to feel the strain from the previous nights preparations. Brother Luke had to make a few trips to the bathroom between each heat to talk tactics with the toilet bowl.

Qualifying Heat 2:
So now to the final qualifying session and the race that would determine our positions for the Grand Prix. By now the rain had subsided, but there was still plenty of standing water on the track. We started from the grid this time and after another rain soaked action packed race, the final positions stood thus:

In 4th pace, clawing his way back up the pack was brother Chris, a much-improved performance from the previous race. In 3rd place with very consistent racing was Brother Sam, but in second, making significant progress up the rankings was Adam Gibbs –were we about to see a sneaky triumph from the back of the grid from our new brother-in-law? Only time would tell. Up in first was the consistently well performing Rob Douglas, who a betting man would put odds on for victory in the Final. The surprise here, however, was Chris Burnett, who after achieving podium finishes in all previous races, was now languishing down in 9th, only beating our youngest contender at 16, Paul Buxton. Now Paul deserves special mention here. Last place, may sound like a disappointing result on paper, but if you could see the style in which it was attained, you would see his efforts were extremely worthy and aligned with the ethos of the AWCC. That ethos is that above all else, the AWCC should be a bloody good laugh. And when Paul explained the look on Marshall’s face when he jumped for his life, you could see that he’d nailed it. While consistency and clean driving were winning the races, Paul selflessly treated the crowd to what they’d actually come to see - a spectacular crash. And by losing it at the fastest part of the track, wedging his car under the tire wall, nearly wiping out a Marshall and giving us the only Red flag of the day, Paul was in many ways, winning.

The Grand Prix
So to the final, the decider that would determine this year’s winner of the AWCC. Was two times winner brother Jake going to be handing over the cup to a new reigning champion? Of course he was, he hadn’t even made it into the top four during the previous races. I don’t mean to be harsh, but facts are facts and the clock doesn’t lie. Rob Douglas was looking like the bookies choice to win, but his bloodline unfortunately excludes him from the ultimate prize. So would it be between brother Chris and brother Sam, or would Adam Gibbs, come racing into the family covered in glory (and possibly a little resentment). Anything could happen.

So we started from the grid again, and this time the track had dried out a bit more. The result was that all achieved better times and faster speeds. However, this is my time to gloat a little, as the chief reporter on the days activities, I’d like to point out that the fastest lap time and fastest speed during the final was achieved by me. (1.20.06 and 37.6mph respectively) A little consistency may have seen me closer to a podium finish, but hey. So let’s run down the complete grid from last to first and reveal the winner of this year’s Annual Williams Challenge Cup.

In 10th place a surprising result for a very credible contender for the podium, Adam Gibbs. Adam claimed that his car was significantly slower than everyone else’s, and having driven the notorious number 18 kart myself, I could confirm that his car was in fact a heap of crap. However the fact remains that a bad workman blames his tools, so better luck next time.

In 9th place was nephew Paul Buxton, who being the youngest racer of the day and continuing after a huge accident in the second qualifying heat is to be applauded for his result. No doubt in a year or so, he’ll be whipping our arses and will consequently be disqualified from future challenges for taking the fun out of it.

In 8th brother Luke, who despite being so hungover his own driving made himself vomit, achieved a reasonable finish on the day.

7th was brother Jake, winner for the last two years who would now graciously hand the cup over. Again I think he was suffering from overdoing race preparations the previous night.

In 6th place was Chris Burnett, who was doing so well with two podium finishes in the earlier races. Settling in the middle of the results table, it is suspected that he also was victim of a delayed hangover.

In 5th place was Brother John with a few moments of brilliance, but not enough of them to get a sniff at the podium.

4th place, and a surprise here, a contender who has yet to get a mention: Brother Judd. Returning a middle of the table performance in the previous sessions, Judd turned up the heat in the final to finish a whisker off the podium.

So to the podium. In 3rd place it’s a Williams, but have they won the Cup? All the way over from Australia it’s brother Chris. A consistently good performance throughout the day secured him a superb result. Well done. So two positions left and two drivers: Sam Williams and Rob Douglas. I don’t know why I’m trying to rack up the tension at this point, as you were all there and so you all know the result.


Sam wins the 2013 AWCC,

But does he win it with a 2nd or 1st place? Well it was neck and neck until the last corner, Rob slightly had the edge, but as he felt the grip of his back tyres vanish, he knew that he’d over cooked it. And it must have been with a tear in his eye that he saw Sam sailing past to take the chequered flag. All that police training finally won out in the end and Sam was crowned the winner. Champagne was sprayed, hands were shook and we all headed back to the cottage for a Roast cooked by the team Chef, Dad.

Until next year…

18.8.13

2nd Annual Williams Challenge Cup (AWCC) - Sea Fishing, Mudeford, Dorset - Sunday 19th August 2012

The 2nd Williams challenge went ahead on a glorious weekend in Mudeford and fulfilled all expectations for this fledgling annual event in only its second year.  A late start on the Saturday night saw the competitors depart for the traditional rule making meetings in the local bars of Southampton. Confident local man and competition virgin Adam Gibbs acted as guide for the evening, escorted by his personal fishing mascot Marie. 

A fistful of beers and some debate later it was agreed the Cup completion should be decided by the absent organiser and occupational law maker Sam. A phone call found him lounging in a Scottish lodge overlooking a fine loch. The Law man graciously approved the formula of Quantity x Species for the cup competition and also passed snippets of fishing wisdom to the messenger which were immediately forgotten thanks to the pint count at 1145pm (hence not shared with the whole group!!).   Various side bets and were subsequently proposed by Judd as he realised his options to maximise his winnings were heavily impacted by this non-traditional surprise format.  Only the fresher (Adam) and the young (Chris) took him up on his offer of biggest fish for a fiver, the rest being wise to his tactics.   A late curry in a house evidently accustomed to drunks and strays, saw off the evening.

Jake, the reigning champion of the Williams Cup, was relieved to return from the night with the aforementioned cup still in his grasp, as earlier whilst exclaiming how difficult it would be to prise from him, it was snatched from his hands with some ease by the elder statesman of this year’s event, Judd (the only competitor over 40!). 

An early start on the Sunday morning saw breakfast skipped by most as we whisked through the empty roads of the new forest on what was already a blistering hot day. Fuelled only by midnight Curry and fresh morning coffee, it was a ‘Windows down’ journey for more than one reason (especially for those in the car with John!).
                                            
Arriving in good time and after picking up supplies there were a few tense moments while John conversed with an automated parking ticket service but otherwise all were fit.  We met Andy and Jamie, the Skippers of our boat, ‘The Offshore Rebel’ and were ferried out to the competition fishing grounds just north of the Needles. After distribution of score cards, the first Lines were dropped in and the 2nd Annual Williams Challenge Cup. (AWCC) was underway.

The onboard ‘Fish finder’ radar and an experienced skipper ensured we all started strongly and very quickly the Mackerel were flopping onto the deck in twos and threes.  Positioned on the Starboard side, Jake and Luke had the run of the shoals and started to stretch away from the rest hitting 20 fish before the stern (Adam and Judd) had reached a tally worth bothering the score card for.  Chris and John on the port side were middle runners at this stage. 

Jake landed the first fish and quickly another, becoming the first competition leader, telling signs of his fierce intent for the day.   Up to 20 fish Jake had stayed ahead of the rest but shortly after Luke started pulling in 3’s and 4’s at a time and opened up a 3 fish gap from Jake, becoming the second competition leader by the time we moved off to go for something bigger.

During the short transit to another spot, the Skipper sparked a stewards enquiry into the current rankings by pointing out that Luke’s line was rigged with 5 feathers where as all the others were using only 3. Hollers and shouts of unfair advantage and dirty tactics fell on deaf ears as Luke proclaimed his innocence and unawareness of the disparity.  When the skipper suggested a 5% point’s penalty, it was met with cheers of agreement especially from the back runners in the field!  The issue was parked, but was sure to be resurrected if the final rankings were within the ludicrous 5% bracket!        

Before baiting began for the big fish (rag worm, mackerel and squid were available) a couple of notable things happened.  Firstly, Jake to the annoyance of most appointed himself the onboard commentator. Using a pencil for a microphone he embarked on a rambling broadcast style update. Most of the competitors noticed the pencil mic was particularly sharp and could have been put to a much better use as far as Jake was concerned!   Secondly, given our previous nights exploits the onboard WC had been a welcome site for most, unfortunately this was short lived as the first occupant (anon.) rendered it a hazardous no go area due to toxic fumes.  

The second spell of fishing had begun and like the seagulls above us the competitors swooped on the bait table and dropped our lines into the very heavy current sweeping past.   A quite patch spent admiring the great views and basking in the sunshine on a dead calm sea was only interrupted by a truly awful joke relayed by the senior Skipper Andy. Everyone politely chuckled at the punch line and wondered if this was the way he entertained the punters when nothing was biting.  Thankfully before the next cracker! The wait was broken by Chris hooking our first Bream of the day, doubling his species count and notching up the 3rd Competition leader change of the day. It was clear the winner could come from any quarter at this stage. Despite the relief and brief excitement no one was able to follow up Chris’s catch so a vote proposed, seconded and agreed essentially by Judd in a one man conversation, resulted in a change of location.

In retrospect the new site proved to be as useful as the first as far as catching fish was concerned but never-the-less it broke the dry patch and gave Jake another opportunity to get out his pencil and try some more amateur commentary, no doubt attempting to psyche out the competition as he threw all he had at the task in hand.   Worth noting at this point that some of the competitors were only a single fish or species away from the lead, while others languishing at the back had already started focusing on the side bets.

It was a change in the tide and subsequent weakening of the current that finally broke quiet spell.  The Bream were partial to the Rag worm and after Chris had shown the way, most competitors had braved this particularly aggressive bait and it started to reap rewards.  Adam sitting on a low twenties Mackerel score pulled in the second bream of the day doubling his total and edging in front of Chris whom while holding 2 species already, only had a high teens mackerel haul pushing him into second.  It was John’s turn to secure the lead when at first he teased the group with a caught but not landed juvenile bream, which was disqualified, then followed up with a second, caught and netted.  We were three quarters through the challenge, 6 competitors and 5 different leaders so far. Was Judd about to complete the set and steal a last gasp victory??    ....Apparently Not.    
No sooner had John scooped the lead when Adam snatched it back with another bite on the line. Anything other than a Mackerel or Bream would treble his score putting him potentially in an unassailable lead. Even one of the aforementioned would still give him the lead but only by a cat’s whisker!!  As the catch was scooped into the net the collective group held their breath......It was a Bream. Game on.
 
With only half an hour remaining the mood changed to one of intense concentration. Clearly the fish were there for the taking and the thought of any of the Williams boys relinquishing the Challenge Cup to the new comer was a galling one. Throwing everything into the ring, Judd repeatedly raised hopes by fighting various fish only to bring nothing back to the boat.  Chris, in a tactical move to edge back into the lead, switched his line back to feathers to try and boost his score. 3 Mackerel would have earned him 6 more points giving a 2 point lead but alas the move was in vain as he returned to the baited line after only a single catch.  Both Luke and Jake also tried the mackerel lines in the short time left but nothing bit. Luke’s spell on the feathers was a frustrating one as the junior skipper (Jamie) having hopped on to Luke’s baited line, proved there might actually be some skill required here by pulling in a Bream of his own! 
 
With only 10 minutes of fishing left, Adam’s vision of victory was dashed as the reigning champion of the AWCC showed what it takes by catching a new comer to the Species chart, a fine Dog Fish.  It was only a second species for Jake but enough to leap frog him into a commanding lead. Only a 3rd species from Adam, John or Chris or 2nd from Luke would be enough to snatch back the Victory.  For the second time Adam had heart’s pumping when he pulled in his 3rd Bream of the day but it was not enough.  
“Time Gentlemen please” from the Skipper ended the Competition and sent Jake into a victory dance around the boat with a rendition of ‘we are the Champions’ being played out in his ear via Adams phone.  An Epic battle on a glorious summer’s day had resulted in a worthy (and mildly smug) 2012 AWCC champion.
Returning to shore the post competition lunch was a hearty one as local restaurant ‘the Jetty’ kindly cooked up a tray of our Mackerel haul as an appetiser. Not wanting to award the Cup to himself Jake received it from Luke and the Traditional names in a hat for next year’s challenge organiser were drawn.  John will take the honour for 2013.
 
After a cooling dip in the Sea the competitors bade farewell and went on their way.
.......till next year.
 

17.8.13

1st Annual Williams Challenge - Fly Fishing on Rutland Water - Thursday, 9 June 2011

What an absolutely fabulous weekend Jake had prepared for us! Sam drove Mum and I to Rutland, starting at 5.30 am on Saturday morning. After missing our turning for the M6 and nearly hitting Nottingham we arrived at the lake about an hour late but a very good natured trainer made us feel very welcome and soon had us casting onto grass at the lakeside. After an Italian lunch we spent the afternoon putting our training into practise and Judd caught the first catch of the day soon followed by a second. At the end of the day we checked into a plush hotel, freshened up and taxied into Oakham where some liquid refreshment was followed by an extremely nice curry.
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Sunday turned out to be too windy for fly fishing so we resorted to trawling the lines behind the boats as the wind blew them across the water. However, one needs weighted lines to do this successfully and these were in short supply so innovative solutions, such as restaurant cutlery pretending to be fishing weights resulted. The catch numbered 9 (I think) and the awards of largest fish caught, highest weight of catch per boat and highest weight of catch per person went to Rob, Judd and Jake respectively. The Williams Challenge Cup, an excellent innovation from Jake, will have its virginal silver engraved with the first winner’s name, activity and venue. It will be held for one year until the Winner of the 2012 challenge emerges. Lots were drawn to reveal that Sam will be organising the 2012 challenge.
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A great tradition to bring the family together an be carried on by future generations. Thanks Jake for all the effort and planning and for coming up with the idea. I’m not into fishing but was surprised at how much I enjoyed the experience