Hughes regains control with USF Pro 2000 Toronto perfection

Lochie Hughes this morning took a big step toward his ultimate goal of winning this year’s USF Pro 2000 championship title by virtue of dominating the second leg of the Continental Tire Grand Prix of Toronto for Turn 3 Motorsport. The Australian …

Lochie Hughes this morning took a big step toward his ultimate goal of winning this year’s USF Pro 2000 championship title by virtue of dominating the second leg of the Continental Tire Grand Prix of Toronto for Turn 3 Motorsport. The Australian followed a fine recovery drive yesterday by leading throughout today’s 25-lap race for his fifth win of the season.

New Zealand’s Liam Sceats rebounded from a first-lap incident on Saturday to secure his fifth podium of the year for TJ Speed Motorsports after relegating championship contender Jace Denmark (Pabst Racing) to third place with a late pass.

After being pipped to the pole for yesterday’s race by Turn 3 Motorsport teammate Danny Dyszelski and then being caught up in a first-corner melee, Hughes made sure there would be no repeat by snaring the extra championship point for this morning’s race during a second qualifying session on Saturday morning. Hughes also took full advantage of his fourth Continental Tire Pole Award by maintaining his lead into the first corner, although behind him there was more drama as Dyszelski, who this time started in eighth, once again was involved in an incident along with BN Racing teammates Alessandro De Tullio and Ricardo Escotto.

Hughes again took off into the lead once the cleanup had been completed, while Denmark initially led the chase having overtaken championship rival Nikita Johnson (VRD Racing)  at Turn 1 on the initial start.

Johnson was able to redress the balance with a bold move at Turn 5 on the eighth lap, then quickly closed on Hughes. The pair was rarely separated by more than a car length or two for the next dozen laps, until Johnson made a mistake at Turn 10 and spun into one of the unforgiving concrete walls. His day was done.

Hughes once again took off confidently at the restart with three laps remaining, pulling away to an emphatic victory, leaving Denmark to come under attack from Sceats and a large pack of cars behind. Denmark parried an attempt by Sceats to take a pass at Turn 5, only to make a mistake under braking for Turn 10, running wide and allowing the Kiwi through into second, where he remained until the finish.

“This win was really important with only two races to go. The season has gone by so quickly. I feel like we were just at St. Pete,” said Hughes. “I was happy to just not do any overtaking in that race. The last two races, we ended up being in the pits and had to do a bunch of overtaking the rest of the race. It was nice to just stay out in front and I can’t thank the Turn 3 crew enough for giving me an amazing car.”

Mac Clark matched his best result of the season for DEForce Racing with fourth, while an incident on the final lap at Turn 1 involving Sceats’ teammate Cooper Becklin, Jorge Garciarce (DEForce Racing), Logan Adams (Comet/NCMP) and Dutch debutant Glenn van Berlo (Pabst Racing) allowed Garciarce to emerge in fifth ahead of Jay Howard Driver Development’s Frankie Mossman who vaulted from 11th to sixth at the checkered flag.

Garciarce’s best result of the year also earned him the Tilton Hard Charger Award after lining up 13th on the grid.

Hughes’ dominant drive not only secured a fifth PFC Award for Peter Dempsey as the winning car owner, it also brought him a healthy 35-point advantage heading into the final doubleheader event of the season at Portland International Raceway, Aug. 27-28.

RESULTS

Provisional championship points after 16 of 18 rounds:

1. Lochie Hughes, 354

2. Jace Denmark, 319

3. Nikita Johnson, 291

4. Liam Sceats, 241

5. Christian Brooks, 232

6. Simon Sikes, 224

7. Danny Dyszelski, 203

8. Ricardo Escotto, 191

9. Mac Clark, 187

10. Frankie Mossman, 185