Second in the standings was Jake Hill, son of a former Brands racing school instructor, who has made his old man Simon so proud over recent seasons as he’s matured into a genuine BTCC force. Speaking to ITV co-commentator and 1992 BTCC champion Tim Harvey pre-season, he’d told me Hill “has a championship in him” following a switch from front-driven Focus to West Surrey Racing’s rear-wheel-drive BMW 330e M Sport, and so it appeared after a strong penultimate weekend at Silverstone that included a third win of the season. In a strong BMW, Hill seemed ready for his moment at his beloved home circuit.
Yet it wasn’t to be. Ingram stormed to a vital pole position on Saturday, then dealt with the inevitable butterflies on Sunday morning to withstand a challenge from Rory Butcher’s Toyota Corolla to win the first race. He refused to get too excited, even after repeating the feat in the early-afternoon second encounter, his sixth victory of the season and the most of any driver. Now leading the points, destiny appeared to be in his hands. Except race three in the BTCC is partially reversed grid. Starting 10th, Ingram was in prime mid-pack territory to be pinged into a barrier. Hill, second in race two, was starting beside him… But no, Jake is better than that. The pair raced cleanly and with no quarter given as Ingram’s team-mate Dan Lloyd led all the way from the reverse-grid pole for the victory that was always going to be overshadowed by the parries and thrusts of the battles behind him.
Sutton, Hill and Ingram ran nose-to-tail in the closing stages, behind Lloyd, BTC Racing Honda driver Josh Cook and Butcher. For Sutton, the day had been one of disappointment, a turbo power problem in race one putting him firmly on the back foot. He didn’t have the speed to challenge for the victory he needed and now on the last lap here was Hill making a lunge at Paddock Hill Bend. It says much for all three that Ingram, without needing to given his championship advantage, felt confident enough to nose his Hyundai down the inside and demote Hill out of contention as Sutton stayed ahead. Ingram finished fifth, on the tail of the blue Ford, with Hill dropping to seventh. Tom was champion by 12 points from Sutton, who in turn was just one point ahead of Hill. Tense, breathless and captivating motor sport.