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                   GP 
                    ANNIVERSARY TROPHY 
                  Sunday 
                    November 9 
                    Weather: Damp and drying track 
                  FRANK 
                    SYTNER GRABS VICTORY IN THRILLING FINISH 
                  Frank 
                    Sytner grabbed a last-minute victory in the Macau Grand Prix 
                    Anniversary Trophy race on Sunday after an enthralling duel 
                    with fellow Briton Simon Hadfield. The pair battled almost 
                    every inch of the way to delight the spectators as they were 
                    separated by less than two tenths of a second at the chequered 
                    flag. 
                  With 
                    track conditions damp from a morning downpour, the 10-lap 
                    race began under the Safety Car. The field was eventually 
                    released at the end of the second lap and, although pole position 
                    man Hadfield made a brilliant getaway in his Lotus 30, he 
                    was soon swallowed up by Sytner's Lola T70 Spyder on the run 
                    down to Lisboa. 
                  But 
                    it did not take Hadfield long to respond and, after running 
                    right in the slipstream of Sytner up the hill from San Francisco 
                    Bend, he made a decisive move through Hospital and stormed 
                    into the lead. The pair then swapped positions numerous times 
                    - with Sytner's straight-line speed advantage powering him 
                    past on the main straights before Hadfield could respond in 
                    the twisty back section of the track. 
                  With 
                    two laps to go, however, it appeared Hadfield had made a clean 
                    break as he opened out almost a four second advantage on Sytner. 
                    But, after losing time behind back markers, Sytner was again 
                    right on his tail and Hadfield could do nothing to stop his 
                    rival diving through on the straight before the final corner. 
                  A 
                    delighted Sytner said: "I was really looking forward 
                    to the straights because in the twisty parts my car was too 
                    slow. It was great fun out there." 
                  Hadfield 
                    was far from unhappy with the result though. In fact, he was 
                    more than delighted with the show that stirred the spectators 
                    in the Macau grandstands. "I hoped it looked stunning 
                    when the two cars were running side-by-side going up the hill," 
                    he said. "It certainly was from where I was sitting." 
                  Denis 
                    Welch grabbed the final podium position after putting eventual 
                    race winner Sytner under pressure in the closing stages of 
                    the race. He knew that his Lotus 23B's lack of top speed would 
                    give him little chance of making a move on the straights, 
                    but there was never a real opportunity to get past on the 
                    back section. 
                  Denmark's 
                    Jac Nellemann was the leading Class A finisher, for cars built 
                    between 1950 and 1959, after grabbing fourth place in his 
                    Lotus 17. Briton David Piper escaped totally unhurt after 
                    crashing into the tyres at R Bend on lap nine in his Ferrari 
                    275LM.  
                   
                    Issued on behalf of the Macau Grand Prix Committee by PR Plus 
                    Limited 
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