Round 06, K1 race report – Edwyn Low becomes sixth different winner of 2009

Saturday, 6 June 2009
Shah Alam Stadium Kart Circuit (CCW)

Please post your race report / experience on this thread.

Race update

K1 1st qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|A Muhaymin|K1-70|2|2|20
A|2|Cheah Ben Lee|K1-45|6|1|16
A|3|Zulkifli Samad|K1-45|4|4|14
A|4|Danny Chooz|K1-70|1|7|12
A|5|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1-45|5|12|11
A|6|SK Wong|K1-70|7|6|10
A|7|Nazaruddin|K1-70|3|5|9]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Edwyn Low|K1-70|6|10|20
B|2|Ashraff Dewal|K1-70|2|3|16
B|3|Fazz Rahman|K1-70|5|1|14
B|4|Faiz Annuar|K1-45|3|7|12
B|5|Shahrul Azlan|K1-70|7|2|11
B|6|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1-45|4|12|10
B|7|Tarmizi|K1-70|1|11|9]

K1 2nd qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Danny Chooz|K1-70|7|7|20
A|2|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1-45|3|12|16
A|3|Zulkifli Samad|K1-45|4|4|14
A|4|A Muhaymin|K1-70|6|2|12
A|5|Nazaruddin|K1-70|5|5|11
A|6|SK Wong|K1-70|1|6|10
A|7|Cheah Ben Lee|K1-45|2|1|9]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Fazz Rahman|K1-70|3|1|20
B|2|Edwyn Low|K1-70|2|10|16
B|3|Tarmizi|K1-70|7|11|14
B|4|Ashraff Dewal|K1-70|6|3|12
B|5|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1-45|4|12|11
B|6|Faiz Annuar|K1-45|5|7|10
B|7|Shahrul Azlan|K1-70|1|2|9]

Overall Qualifying Ranking

[table Rank|Driver|Class|Seed|Points
1|Edwyn Low|K1-70|21|36
2|Fazz Rahman|K1-70|19|34
3|Danny Chooz|K1-70|2|32
4|A Muhaymin|K1-70|5|32
5|Ashraff Dewal|K1-70|7|28
6|Zulkifli Samad|K1-45|10|28
7|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1-45|16|27
8|Cheah Ben Lee|K1-45|-|25
9|Tarmizi|K1-70|1|23
10|Faiz Annuar|K1-45|11|22
11|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1-45|18|21
12|Nazaruddin|K1-70|9|20
13|Shahrul Azlan|K1-70|26|20
14|SK Wong|K1-70|-|20]

Championship update

Final Race Result

[table Pos|Group|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
1|(A)|Edwyn Low|K1-70|1|10|20
2|(A)|Fazz Rahman|K1-70|2|1|16
3|(A)|Ashraff Dewal|K1-70|5|3|14
4|(A)|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1-45|7|12|12
5|(A)|Zulkifli Samad|K1-45|6|4|11
6|(A)|A Muhaymin|K1-70|4|2|10
7|(A)|Danny Chooz|K1-70|3|7|9
8|(B)|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1-45|4|12|8
9|(B)|Nazaruddin|K1-70|5|5|7
10|(B)|Faiz Annuar|K1-45|3|7|6
11|(B)|Cheah Ben Lee|K1-45|1|1|5
12|(B)|Shahrul Azlan|K1-70|6|2|4
13|(B)|SK Wong|K1-70|7|6|3
14|(B)|Tarmizi|K1-70|2|11|2]

Championship report

Overall Standings after Round 06

[table Rank|Driver|Cat|Points|Qualifying
1|Tarmizi|K1/70|70|166
2|Danny Chooz|K1/70|62|165
3|Desmond Khoo|K1/70|53|111
4|A Muhaymin|K1/70|51|146
5|Ashraff Dewal|K1/70|50|96
6|Ramsey Sabelt|K1/45|44|138
7|Zulkifli Samad|K1/45|43|138
8|Nazaruddin|K1/70|42|141
9|Iskandar Mildseven|K1/45|37|114
10|Jules Ng|K1/70|36|66
11|Faiz Annuar|K1/45|35|105
12|Edwyn Low|K1/70|28|60
13|Fazz Rahman|K1/70|27|121
14|Luen|K1/70|26|107
15|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1/45|26|88
16|Yusnee Yusof|K1/70|25|95
17|Jason Lu – BM5|K1/70|24|110
18|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1/45|20|118
19|Mark Ian Timms|K1/70|15|71
20|James Mitchell|K1/70|14|30
21|Brian Eravelly|K1/70|8|79
22|Yip Yen|K1/70|7|36
23|Zainy|K1/70|5|40
24|Cheah Ben Lee|K1/45|5|25
25|Shahrul Azlan|K1/70|4|56
26|Hafidz Fahro Rozi|K1/45|4|18
27|Mohd Julian Hussein|K1/45|3|32
28|SK Wong|K1/70|3|20
29|Shaeran Baba|K1/70|0|28
30|Devan Sridaran|K1/70|0|15
31|Patrick Tan|K1/70|0|14]

Round 06, K2 race report – Nizam Rahman clinches fourth win of the year

Saturday, 6 June 2009
Shah Alam Stadium Kart Circuit (CCW)

Please post your race report / experience on this thread.

Race update

K2 1st qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Nizam Rahman (nizer)|K2-45|1|20|20
A|2|Rizal Khalid|K2-70|2|21|16
A|3|Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2-45|3|19|14
A|4|Angeline Ooi|K2-45|4|14|12
A|5|Yong Chun Fung|K2-45|5|16|11]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Abd Razak Halim|K2-45|2|20|20
B|2|Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2-45|1|16|16
B|3|Jazland Azmi|K2-45|3|19|14
B|4|Brandon Lim (PFR2828)|K2-70|4|21|12
B|5|Dinesh|K2-45|5|14|11]

K2 2nd qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Nizam Rahman (nizer)|K2-45|5|20|20
A|2|Rizal Khalid|K2-70|4|21|16
A|3|Yong Chun Fung|K2-45|1|16|14
A|4|Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2-45|3|19|12
A|5|Angeline Ooi|K2-45|2|14|11]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Abd Razak Halim|K2-45|4|20|20
B|2|Brandon Lim (PFR2828)|K2-70|2|21|16
B|3|Jazland Azmi|K2-45|3|19|14
B|4|Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2-45|5|16|12
B|5|Dinesh|K2-45|1|14|11]

Overall Qualifying Ranking

[table Rank|Driver|Class|Seed|Points
1|Nizam Rahman (nizer)|K2-45|1|40
2|Abd Razak Halim|K2-45|7|40
3|Rizal Khalid|K2-70|2|32
4|Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2-45|3|28
5|Jazland Azmi|K2-45|11|28
6|Brandon Lim (PFR2828)|K2-70|24|28
7|Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2-45|22|26
8|Yong Chun Fung|K2-45|-|25
9|Angeline Ooi|K2-45|25|23
10|Dinesh|K2-45|-|22]

Championship update

Final Race Result

[table Pos|Group|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
1|(A)|Nizam Rahman (nizer)|K2-45|1|20|20
2|(A)|Rizal Khalid|K2-70|3|21|16
3|(A)|Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2-45|4|16|14
4|(A)|Jazland Azmi|K2-45|5|19|12
5|(A)|Abd Razak Halim|K2-45|2|24|11
6|(B)|Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2-45|2|19|10
7|(B)|Brandon Lim (PFR2828)|K2-70|1|21|9
8|(B)|Yong Chun Fung|K2-45|3|16|8
9|(B)|Dinesh|K2-45|5|20|7
10|(B)|Angeline Ooi|K2-45|4|14|6]

Championship report

Overall Standings after Round 06

[table Rank|Driver|Cat|Points|Qualifying
1. |Nizam Rahman (nizer)|K2/45|90|200
2. |Rizal Khalid|K2/70|77|170
3. |Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2/45|74|170
4. |FAIBS|K2/45|58|139
5. |Vincent Chin|K2/45|52|128
6. |Abd Razak Halim|K2/45|48|147
7. |Zainuddin Zainal|K2/45|43|124
8. |Mohd Fikri Rahim|K2/45|32|86
9. |Jazland Azmi|K2/45|30|96
10. |Stuart Gibbs|K2/70|28|96
11. |M Z Azizi Abd Malek|K1/70|19|59
12. |Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2/45|17|50
13. |Stevo|K2/70|15|94
14. |Brandon Lim (PFR2828)|K2/70|15|63
15. |SK Wong|K1/70|15|58
16. |Nurhafizah Nazarudin|K2/45|12|55
17. |Angeline Ooi|K2/45|12|45
18. |Nurul Alis|K2/45|12|41
19. |Suhazlan|K2/45|11|30
20. |Aaron Liddell|K1/45|11|28
21. |Kenny (Zoggee)|K2/70|10|54
22. |Jonathan Kan|K2/70|10|42
23. |Cheah Ben Lee|K1/45|9|26
24. |Emmy Diana|K2/45|8|56
25. |Yong Chun Fung|K2/45|8|25
26. |Dinesh|K2/45|7|22
27. |Zainy|K1/70|6|41
28. |Ruben Yap|K2/45|6|20
29. |Ng Wei Li|K3/70|4|20
30. |Imran Ishak|K2/45|2|38
31. |Alson Wong|K2/70|2|23
32. |Ooi Soon Tiang|K2/45|2|16
33. |Alex Lum|K2/45|1|31]

Round 06, K3 race report – Daniel Rao takes win from Afiq on last lap

Saturday, 6 June 2009
Shah Alam Stadium Kart Circuit (CCW)

Please post your race report / experience in this thread.

Race update

K3 1st qualifying report

[table Group|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Chris Setter|K3-45|8|20|20
A|2|Mohd Afiq Hamzah (fiq)|K3-45|1|1|16
A|3|Aiman Rizal|K3-45|4|7|14
A|4|Shirley Wong|K3-45|2|2|12
A|5|Faiz Rahman|K3-45|7|11|11
A|6|Adam Tan|K3-70|10|15|10
A|7|Jamizan Jamaludin|K3-45|3|5|9
A|8|Muhaimin Ralf Che Din|K3-70|5|9|8
A|9|Rene Kraemer|K3-70|9|12|7
A|10|Khairulddin Md Hashim|K3-70|11|14|6
A|11|Ahmad Mohsin Dadameah|K3-70|6|18|5]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Daniel Rao (1997)|K3-45|1|1|20
B|2|Muhammad Afif Ahmad|K3-45|3|5|16
B|3|Rizal Halim|K3-70|2|2|14
B|4|Syed Muhammad Syafiq|K3-45|4|7|12
B|5|Syamsul Razmin|K3-45|7|11|11
B|6|Ahmad Shahrizan|K3-70|8|20|10
B|7|Shafik Jaafar|K3-70|5|9|9
B|8|Akmal Mansor|K3-70|6|10|8
B|9|Shahrudin Mohd Taib|K3-70|10|15|7
B|10|PK Leong|K3-45|9|12|6]

K3 2nd qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Mohd Afiq Hamzah (fiq)|K3-45|11|17|20
A|2|Aiman Rizal|K3-45|8|20|16
A|3|Shirley Wong|K3-45|10|15|14
A|4|Faiz Rahman|K3-45|5|8|12
A|5|Chris Setter|K3-45|4|7|11
A|6|Adam Tan|K3-70|2|2|10
A|7|Jamizan Jamaludin|K3-45|9|44|9
A|8|Ahmad Mohsin Dadameah|K3-70|6|18|8
A|9|Muhaimin Ralf Che Din|K3-70|7|11|7
A|10|Rene Kraemer|K3-70|3|5|6
A|11|Khairulddin Md Hashim|K3-70|1|1|5]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Muhammad Afif Ahmad|K3-45|8|20|20
B|2|Daniel Rao (1997)|K3-45|10|15|16
B|3|Rizal Halim|K3-70|9|12|14
B|4|Syamsul Razmin|K3-45|4|7|12
B|5|Syed Muhammad Syafiq|K3-45|7|11|11
B|6|Shahrudin Mohd Taib|K3-70|1|1|10
B|7|PK Leong|K3-45|2|2|9
B|8|Akmal Mansor|K3-70|5|9|8
B|9|Shafik Jaafar|K3-70|6|10|7
B|10|Ahmad Shahrizan|K3-70|3|5|6]

Overall Qualifying Ranking

[table Rank|Driver|Class|Seed|Points
1|Mohd Afiq Hamzah (fiq)|K3-45|1|36
2|Daniel Rao (1997)|K3-45|2|36
3|Muhammad Afif Ahmad|K3-45|13|36
4|Chris Setter|K3-45|-|31
5|Aiman Rizal|K3-45|19|30
6|Rizal Halim|K3-70|5|28
7|Shirley Wong|K3-45|3|26
8|Syed Muhammad Syafiq|K3-45|27|23
9|Faiz Rahman|K3-45|59|23
10|Syamsul Razmin|K3-45|-|23
11|Adam Tan|K3-70|-|20
12|Jamizan Jamaludin|K3-45|8|18
13|Shahrudin Mohd Taib|K3-70|-|17
14|Shafik Jaafar|K3-70|39|16
15|Akmal Mansor|K3-70|55|16
16|Ahmad Shahrizan|K3-70|-|16
17|Muhaimin Ralf Che Din|K3-70|35|15
18|PK Leong|K3-45|-|15
19|Ahmad Mohsin Dadameah|K3-70|43|13
20|Rene Kraemer|K3-70|-|13
21|Khairulddin Md Hashim|K3-70|-|11]

Qualifying Ranking – K3/45

[table Rank|Driver|Class|Seed|Points
1|Mohd Afiq Hamzah (fiq)|K3-45|1|36
2|Daniel Rao (1997)|K3-45|2|36
3|Muhammad Afif Ahmad|K3-45|13|36
4|Chris Setter|K3-45|-|31
5|Aiman Rizal|K3-45|19|30
6|Shirley Wong|K3-45|3|26
7|Syed Muhammad Syafiq|K3-45|27|23
8|Faiz Rahman|K3-45|59|23
9|Syamsul Razmin|K3-45|-|23
10|Jamizan Jamaludin|K3-45|8|18
11|PK Leong|K3-45|-|15]

Qualifying Ranking – K3/70

[table Rank|Driver|Class|Seed|Points
1|Rizal Halim|K3-70|5|28
2|Adam Tan|K3-70|-|20
3|Shahrudin Mohd Taib|K3-70|-|17
4|Shafik Jaafar|K3-70|39|16
5|Akmal Mansor|K3-70|55|16
6|Ahmad Shahrizan|K3-70|-|16
7|Muhaimin Ralf Che Din|K3-70|35|15
8|Ahmad Mohsin Dadameah|K3-70|43|13
9|Rene Kraemer|K3-70|-|13
10|Khairulddin Md Hashim|K3-70|-|11]

Final Race Result

[table Pos|Group|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
1|(A)|Daniel Rao (1997)|K3-45|10|17|20
2|(A)|Adam Tan|K3-70|1|5|16
3|(A)|Muhammad Afif Ahmad|K3-45|9|8|14
4|(A)|Mohd Afiq Hamzah (fiq)|K3-45|11|20|12
5|(A)|Shirley Wong|K3-45|5|2|11
6|(A)|Rizal Halim|K3-70|6|1|10
7|(A)|Syed Muhammad Syafiq|K3-45|4|7|9
8|(A)|Faiz Rahman|K3-45|3|44|8
9|(A)|Syamsul Razmin|K3-45|2|4|7
10|(A)|Chris Setter|K3-45|8|6|6
11|(A)|Aiman Rizal|K3-45|7|15|5
12|(B)|Jamizan Jamaludin|K3-45|10|20|4
13|(B)|Ahmad Mohsin Dadameah|K3-70|3|8|3
14|(B)|Muhaimin Ralf Che Din|K3-70|5|11|2
15|(B)|PK Leong|K3-45|4|7|1
16|(B)|Khairulddin Md Hashim|K3-70|1|2|0
17|(B)|Ahmad Shahrizan|K3-70|6|1|0
18|(B)|Shafik Jaafar|K3-70|8|4|0
19|(B)|Rene Kraemer|K3-70|2|44|0
20|(B)|Akmal Mansor|K3-70|7|3|0
21|(B)|Shahrudin Mohd Taib|K3-70|9|9|0]

Final Race Result – K3/45

[table Pos|Group|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
1|(A)|Daniel Rao (1997)|K3-45|10|17|20
2|(A)|Muhammad Afif Ahmad|K3-45|9|8|16
3|(A)|Mohd Afiq Hamzah (fiq)|K3-45|11|20|14
4|(A)|Shirley Wong|K3-45|5|2|12
5|(A)|Syed Muhammad Syafiq|K3-45|4|7|11
6|(A)|Faiz Rahman|K3-45|3|44|10
7|(A)|Syamsul Razmin|K3-45|2|4|9
8|(A)|Chris Setter|K3-45|8|6|8
9|(A)|Aiman Rizal|K3-45|7|15|7
10|(B)|Jamizan Jamaludin|K3-45|10|20|6
11|(B)|PK Leong|K3-45|4|7|5]

Final Race Result – K3/70

[table Pos|Group|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
1|(A)|Adam Tan|K3-70|1|5|20
2|(A)|Rizal Halim|K3-70|6|1|16
3|(B)|Ahmad Mohsin Dadameah|K3-70|3|8|14
4|(B)|Muhaimin Ralf Che Din|K3-70|5|11|12
5|(B)|Khairulddin Md Hashim|K3-70|1|2|11
6|(B)|Ahmad Shahrizan|K3-70|6|1|10
7|(B)|Shafik Jaafar|K3-70|8|4|9
8|(B)|Rene Kraemer|K3-70|2|44|8
9|(B)|Akmal Mansor|K3-70|7|3|7
10|(B)|Shahrudin Mohd Taib|K3-70|9|9|6]

Championship update

Overall Standings after Round 06

[table Rank|Driver|Cat|Points|Qualifying
1. |Mohd Afiq Hamzah (fiq)|K3/45|99|182
2. |Daniel Rao (1997)|K3/45|82|184
3. |Shirley Wong|K3/45|47|115
4. |Rizal Halim|K3/70|43|117
5. |Ramzul Zai|K3/45|34|68
6. |Muhammad Afif Ahmad|K3/45|32|118
7. |Jamizan Jamaludin|K3/45|32|114
8. |Dinesh|K2/45|32|110
9. |Thiban|K3/45|32|95
10. |Yong Chun Fung|K2/45|28|48
11. |Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2/45|25|77
12. |Tg Nazroff|K3/45|21|43
13. |Ahmad Ezane Ahmad Taharim|K3/45|20|62
14. |Aiman Rizal|K3/45|16|117
15. |Timothy Ketit|K3/45|16|65
16. |Khairul Hizam|K2/45|16|31
17. |Adam Tan|K3/70|16|20
18. |Syed Muhammad Syafiq|K3/45|14|72
19. |Karen Tan|K3/45|13|79
20. |Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1/45|12|34
21. |Jason Lau|K3/45|12|23
22. |Lee Wan Chan|K3/45|10|22
23. |Ammar Shahbana|K3/70|9|39
24. |Wong Mun Jun|K3/45|8|40
25. |Faiz Rahman|K3/45|8|33
26. |Wira Ahmad Fauzi|K3/70|8|27
27. |Syamsul Razmin|K3/45|7|23
28. |Derek Hooi|K3/45|7|19
29. |Chris Setter|K3/45|6|31
30. |Vincent Leong|K3/45|6|22
31. |Tham Mun Keat|K3/45|6|22
32. |Muhaimin Ralf Che Din|K3/70|5|51
33. |Mohd Zahid Mustapha|K3/45|5|19
34. |Ian Tan|K3/45|5|18
35. |Leona Chin Lyweoi|K3/45|4|26
36. |Alson Wong|K2/70|4|25
37. |Zafina|K3/45|4|18
38. |Ahmad Basir|K3/45|4|12
39. |Ahmad Mohsin Dadameah|K3/70|3|57
40. |Premachandran Rajan|K3/70|3|42
41. |Lim Boon Leng|K3/70|3|18
42. |Azri Zain|K3/70|3|17
43. |Shafik Jaafar|K3/70|2|34
44. |Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2/45|2|18
45. |Mohd Azlee Ishak|K3/45|2|18
46. |Francis Lai|K3/70|1|31
47. |PK Leong|K3/45|1|15
48. |Shafig Shah|K3/45|0|47
49. |Jason Ylescupidez|K3/70|0|38
50. |Raja Mardiah Idris|K3/45|0|31
51. |Akmal Mansor|K3/70|0|28
52. |Carmen Lim|K3/45|0|23
53. |George Lim|K3/45|0|23
54. |Gina Finanza|K3/45|0|21
55. |Husni Seth|K3/45|0|18
56. |Shahrudin Mohd Taib|K3/70|0|17
57. |Ahmad Shahrizan|K3/70|0|16
58. |Stewart Donald|K3/45|0|15
59. |Mohd Asraf|K3/70|0|15
60. |Vincent Lee|K3/45|0|14
61. |Rene Kraemer|K3/70|0|13
62. |Lim Fang-Yin|K3/45|0|13
63. |Khoo Lik Pang|K3/45|0|12
64. |Angeline Ooi|K2/45|0|11
65. |Ricky Woon|K3/70|0|11
66. |Khairulddin Md Hashim|K3/70|0|11
67. |Feizal Nightman|K3/45|0|10
68. |Ahmad Syadzwan Nasruddin|K3/45|0|9
69. |Ulul Azmi Ismail|K3/45|0|8
70. |Kenneth Liang|K3/45|0|8
71. |Chi Kan|K3/45|0|7
72. |Taufik Zakaria|K3/45|0|7
73. |Orido Ong|K3/45|0|5
74. |Brandon Lim (PFR2828)|K2/70|0|4
75. |Akil Hassan|K3/45|0|3
76. |Ferdinand Lai|K3/45|0|1]

K3/45 Standings after Round 06

[table Rank|Driver|Cat|Points|Qualifying
1. |Mohd Afiq Hamzah (fiq)|K3/45|101|182
2. |Daniel Rao (1997)|K3/45|85|184
3. |Shirley Wong|K3/45|52|115
4. |Muhammad Afif Ahmad|K3/45|36|118
5. |Ramzul Zai|K3/45|36|68
6. |Jamizan Jamaludin|K3/45|35|114
7. |Thiban|K3/45|34|95
8. |Aiman Rizal|K3/45|24|117
9. |Ahmad Ezane Ahmad Taharim|K3/45|22|62
10. |Tg Nazroff|K3/45|22|43
11. |Ahmad Basir|K3/45|20|12
12. |Syed Muhammad Syafiq|K3/45|19|72
13. |Timothy Ketit|K3/45|18|65
14. |Karen Tan|K3/45|17|79
15. |Jason Lau|K3/45|12|23
16. |Chi Kan|K3/45|12|7
17. |Ulul Azmi Ismail|K3/45|11|8
18. |Faiz Rahman|K3/45|10|33
19. |Lee Wan Chan|K3/45|10|22
20. |Stewart Donald|K3/45|10|15
21. |Wong Mun Jun|K3/45|9|40
22. |Syamsul Razmin|K3/45|9|23
23. |Chris Setter|K3/45|8|31
24. |Derek Hooi|K3/45|8|19
25. |Vincent Leong|K3/45|7|22
26. |Mohd Zahid Mustapha|K3/45|7|19
27. |Akil Hassan|K3/45|7|3
28. |Leona Chin Lyweoi|K3/45|6|26
29. |Tham Mun Keat|K3/45|6|22
30. |Ian Tan|K3/45|6|18
31. |Zafina|K3/45|5|18
32. |Mohd Azlee Ishak|K3/45|5|18
33. |PK Leong|K3/45|5|15
34. |Raja Mardiah Idris|K3/45|3|31
35. |Lim Fang-Yin|K3/45|3|13
36. |Shafig Shah|K3/45|2|47
37. |Husni Seth|K3/45|2|18
38. |Vincent Lee|K3/45|2|14
39. |Khoo Lik Pang|K3/45|1|12
40. |Carmen Lim|K3/45|0|23
41. |George Lim|K3/45|0|23
42. |Gina Finanza|K3/45|0|21
43. |Feizal Nightman|K3/45|0|10
44. |Ahmad Syadzwan Nasruddin|K3/45|0|9
45. |Kenneth Liang|K3/45|0|8
46. |Taufik Zakaria|K3/45|0|7
47. |Orido Ong|K3/45|0|5
48. |Ferdinand Lai|K3/45|0|1]

K3/70 Standings after Round 06

[table Rank|Driver|Cat|Points|Qualifying
1. |Rizal Halim|K3/70|76|117
2. |Ahmad Mohsin Dadameah|K3/70|47|57
3. |Premachandran Rajan|K3/70|40|42
4. |Jason Ylescupidez|K3/70|34|38
5. |Ammar Shahbana|K3/70|30|39
6. |Muhaimin Ralf Che Din|K3/70|28|51
7. |Francis Lai|K3/70|25|31
8. |Shafik Jaafar|K3/70|21|34
9. |Wira Ahmad Fauzi|K3/70|20|27
10. |Adam Tan|K3/70|20|20
11. |Lim Boon Leng|K3/70|16|18
12. |Azri Zain|K3/70|14|17
13. |Ricky Woon|K3/70|14|11
14. |Mohd Asraf|K3/70|12|15
15. |Khairulddin Md Hashim|K3/70|11|11
16. |Akmal Mansor|K3/70|10|28
17. |Ahmad Shahrizan|K3/70|10|16
18. |Rene Kraemer|K3/70|8|13
19. |Shahrudin Mohd Taib|K3/70|6|17]

Finalisation of my-kart event calendars

for those people who have been asking me to change the dates for round 06/2009: all i have to say is, i’m sorry i will not change the dates on account of requests from a few. the calendar had been fixed since the beginning of the year, and it is intended that the calendar remains for better planning in the greater scheme of things. it is naturally possible that some of us will miss the odd race or two… which is why we only count the best 8 scores out of 10 rounds.

having a firm calendar is important as we speak to outsiders / external parties and talk about what my-kart is about. having firm calendars as opposed to tentative or changing ones gives us more credibility as a race series promoter, and not just another social event organiser.

so let’s put this issue to rest and let the event run its course.

for the 2010 calendar, lets get forward views of all important dates in 2010 early so we can plan the calendar accordingly. as i have indicated before, in the open-source spirit of my-kart, let’s work together to review the future calendars before we finalise in january of that year.

Alex Tabarrok: How ideas trump economic crises — a surprising lesson from 1929

source: TED.com | http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/525

source: TED.com | http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/525

about this talk:

The “dismal science” truly shines in this optimistic talk, as economist Alex Tabarrok argues free trade and globalization are shaping our once-divided world into a community of idea-sharing more healthy, happy and prosperous than anyone’s predictions.

about Alex Tabarrok: http://www.ted.com/index.php/speakers/alex_tabarrok.html

With the hit economic blog MarginalRevolution.com, co-author Alex Tabarrok generates more hits than a summer hailstorm, and sheds light into the darkest corners of the dismal science.

in this talk, Alex Tabarrok describes the phenomena of globalisation on the spread of ideas. He talks about the global village needing to share and collaborate on ideas and idea development so that some ideas can move faster. He uses the Great Depression of 1929 to illustrate the effect of ideas in overcoming adversity. This reflects what my-kart aims to do with its own ideas of popularising grassroots motorsports – on how we can bring malaysia’s motorsports to a much higher level. We encourage sharing and collaboration across the board.

go ahead, watch and listen to the video talk and let us know what you think.

Charles Leadbeater: The rise of the amateur professional

source: TED.com | http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/63

source: TED.com | http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/63

about this talk:

In this deceptively casual talk, Charles Leadbeater weaves a tight argument that innovation isn’t just for professionals anymore. Passionate amateurs, using new tools, are creating products and paradigms that companies can’t.

about Charles Leadbeater: http://www.ted.com/index.php/speakers/charles_leadbeater.html

A researcher at the London think tank Demos, Charles Leadbeater was early to notice the rise of “amateur innovation” — great ideas from outside the traditional walls, from people who suddenly…

in this talk Leadbeater describes how some of the biggest commercial successes in the world were born out of collaborative efforts of consumers and communities, and not corporations and individuals. he talks about “professional amateurs” which basically mean, amateurs who are passionate about their hobby (not profession), but want it to be done at professional standards. this pretty much describes the people at my-kart.

go ahead, watch and listen to the video talk and let us know what you think.

Collection of thoughts on my-kart’s model

in many of my discussions with members, i often describe my-kart as an open-source organisation. to give a better illustration, i’d like to have a dialogue with all of you on the subject.

feel free to post some stuff that best describes the model for my-kart.

in many of my discussions with members, i often describe my-kart as an open-source organisation. to give a better illustration, i’d like to have a dialogue with all of you on the subject.

feel free to post some stuff that best describes the model for my-kart.

as a thought starter, in the committee meeting on 2 May 2009 (right after the round 05/2009 DRIVERS series event) at Burger King, Extreme Park Shah Alam, i mentioned a couple of points relating to the my-kart model:

  1. members can add any new series under the my-kart brand provided that it meets the brand standards
  2. that my-kart purpose remains on providing affordable and accessible racing for all (and not focus on profits)
  3. that everybody should participate in making my-kart events achieve these objectives – including newcomers

i shall share some video clips from TED.com to describe some of these ideas. feel free to add and share your thoughts too.

The Facebook Generation vs. the Fortune 500

Gary Hamel’s Management 2.0
A look at new ways of managing

By Gary Hamel

Gary Hamel’s Management 2.0
A look at new ways of managing

By Gary Hamel

The experience of growing up online will profoundly shape the workplace expectations of “Generation F” – the Facebook Generation. At a minimum, they’ll expect the social environment of work to reflect the social context of the Web, rather than as is currently the case, a mid-20th-century Weberian bureaucracy.

If your company hopes to attract the most creative and energetic members of Gen F, it will need to understand these Internet-derived expectations, and then reinvent its management practices accordingly. Sure, it’s a buyer’s market for talent right now, but that won’t always be the case—and in the future, any company that lacks a vital core of Gen F employees will soon find itself stuck in the mud.

With that in mind, I compiled a list of 12 work-relevant characteristics of online life. These are the post-bureaucratic realities that tomorrow’s employees will use as yardsticks in determining whether your company is “with it” or “past it.” In assembling this short list, I haven’t tried to catalog every salient feature of the Web’s social milieu, only those that are most at odds with the legacy practices found in large companies.

1. All ideas compete on an equal footing.

On the Web, every idea has the chance to gain a following—or not, and no one has the power to kill off a subversive idea or squelch an embarrassing debate. Ideas gain traction based on their perceived merits, rather than on the political power of their sponsors.

2. Contribution counts for more than credentials.

When you post a video to YouTube, no one asks you if you went to film school. When you write a blog, no one cares whether you have a journalism degree. Position, title, and academic degrees—none of the usual status differentiators carry much weight online. On the Web, what counts is not your resume, but what you can contribute.

3. Hierarchies are natural, not prescribed.

In any Web forum there are some individuals who command more respect and attention than others—and have more influence as a consequence. Critically, though, these individuals haven’t been appointed by some superior authority. Instead, their clout reflects the freely given approbation of their peers. On the Web, authority trickles up, not down.

4. Leaders serve rather than preside.

On the Web, every leader is a servant leader; no one has the power to command or sanction. Credible arguments, demonstrated expertise and selfless behavior are the only levers for getting things done through other people. Forget this online, and your followers will soon abandon you.

5. Tasks are chosen, not assigned.

The Web is an opt-in economy. Whether contributing to a blog, working on an open source project, or sharing advice in a forum, people choose to work on the things that interest them. Everyone is an independent contractor, and everyone scratches their own itch.

6. Groups are self-defining and -organizing.

On the Web, you get to choose your compatriots. In any online community, you have the freedom to link up with some individuals and ignore the rest, to share deeply with some folks and not at all with others. Just as no one can assign you a boring task, no can force you to work with dim-witted colleagues.

7. Resources get attracted, not allocated.

In large organizations, resources get allocated top-down, in a politicized, Soviet-style budget wrangle. On the Web, human effort flows towards ideas and projects that are attractive (and fun), and away from those that aren’t. In this sense, the Web is a market economy where millions of individuals get to decide, moment by moment, how to spend the precious currency of their time and attention.

8. Power comes from sharing information, not hoarding it.

The Web is also a gift economy. To gain influence and status, you have to give away your expertise and content. And you must do it quickly; if you don’t, someone else will beat you to the punch—and garner the credit that might have been yours. Online, there are a lot of incentives to share, and few incentives to hoard.

9. Opinions compound and decisions are peer-reviewed.

On the Internet, truly smart ideas rapidly gain a following no matter how disruptive they may be. The Web is a near-perfect medium for aggregating the wisdom of the crowd—whether in formally organized opinion markets or in casual discussion groups. And once aggregated, the voice of the masses can be used as a battering ram to challenge the entrenched interests of institutions in the offline world.

10. Users can veto most policy decisions.

As many Internet moguls have learned to their sorrow, online users are opinionated and vociferous—and will quickly attack any decision or policy change that seems contrary to the community’s interests. The only way to keep users loyal is to give them a substantial say in key decisions. You may have built the community, but the users really own it.

11. Intrinsic rewards matter most.

The web is a testament to the power of intrinsic rewards. Think of all the articles contributed to Wikipedia, all the open source software created, all the advice freely given—add up the hours of volunteer time and it’s obvious that human beings will give generously of themselves when they’re given the chance to contribute to something they actually care about. Money’s great, but so is recognition and the joy of accomplishment.

12. Hackers are heroes.

Large organizations tend to make life uncomfortable for activists and rabble-rousers—however constructive they may be. In contrast, online communities frequently embrace those with strong anti-authoritarian views. On the Web, muckraking malcontents are frequently celebrated as champions of the Internet’s democratic values—particularly if they’ve managed to hack a piece of code that has been interfering with what others regard as their inalienable digital rights.

These features of Web-based life are written into the social DNA of Generation F—and mostly missing from the managerial DNA of the average Fortune 500 company. Yeah, there are a lot of kids looking for jobs right now, but few of them will ever feel at home in cubicleland.

So, readers, here’s a couple of questions: What are the Web-based social values that you think are most contrary to the managerial DNA one finds inside a typical corporate giant? And how should we reinvent management to make it more consistent with these emerging online sensibilities?

i’ve decided to re-post hamel’s article here for easy reference.

the original article can be found at the wall street journal online:
http://blogs.wsj.com/management/2009/03/24/the-facebook-generation-vs-the-fortune-500/

i would like to have your thoughts on this subject.

Round 05, K1 race report – Tarmizi claims first win of 2009 to take championship lead

Saturday, 2 May 2009
Shah Alam Stadium Kart Circuit (CW)

Please post your race report / experience on this thread.

Race update

K1 1st qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Desmond Khoo|K1-70|1|11|20
A|2|Zulkifli Samad|K1-45|4|4|16
A|3|Iskandar Mildseven|K1-45|3|1|14
A|4|Nazaruddin|K1-70|2|5|12
A|5|Brian Eravelly|K1-70|6|3|11
A|6|Zainy|K1-70|8|6|10
A|7|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1-45|5|12|9
A|8|Mark Ian Timms|K1-70|7|10|8]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Tarmizi|K1-70|1|11|20
B|2|Ramsey Sabelt|K1-45|2|4|16
B|3|Jason Lu – BM5|K1-70|3|10|14
B|4|Yusnee Yusof|K1-70|6|6|12
B|5|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1-45|8|12|11
B|6|Faiz Annuar|K1-45|5|7|10
B|7|Luen|K1-70|4|5|9
B|8|Fazz Rahman|K1-70|7|8|8]

K1 2nd qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Mark Ian Timms|K1-70|2|10|20
A|2|Zulkifli Samad|K1-45|5|4|16
A|3|Iskandar Mildseven|K1-45|6|1|14
A|4|Zainy|K1-70|1|6|12
A|5|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1-45|4|12|11
A|6|Brian Eravelly|K1-70|3|3|10
A|7|Nazaruddin|K1-70|7|5|9
A|8|Desmond Khoo|K1-70|8|11|8]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1-45|1|12|20
B|2|Yusnee Yusof|K1-70|3|6|16
B|3|Tarmizi|K1-70|8|11|14
B|4|Ramsey Sabelt|K1-45|7|4|12
B|5|Fazz Rahman|K1-70|2|8|11
B|6|Jason Lu – BM5|K1-70|6|10|10
B|7|Faiz Annuar|K1-45|4|7|9
B|8|Luen|K1-70|5|5|8]

Overall Qualifying Ranking

[table Rank|Driver|Class|Seed|Points
1|Tarmizi|K1-70|2|34
2|Zulkifli Samad|K1-45|13|32
3|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1-45|25|31
4|Desmond Khoo|K1-70|4|28
5|Ramsey Sabelt|K1-45|5|28
6|Iskandar Mildseven|K1-45|9|28
7|Yusnee Yusof|K1-70|14|28
8|Mark Ian Timms|K1-70|21|28
9|Jason Lu – BM5|K1-70|10|24
10|Zainy|K1-70|27|22
11|Nazaruddin|K1-70|8|21
12|Brian Eravelly|K1-70|20|21
13|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1-45|16|20
14|Faiz Annuar|K1-45|12|19
15|Fazz Rahman|K1-70|17|19
16|Luen|K1-70|11|17]

Championship update

Final Race Result

[table Pos|Group|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
1|(A)|Tarmizi|K1-70|1|11|20
2|(A)|Desmond Khoo|K1-70|4|2|16
3|(A)|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1-45|3|12|14
4|(A)|Zulkifli Samad|K1-45|2|4|12
5|(A)|Yusnee Yusof|K1-70|7|6|11
6|(A)|Mark Ian Timms|K1-70|8|7|10
7|(A)|Iskandar Mildseven|K1-45|6|1|9
8|(A)|Ramsey Sabelt|K1-45|5|3|8
9|(B)|Faiz Annuar|K1-45|6|7|7
10|(B)|Nazaruddin|K1-70|3|5|6
11|(B)|Zainy|K1-70|2|6|5
12|(B)|Luen|K1-70|8|2|4
13|(B)|Brian Eravelly|K1-70|4|3|3
14|(B)|Fazz Rahman|K1-70|7|8|2
15|(B)|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1-45|5|12|1
dns|(B)|Jason Lu – BM5|K1-70|1|10|dns]

Championship report

Overall Standings after Round 05

[table Rank|Driver|Cat|Points|Qualifying
1|Tarmizi|K1/70|68|143
2|Danny Chooz|K1/70|53|133
3|Desmond Khoo|K1/70|53|111
4|Ramsey Sabelt|K1/45|44|138
5|A Muhaymin|K1/70|41|114
6|Iskandar Mildseven|K1/45|37|114
7|Ashraff Dewal|K1/70|36|68
8|Jules Ng|K1/70|36|66
9|Nazaruddin|K1/70|35|121
10|Zulkifli Samad|K1/45|32|110
11|Faiz Annuar|K1/45|29|83
12|Luen|K1/70|26|107
13|Yusnee Yusof|K1/70|25|95
14|Jason Lu – BM5|K1/70|24|110
15|Mark Ian Timms|K1/70|15|71
16|Mohd Hanif Che Din|K1/45|14|61
17|James Mitchell|K1/70|14|30
18|Chris Al Zafir Setter (csetter)|K1/45|12|97
19|Fazz Rahman|K1/70|11|87
20|Brian Eravelly|K1/70|8|79
21|Edwyn Low|K1/70|8|24
22|Yip Yen|K1/70|7|36
23|Zainy|K1/70|5|40
24|Hafidz Fahro Rozi|K1/45|4|18
25|Mohd Julian Hussein|K1/45|3|32
26|Shahrul Azlan|K1/70|0|36
27|Shaeran Baba|K1/70|0|28
28|Devan Sridaran|K1/70|0|15
29|Patrick Tan|K1/70|0|14]

Round 05, K2 race report – Lim Eu Jin claims cool first win under pressure

Saturday, 2 May 2009
Shah Alam Stadium Kart Circuit (CW)

Please post your race report / experience on this thread.

Race update

K2 1st qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Abd Razak Halim|K2-45|3|20|20
A|2|Rizal Khalid|K2-70|1|22|16
A|3|FAIBS|K2-45|2|14|14
A|4|Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2-45|5|17|12
A|5|Stevo|K2-70|4|24|11
A|6|Ng Wei Li|K3-70|6|19|10]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2-45|2|16|20
B|2|Stuart Gibbs|K2-70|3|22|16
B|3|Aaron Liddell|K2-70|6|18|14
B|4|Vincent Chin|K2-45|1|17|12
B|5|Angeline Ooi|K3-45|4|20|11
B|6|Cheah Ben Lee|K2-45|5|25|10]

K2 2nd qualifying report

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
A|1|Abd Razak Halim|K2-45|4|20|20
A|2|Rizal Khalid|K2-70|6|22|16
A|3|FAIBS|K2-45|5|14|14
A|4|Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2-45|2|17|12
A|5|Stevo|K2-70|3|24|11
A|6|Ng Wei Li|K3-70|1|19|10]

[table Grp|Pos|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
B|1|Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2-45|5|16|20
B|2|Cheah Ben Lee|K2-45|2|25|16
B|3|Aaron Liddell|K2-70|1|18|14
B|4|Stuart Gibbs|K2-70|4|22|12
B|5|Angeline Ooi|K3-45|3|20|11
B|6|Vincent Chin|K2-45|6|17|10]

Overall Qualifying Ranking

[table Rank|Driver|Class|Seed|Points
1|Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2-45|6|40
2|Abd Razak Halim|K2-45|8|40
3|Rizal Khalid|K2-70|2|32
4|FAIBS|K2-45|3|28
5|Stuart Gibbs|K2-70|11|28
6|Aaron Liddell|K2-70|-|28
7|Cheah Ben Lee|K2-45|-|26
8|Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2-45|-|24
9|Vincent Chin|K2-45|4|22
10|Stevo|K2-70|16|22
11|Angeline Ooi|K3-45|44|22
12|Ng Wei Li|K3-70|-|20]

Championship update

Final Race Result

[table Pos|Group|Driver|Class|Grid|Kart|Points
1|(A)|Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2-45|1|16|20
2|(A)|Abd Razak Halim|K2-45|2|20|16
3|(A)|Rizal Khalid|K2-70|3|21|14
4|(A)|FAIBS|K2-45|4|14|12
5|(A)|Aaron Liddell|K2-70|6|18|11
6|(A)|Stuart Gibbs|K2-70|5|25|10
7|(B)|Cheah Ben Lee|K2-45|1|25|9
8|(B)|Vincent Chin|K2-45|3|14|8
9|(B)|Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2-45|2|17|7
10|(B)|Angeline Ooi|K3-45|5|20|6
11|(B)|Stevo|K2-70|4|24|5
12|(B)|Ng Wei Li|K3-70|6|19|4]

Championship report

Overall Standings after Round 05

[table Rank|Driver|Cat|Points|Qualifying
1. |Nizam Rahman (nizer)|K2/45|70|160
2. |Rizal Khalid|K2/70|61|138
3. |Lim Eu Jin (infernoelise)|K2/45|60|142
4. |FAIBS|K2/45|58|139
5. |Vincent Chin|K2/45|52|128
6. |Zainuddin Zainal|K2/45|43|124
7. |Abd Razak Halim|K2/45|37|107
8. |Mohd Fikri Rahim|K2/45|32|86
9. |Stuart Gibbs|K2/70|28|96
10. |M Z Azizi Abd Malek|K1/70|19|59
11. |Jazland Azmi|K2/45|18|68
12. |Stevo|K2/70|15|94
13. |SK Wong|K2/70|15|58
14. |Nurhafizah Nazarudin|K2/45|12|55
15. |Nurul Alis|K2/45|12|41
16. |Suhazlan|K2/45|11|30
17. |Aaron Liddell|K2/45|11|28
18. |Kenny (Zoggee)|K2/70|10|54
19. |Jonathan Kan|K2/70|10|42
20. |Cheah Ben Lee|K2/45|9|26
21. |Emmy Diana|K2/45|8|56
22. |Eddy Hazral (Jinggo)|K2/45|7|24
23. |Zainy|K1/70|6|41
24. |Brandon Lim (PFR2828)|K2/70|6|35
25. |Angeline Ooi|K2/45|6|22
26. |Ruben Yap|K2/45|6|20
27. |Ng Wei Li|K3/70|4|20
28. |Imran Ishak|K2/45|2|38
29. |Alson Wong|K2/70|2|23
30. |Ooi Soon Tiang|K2/45|2|16
31. |Alex Lum|K2/45|1|31]