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Shahan becomes first Indian to win Asian Karting Championship

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Press Trust of India Sepang (Malaysia)
Last Updated : Sep 04 2016 | 8:22 PM IST
Indian racer Shahan Ali Mohsin created history by clinching the Micro Max title in the final weekend of the Asian Karting Championship here today.
Agra native Mohsin managed to thwart off his main championship rival Hayden Haikal in a tough battle, while recovering from a massive bout of food poisoning which forced him to miss two full days of track time.
After complete rest for two days, Shahan was finally felt well enough to head to the circuit, although still far from fit.
Right from practice one though, Shahan was in the mix for the top three spots albeit missing a few tenths from outright benchmark. However, he almost magically put it together in qualifying - taking pole position by over two-tenths of a second (0.2 sec) - a dominating showing given the drivers from 2nd to 5th position were separated by just five-hundredth of a second (0.05 sec).
Coming into the weekend, Shahan was leading the Micro Max championship table by a five point margin to his title rival Hayden. Therefore it was critical to have a clean weekend with no risks and no surprises and finish ahead of Hayden in all sessions possible which included two heat races, a pre-final and the final.
In the two heat races, Shahan kept his composure despite a few brushes with Amer Harris, who was not in championship contention but was fighting aggressively for the race win.

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Shahan and Amer fought hard and Shahan passed Amer in both heats but Amer aggressively took the place back both times. The Indian had the big picture in mind and didn't want to push his luck and risk a DNF. Resultantly, Shahan finished second in both heats but was crucially ahead of title rival Hayden who finished third in both races.
For the pre-finals, the strategy was similar - keep the nose clean and stay on the podium; Shahan was starting 2nd and with Haikal behind in third. Once again it was about Shahan and Amer who passed each other for the lead multiple times but eventually on the penultimate lap Shahan settled for second as Haikal was more than four seconds behind.
So far so good, but the title was set to go down for the wire with Shahan just about holding an advantage - but this time it was a three-way fight all the way through from first to the last lap. Amer, Hayden and Shahan were in the thick of it, rubbing bumpers with places being switched between the two championship contenders while Amer led at the front but not far away.
Eventually Shahan settled for third with Hayden finishing second this time around; with the top three finishing within 0.2 seconds. Numbers were crunched with bated breath and at the end of it - Shahan emerged four points ahead thanks to his consistent performance over the weekend as the winner.

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First Published: Sep 04 2016 | 8:22 PM IST

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