Formula 2 driver Henry Surtees has been airlifted to hospital after apparently being knocked cold when a flying wheel hit him on the helmet as he took part in the second race of the weekend at Brands Hatch.
He is being treated at the Royal London hospital, the regional trauma centre serving Brands Hatch. There is currently no word on his condition.
Surtees, the 18-year-old son of Formula One and motorcycling world champion John, had finished third in the previous race and qualified eighth for the second.
He was running line astern with other cars when Jack Clarke spun off ahead of him exiting Westfield Bend.
Clarke’s fast but relatively innocuous accident was transformed into a dangerous one when he hit a barrier that was positioned curving towards the track as it avoided a tree. His car was sent back towards the circuit and his rear wing and one wheel broke free, tumbling back onto the racing line.
The wheel gathered pace and hit Surtees on the head as he passed. The blue and yellow number seven car went straight on at the next corner, onlookers noting that its throttle was stuck open and its driver’s helmet visor likewise. It hit the barrier on the approach to Sheene Curve and slid to a halt, with no sign of reaction from Surtees.