Ronan Pearson brought the curtain down on his rookie season in the Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship with a solid weekend at Brands Hatch, where results on paper weren’t a fair reflection of his on-track performance.

The Kelty-based youngster went into the season finale hoping to maintain the impressive form he had shown since the summer break, and on a run of eight points finishes in nine starts.

Having never previously driven his Macklin Motors and Saltire Energy-backed Hyundai around the iconic Brands GP circuit, the focus through free practice was on gaining valuable experience ahead of qualifying, with the young Scot going into the session aiming to push towards the top ten.

Whilst 14th position was lower than he hoped for, his time was little over a tenth of a second away from tenth spot, and only half a second off a place on the front row.

Eager to add to his points tally in the opening race of finals day, Ronan instead found himself struggling with a lack of grip on his car, with the end result being that he finished up back in 20th place.

The team worked hard to make changes to the car ahead of race two, but Ronan was unable to benefit when an incident on the opening lap forced him into retirement.

Exiting Druids for the first time, Ronan suddenly found the slow BMW of Colin Turkington in his path and was unable to avoid making contact, which broke the front suspension and pitched him across the circuit where he was collected by Michael Crees.

The heavy damage put Ronan out on the spot and left his Bristol Street Motors with EXCELR8 team with plenty of work to do to repair the Hyundai in time for race three.

Dunfermline Press: Ronan Pearson in race action.Ronan Pearson in race action. (Image: Ronan Pearson Racing)

Taking his place right at the back for the final race of his rookie campaign, Ronan showed his pace to charge through the pack into the points by the half-way stage and although he was knocked back a spot by newly-crowned champion Ash Sutton, 16th position capped a solid end to the weekend.

"It’s been a bit of a funny weekend to end the season," he said. "Normally I’d have said P14 on the grid was a bit disappointing, but around the GP circuit, I was pleased with the result because we’d worked really hard through practice to improve the car and I knew there was still more to come.

"I felt confident going into the opening race but we just didn't have the pace from about the ninth lap. I was running with a train of cars early on but then the car suddenly dropped away and I just had no front-end grip.

"The team worked hard to get on top of that but we couldn’t see how the car would work with the changes because of what happened in race two. There was nothing I could do to avoid Colin and that would have been bad enough without also getting collected by Creesy as it damaged both the right and left suspension.

"The team worked its socks off again to get me out for race three and I really wanted to get a result for them and we came close to a point, but just missed out.

"It was a tough way to end the season but it’s fair to say that I've really lived the dream this year and I cannot thank everyone who has been involved enough. It’s been an incredible experience, and this is only the start."