BRANDON Weeks stole the show for Weymouth Warriors at Exeter in the opening under-10 section of the British Junior League South West Grand Prix.

He earned an amazing 16-point maximum in qualifying to secure a place in the A final where he lined up against the other maximum qualifier, Jacob Soper of Newport.

With Soper finding himself down in fourth place at the chequered flag it was Weeks who took the win and the 25 points after manoeuvring past Jamie Miller of Southampton on the third/fourth turn.

The Cox twins, Daniel and Charlotte, also performed well on their under-10 debuts securing sixth and seventh (second Charlotte, third Daniel) in the B final.

Daniel finding himself in the B due to a couple of finish line plunges stole a win in heat four and a second in heat 12.

Charlie Sam on his Junior League debut had a superb day finishing second in the Under-8 C final, this would have surely been a B if not for an unfortunate fall after leading heat one.

George Newman finished second in the A final to Newport's James Robinson after qualifying with just one dropped point in his heats.

Reigning under-10 champion Matthew Mildon made the move up to under-12s to join team-mate Logan Weeks.

This was expected to be a very tough group and so it proved with no-one getting to the A final with a maximum.

It really was wide open with Mildon securing the Warriors' second runner-up spot of the day to go with the win in the under-10 for Weeks after a fine race involving Aaron Coles (Exeter), Dan Miller (Southampton) and Joe Avery (Exeter).

Logan finished a super third in the B final in a very strong field of riders. Brave overtaking moves saw Logan record a win, a second and two thirds for an 11-point qualification score.

A Warriors' spokesperson said: "As a club we had a brilliant day, scoring a total of 85 race points.

"After the halfway point of he under-12 section we held second overall behind Exeter, unfortunately we had no more riders in the older groups and after round five we slipped to third behind Newport.

"With Southampton (1) and Poole (2) both fielding riders in the under-18s we were always a bit vulnerable, finally ending the day narrowly in fifth."