
Letâs be real for a second.
Weâve all been there. Mid-race, feeling pressure, and the only thing on your mind is:
âI need to hold my position.â
So, what do most drivers do?
They start defending. Early. Aggressively. Every. Single. Corner.
But here’s the truthâŚ
Over-Defending is a Short-Term Move (That Hurts Long-Term)
Think about it. Kart races arenât just 3-lap sprints.
Youâve got 15â20 laps to deal with â and if you start blocking from lap 1, guess what?
Youâre digging your own grave.
The moment you defend, you’re not just holding off one guy â youâre slowing yourself down.
And when you slow down, everyone behind you gets more frustrated.
The group bunches up. The chaos builds.
And then boom â someone makes a risky move, or you get shoved off.
I’ve seen it happen too many times.
Hell, Iâve even been that guy once or twice.
Why Drivers Defend Too Much (And What Happens)
Letâs break it down:
- đ You defend in lap 3
- đ You have to defend again in lap 4, 5, 6âŚ
- đť The leaders pull away
- đĽ The pack behind builds pressure
- 𧨠Eventually, someone goes for a divebomb and it ends in a crash (yours or theirs)
And here’s the worst part:
You couldâve avoided all of it by playing the long game.
đĄ The Smarter Way to Defend in Karting
Hereâs what I teach my drivers at Senndit.com:
1. Defend Only When You Truly Need To
Your job is to go forward, not just hold your position.
Defend:
- First lap (OK, fine)
- Last lap (of course)
- Right after an overtake (strategically)
Thatâs it.
If youâve just passed someone, defend the next corner, maybe two â then focus on pace.
Why? Because if youâre truly faster, youâll break the slipstream and pull away.
2. Donât Give Them a Second Chance
If someone overtakes you right after you passed them, theyâre disrespecting you.
Theyâre saying, âI donât believe youâre faster than me.â
Thatâs when you make a point.
Next lap, pass them and drive them into the dust.
(You know what I mean â donât crash, but make it clear they made the wrong move.)
3. Avoid Group Traps
Hereâs what I mean:
You pass someone, and instead of pushing, you defend too soon.
They re-pass you â but now the whole group behind joins the party.
You lose one spot, then two, then fiveâŚ
Trust me â it happens in a flash.
Avoid the trap:
- Pass
- Defend one corner
- Drive clean, fast laps to create a gap
4. Be Long-Term in Your Thinking
If you’re always thinking, “Let me block this guy again,” youâre missing the bigger picture.
Youâre killing your rhythm.
Youâre not racing anymore. Youâre just reacting.
Instead, focus on driving at your best:
- Hit every apex
- Brake clean
- Use your head, not your ego
đ§ Racing IQ > Blocking Instincts
Karting is not bumper cars.
Itâs not about who blocks better. Itâs about who races smarter.
Sometimes, yes â defending is part of the game.
But if it becomes your whole game?
Youâll burn out. Youâll crash. Or youâll end up in P8 wondering where it all went wrong.
A Quick Story from My Own Race Weekend
I once saw a driver in Mini defending from lap 2 of a 12-lap final.
He was in P4 at the time.
By lap 10?
He was down in P9 or so.
What went wrong?
He defended way too early, forgot to push, and the train behind just ate him alive.
I pulled him aside after the race and told him something like:
âYou werenât racing. You were surviving. And in karting, survivors donât win”.
He never forgot that.
Final Thoughts: Drive Forward, Not Backward
Letâs wrap it up with a simple rule:
đ If youâre fast, prove it with your pace â no need to defend that much.
Hereâs your game plan:
- Pass cleanly
- Defend smartly (1 or 2 corners max)
- Focus on rhythm and racecraft
- Donât let your ego drive the kart
Thereâs no trophy for âmost blocksâ â but there is for finishing first.
So next time you feel the urge to defend every corner, ask yourself:
âIs this a long-term decision â or am I panicking?â
You already know the answer.
Now go out there and drive smart.
Keep sending it.