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RACING FROM A FANS PERSPECTIVE - ALMS - 2009 |
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2009- ACURA SPORTS CAR CHALLENGE, ROAD AMERICA
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POS CAR CLS LAPS DRIVERS CAR MAKE 1 9 P1 71 Brabham/ Sharp Acura ARX 02a 2 66 P1 71 de Ferran/ Pagenaud Acura ARX 02a 3 15 P2 71 Fernandez/ Diaz Acura ARX-01B 4 20 P2 71 Leitzinger/ Franchitti Lola B09 86 Mazda 5 6 P2 71 Pickett /Graf Porsche RS Spyder 6 37 P1 71 J.Field /C.Field Lola B06/10 7 48 P1 70 Mowlem/ Johansson Ginetta-Zytek 09HS 8 12 P1 70 Willman/ McMurry Lola B06/10 9 90 GT2 69 Hand/ Auberlen BMW E92 M3 10 92 GT2 68 Mueller/ Milner BMW E92 M3 11 3 GT2 68 Magnussen /O'Connell Chevrolet Corvette C 12 45 GT2 68 Bergmeister /Long Porsche 911 RSR 13 62 GT2 68 Melo /Kaffer Ferrari 430 Berlinetta 14 4 GT2 67 Beretta /Gavin Chevrolet Corvette C 15 40 GT2 66 Murry/D.Robertson/A.Roberts Doran Ford GT-R 16 44 GT2 65 Law/ Neiman Porsche 911 RSR 17 57 Chal 63 Me.Snow /Ma.Snow Porsche 911 GT3 Cu 18 11 GT2 63 Feinberg/ Hall Dodge Viper 19 02 Chal 62 Parker/ Pickering Porsche 911 GT3 Cu 20 36 Chal 62 Hoaglund /Faieta Porsche 911 GT3 Cu 21 47 Chal 61 Baker /Cosmo Porsche 911 GT3 Cu 22 08 Chal 61 Brown /Sweedler Porsche 911 GT3 Cu 23 87 GT2 56 Henzler/ Miller Porsche 911 RSR 24 21 GT2 54 Farnbacher/ James Panoz Esperante 25 16 P2 50 Dyson/ Smith Lola B09 86 Mazda
Brabham and Sharp drove the Patron Highcroft Acura ARX-02a to its first victory since St. Petersburg in early April. They gained four points on de Ferran and Simon Pagenaud in the LMP1 championship.
Patron Highcroft Racing's Scott Sharp and David Brabham celebrate their victory Sunday at Road America. "I think we handled the car the best we have this year," said Brabham, who leads the title hunt with Sharp by 13 points. "The left front was starting to push a little too much toward the end. I had reasonable heat on the right side tires and could maintain that gap from Gil. He was breathing down my neck; he is a great competitor."
Brabham and Sharp won for the second straight season at Road America. They were LMP2 class winners last season by 0.867 seconds. It was just as - if not more - tense Sunday.
"We felt a little in a rut watching de Ferran win four in a row," said Sharp, who also has SCCA and Trans-Am victories at the circuit to his credit. "It has been a little rough watching them close our points gap. Coming here, we knew we had to dig deep. It was a challenge though to get the car where we wanted it. We made changes last night and this morning. The yellows were in our favor. The team did a great strategy call. David did a great job at the end to hold Gil off - it was very exciting."
The de Ferran and Patron Highcroft Acuras swapped the lead four times in the first 55 laps, mostly on pit strategies. But the final one with seven minutes remaining set up the duel between close friends and even closer competitors.
"I had very little go through my mind because I wasn't about to choke and let that lead go," Brabham said. "So the best thing for me to do is not to think and just drive. When you start looking in the mirrors, you think 'Don't screw up', and then you end up where you were looking. So I tried not to look."
"Our guys are pretty good at strategy," Sharp added. "I thought they had it very well thought out. We were off a little bit (with de Ferran) after they did that stop. They didn't explain too much on the radio - but I think they wanted that so we would hammer down and just race."
In LMP2, Lowe's Fernandez Racing's Adrian Fernandez and Luis Diaz won for the sixth time in seven races in their Acura ARX-01b with a 6.742-second victory over Dyson Racing's Butch Leitzinger and Marino Franchitti. The Lowe's Fernandez crew elected not to change tires on its final pit stop with approximately 30 minutes left.
Fernandez and Diaz extended their championship lead to 55 points with three events - and 75 points - remaining on the season. Fernandez led the race overall late but didn't have enough muscle to hold off the two P1 Acuras.
"I think the whole team did a great job today," Diaz said. "In the start before the first caution our top speed wasn't good. Fortunately, I realized behind the Mazda, our car was very good - very quick. From that point, I started playing with the fuel strategy and the guys did a great job guiding me and making sure we were in front of the competition. After that, I tried to stay close and save fuel."
The strategy worked Sunday just like it did in Utah and last week at Mid-Ohio. The call for tires came at the same time Leitzinger's crew put four fresh Michelins on the Lola-Mazda thinking the decision and new rubber would allow Leitzinger to run down the Acura.
"We wanted to stay ahead of the Dyson," said Fernandez, who had pitted from the lead. "When I got into the car, I was already ahead of them. From there, I had to drive fast and stay ahead of them. Then I saw we had a long gap and I realized we could keep the tires if we needed to. We really didn't know the pace they were going to have in the race. They were very fast in qualifying and in the race. We didn't know their consistency. That is where we excelled - consistency. In that respect, they didn't have the pace. Luis managed to stay with them and that was the key in the end."
The Lowe's Fernandez Acura also won its first MICHELIN GREEN X Challenge prototype trophy since St. Petersburg, a triumph that is awarded for overall performance, energy efficiency and environmental impact.
"We win races by being more efficient and with fuel consumption," Fernandez said. "We always try to save as much fuel as we can and save the tires as much as possible. In racing, we try to push cars to the max but we still try to conserve tires and fuel. This gave us a nice advantage to stay in front."
BMW Rahal Letterman Racing Team scored its first victory in its first year of a partnership that saw Joey Hand and Bill Auberlen lead a 1-2 GT2 finish for the new BMW M3. Auberlen and Hand gained nearly a full lap on the rest of the field on an early-race wave-by when John Baker in one of ORBIT Racing's Challenge class Porsches went off at Turn 12.
That was all they needed for BMW's first victory in the American Le Mans Series since Petit Le Mans in 2001.
"I can hardly remember that far back," said Auberlen, who was part of that lineup with Hans Stuck and Boris Said. "We have a new group of people that are so skilled. You give them enough time to develop the car and they'll make it happen. Dunlop, our tire partner, has been working so hard. We were fast at Mid-Ohio and it didn't go our way.
"There are three gigantic straightaways and the BMWs are known not to have such great straightline speed. But on the long radius corners and with 50-50 weight distribution, the car is so balanced and really dances through. The Porsches and Corvettes seemed to be struggling through some of those corners."
Dirk Mueller and Tommy Milner placed second in their BMW M3, and the Corvette Racing's Johnny O'Connell and Jan Magnussen placed third in their Corvette C6.R. The E85-powered car also won the GT portion of the MICHELIN® GREEN X® Challenge for the second straight event.
But the weekend belonged to BMW. The M3s were quickest in all four testing and practice sessions, qualified on pole and posted the fastest GT2 race lap.
"Bill and I called this one to ourselves," said Hand, a first-time winner who also earned his first pole position Saturday. "We've been talking it up pretty well here. We felt like we had a good chance to win at Mid-Ohio but got hit by a prototype and we were really good at Lime Rock. It all starts when the car gets off the truck. I can't say enough about the guys at BMW Rahal Letterman Racing. It came exactly as we thought it would. Once I got in the car, we basically had a lap in hand, and my job was not to get hit and not fall too far behind."
Martin and Melanie Snow scored their second straight Challenge class victory and third in four races with their Snow Racing Porsche 911 GT3 Cup entry. They beat the Gruppe Orange Porsche of Nick Parker and Donald Pickering by one lap.
The race wasn't that easy though. Just as it did in other classes, the yellow flag stops and a long opening stint by Pickering put Melanie Snow on the attack throughout her stint.
"I started in the car and did what I could to get ahead," said Melanie Snow, who won the first American Le Mans Series race at Sebring in 1999 with her husband along with Patrick Huisman. "We would pull out but then have to stop for fuel and then repass the rest of the guys. It was a big challenge this weekend running the Patron GT3 Challenge by Yokohama."
Pickering finally pitted just shy of the two-hour mark for a driver change, and Martin Snow gained the lap advantage in that period. One of the bigger challenges for Snow in his final stint was watching for the faster cars in the braking zones while yet being nearly as quick in a straightline as the GT2 runners.
"Our car was really good," he said. "I was able to maintain some pretty quick laps without being on the edge. When I caught up to someone, it was relatively easy. But when you get behind one of the GT2 cars and lose the clean air, you have to move over to gain the downforce back. They are also much quicker off the corners than we are. The traffic wasn't too bad out there but when you get five or six of the GT2 cars around you, it's almost as bad as being around one or two prototypes."
Gruppe Orange's second entry of Bob Faieta and Wesley Hoaglund, winners at Lime Rock in July, were third in the class.
courtesy: americanlemans.com
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