Friday, 17 November 2017

FIA WEC - 6 Hours of Bahrain: Porsche 919 Hybrid on pole in its final race

Neel Jani and Nick Tandy took pole position for the final race of the 2017 FIA WEC season, and the final race for the Porsche 919 Hybrid tomorrow. 
Jani and Tandy set a combined time of 1.39.383 in three stages. Tandy's first qualifying run was ruined by a driver error, but when Jani put everyone else on half a second, Tandy got back out again for a second run and nailed it too with the third fastest time of the session. The number 1 Porsche 919 Hybrid on pole for its final race in the FIA WEC, it couldn't be more symbolic.



Mike Conway and Jose Maria Lopez secured the second place on the grid in their #7 Toyota TS050 Hybrid, with a combined time of 1.39.646, 0.263 seconds slower than the leading Porsche. The #2 Porsche of Timo Bernhard and future F1 star Brendon Hartley was third fastest ahead of the second Toyota of Anthony Davidson and Kazuki Nakajima.



In LMP2 it's Signatech Matmut Alpine that clinched their third pole position of the season. Andre Negrao and Gustavo Menezes had an average time of 1.47.227, 0.385 seconds faster than the #38 Jackie Chan DC Racing of Thomas Laurent and Ho-Pin Tung. Their main rivals for the title in the #31 Vaillante Rebellion Oreca will be right behind them on the grid in third place. Rounding out the top 5 in class are the #26 G-Drive Racing and the #25 CEFC Manor TRS Racing. Matthieu Vaxiviere set the fastest time in LMP2 in 1.47.000, but only got to seventh position on the grid.



2017 manufacturer champions Ferrari took pole position in the GTE Pro class with the #71 488 GTE of Davide Rigon and Sam Bird. Both drivers set a laptime within 0.025 seconds from eachother, resulting in a combined time of 1.56.033. Darren Turner and Jonny Adam gave the Aston Martin Vantage a front row start in its final race, just under four thenths of a second behind the Ferrari. Third fastest was the #67 Ford GT of Andy Priaulx and Harry Tincknell, just ahead of their title rivals in the #51 Ferrari.



Pole position in GTE-Am was once again for Paul Dalla Lana and Pedro Lamy, impressively scoring their seventh out of nine pole position of the season. Both drivers set an average time of 2.00.111 which gave them an advantage of 0.174 seconds to the #61 Clearwater Ferrari of Matt Griffin and Weng Sun Mok. Proton Competition lost a point to Aston Martin in the title challenge and will start on third place tomorrow.

Free Practice 3


Porsche went fastest in this morning's practice session wit both 919 Hybrids on the top of the timesheets.  Fastest overall was Timo Bernhard in the #2 Porsche with a lap of 1.42.438, beating Neel Jani in the #1 sister car. Anthony Davidson was the fastest Toyota driver, but over a second behind Bernhard (1.43.734). 



Vaillante Rebellion's morning session didn't go as well as yesterday, the fastest of the two cars now only able to set the fourth time. Jackie Chan DC Racing stepped up, both cars outpacing the rest of the field. Ho Pin Tung set the pace in the Mighty38 with 1.48.879, which was just under half a second faster than Tristan Gommendy in the #37. Loïc Duval was the fastest driver in the #26 G-Drive Oreca again, ending up in fourth place. 



AF Corse took command of the GTE Pro class with James Calado in the #51 Ferrari F488 going round in 1.57.972. Andy Priaulx seemed to have found the right pace in the Ford #67, setting the second fastest time just over two tenths of a second over Calado. This fastest was Davide Rigon in the second Ferrari. 



In GTE Am it was Matt Griffin who went fastest again in the #61 Clearwater Racing Ferrari with a laptime just over two minutes (2.00.661).  Matteo Cairoli put the #77 Proton Competition Porsche on second place, with the #54 Spirit of Race Ferrari behind him in third. The session was shortly red flagged when the #86 Gulf UK Racing Porsche had a small fire. 
The race into dusk and under the floodlights will be green flagged tomorrow afternoon at 16.00h local time. 
Results Free Practice 3
Qualifying results LMP
Qualifying results GTE

Kristof Vermeulen. 

Thursday, 16 November 2017

FIA WEC 2017 - 6 Hours of Bahrain: Toyota dominates Thursday practice

It seems only a few months ago when the 2018 season kicked off in Monza early April, and now we're already into the final raceweekend at Bahrain. A race into the night to finish another exciting season in the FIA World Endurance Championship, but also - again - a race after which a few goodbyes will be waived. Sunny, cloudless skies in Bahrain today & temperatures rising up to just under 30° Celsius this afternoon made it almost perfect conditions for the start of the final WEC weekend of 2017.

The afternoon session was red flagged for almost 40 minutes when Harry Tincknell lost oil out of his #67 Ford GT and stopped on track.  Another 30 minutes were added to the session, the cars now driving into sunset and finishing under the floodlights.




Mike Conway set the fastest laptime of the afternoon in his #7 Toyota TS050 Hybrid with a 1.42.313. Sébastian Buemi took second place in the #8 Toyota, just under 0.2 seconds behind Conway.  The Porsches were third (#1) and fourth (#2) fastest, 0.334 and 0.500 seconds behind the leading Toyota. 

Vaillante Rebellion was quickest in LMP2, the championship leading #13 Oreca of Nelson Piquet Jr going round in 1.58.579. Piquet was a fraction of a second (0.022) faster than Loïc Duval in the G-Drive LMP2. Duval had to park the car early in the session, but that didn't stop him from putting in an impressive lap at his return to the FIA WEC. Third quickest was Alex Brundle in the #37 Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca, with a time of 1.49.083. Completing the top 5 were the #36 Signatech Matmut Alpine of Gustavo Menezes and the #24 CEFC Manor Oreca of Jean-Eric Vergne. 

Ferrari on top in GTE Pro with Alessandro Pier Guidi in the #51 AF Corse F488 GTE. The Italian held off Jonny Adam in the #97 Aston Martin with 0.322 seconds. Despite having to park his Ford GT early in the session, Harry Tincknell still managed to do a lap of 1.59.413, enough to put him on third place in the afternoon. 

Matteo Cairoli was fastest in the GTE Am class, with a lap of 2.00.428 in the #77 Proton Competition Porsche. Pedro Lamy put his Aston Vantage V8 in second position, 0.125 seconds behind Cairoli.  Third fastest was Ben Barker in the #86 Gulf UK Porsche.

Toyota Gazoo Racing continued to dominate both Porsches in the evening session, finishing first and second again. Kazuki Nakajima in the #8 TS050 Hybrid now went fastest in an uninterrupted session, putting a 1:40.095 on the timetables. Jose Maria Lopez now put the #7 sister car on second place, 0.598 seconds behind Nakajima. Brendon Hartley was the fastest Porsche driver this evening, just 0.080 seconds behind Lopez.

Swiss team Vaillante Rebellion set the pace again in the LMP2 class, now with both cars on the top spots of the leaderboard. Bruno Senna was quickest under the lights in a 1.47.664, 0.574 seconds faster than Nelson Piquet Jr in the sister car.  Thomas Laurent in the 38 Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca was third fastest in 1.49.002, 7 thousands of a second ahead of André Negrao in the Signatech Matmut Alpine.

It's the final race in the GTE Pro class for the Aston Martin Vantage this weekend, but they sure won't be sent in retirement without a decent fight.  Both Astons set the fastest times in class this evening. Jonny Adam in the #97 beat Marco Sorensen in the #95 sister car with almost half a second. Adam's fastest time a 1.57.014. Best of the rest was Davide Rigon in the #71 AF Corse Ferrari F488 GTE.

In the Am class, the #61 Clearwater Racing Ferrari was the first to dive under the 2 minute mark today.  Matt Griffin set a 1.59.773, beating Francesco Castellacci in the #54 Spirit of Race Ferrari with 0.408 seconds. Pedro Lamy in the championship leading #98 Aston Martin set the third fastest time this evening.
Track action resumes tomorrow morning with the third and final free practice session at 11h20 local time.  Qualifying is due to start at 17h00 in the afternoon.

Free Practice 1 results
Free Practice 2 results

Kristof Vermeulen. 

Sunday, 12 November 2017

FIA WEC - 6 Hours of Shanghai - Third win for Toyota, championships for Porsche and Ferrari

In a dominant performance by Toyota the #8 TS050 of Anthony Davidson, Sebastian Buemi and Kazuki Nakajima took the overall win in last weeks 6 Hours of Shanghai by a lap over the #2 Porsche 919 Hybrid of Timo Bernhard, Earl Bamber and Brendon Hartley. 

© Toyota Motorsport gmbh


Despite the Toyota win, second place was comfortably enough for the #2 Porsche trio to seal the World Endurance Driver’s Championship.
“It’s an awesome feeling” Hartley said at the end of the race, “Not the best race for us but we will celebrate anyway and I will remember this forever”. Today’s Championship title gives the trio their ‘endurance double’ being crowned both Le Mans and World Champions in a single season.

© Toyota Motorsport gmbh


Until the final 40 minutes of the race it looked as if Toyota were on course for a 1-2 finish which would have pushed the race for the Manufacturer’s World Championship title to the final round in Bahrain next week. However, in his second incident of the day, while leading the race, Jose Maria Lopez hit the #91 Porsche 911 RSR GTE of Richard Lietz, damaging both front & rear suspension of the #7 Toyota which required a 13 minute tip to the pits to rectify, ending Toyota’s chances of a double podium win and handing the Manufacturers LMP1 Championship crown to Porsche. 

© Porsche


Lietz’s 911 fared slightly better from the incident and required just the two right side tyres replacing, however, the collision ended his hunt for Harry Tincknell in the #67 Ford GT, resigning the Austrian to second place in class. Although scant consolation to the Porsche GTE team, Lopez received a 10 second penalty for the incident which was added to his overall time.

© Porsche


Rounding out the podium in Shanghai was the No.1 Porsche 919 Hybrid of Neel Jani, André Lotterer and Nick Tandy. Their race was compromised in the first hour when Tandy slowed with a throttle sensor issue.

© Autowebbb - Drew Gibson

In the LMP2 class China provided us with arguably one of the best races of the season. The class was eventually won by the #31 Vaillante Rebellion squad of Bruno Senna, Nicolas Prost and Julien Canal, who also took over the lead in the championship from the #38 Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca.

© FIA WEC/Adrenal Media


In a race packed full of incident and excitement, Brazilian driver Senna laid the foundations for the team’s eventual win taking him and Canal to the lead of the LMP2 championship by four points (Prost having missed a race earlier in the year). Their chief rivals during the race were the #38 Jackie Chan DC Racing trio of Oliver Jarvis, Ho-Pin Tung and Thomas Laurent. The three-time category winners had seemed to have built a race-winning platform after a stellar double stint from Jarvis, but then a fraught final two hours saw a collision between their Oreca 07 and the #26 G-Drive Racing car. Damage to the front of their car meant they eventually finished off the podium in fourth position.

© Signatech Alpine

Runners-up in the LMP2 category were the Signatech Alpine crew of Nicolas Lapierre, Gustavo Menezes and André Negrão; today’s result keeping Menezes in outside contention for the LMP2 Drivers’ crown.


Making it two Vaillante Rebellion cars in the top three was the #13 car of Nelson Piquet Jr, David Heinemeier-Hansson and Mathias Beche. They recovered from contact on the opening lap to score their second podium position of the season, with Heinemeier Hansson arguably being crowned ‘driver of the day’ as he defended throughout his stint against factory Audi DTM driver Nico Müller in the #26 G-Drive Oreca.

© Ford/Drew Gibson


In the GTE ranks, Ford scored a hard-fought victory as Andy Priaulx and Harry Tincknell claimed their second LMGTE Pro win of the 2017 FIA World Endurance Championship season for their #67 Ford Ganassi Team UK Ford GT. The win for Ford’s ‘Britpack’ car thrust the British duo thrust back into contention for the FIA GT World Endurance Championship Driver’s title with 127,5 points. The win came after Tincknell performed a heroic rear-guard action when he came under intense pressure from the #91 Porsche in the fifth hour. When Lietz’s 911 RSR was hit by the #7 Toyota, driven at the time by José Maria Lopez, it freed up Tincknell and he brought the car home to claim the maximum points haul.

© Porsche


Second spot on the podium went to the #91 Porsche 911 RSR of Frédéric Makowiecki and Richard Lietz who now lie second in the driver’s championship with third place going to the #51 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE of James Calado and Alessandro Pier Guidi. The final spot on the podium coupled with the 6th place finish for the #71 car was enough to give the Italian manufacturer the FIA GT Manufacturer’s Title one race before the final round.

© FIA WEC/Adrenal Media


In the GTE AM category, Aston Martin turned its pole position into their 50th class win with the #98 V8 Vantage GTE of Paul Dalla Lana, Pedro Lamy and Mathias Lauda taking the chequered flag a lap ahead of the #86 Gulf Racing UK Porsche 911 of Khaled Al Qubaisi, Ben Barker and Nicholas Foster. The final spot on the podium went to the #77 Dempsey – Proton Racing Porsche.

© Porsche


Dalla Lana & co now lead the championship going into the final race of the season. Clearwater Racing had a disastrous race losing 6 laps in the box after being hit by the #37 Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca early in the race, taking out also the #54 Spirit of Race Ferrari. All is still to play for though in Bahrain next week with the Aston leading the Porsche with 10 points and the Ferrari 1 point further behind.

Race highlights


Kristof Vermeulen
This article originally appeared on Sportscarglobal