Sunday, September 12, 2021

Winner & Highlights of the IMSA WeatherTech Sports Car Championship Hyundai Sports Car Championship at Laguna Seca Raceway

Laguna Seca Raceway, and the scenic Monterey Peninsula, beckon for the teams and drivers of the IMSA WeatherTech Sports Car Championship, who (to quote the song by the Mamas and The Papas), will be “California Dreamin’ “, for the next two races.  Famous for racing since the 1950s, the track here at Laguna Seca has three things.  Icon status, sand in the runoff areas, and a famous turn simply known as The Corkscrew.  A handful of races remain.  Take all the championship points you can in this 2 hour and 40-minute motor race with a 26-car field.  Racing conditions are perfect.  Sunny with an ambient temperature of 68 degrees and a west, northwest wind blowing at 12 miles an hour.  In Daytona Prototype International, Action Express Racing have been on a charge, winning the last two races in succession. 

They are the only team in 2021 to go back-to-back.  The #31 team is keeping the heat on the #10 Konica Minolta Wayne Taylor Racing Acura team, which is one of their big rivals for the championship along with the #01 Ganassi Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R.  In GT Le Mans, it is a similar scenario as Cooper MacNeil and the #79 WeatherTech Racing Porsche 911 RSR-19, are proving they can step up to the plate and beat the factory Chevrolet Corvette C8.R’s on a regular basis.  MacNeil and his team won the most recent event at Road America in GT Le Mans.  Meanwhile, in GT Daytona, the points battle is hot and heavy with four cars within 124 points of each other. 

Four races to go of course.  BMW, Aston Martin, Porsche, or Lamborghini could be possible champions at the end of the year.  In the LMP2 class, Ben Keating and Mikkel Jensen are probable champions.  If the #11 Win Autosport team of Steven Thomas and Tristan Nunez want to do anything about the PR1/Mathiasen steamroller, they will have to push the go button, now, before it is perhaps too little too late.  They are 58 markers behind the #52 automobile.  Action Express and the #31 car has the momentum.  They are peaking at the right time.  They are in their rhythm now.

However, the twists and turns of this circuit at Laguna Seca has not suited the big, heavy, powerful Cadillac DPi.  They have yet to win a race here at Monterey since the start of the Daytona Prototype International era in 2017.  Action Express starts fourth.  Acura in the meantime, sweep the front row of the grid and have won races here in 2019 and 2020.  Wayne Taylor Racing with Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque are searching for their third or fourth win of the year, while the #60 Meyer Shank Racing Acura for Dane Cameron and Olivier Pla, they’ve gone winless the whole year in 2021 and want to turn that around.

Three-time IMSA champion Dane Cameron hasn’t won in two years.  In the GT Daytona class, Bill Auberlen is the championship leader aboard the #96 Turner Motorsports BMW M6 GT3.  But the #23 Aston Martin Vantage GT3 from The Heart of Racing, has been in the fight as well.  Ross Gunn and Roman De Angelis want a slice of that victory cake, and are doing all they can to get it, going up against the team of Bill Auberlen and his co-driver, Robby Foley.  The points lead is only 18 in GT Daytona.  The Am driver sets the grid spot while the pro drivers have their own session.

You are not allowed to get out of the car until the session is completed.  Ross Gunn stepped out of that automobile before the session ended.  Therefore, Gunn and company had their qualifying time disallowed and will start shotgun on the field in GTD.  They were 18 points behind coming in, gained five points to be 13 behind.  But after the penalty, the math works out so they are now 32 points in-arrears and they will have to push, push, push to get the ground back.  Small margins, yes.  But every point counts as we get closer to the end of a frantic 2021 season in the WeatherTech Championship.

The command is given.  Drivers, start your engines!  The cars sit echelon style in the pit lane and are ready now to roll off on their formation laps.  Here they come.  26 cars start today’s race across the four classes with half a dozen DPi cars, four LMP2 cars, three GTLM cars, and the largest subscribed class is GTD with a baker’s dozen, 13 cars, entered.  Two Acura’s may be on the front row.  But two Cadillac’s lock out row two with the #01 Ganassi Racing Cadillac in the hands of Kevin Magnuseen, and right alongside him, the #31 Whelen Engineering Action Express Racing Cadillac in the hands of Pipo Derani. 

Derani must push and be aggressive but be cautious as well before the next event also in California on the streets of Long Beach.  Mazda also want a slice of the pie with the #55 entry for Oliver Jarvis and Harry Tincknell.  That car qualified fourth but will start sixth after being outside of the rules insofar as negative camber on the tires.  Too much camber on the right rear tire after going off the road in qualifying.  The #31 and the #10 are the heavy hitters.  But there are other hungry wolves within the pack as well.  This is going to be a fair fight to the finish at Laguna Seca today, ladies and gentlemen.

The #9 Pfaff Motorsports Porsche are third in points in GT Daytona with their plaid-colored racer.  They are fifth in points and need a good finish to improve.  The #1 Paul Miller Racing Lamborghini changed and adjusted their Lamborghini Huracan GT3.  But that car, is no longer in the championship hunt.  So, they want to go for a win.  That is the objective for Madison Snow and Bryan Sellers, today.  It should be noted, we talked earlier about The Heart of Racing.  They have a second car in today’s race as a team car to the #23 De Angelis/Gunn Aston Martin.  That is Aston Martin #27 being shared by Ian James, the team owner, and Alex Riberas.

In GTLM, the #3 Chevrolet Corvette C8.R has pole.  This is the fourth consecutive pole position for Jordan Taylor and Antonio Garcia.  In the morning warmup, the Porsche was quickest.  In LMP2, it is a four way battle for the title.  Ben Keating leads the championship and Steven Thomas, and company can still fight.  We are readying for a start on the final pace lap through the last sector of track here at Laguna Seca.  How aggressive will Dane Cameron be aboard the #60 Meyer Shank Acura?  This is going to be hot.  Two Acura’s on the front row.

Hammer down, and it is go time here at Laguna Seca!  Filipe Albuquerque takes the lead of the motr race and here comes Pipo Derani moving on Kevin Magnussen already and both are going to be monstered immediately by the #55 Mazda, and Harry Tincknell!  Three wide already!  We watch the start for GTLM/GTD.  Out of the Andretti hairpin for the first time.  Through the infield and up the hill on the Rahal straightaway heading for The Corkscrew and we have a car off in the dust already, look.  That is the #76 Compass Racing Acura NSX GT3 in the hands of Jacob Abel, making his debut in the IMSA WeatherTech Championship.  Abel is back on track in the car he shares with Mario Farnbacher.

Now, one of the Aston Martin’s also has spun and that is the #27 entry.  That is the Riberas/James entry we spoke of earlier.  Ian James at the wheel of it.  He is stranded in the middle of the road.  Abel has broken rear suspension on the right rear of that Acura.  Not a good thing for his IMSA debut.  In replay, we can see James slithered off the road and into the sand.  As he came back on track, trying to correct it, he crunches into the side of Jacob Abel who had no place to go.  Acura have won two of the last three GTD races here at Laguna Seca including last year with Mario Farnbacher.  No Full Course Yellow has been announced.  Filipe Albuquerque leads over Dane Cameron as the Acura’s scamper away from the rest of the DPi field.  Maybe Ian James put the Aston in a place of safety.  Filipe Albuquerque, who leads the championship, he scored his first ever IMSA pole in qualifying yesterday.

Ah yes.  We do indeed have a Full Course Yellow on the circuit.  Ian James is slightly out fo the way and we can see the Acura got absolutely socked on the right rear!  We can see that Abel got loose and the Aston just had no place to go.  Meanwhile, that car is still being attended to by the safety personnel from the AMR safety team.  The #76 Acura is in the pit lane being surveilled for how much damage there is.  The driver is out of the #27 Aston Martin and it is game over.  Likewise, it could be game over for the #76 as well, look.  The crew is pushing that car to the garage or so it seems.

It is indeed on the dollies and will have to be serviced.  Watch out in the dry lake segment of Laguna Seca.  Dane Cameron takes us for a lap around Laguna Seca at his home track.  Cresting the hill to the Andretti hairpin.  Brake hard with lots of understeer.  Through turn three, a difficult turn.  Under the bridge, past turn four into the kink.  Then, go into the compression of turn five without running out of road.  A blind entry into turn six and up the Rahal straightaway we go.  Then, into The Corkscrew, slowing down through a blind entry.  Drop off the edge of the earth as the road falls away like a rollercoaster.

Flow out into turn ten and big compression again and into the last turn in 11, with very low grip.  Watch out for the paint in the final turn.  Everyone knows The Corkscrew, but it is indeed the most unbelievable corner 180 feet down.  When you are in traffic, you just cannot see your marks.  It’s unbelievable.  The keys to victory in this motor race have to do with tire management as the cars are sliding around.  Watch for brake lockup.  An extra stop for fuel could be advantageous today because you are off the throttle more than on it, and this way, you could save fuel.

Good fuel mileage, so the tires are the critical marker.  Match the pace to a shorter stint especially in GTLM.  Be bold on the brakes and be totally commitment.  We have seen banzai passes here including Renger van der Zande over Dane Cameron in the 2017 WeatherTech Championship race, and, also, the famous IndyCar race (known as Champ Car back then), by Alex Zanardi on Bryan Herta, in 1996.  Compass Racing, and the #76 Acura, was thought to have cosmetic damage.  It is game over for the team and car.  The suspension was torn apart, and the rear end locked up and became useless.

They will try hard to fix it.  But it will be difficult for them to get back on track today.  Ian James is a man who wear several hats.  He is team owner and driver for The Heart of Racing, doing the endurance races and this race, with them.  He also manages other drivers including Mario Farnbacher who drives the #76 car!  Oh dear.  Poor old Jacob Abel was just a passenger in that instance.  Ian had one of the Lexus cars on his flank as well.  We have run five laps in this race so far.  So, fuel consumption dictates a three-stop race for DPi and LMP2, as well as a two stop race for GTLM and GTD. 

The minimum drive time is 45 minutes.  Filipe Albuquerque will lead the field back to green and hopefully we can get some green flag racing for the better portion of this motor race.  Filipe Albuquerque takes off from a cannon, again.  Dane Cameron is second followed by Kevin Magnussen, Pipo Derani, and Harry Tincknell.  Meyer Shank Racing must execute.  He has won here before.  Olivier Pla, Cameron’s co-driver, he has only raced here at Laguna Seca, once, back in 2017.  MSR have been trying hard to find a setup window on the dampers in the suspension.

The #10 car has been able to find the right thing with the dampers.  It is warmer today at Laguna Seca than it has been previously this weekend.  Robby Foley now leads GT Daytona by six tenths of a second over Trent Hindman and Madison Snow is closing too.  Adding to the pain for the #60 team, the schedule in 2021 is compressed due to what has been going on with the pandemic.  Get the setup spot on right when you roll off the truck.  RobbY Foley is just 6/10ths of a second ahead of Trent Hindman.  Turner Motorsports are realizing this west coast swing is helping them.  We have Long Beach coming up in a couple weeks.  Then, it is an all GT race at Virginia International Raceway, before the finale at Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta in November. 

The race is now beginning to settle down as Filipe Albuquerque leads.  We continue watching GTD action and zero in on the #14 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3.  This is the car being shared by Aaron Telitz and Jack Hawksworth.  I believe Telitz is at the wheel of it, and he was tipped into a spin by a rival there, look.  He did not hit anything but backed up into the sand in turn two.  Now the two Lexus cars look to be running together although it is hard to tell.  Yes indeed they are.  Jack Hawksworth is following the sister car, the #12 shared by Frankie Montecalvo and Zach Veach.  Nothing going on at the sharp end.  Filipe Albuquerque carries on his merry way in the lead.

A gorgeous afternoon here in central California.  Trouble once again for the Heart of Racing Aston Martin, the #23 of Roman De Angelis, slow.  Wow!  He got clouted by the #66 Acura in the hands of Till Bechtolsheimer!  That is the Gradient Racing entry the Briton shares with American driver Marc Miller.  Boatloads of argy bargy early in the motor race today here at Laguna Seca.  Yikes!  When you get down to the nitty gritty portion of the season, with two or three races left, you hope for a modicum of respect among drivers.  A penalty for Richard Heistand aboard the #39 CarBahn with Peregrine Racing Audi R8 LMS GT3. 

This penalty is being served for jumping the restart.  Heistand is of course sharing this automobile with Jeff Westphal.  When the green flag waves, you race.  Ah.  It was Heistand who sent Telitz spinning.  The irony is that Heistand formerly drove for the Vasser Sullivan Lexus organization but is now in the Audi camp.  Heistand drove for Lexus two years ago in 2019.  This is their home track and they won Michelin Pilot Challenge here last year.  Steve Dinan, a longtime BMW tuner, is the team manager for this team, racing with Audi.  Poor old Heistand is being called to the lane for an incident responsibility penalty.  He will be feral on the radio, bluing to the team, “why on earth do we have an (expletive) penalty?!” 

The minimum drive time in GT Daytona in this event is 45 minutes.  Heistand still must drive for the rest of his stint.  This is a drive through penalty at 60 kilometers an hour which costs 25 seconds on pit lane delta.  Ben Keating is on a high after finishing second in GTE Am competition at the 24 Hours of Le Mans.  Keating still wants a Le Mans win.  He scored his seventh pole yesterday in qualifying.  Keating said that the car is always squirming around and giving up grip.  Keating has an ability to swap back and forth between different cars, even though he is not a pro racing driver.  He is a Texas car salesman who has a franchise of dealers.

PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports is a locally based team out of Fresno, California, so they’re right in their own backyard here at Laguna Seca more or less.  They are going for the hat trick here at Laguna Seca.  Jordan Taylor, meanwhile, leads in GT Le Mans with the sister Corvette C8.R, the #4 entry, right on his six at the moment in the hands of Tommy Milner.  He thought he had a shot at pole, but the #3 team has had four straight poles this year.  Jordan Taylor and Antonio Garcia have the speed and the chemistry. 

Little things pick at you if you can’t get things down.  For Tandy and Milner, they won at Detroit with no points on the line, but they want a points win, and need to sweep the tables on their teammate.  BMW will be back for the finale at Petit Le Mans in November.  Ben Keating, whoa!  That was a late turn in into the first corner, and… crunch!  Keating whacks the side of Till Bechtolsheimer at the wheel of the #66 Gradient Racing Acura NSX GT3.  Bechtolsheimer sharing that automobile with Marc Miller in today’s race.  Keating went for a gap that didn’t exist.

He could very easily have drawn a penalty on that deal.  These cars are tough, made of strong stuff.  We are closing in on the two-hour mark left in the race, having run for almost 40 minutes by now.  Acura #10 still leads.  Once again, you’ve not missed anything.  Keating is now inbetween a couple GT Daytona cars.  In replay, we can see that he biffed the #12 Lexus RC F GT3 off the road and into the dust.  That’s the Frankie Montecalvo and Zach Veach driven automobile, the Vasser Sullivan entry.  Meanwhile, Ben Keating is on his merry way, and he is catching up to more GT Daytona traffic.

In his sights now, the #23 The Heart of Racing Aston Martin Vantage shared by Roman de Angelis and Ross Gunn.  Before we get back to the current race, we must talk about LMDh and what is to come in the IMSA WeatherTech Championship with the new breed of sports cars.  We saw on NBC Sports a featurette about Cadillac as they have just debuted their new LMDh race car, and their contender looks stunning.  Yours truly described it as “a fighter jet on wheels”.  Cadillac is one of five confirmed brands in LMDh set to enter the 2023 season.

Cadillac will be there along with Acura, and three of the heavy hitting brands from Germany in Porsche, Audi, and BMW.  These cars will be hybrid and we have the Le Mans Hypercars in World Endurance Championship competition.  The chassis for each of these contenders, we will see BMW and Cadillac both using an Italian Dallara built chassis.  Acura will remain with Oreca from France, and Porsche and Audi will run with Multimatic.  There is talk of these new cars being tested later this year into early 2022.  We could see companies we already see in World Endurance Championship competition like Toyota, Glickenhaus, and Alpine, join the ranks.

However, that is hard to say.  If everything really gets off the ground with this convergence with LMDh and LMH, we could see no fewer than ten brands out there racing together.  But it remains to be seen if companies like Peugeot, Glickenhaus, Ferrari, and Toyota might come to the table and say “yes, we want to compete with the other manufacturers.” 

Breaking it all down, the grid at the Rolex 24 in 2023 could see:

Cadillac

Audi

Porsche

BMW

Toyota

Ferrari

Peugeot

Glickenhaus

Alpine

Nonetheless, we will see what happens.  So many shiny objects to see.  IMSA and the ACO have a ten-year rules formula agreement with the convergence and what have you.  We see about eight manufacturers and there could be more.  IMSA and ACO will have their rules package for the next decade with this convergence deal.  S, in replay, we can see Ben Keating crunching into the Lexus, but it appears Montecalvo did not see him. 

Tow DPi cars have already pitted including both Tristan Vautier in the #5 JDC-Miller Mustang Sampling Cadillac and the #31 Whelen Engineering Action Express Cadillac with Pipo Derani at the wheel of it.  Mazda, car #55 is also in the lane now.  Mazda is one of the brands that said no to LMDh and will instead retire from prototype competition at the end of this season (after Petit Le Mans) and will focus instead on customer racing in their MX5 Cup championship that serves as a support series for IMSA.  Mazda are now in the lane and so is the #01 Ganassi Cadillac. 

No one has yet put on fresh Michelin tires.  Everyone has been using scrubbed sets.  We’ve seen Cadillac and Mazda pit their cars but no sign yet of the Acura’s from WTR and MSR hitting the lane.  Acura’s seem to be stretching fuel, but by staying out they risk a yellow and being in the danger zone.  Filipe Albuquerque has the other DPi cars down a lap, but they will be stacked up.  45 minutes on full fuel tanks.  You can still eke out a three-stop strategy.  You are slicing the cake in different ways.  #55, the Mazda, started on fresh tires, but it didn’t work.

#55 leapfrogged the #01.  But Kevin Magnussen made his way back around Harry Tincknell.  Cadillac have not won at Laguna Seca yet.  Pipo Derani is the highest placed Cadillac at this stage and with nearly 40 minutes gone, the #10 Acura and Filipe Albuquerque, finally come to pit lane for service.  Four Michelin tires and fuel.  Wayne Taylor Racing have worked on the rear of the Acura.  They are looking to see if the rear tires stay alive.  So far so good for those boys.  The car stayed planted in the lane for 22 seconds, but a full fuel load on a DPi car is 30 seconds. 

They only used ¾ of a fuel load.  So, Filipe Albuquerque is now 32 seconds behind Dane Cameron while Pipo Derani is closing.  #60 are not in the championship game.  So they can essentially throw caution to the wind if they wish to.  Cool temperatures this weekend and the track is slick but fast.  There’s lots of grip as it is not extremely hot because then the track surface here at Laguna Seca really, really gets greasy.  Dane Cameron has won here three times in GT Daytona and in the overall in DPi.  DPi and GTLM as you can see from the graphics box, have only a ten-minute minimum drive time, while it is 45 minutes for LMP2 and GTD.  An hour and 55 minutes is the maximum drive time in both LMP2 and GTD.

A driver will lift and coast to save fuel while leading.  That is what Dane Cameron is doing.  What will the strategy be for MSR?  We are seeing strategy calls from other teams as well.  Cameron coming up behind one of the LMP2 cars, the #11 Win Autosport entry of Steven Thomas and Tristan Nunez.  Cameron runs a wee bit wide but stays on the course.  Acura have dominated here at Laguna Seca over the last three years, in both DPi and GT Daytona. 

The track at Laguna Seca suits the Acura’s it seems.  The track is abrasive with high tire degradation, although it is smooth.  Maybe the Acura has the aerodynamic advantage in DPi over Cadillac and Mazda.  Acura in GT Daytona also have had an edge.  Mario Farnbacher and Jacob Abel, it is game over for those two blokes as we saw earlier on.  MSR does not have to worry about tire degradation.  Action Express and Cadillac are not worried about tires.  They’ve committed to four shorter stints and the team tells Pipo Derani, “keep pushing, mate.  Keep pushing.” 

Pipo Derani won in class here at Laguna Seca in 2018, but that was with a different team.  He then joined Action Express at the beginning of the 2019 season.  Pipo Derani and Felipe Nasr have been really pressing hard.  The #5 JDC Miller Motorsports Cadillac also pitted.  So, speaking of pit stops, we have one in GT Daytona as the #96 Turner Motorsports BMW M6 GT3 makes a stop from the race lead in class.  Robby Foley out of the car, and Bill Auberlen is into the seat.  Auberlen had a tire issue yesterday in Michelin Pilot Challenge.  Be extremely careful to keep the tires planted on the road.

The LMP2 leader is in the lane, too.  Tires, fuel, and a driver change for the PR1/Mathiasen car as Ben Keating hands over to the Dane, Mikkel Jensen.  We have seen contact, and argy bargy between the prototypes and the GT Daytona cars.  #52 appears to have a slight transmission issue between third and fourth gear on the paddle shifters.  But, there are no complaints from the drivers about it.  A couple of GTD cars in the lane and so is the Win Autosport entry.  We are past the minimum drive time for the Pro-Am categories, so there are wholesale driver changes taking place.

Oh dear.  Rob Ferriol is off the road in the Team Hardpoint Porsche, the #88 GT Daytona entry.  Ferriol is trundling to the lane likely with a flat tire.  He wll hand the car to Katherine Legge, 2018 class winner with Alvaro Parente in an Acura NSX GT3 in GT Daytona.  Ferriol, into Rainey curve and into turn ten, spins the car.  Did he cut a tire down the hill?  It was a lazy spin.  He was on the brakes into the turn, and… screech!  He just rotated the car on the whirligig and then kept on trucking, albeit slowly.  That was a long pit stop.  Not good, mate.  Not good.

That was not a full fuel load for the #88 team.  Dane Camero leads Filipe Albuquerque now by 25 seconds.  Will Dane Cameron pit?  We’re going to find out momentarily.  We continue following the progress of the leader as Dane Cameron is making his way through traffic and for the most part, he has a clear road ahead of him now.  Great overhead shots, from a drone most likely, here at Laguna Seca Raceway.  Working GT Daytona traffic through The Corkscrew.  He has cleared it.  So, you haven’t missed much. 

Trent Hindman has made a pit stop for the first time in the #16 Wright Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3R handing the automobile to Patrick Long.  Long, a native Californian, who was at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway presiding over a festival for classic air-cooled Porsche’s.  Zacharie Robichon, the Canadian, is also in the lane in the #9 Pfaff Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3R, and he is going to hand over to Laurens Vanthoor, the vastly experienced Belgian who is and has been a Porsche factory driver.  Pfaff and their traditional plaid liveried car, wants to have points.

Laurens Vanthoor has won here at Laguna Seca in GTLM before.  They are surely relying on strategy to do well.  Dane Cameron still has to hit the pit lane and we have an hour and 45 minutes left on the board, so we are nearly an hour into the motor race.  He is coasting from the crest of the hill for 400-500 yards, and that habit is helping his fuel mileage.  Will they do it on a two-stop strategy?  This is fascinating stuff.  He is five minutes over as the DPi cars can run about 45 minutes on a tank.  We see the fuel ranges widen in the other classes in terms of minutes and laps.  Here’s the breakdown, the table of the numbers.

DPi         32-35 laps = 41-45 minutes of fuel with a 30 second fuel fill in the lane.

LMP2:   34-37 laps = 45-49 minutes of fuel with a 34 second fuel fill in the lane.

GTLM: 46-49 laps = 63-65 minutes of fuel with a 34 second fuel fill in the lane.

GTD: 44-47 laps = 63-67 minutes of fuel with a 40 second fuel fill in the lane.

It should also be considered that the pit lane delta to transfer through is 25 seconds.  Cameron is five minutes over the time limit on fuel, with his coasting technique.  If they can do that for two more stints, they will only need two more fuel stints, and a two-stop race.  Also, into the pits, we now have the #14 Vasser Sullivan Lexus in GT Daytona.  Pardon me.  Three stops.  Into the lane now, is Dane Cameron and he hands the car over to Olivier Pla. 

Despite the warm weather here at Laguna Seca, the Acura #60 might just be in the sweet spot right now. Cameron was on fumes coming into the lane and they have done a full fuel fill.  Checking the info, according to NBC Sports’ Calvin Fish, MSR are looking to do two stops while other DPi teams will be on a three-stop strategy.  At the sharp end of the field now, since the #60 will be recycling back in, Filipe Albuquerque in the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Acura now leads, with Pipo Derani second aboard the #31 Whelen Engineering Action Express Cadillac, and in third place, the #01 Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac in the hands of Kevin Magnussen.

Meanwhile, in GT Daytona, Madison Snow leads the field aboard the #1 Paul Miller Racing Lamborghini Huracan GT3 ahead by almost 40 seconds over the Bill Auberlen driven #96 Turner Motorsports BMW M6 GT3.  Snow heads for the pit lane for service, as there’s more pavement in the pit lane now.  Bryan Sellers is going to take over the Lamborghini.  This team won in class at Laguna Seca back in 2019.  The notebooks don’t help as much from year to year on this track because the pavement is so abrasive.  Paul Miller Racing, they have thrown the kitchen sink at getting this car in the sweet spot.

Split strategy for Corvette Racing that some may say is due to team rivalry.  #4 is in the lane first.  Realistically, both cars at Corvette Racing just must find a way to stay ahead of the #79 WeatherTech Racing Porsche.  They know that Porsche is very quick.  Cooper MacNeil sharing that car with Aussie Matty Campbell this weekend.  The #79 car has two wins to their credit in GTLM in 2021, at Sebring and last time we raced, at Road America.  So, everyone has pitted at least once as Filipe Albuquerque in the #10 Acura resumes in the lead of this motor race.

Dane Cameron says that he had a long stint on qualifying tires.  They can roll the dice and throw caution to the wind via fuel saving.  How do you save fuel at Laguna Seca?  Cameron says that the long, flowing turns help with fuel saving, lfiting and coasting, and finding a rhythm.  Everything adds up.  You have to trust your drivers, but as an engineer, you have to really know your numbers and mathematics.  At a track like Laguna Seca, you can roll and coast through turns while at a track like Road America, even though it is a high-speed circuit, there’s a lot of corners there, where you have to come to a complete stop going in the corner, and then accelerate again on exit.  Here, you can flow through the turns in a smoother manner.        

Bill Auberlen is giving the #96 Turner Motorsports BMW M6 GT3 a nice ride.  He is nearly six seconds ahead of Patrick Long in the Porsche, the #16 for Wright Motorsports.  Laurens Vanthoor in third is 11 seconds, or 11 and a half seconds, down the road.  The #5 JDC-Miller Motorsports Cadillac has made two stops in the race so far and had a drama filled stop the second time.  Loic Duval spun entering the pit lane and may have gotten a shot of power he wasn’t expecting while the pit lane speed limiter was on.  Duval, and co-driver Tristan Vautier, are now a lap down to the rest of the DPi field. 

Loic Duval is a former Le Mans winner and he is a champion of the FIA World Endurance Championship.  He is one of three drivers in today’s race signed up for the Peugeot Hypercar program that will debut next year.  It is Loic Duval, Mikkel Jensen, and Kevin Magnussen.  They are all moving over to full-time drives with Peugeot in WEC next year.  They won the 12 Hours of Sebring and finished fourth in the sprint race at Watkins Glen back in July.  Pipo Derani brings the #31 Whelen Engineering Action Express Cadillac to the lane, for the second pit stop of the day.

He is going to hand the car over to Felipe Nasr.  Scrubbed tires again for the #31.  Nobody in the DPi ranks has yet used a set of fresh, sticker Michelin tires.  Don’t spin the wheels on the air jacks.  Felipe Nasr is down and away while the #55 Mazda is also in the lane and will see Oliver Jarvis step in for the next stint, replacing Harry Tincknell.  This team had issues with the radio earlier in the race today.  #55 is also using scrubbed tires.  Their radio issues are now fixed.  But they don’t have the rear end grip on that car that they want by any means.

A full fuel load with an hour and a half to go, needing one more stop.  Acura #10 now pits from the lead of the motor race.  Scrubbed tires, again, look, and a full fuel load.  The #31 Cadillac did have wheel spin.  What will the marshals’ call be on that?  It looks like the marshals looked n a couple different directions to see if there was awheel spin on the Cadillac, as now, scrubbed tires for the #10 Acura as well, plus fuel.  A crew member moves an air hose out of the way.  The rule on wheel spin is black and white.  There is no gray area. 

Back onboard with the #10 Acura, plunging through The Corkscrew.  Now into the pit lane, the #01 Ganassi Racing Cadillac.  So, they are one of the later DPi cars to hit the pit lane.  Tires and fuel as well as a driver change.  So, Renger van der Zande should be taking over from Kevin Magnussen.  What do Steve Jobs, Prince, Elon Musk, and Laguna Seca Raceway have in common?  Well, in ’07, Apple introduced the first iPhone, Prince entertained at the Super Bowl halftime show, Elon Musk displayed his first Tesla electric car at auto shows all over the country, and 2007 was also the most recent repaving of the track surface here at Laguna Seca, 14 years ago. 

There are no fixed timetables for a track surface life.  The level of roughness in macro and micro (big and small bumps), is critical.  The top layer has begun wearing away and this gradually exposes rougher, more abrasive pavement underneath.  This aggregate underlayer can cause greater, more pronounced degradation in the tires.  When the track surface was new, and fresh, a soft compound tire was called for.  As it began aging, a medium compound was utilized.  Everyone in the field now uses a harder compound to combat tire degradation from the roughness of the surface that exists now in 2021.

So, there you see, how the surface of a racetrack can evolve over time.  Fascinating stuff it is indeed.  Just under two and a quarter miles, in length.  2.238 miles with 11 corners.  The elevation change in total on this circuit is 180 feet.  We have 19 drivers who have won races here at Laguna Seca, in the field today.  The first race run here was on November 8th, 1957, won by Pete Lovely.  The Corkscrew has an 18% grade.  The legal amount on a road for a drop off, a gradient, is six percent.  On an alternate strategy, Olivier Pla is now the race leader with a nearly ten second lead over Ricky Taylor.

Felipe Nasr has the #31 Whelen Cadillac for Action Express in third overall with Renger van der Zande and Oliver Jarvis completing the top five, and only the top five cars are now on the lead lap.  Olivier Pla leads Ricky Taylor by ten seconds and Felipe Nasr is next up in third place who is looking to eat into the lead in the points for the #10 car.  Some of the drivers who have moved up well from their starting places include four GT Daytona drivers.  Ross Gunn has moved up eight places, Andy Lally up four, Laurens Vanthoor and Katherine Legge both up two, and Olivier Pla has gained one place in DPi.

The trouble with Laguna Seca (the dry lagoon), is the sand on the outside of the road and the fact that the sand gets on the track and causes friction on the tires as the grip changes every corner of every lap and feeling out the grip is a key deal to being a great driver.  We watch the #14 Vasser Sullivan Lexus RC F GT3 in the GT Daytona class, running sixth.  They have not had the 2021 season they wanted.  Jack Hawksworth and Aaron Telitz have run extremely well in some places.  Zach Veach is giving the sister car a good drive too.

This is a track where the Lexus boys realize they are a bit on the back foot.  Olivier Pla still leads the motor race on a long stint strategy with one less pit stop in the mix.  Olivier Pla has an eight plus second lead at the present time.  Another GT Daytona battle rages on between two Porsche’s.  Wright Motorsports vs. Pfaff Motorsports.  Patrick Long vs. Laurens Vanthoor I believe.  Down through The Corkscrew and Rainey Curve they go.  They negotiate the final turn and the battle continues on in earnest.  This is fun to watch! 

Oliver Jarvis runs fifth overall right now, 34 seconds behind the lead.  Mazda is ending this program at the end of the year.  There’s lots of driver movement in a gap year for 2022 until we get to LMDh in 2023.  Mazda of course will not race in LMDh and have elected instead to focus on their MX-5 Cup spec racing program.  Yikes!  Internecine scrapping in the Corvette camp!  They split the #39 CarBahn with Peregrine Racing Audi R8!  Jeff Westphal moves aside allowing the battle between Antonio Garcia and Nick Tandy to steam through.  Tandy is hungry for a win and is upset about not having one.  So he isn’t going to make it easy for Antonio Garcia by any stretch.

He wants a slice of the victory cake.  They move past the #44 Magnus Racing Acura with Andy Lally at the wheel of it.  Meanwhile, third spot still is held by Felipe Nasr in the #31 Whelen Engineering Action Express Cadillac.  Pipo Derani says that the tire degradation is a huge issue at Laguna Seca with all the sand.  They have a touch less downforce than the Acura’s do.  They are running very well but overtaking is very difficult with a loss of downforce.  Traffic and pit stops are critical, thinking of how the championship is going to work.

At Long Beach in the next race, the Cadillac should shine.  It will be a tight fight between Cadillac and Acura.  They are trying to win this race today and every race from here on has major championship implications.  Action Express have moved up to second place in points courtesy of consistent finishes.  They were fourth in points after Mid-Ohio and had a second place there and at Belle Isle.  The Six Hours of Watkins Glen yielded a top five placing.  Then, they won the sprint race at The Glen, the Watkins Glen 240, and at Road America, which has brought them within 41 points of the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Acura.  AXR is executing.  The Cadillac does not produce the same levels of downforce the Acura does.  But they are pressing hard and really going for it.  We are looking at these potential points swings after today’s race is done and dusted.

DPi: 100 points

LMP2: 70 points

GTLM: 50 points

GTD: 170 points

If the #10 Acura finishes third, they could still lose the points lead, theoretically, if either the #55 Mazda or the #31 Cadillac win the race today.  #10 is second, #31 is third, #55 is fifth.  Ricky Taylor is now running 6.6 seconds behind Olivier Pla.  Filipe Albuquerque says every race is a race that must be won.  Even the championship leaders, they cannot settle back and take it easy.  Complacency does not work in racing.  You are on a knife edge every corner of every lap of this motor race, threshold braking into the corners.  The prototype cars do not have ABS and the GT Daytona cars do, while neither do the GTLM machines.  Laurens Vanthoor is reeling in Bill Auberlen having passed Patrick Long.

The #52 LMP2 leading PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports Oreca is in the pit lane and Mikkel Jensen, the Dane, will stay in the automobile for another stint.  Tires and fuel for this car.  Trouble for the left rear wheel nut and thankfully a cross threaded wheel nut did not affect their pit stop greatly.  The mechanic always has a spare wheel nut handy.  Olivier Pla leads overall while Ryan Dalziel is the LMP2 leader at this stage, aboard the #18 Era Motorsport Oreca.  The battle also rages on in GTLM between the two factory Corvette C8.R’s. 

Tandy might try to get past Garcia here.  We shall see as the two mid-engined Corvette’s are nose to tail headed up the Rahal straightaway.  Now, pit stop time for the #96 Turner Motorsports BMW M6 GT3.  Tires and fuel for this automobile it appears, in the Liqui Moly lubricants colors.  We have nearly reached the one-hour remaining mark in this race.  Bill Auberlen still in the car, and that could have been the final stop for fuel and tires.  Auberlen is the first of the leaders in GTD to pit.  Maybe some of the other GTD cars will run a bit longer, and therefore, his tires might be knackered towards the end of the race.

Now in the lane, the #1 Paul Miller Racing Lamborghini of Bryan Sellers who briefly held the class lead.  Scrubbed/scuffed tires going onto the Lamborghini.  They have a new fueler who is also the crew chief on the team.  The #23 Heart of Racing Aston Martin is in as well.  Ross Gunn staying in the car.  A fuel load of petrol for those boys.  They are topped up with 63 minutes now on the board.  So, the hour to go mark is at hand.  The #88 Hardpoint Porsche is in the lane for tires with Katherine Legge at the controls.  No rain today, but marine layer fog early in the morning is common.

They went with sticker tires for the Aston Martin and scuffed tires on the #1 Lamborghini.  Ross Gunn, 24 years old, from England.  Alex Riberas never had a chance to race in the sister car.  He raced with The Heart of Racing Aston Martin team at the 2020 Rolex 24 at Daytona.  I was there.  I saw him race.  Since then, he has finally come back and he went way down to New Zealand to do some racing there but was trapped in New Zealand during the initial stages of the pandemic.  He was racing with The Heart of Racing in New Zealand for the best part of the year in 2020.  Ian James and Alex Riberas worked together at Alex Job Racing in 2016.  They will race at Long Beach and VIR (Virginia International Raceway), with the second car.  Since the #1 Lamborghini and #9 Porsche have both done the overcut on their pit strategy, Bill Auberlen is now running in third spot.

Vanthoor is two and a half seconds up the road and now Auberlen is pushing trying to move around Bryan Sellers.  Pit stop time now too for the #79 WeatherTech Racing Porsche 911 RSR-19 in GT Le Mans.  Cooper MacNeil sharing with Matty Campbell of course.  Four tires and fuel and of course the front mounted fuel tank and filler on the Porsche 911.  That’s classic.  Bill Auberlen has warmer tires and in replay we see him giving him some argy bargy and a love tap between Auberlen and Long.  They had some consternation and bad blood between those two blokes.

We ought to mention Gabriel Aubry in the #8 Tower Motorsports Oreca 07 Gibson in LMP2.  The Frenchman, sharing that car with Canadian John Farano this weekend.  They run second in LMP2.  Aubry has a lot of speed and is a talented driver.  Mikkel Jensen, Gabriel Aubry, Ryan Dalziel, and Tristan Nunez, the top four.  Nunez is an ex-Mazda factory driver.  This is the penultimate event for LMP2 before we see the LMP2 cars race again at the season finale at Petit Le Mans.  LMP2 cars will not race at Long Beach or VIR.  Olivier Pla’s lead over Ricky Taylor in the overall stands at eight seconds and Felipe Nasr remains in third a further almost 20 seconds off the lead.

We’re inside an hour to go and MSR are not set up for a pit stop at all.  The #10 team at Wayne Taylor Racing and the #31 Action Express Cadillac teams must wonder, and be scratching their heads saying, “how on earth are the #60 boys getting this fuel mileage?”  Pla’s fuel stop will be much longer than what the other cars need.  Will their strategy work out?  We are looking at final pit stops soon.  One of the GTD Lexus RC F GT3’s is in.  That is the #12, the Frankie Montecalvo and Zach Veach car.  Ah.  Right on the nose, the #60 MSR Acura is in the pit lane, now.  Four tires, fuel, and a driver change it is.  So, Dane Cameron steps back into the car replacing Olivier Pla.

It was a perfect stop and four scrubbed tires as well as a full fuel load.  They are doing three maximum fuel loads and Olivier Pla was doing an even better fuel saving job than Dane Cameron was.  Can #60 beat their rivals in the other Acura, the #10?  We are now indeed watching the #10 machine.  We see other cars come through.  Here comes the #31 Whelen Action Express Cadillac, Felipe Nasr at the wheel of it.  They are still pushing very hard.  There is no giving up in that team.  They are followed in hot pursuit by the #01 Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac as well, Renger van der Zande at the controls.  Speaking of Cadillac, another pit stop (presumably the final one), for the #5 JDC-Miller Motorsports Mustang Sampling entry.

Tires, fuel, and a top up of the drink bottle it looks like.  Road cars at Cadillac now have a system of electronics that are like doing heel and toe on the accelerator and brake, blipping downshifts on an old school race car, an electronic limited slip differential.  #31 in the pit lane, a standard stop for Action Express.  Scrubbed tires going onto the car for Felipe Nasr.  They have to be as close as possible to the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Acura should they have a shot at the championship in 2021 and you know they are going to be right on there, and push like crazy.

Corvette #4 into the pits.  Foru tires and fuel and a driver change for this team.  There are different strategies between GTLM and DPi teams.  Sticker tires for the GTLM cars and Nick Tandy is down and a way.  A scrubbed tire is not as quick in the beginning but has longevity compared to a sticker Michelin.  Whoa!  Nick Tandy is off the road, look, right toward pit out!  I don’t think he will be penalized, but he knows Antonio Garcia is coming in a hurry.  There likely will not be a penalty for that, and he wanted to appease the marshals to avoid being penalized.

It is game on now.  The sticker tires had no grip and had just come out of the molds.  Garcia and Tandy are going to get a bit held up by the Porsche #16 of Patrick Long.  Scrubbed tires for the #55 Mazda and a full fuel load as Oliver Jarvis has not yet been able to reap rewards in this motor race.  Ricky Taylor is now in the lane, 21 seconds in hand over Renger van der Zande.  The race can be won or lost in the lane.  A quick aero adjustment, and the car is down and away.  That little adjustment has cost the #10 team time and Olivier Pla is pouncing.

Meyer Shank Racing’s strategy is working.  55 minutes for Cameron’s first stint.  49 minutes for Pla’s initial stint.  He will have to really save fuel to get to the end with 42 minutes on the board yet.  Renger van der Zande is the last DPi machine to pit.  Olivier Pla cycles back into the lead of the motor race.  Now to the lane, the LMP2 leading #52 PR1/Mathiasen Wynn’s lubricants car.  Tires, fuel, and a driver change.  It appears Ben Keating will likely finish out this race.  The speed trap on the front straightaway shows the speed of each car as it is atop the WeatherTech sponsor billboard bridge.  Meanwhile, the #3 Corvette is still pushing the sister car in GTLM.

Up to The Corkscrew, and then… all the way down, down, down, down, down.  Olivier Pla leads Ricky Taylor by a margin of ten seconds with less than 40 minutes to go.  Can Ricky Taylor and Felipe Nasr run down Olivier Pla?  That’s the question on everybody’s minds.  Pla’s lead over Taylor is 10.8 seconds.  The Frenchman, from Toulouse, is having to really press hard.  He must improve on the fuel mileage that he got on the last stint.  His lap times match Ricky Taylor, who has lots more fuel to burn.  He has the gap and the track position.  Ricky Taylor is good to go full rich.

Ricky Taylor is just now beginning to eat into Pla’s lead.  Filipe Albuquerque says that the MSR team is gambling and saving fuel.  The #10 car is the big deal, and the #10 has to cover the #31 and the #55.  Wayne Taylor Racing are thinking big picture and going for the championship.  In the meantime, the #01 of Renger van der Zande, he is pressurizing Felipe Nasr.  Nasr and van der Zande clear one of the Lexus cars.  That is the #14 of Jack Hawksworth, sixth in GT Daytona.  Zach Veach is a lap down on the GTD field in the sister #12 Lexus.  Laurens Vanthoor in the #9 Pfaff Motorsports Porsche leads the class and does so by nearly three seconds over Bryan Sellers in the #1 Paul Miller Racing Lamborghini.

Bill Auberlen, third in class is also close behind with Turner Motorsports, and their strategist Don Salama making the calls.  The #9 and #1 are still in the fight for the GT Daytona championship.  Ricky Taylor is now 4.9 seconds away from Olivier Pla.  Will Taylor catch Pla and force him to run his race car out of petrol?  We’ll see.  The leaders work their way through the GT Daytona traffic, precisely and diligently.  Wow!  We have just seen a pass for the lead!  Ricky Taylor has found an opportunity and taken it, to pass Olivier Pla!  The #11 Steven Thomas and Tristan Nunez Win Autosport LMP2 car was in the way, and Taylor uses it as a pick, to pass Pla for the lead!

If you are going to fuel save, you have to do it through the stint.  But Pla could not fuel save and run the pace he could.  18-19 seconds behind is the battle of the Cadillac’s with Felipe Nasr for Action Express and Renger van der Zande for Ganassi Racing.  These two are evenly matched.  The consistent lap times (and we have not talked much about lap time in this race) among the DPi cars, is in the 1:18-1:20 bracket.  Renger van der Zande is keeping the heat on Felipe Nasr.  There will be only two races to go after this one for the DPi cars, at Long Beach on the famous street circuit that used to host the United States West Formula 1 Grand Prix back in the 1970s, and then, the Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta in November.

Laurens Vanthoor still controls the class lead in GT Daytona over Bryan Sellers’ Lamborghini.  If they can bring it home, they will win three races, Pfaff Motorsports.  Patrick Long has gone around Bill Auberlen.  Bryan Sellers and company had said they were not worried about the championship.  They are in it.  Maybe that was PR speak they were using, intentionally underestimating their abilities.  Vanthoor leads Sellers by four and a half seconds.  Ross Gunn is now only 21 seconds behind Bill Auberlen.  So, he could be on Auberlen’s six very soon.  The #23 car was penalized in qualifying of course.

They had points negated after qualifying and before the race.  Nick Tandy has gapped Antonio Garcia by two and a half seconds in GT Le Mans.  Tandy wants that first championship race win.  They must make inroads in the GTLM points battle with their sister car.  We learned later after their exhibition run at Belle Isle in Detroit, last June, Corvette Racing were testing ABS systems on the car for their probable entry next year in the GT Daytona Pro class which replaces GT Le Mans going forward as GT3 comes to the fore in production-based sports car racing, particularly in IMSA.

Next year, GT Le Mans goes away.  The Corvette will shift into a GT Daytona mode with ABS brakes.  Laurens Vanthoor and Zacharie Robichon have had a hard time trying to find a compromise on their setups.  Therefore, Laurens Vanthoor was given the longer finishing stint and Zacharie Robichon took the shorter first stint.  Bill Auberlen in the meatime, has fading tires, and mushy brakes.  This is all I’ve got.  Struggle home to the end of the motor race.  Robichon had to play the team game in qualifying without making compromises.  New tires and the professional driver is strapped into the car.  Ricky Taylor now leads Olivier Pla by a tad over eight seconds, 8.3 to be precise.

This move was based on pure pace as Olivier Pla ought to slow down with 16 minutes left on the clock.  We are getting down to the nitty gritty here, folks.  To quote former racing driver and play by play man, Irishman Derek Daly, “this is good stuff here.”  The clock is ticking.  #10, they are executing and getting major results even though they have not won since Mid-Ohio in May.  The Cadillac teams have not had the races they wanted.  It is horses for courses and the Acura boys have seemed to have the horse for this course. 

That said, Felipe Nasr is rapidly closing in on Olivier Pla.  The Brazilian is only five seconds behind the Frenchman now.  Yikes!  Make it two seconds!  Nasr is flying and Pla is going to have to turn up the wick.  A fuel save strategy must be a complete run.  Pla, Nasr, and van der Zande are right together.  Plunging down the hull into Rainey curve.  These cars are incredibly rapid.  Nasr might just get around Olivier Pla.  Laguna Seca has not been a good track for the Cadillac’s historically.  But the #31 will be happy with a possible second place.  Cadillac’s sweet spots will be at Long Beach and at Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta in the final two races of the season.

Renger van der Zande now must negotiate his way past both Olivier Pla and Felipe Nasr if he wants to get to the sharp end.  Nasr in the meantime, is holding off these two hungry wolves behind him.  Ah.  Renger van der Zande shoots right past Olivier Pla.  Now he will try and go after Felipe Nasr.  Serenely in the lead, Ricky Taylor is motoring.  He does have a lapped Acura NSX GT3 ahead, and clears the damaged Gradient Racing entry, the #66 NSX GT3 of Till Bechtolsheimer from England and American Marc Miller.

Ricky Taylor’s lead over Felipe Nasr is now 19 and a half seconds.  Acura are going for their third straight win but not a third straight 1-2 finish.  The #60 car of Olivier Pla continues saving fuel.  He works his way past Bill Auberlen, fourth in GT Daytona.  Felipe Nasr must keep his foot to the floor to keep Renger van der Zande behind him.  Pla lost track position all in one lap.  The #60 car qualified in second spot.  It didn’t seem they needed an extreme strategy, and they have rolled the dice but it might not pay off for them today.

That was at Road America last time.  Check that.  Today, they tried their best and they are looking for a win.  Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque have been on rails today.  Meanwhile, Renger van der Zande is chasing down Felipe Nasr.  Renger van der Zande and the #01 team are fourth in the championship.  The #31 cannot give up points they desperately need.  Nasr wiggles through turn five.  Maybe his tires are knackered.  In 2017, Renger van der Zande at the wheel of an LMP2 car, passing Dane Cameron (who at that time drove with Action Express), and van der Zande, who was driving for Spirit of Daytona Racing, made the move very late.

That was a win for Renger van der Zande and Belgian Marc Goossens.  Now, van der Zande is right to the flank of Felipe Nasr!  Outside, and now back to the inside goes van der Zande!  He is trying the over under on Nasr!  You know that Nasr won’t let him get away with this!  Contact out of the corner!  More contact!  Nasr has two wheels off in the sand!  He holds it together but van der Zande goes by.  Nasr will not roll over and play dead.  The #1 Paul Miller Racing GTD Lamborghini is the meat in a Cadillac sandwich.  Renger van der Zande is going to eke out a bit of a gap.

Renger van der Zande of course drove for Wayne Taylor in 2020 when that team was still racing a Cadillac.  White flag next time by.  Taylor leads by 20 seconds, and he will have a 100 point gap over the #31 car.  White flag.  One more time around Laguna Seca Raceway.  Dipping into turn six, and headed up the Rahal straight and back down through The Cokscrew, and there’s a wreck in The Corkscrew with two LMP2 cars!  Yikes!  Ricky Taylor slammed on the brakes, but now, three in a row for Ricky Taylor, Filipe Albuquerque, and Wayne Taylor Racing.

This is their first win at Laguna Seca in eight years, since 2013.  Ben Keating and Mikkel Jensen will win for PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports in LMP2.  Nick Tandy and Tommy Milner win in GT Le Mans.  They have made their first 2021 win happen, their 119th overall win for Corvette and their eighth at Laguna Seca.  Pfaff Motorsports and Porsche will win GT Daytona with Laurens Vanthoor and Zacharie Robichon.

Overall/DPi: #10 Taylor/Albuquerque                     Acura ARX-05 DPi

                LMP2: #52 Keating/Jensen                          Oreca 07

                GT Le Mans: #4 Milner/Tandy                     Chevrolet Corvette C8.R

                GT Daytona: #9 Vanthoor/Robichon        Porsche 911 GT3R

That’s a wrap from Laguna Seca!  Time is of the essence.  Three races remaining in the season, two only for DPi, and LMP2, while GTLM and GTD have three races.  The next event is in two weeks on the streets of Long Beach, California, at the former home of the United States Formula 1 Grand Prix West, back in the 1970s and current home for IndyCar and IMSA.  We will see DPi, GTLM, and GTD cars race at Long Beach.  Excited for that event, and it will be the first race there in two years.

So long everyone.  See you at Long Beach for an hour and 40 minute street fight.

      

         

 

   

   

   

    

   

 

            

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