08-03-2005 | #1 |
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Road Atlanta
Posts: 371
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Portland Grand Prix Race Results
TWO IN A ROW FOR CHAMPION RACING'S BIELA, PIRRO
Portland - Trailing by 1.5 seconds with two laps left, Emanuele Pirro couldn't believe it. He closed quickly on Dyson Racing's No. 16 Lola, which lost fuel pressure while leading, to win the Portland Grand Prix on Saturday night in Round 6 of the American Le Mans Series. Four miles proved to be the difference. Pirro clawed his way back from third place with about 30 minutes left to put himself in position to go by James Weaver on lap 136. Chris Dyson and Andy Wallace, who teamed in the pole-sitting No. 20 Dyson Racing Lola, finished second, about 10 seconds back. Weaver, who had led by more than four seconds in the waning moments, and teammate Butch Leitzinger finished third. "I've known James (Weaver) since our Formula 3 days, and I like fighting hard with a guy with a lot of experience. I know I can push hard and still trust him to do right," Pirro said. "I was unhappy that I took the lead under those circumstances, I would have rather passed him under racing. But when I found out it was because he ran out of petrol I was happier because that means they took a risk and it didn't play out for them, and that's racing, that's another story." "We are a young crew," Pirro said. "By each race, we are improving and improving and improving. The championship looks good for us." Indeed it does. Pirro and Biela moved ahead of teammates Marco Werner and JJ Lehto in the P1 drivers championship standings. Fortune frowned on the defending race and series champions about 45 minutes in. As Werner attempted to go under the No. 4 Corvette Racing C6-R of Olivier Beretta, the Audi spun under braking. Werner was able to nurse the Audi back to the pits, and the crew had to replace the rear cover. Once Lehto got back on the track, the rear bodywork flew off as he moved past the No. 63 ACEMCO Motorsports Saleen. Lehto spun off the track and collected Terry Borcheller with him. Both cars retired from the race, handing the LMP1 drivers championship lead to Pirro and Biela. In LMP2, the No. 37 Intersport Racing Lola won for the third time this year as Clint Field and Gregor Fisken drove past a stranded No. 10 Miracle Motorsports Courage near the two-hour mark. Field has now won three times this year and moved past Miracle's Jeff Bucknum and Chris McMurry for the drivers lead in P2. "It's always a struggle to get a good match, but with great drivers at your disposal like Liz Halliday and Gregor Fisken that can adapt to my driving style, our car, and our team, it makes winning easier," Field said. "Gregor did a great job on his stint. He kept it safe and kept it clean and our team did a great job on the stops. "I was plugging away two seconds a lap faster," he added. "So if the No. 10 car had held up, I was thinking it was going to be a great finish. We had a bit of the same troubles last year, we had a couple of wins but a couple of DNFs, so we know how it can be." The ACEMCO Saleen's misfortune opened the door for another 1-2 finish in GT1 for Corvette Racing. Beretta and Gavin won for the second time this year, posting a 0.714-second victory over the No. 3 entry of Ron Fellows and Johnny O'Connell. The critical moment came during a pit stop at just about the two-hour mark when both cars pitted under caution. Gavin beat O'Connell out of the pits, and that's the way it stayed. "At Sebring, we lost the race like this, and today we nearly lost it again," Beretta said. "The car was very difficult to drive. I'm very happy for the No. 4 crew, and we have the No. 3 car on the podium. So this is fantastic." Gavin said the Corvette's steering wheel was bent, and the car wasn't nearly as smooth in the corners as it was before the incident. But thanks to quick and timely pit work, he said, the car never relinquished its lead from that point. "The team did an amazing job today," Gavin said. "The car was quite badly damaged with the accident with the No. 1 car. It looked like we were going to have to make an unscheduled pit stop, but Olivier kept going and the pit crew worked their magic." Third was the No. 5 Pacific Coast Motorsports Corvette C5-R of Alex Figge and Ryan Dalziel, the first podium for the first-year team. It also marked the first time three Corvettes climbed the podium in the ALMS. In GT2, Timo Bernhard and Romain Dumas won their fourth straight race in their No. 23 Alex Job Racing Porsche. Not only did they finish comfortably ahead of the second place No. 43 BAM! Porsche of Martin Jensen and Wolf Henzler, they unofficially took the class points lead over Patrick Long and Jorg Bergmeister in the No. 31 Petersen Motorsports/White Lightning Racing Porsche, which finished eighth in class. "I knew our strongest competitor was not on the same lap as us," Bernhard said. "It was a little better for us. I walked away from the BAM! car, and that allowed me to save my tires. It was a good thing because we had a yellow and everyone else pitted for tires." Over the past two races, Bernhard and Dumas have led every lap, a span of 226 consecutive laps. "It might have looked easy in the last two races, but it wasn't," Bernhard said. "It would have been a good battle with the No. 31 car. Everything is good at every track we go to. We have the experience." The seventh round of the American Le Mans Series is the Generac 500 at Road America, set for 3 p.m. EDT Aug. 21 at Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wis. The race will be broadcast on SPEED Channel. Qualifying is scheduled for 2:55 p.m. EDT Aug. 20. American Le Mans Radio, and Live Timing and Scoring will be available at www.americanlemans.com. Portland Grand Prix Sunday, Portland International Raceway Unofficial results 1. (4) Frank Biela, Germany; Emanuele Pirro, Italy; Audi R8 (1, P1), 138. 2. (1) Andy Wallace, England; Chris Dyson, Pleasant Valley, NY; Lola EX257 AER (2, P1), 138. 3. (2) Butch Leitzinger, State College, PA; James Weaver, England; Lola EX257 AER (3, P1), 136. 4. (5) Gregor Fisken, Scotland; Clint Field, Dublin, OH; Lola B05/40/AER (4, P2), 133. 5. (8) Olivier Beretta, Monaco; Oliver Gavin, England; Corvette C6-R (5, GT1), 132. 6. (9) Ron Fellows, Canada; Johnny O`Connell, Flowery Branch, GA; Corvette C6-R (6, GT1), 132. 7. (7) Bryan Willman, Kirkland, WA; Michael Lewis, San Diego, CA; Riley & Scott MRK IIIC (7, P1), 131. 8. (12) Alex Figge, Hollywood, CA; Ryan Dalziel, Scotland; Corvette C5-R (8, GT1), 131. 9. (11) Fabrizio de Simone, Italy; Mika Salo, Finland; Maserati MC12 (9, GT1), 130. 10. (15) Romain Dumas, France; Timo Bernhard, Germany; Porsche 911 GT3 RSR (10, GT2), 126. 11. (17) Wolf Henzler, Germany; Martin Jensen, Denmark; Porsche 911 GT3 RSR (11, GT2), 125. 12. (18) Johannes van Overbeek, San Francisco, CA; Jon Fogarty, Palo Alto, CA; Porsche 911 GT3 RSR (12, GT2), 125. 13. (14) Michele Rugulo, Italy; Tom Weickardt, Whitefish Bay, WI; Dodge Viper (13, GT1), 124. 14. (21) Robin Liddell, Scotland; Bryan Sellers, Centerville, OH; Panoz Esperante eGTLM (14, GT2), 124. 15. (22) Marino Franchitti, Scotland; Christophe Tinseau; Panoz Esperante eGTLM (15, GT2), 123. 16. (23) Justin Jackson, Buford, GA; Michael Galati, Olmsted, OH; Porsche 911 GT3 RSR (16, GT2), 121. 17. (19) Lonnie Pechnik, Pacific Grove, CA; Seth Neiman, Burlingame, CA; Porsche 911 GT3 RSR (17, GT2), 121. 18. (13) Guy Cosmo, Long Island, NY; Jamie Bach, West Palm Beach, FL; Courage Mazda (18, P2), 118. 19. (16) Patrick Long, Oak Park, CA; Jorg Bergmeister, Germany; Porsche 911 GT3 RSR (19, GT2), 114. 20. (20) Darren Law, Phoenix, AZ; Ian Baas, Noblesville, IN; Porsche 911 GT3 RSR (20, GT2), 95, Broken Axle. 21. (6) Jeff Bucknum, Lake Havasu City, AZ; Chris McMurry, Phoenix, AZ; Courage C-65 (21, P2), 86. 22. (10) Terry Borcheller, Gainesville, GA; Johnny Mowlem, England; Saleen S7R (22, GT1), 48, Accident. 23. (3) Marco Werner, Germany; JJ Lehto, Finland; Audi R8 (23, P1), 48, Accident. Unofficial points LMP1 Emanuele Pirro 104 Frank Biela 104 Andy Wallace 93 Chris Dyson 90 Marco Werner 87 JJ Lehto 87 James Weaver 85 Butch Leitzinger 85 Tom Kristensen 26 Allan McNish 22 Guy Smith 16 Tom Chilton 10 Hayanari Shimoda 10 Michael Lewis 10 Bryan Willman 10 LMP2 Clint Field 76 Jamie Bach 65 Guy Cosmo 65 Jeff Bucknum 62 Chris McMurry 62 Jon Field 36 Ben Devlin 29 Ian James 26 Liz Halliday 20 Gregor Fisken 20 Gunnar van der Steur 16 Erik van der Steur 13 GT1 Ron Fellows 114 Johnny O`Connell 114 Olivier Beretta 107 Oliver Gavin 107 Johnny Mowlem 65 Terry Borcheller 65 Alex Figge 57 Ryan Dalziel 57 Michele Rugolo 38 Tom Weickardt 38 Darren Turner 26 Stephane Ortelli 26 David Brabham 26 Max Papis 22 Jan Magnussen 19 Ralf Kelleners 16 David Empringham 12 Jean-Philippe Belloc 10 Stephane Sarrazin 9 Pedro Lamy 9 Peter Kox 9 Fabrizio De Simone 0 Mika Salo 0 GT2 Romain Dumas 96 Timo Bernhard 96 Patrick Long 90 Jorg Bergmeister 90 Jon Fogarty 69 Joh. van Overbeek 69 Robin Liddell 51 Tim Sugden 49 Justin Jackson 39 Wolf Henzler 31 Bill Auberlen 31 Nic Jonsson 28 Lucas Luhr 26 Marino Franchitti 24 Mike Rockenfeller 23 Ian Baas 21 Seth Neiman 21 Lonnie Pechnik 21 Bryan Sellers 21 Randy Pobst 21 Darren Law 19 Michael Cawley 17 Marc Sluszny 16 Martin Jensen 16 Tracy Krohn 16 Andrew Thompson 14 Michael Vergers 14 Juan Barazi 14 Spencer Pumpelly 12 Steve Ivankovich 12 Andy Lally 12 Tony Burgess 12 Christophe Tinseau 8 Michael Galati 6 Scott Maxwell 5 Sascha Maassen 4 Rick Skelton 1 |
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