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Cadillac Prototype Races to Rolex 24 Victory

  • Written by Daytona International Speedway Media
  • Published in Circuit

Christian Fittipaldi, Joao Barbosa, Filipe Albuquerque Co-Drive Cadillac Prototype to Rolex 24 At DAYTONA Victory.

 

 

  • Team Sets Race Records for Total Laps, Distance
  • Former Formula 1 Champion Fernando Alonso Co-Drives to 38th-Place Finish
  • Chip Ganassi Racing Gets 200th Victory As No. 67 Ford GT Wins GT Le Mans Class
  • GT Daytona Class Won by Lamborghini Huracan
  • 5-Time Rolex 24 Champion Scott Pruett Finishes 29th in Final Race


[Image: Mustang Sampling Racing]

The rigors of racing for 24 consecutive hours were evident Sunday, with a Rolex 24 At DAYTONA that was remarkable for its speed but also memorable for its attrition that dashed championship hopes for a number of high-profile teams.

In winning the 56th running of the famed sports car endurance classic at Daytona International Speedway, Christian Fittipaldi, Joao Barbosa and Filipe Albuquerque, in the No. 5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac DPi, completed 808 laps and a total of 2,876.48 miles – both race records and the equivalent of a Daytona Beach-to-Oakland, California cross-country drive. Record-setting was aided by the race having only three caution periods.

The Cadillac was stout and steady despite some late-race overheating problems, which added up to dominance, ultimately. The No. 5 led the race’s last nine hours and at the finish was 1 minute, 10.544 seconds ahead of the other Action Express Racing entry, the No. 31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac DPi driven by Felipe Nasr, Eric Curran, Mike Conway and Stuart Middleton. Finishing third as the final car on the lead lap were Colin Braun, Loic Duval, Jonathan Bennett and Romain Dumas in the CORE Autosport No. 54 ORECA LMP2.

The demanding 3.56-mile DIS road course was especially unforgiving for the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship’s headlining Prototype class. The defending Rolex 24 champion team, the No. 10 Konica Minolta Cadillac DPi, fell out of contention early due to a faulty radiator and ended up 45th in the 50-car field. The No. 23 Ligier LMP2 of United Autosports, featuring two-time Formula 1 champion Fernando Alonso, punctured a tire in the eighth hour and had a brake issue in the 11th hour; the car finished 38th. The two Acura DPi entries fielded by owner Roger Penske – with former Indianapolis 500 champions Helio Castroneves and Juan Pablo Montoya in the driver lineup – finished ninth and 10th, respectively. An on-track incident damaged one car; an alternator problem hampered the other’s chances.

All of that combined to open the door more than enough for the No. 5 team, which finished second in last year’s Rolex 24 after a late-race incident with the No. 10 Cadillac.

“I really do believe that the fact we had very few yellows compromised a lot of the machinery out there and really put a lot of stress on a lot of cars,” said Fittipaldi, after he and Barbosa claimed their third Rolex 24 victory. “Some cars started dropping off. Even ourselves, we had to baby it the last six or seven hours. We had a slight overheating problem.

“The whole race took on a slightly different dimension, a different path. Within one hour it went from a sprint race to an enduro race.”

Added Barbosa: “Just the expectation before we started this race was amazing. All the names, all the teams, all the drivers who were here, we definitely knew this was not going to be an easy race. Whoever won would really have to deserve it.”

Alonso’s heralded Daytona debut had its highlights despite the disappointing finish. After the tire problem, Alonso charged from three laps down to within one lap of the leaders. And for other portions of the race’s early hours, the car was one of the fastest in the field, overall.

“I think I have a positive feeling about the race; unfortunately we had too many issues that were out of our control, some unlucky situations,” Alonso said, adding that he likely will return to the Rolex 24.

“I think so. This race is in January. It’s an iconic race, a prestigious race. It’s in the part of the year where normally we [drivers from outside sports cars] are preparing for our season, in whatever category. So, instead of being on the bike or in the gym, you’re driving.”

 

 

In the GT Le Mans (GTLM) class, Chip Ganassi Racing’s No. 67 Ford GT, driven by Scott Dixon, Ryan Briscoe and Richard Westbrook, gave the Ganassi organization its 200th victory across four racing disciplines – sports car, stock car, open wheel and rally cross. Ganassi’s No. 66 Ford GT, the winning GTLM car last year, finished second Sunday. Ganassi has six overall Rolex 24 victories and two in GTLM.

[Image: Roush Yates Engines/ Ford Performance]

 

The GT Daytona class was won by Rolf Ineichen, Mirko Bortolotti, Franck Perera and Rik Breukers in the No. 11 Lamborghini Huracan GT3. It was the first Rolex 24 victory for Lamborghini.
Grasser Racing
[Image: GRT Grasser Racing]

Taken from the Graser Racing News :

With an impressive victory, the Austrian GRT Grasser Racing Team won the most important race in the USA (Rolex 24h Daytona) in GTD. With Rolf Ineichen (CHE), Mirko Bortolotti (ITA), Franck Perera (FRA) and Rick Breuckers (NLD) - # 11 Lamborghini Huracan - they finished the most important endurance race in the USA after 752. After the 3rd place at the 24h race in Dubai, 14 days ago, GRT Grasser celebrated 2 big successes in January! Team owner Gottfried Grasser is overwhelmed: "I just can not find words to win from the last place on the grid of one of the most famous races in the world: 24 hours without any problems ending the race is a success for the whole team and the drivers 2. Lamborghini also finished the race in 13th place. We are happy!

 

 

 

 

Five-time Rolex 24 champion Scott Pruett, racing for the final time, co-drove the No. 15 Lexus RC F GT3 to a ninth-place finish (29th overall) in the GTD class. Pruett retires with a share of the Rolex 24 all-time overall victory record, tied with Hurley Haywood. Pruett holds the race record for class victories with 10.

“It was business as usual,” Pruett said. “But the memories here, the races here, the fans here ... it’s [all] second to none. The first thing to do, now, is toast this career with my wife and my family. And second, it will be just to take a moment to look back, and to savor it all.”

 

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