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Zoom Zoom: 2009 LeMans Defeats All Contenders

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009 | Author:
Peugeot and Audi were hungry from the start

Peugeot and Audi were hungry from the start

At one point on Saturday morning, two hours into the start of the 24 Hours of LeMans, I turned to my brother and said: “There’s been more entertainment bang for our buck in two hours of this than in all other auto racing so far this season combined”. He had no quarrel with that assertion.

From the moment the green flag waved (well, in fact, it was a French flag – gotta love the French!), Peugeot and Audi went at it – hard. Peugeot had won the pole position with one of its three entries in P1 (Prototype 1 class). Audi were right there with them at the front of the grid.

Flying past the Start/Finish line, Scotsman Allan McNish weaved his Audi this way and that trying to get past the No. 9 Peugeot driven by Stéphane Sarrazin, who would have none of it. On a few occasions on that first lap, the two left their audience and team members holding their breath – crashing a car on the first lap of a 24 hour race is not recommended. Peugeot stayed ahead, however, and never relinquished the lead (albeit not with the same car).

During the first pit stop, Peugeot’s No. 7 car driven by Pedro Lamy pulled in and everything was looking good. The lollypop operator (that’s the guy who tells the driver when it’s safe to pull back into the race) gave the all-clear and Lamy gassed it and turned left. Unfortunately, the car whose pit lane was directly in front of him, the 17 Pescarolo Sport, was trying to get into his pit and instead slammed into the left rear of the Peugeot. It looked like a hard nudge (video below), but it was enough to pierce a hole in the Peugeot’s tire. Lamy continued on his way with fingers surely crossed, but once he got onto the track it became clear that disaster had struck. Smoke was emanating from the tire well and within a few seconds the tire had torn itself apart, whipping the side of the car and destroying the chassis. This went on for all 14 kilometers left between he and a return to the pits. So much debris was being spewed onto the track from the Peugeot that a full course yellow had to be instituted.

When I first saw the tire explode right outside the exit of pit lane I told my brother there was no way he could make it back. Defying the odds, the Peugeot chugged along on three wheels all the way back to pit lane, got pulled into the garage and spent 35 minutes getting  the left and rear of its chassis rebuilt – a truly remarkable job by the pit crew. The No. 7′s chances of winning were now infinitesimal, but it carried on nonetheless.

One of Audi’s P1 entries also had an adventure early on. Alexandre Prémat, driving the No. 3 Audi, somehow lost control in a chicane and spun the car into the gravel trap. At LeMans the rule is that if you can keep your motor running, the stewards will come out and push you back onto the track, which is what happened here. Losing ten minutes while stationary in a gravel trap is no way to go about winning a race, mind you.

That left two Audis and two Peugeots battling out for the rest of the race. As the sun was setting in France, German Lucas Luhr lost control of the No. 2 Audi and smashed into a tire barrier, completely destroying the back end of the car and forcing it to retire (video follows). You could sense the Audi team deflate at that moment (kinda like what happens to the Blue Jays when Roy Halladay goes down with an injury). With only one competitive car left on the track (and on this day, the ability of the Audi to compete with the Peugeots was debatable), the sense of doom in the Audi pits had taken hold.

The Peugeot team, with the pride of France resting on their shoulders, had not won at LeMans in 16 years. They were favoured for the last few years but Audi, with technically inferior cars, had found a way to race the perfect race. 2009 was to be Peugeot’s year, but not without some drama near the end.

French national pride was palpable on Sunday morning

French national pride was palpable on Sunday morning

With only a few minutes left, the No. 8 of Sébastien Bourdais (yes, that Sébastien Bourdais), who was then running in 2nd place, slowed to a crawl. The announcers started going crazy, wondering what kind of mechanical issues could be arising, and whether or not the 1st place No.9 car could be experiencing the same problems.

Turns out the Peugeot team were so far ahead of the third place car that they could afford to let the No. 7 Peugeot catch up to them (albeit still many laps down) so they could all cross the finish line at the same time – the perfect Peugeot photo-op, a rare luxury for teams to indulge.

Peugeot weren’t the only ones to take advantage of a huge lead at the end to partake in some photogenic posturing. Corvette, in their final race in GT1, brought their car into the garage, polished it up and made it all pretty for the finish. It was quite a risk to take, as rules state that cars in the pits have to be turned off and then restart on their own before heading back out onto the track. After 23 1/2 hours racing, you’re tempting fate by playing such esthetic games, but fortunately for them the good ol’ C6.R powered up without a problem. A high point for General Motors this year, wouldn’t you agree?

ALMS got a shot in the arm from its Ferrari entry dominating the GT2 class

ALMS got a shot in the arm from its Ferrari entry dominating the GT2 class

In GT2, what was billed as an epic battle between Porsche and Ferrari turned into a Maranello whitewash, as the F430 took the first four spots in class. Of note, the two Ferrari teams that came over from the American LeMans series ended up on the podium. The Risi Competizione team out of Houston beat all European contenders to take the top step on the podium. Well done, and it has me pondering a trip to Lime Rock, Connecticut on July 16th so I can see these cars for myself. Only a 6 hour drive and free camping with your race ticket. My girlfriend and I had planned a trip to Mosport the weekend of August 21st to do so, but with a good friend getting married, well…Lime Rock you lookin’ good right now, baby!

All in all I was completely satisfied with this year’s LeMans. Thrills, and spills, great battles and drama, the teams I was cheering for won and I was left looking forward with great anticipation to next year’s edition. If anything was lacking it was the company of both my brothers to watch it with me – I’ll have to twist some arms between now and next year’s race to make it happen.

The Twit: A Weekend To Satiate All Fans

Friday, June 12th, 2009 | Author:
LeMans highlights a plethora of sporting goodness this weekend

LeMans highlights a plethora of sporting goodness this weekend

There’s a bonanza of must-see-sports-tv this weekend. Let’s go down the list that got my attention.

Friday:

- Roy Halladay toys with the lowly Marlins. This one should be over by the end of the first period of the next item. (TSN, 7 pm)

- Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final. We can finally be done with it. This doesn’t mean I don’t love hockey (I do) or that the quality of play has been poor (it hasn’t), it’s just that it’s fucking June already. (CBC, NBC, 8 pm)

Saturday:

- 24 Hours of LeMans. Scroll down a couple posts for my thoughts on why this event is so special. (Coverage begins at 8am on Speed, goes until noon then comes back on at 4 pm until 10 pm, then coverage picks up again at Midnight until the checkered flag at 9:30 am Sunday).

- Casey Janssen continues his journey back to dominance with a start against the Marlins (1 pm, TSN)

- This is only for those in Ottawa, but Tyson: The Documentary is playing at the Bytowne at 2:45 pm, and I’ll be there with a group of friends

- The New York Mets take on the New York Yankees. One of the only series that makes interleague play palatable. Ken Rosenthal has a good column on the Mets manager and why he’s doomed to fail. (Fox, 4 pm)

Gotta love the Summer of Tallet

Gotta love the Summer of Tallet

Sunday:

- LeMans wraps up (Speed, all morning up to 9:30 am)

- The Summer of Tallet (as Tao of Stieb refers to it) continues, with the man himself taking on the Marlins (TSN, 1 pm)

- Kobe and the Lakers could finish the series against the Magic (TSN, 8 pm)

In Other News:

- Say it ain’t so: Pedro Drawing Interest (and it ain’t from Les Geais Bleus).

Zoom Zoom: LeMans On Deck

Tuesday, June 09th, 2009 | Author:
Looking for something new to watch? Check out the 24 Hours of LeMans this weekend,  

Looking for something new to watch? Check out the 24 Hours of LeMans this weekend,

Last week, my lovely companion asked me if I had any plans on Saturday, June 13th. Unable to think that far ahead, I turned to the trusty planner in my iPod Touch. “Saturday, June 13th. Let’s see here… Sorry Sweetie, LeMans is on that day.” Thankfully I have the best girlfriend in the world and that was the end of the conversation.

Committing to an event like LeMans is unlike any other sporting event – because it lasts 24 straight hours. I’m not hardcore enough to sit through 24 hours of racing, but I will probably watch at least 10 hours; the pre-race and start on Saturday at 8:30 a.m. until noon, the finish Sunday when I get up at around 8:00 a.m., and a few hours of coverage here and there Saturday. Not that I could watch all 24 hours even if I wanted to because Speed TV is throwing in coverage of other automotive events throughout the day Saturday.

I have fond memories of watching my first LeMans a few years ago. I was back at my parent’s place on account of the passing of my grandfather, and my brothers and I decided to watch coverage of LeMans when we could during that weekend. It was a welcome diversion from the other serious issues we had to deal with, and it was a rare moment of bonding for all three of us together (there’s a major age difference between all three of us. It was also the first year in which Jacques Villeneuve participated as a driver for Peugeot, which gave us extra incentive to tune in.

Part of the magic of LeMans is the track on which it takes place: Circuit de la Sarthe is almost 14 kilometers long with long straightaways and dangerous curves. A lap in a GT2 car takes 13 minutes, so if something breaks down just after you passed the pits, your chances of making it back there and fix the problem are minimal, and even if you do you lose an incredible amount of time.

Compelling pit action helps define LeMans

Compelling pit action helps define LeMans

As in the American LeMans Series, four classes of cars participate; two prototypes classes (who go as fast as F1 cars) and two Grand Touring classes (GT classes are modified street cars, like Ferrari F430′s and Porsche 911′s). The slower GT cars create moving obstacles for the prototype cars, which means the drivers must be alert at all times – no small feat when you’re racing two and three hours at a time (known as a stint, every car has three drivers who alternate between racing and resting).

Another alluring part of LeMans is that the pit stops act more like your neighbourhood service garage than what you see in an F1 or NASCAR pit. Cars often have to stay in the pits for minutes at a time, repairing bodywork, replacing worn brakes, clearing debris from ventilation ducts, etc. Coverage of the pits is often as compelling as what’s happening on track, especially during the nighttime hours where it’s difficult to work out who’s doing what on track due to limited lighting.

The men in the pits often go 40 straight hours without sleep, and as much as drivers try to sleep between stints, I can’t imagine trying to catch some shuteye after having just spent 3 hours driving as fast as 300 km/h. My buddy Jr. Forester could, but he’s no mere mortal (come to think of it, neither are these drivers). Heck even the commentators take shifts – there’s really no other event like it.

At the end of the day, winners are determined by the car in each class that has completed the most laps. It’s a war of attrition, with retired cars littering the side of the track, and exhausted drivers and crew members biting their nails for the last few hours, hoping the car makes it to the finish. 

If you’ve got Speed TV, check in a couple times on Saturday or Sunday morning if you have a chance. I’m a big fan of expanding one’s sporting horizons, and this great article brought to my attention by StephD elaborates on this point (don’t ask me to explain cricket to you, though, I have yet to decipher what it is they’re trying to accomplish out there!).