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AMERICAN LE MANS SERIES |
28/06/2004 |
Lamborghini Battles For Third Place On Debut |
Second Murciélago R-GT Damaged In Practice |
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Lamborghini Battles For Third Place On Debut
In a tense battle fought all the way to the finish line in today’s second round of the American Le Mans Series (ALMS) at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, the Krohn-Barbour Racing Lamborghini Murciélago R-GT of Peter Kox and David Brabham missed out on a third place finish by just 0.679 sec after two hours and 45 minutes of racing. This was the first appearance of the Krohn-Barbour Racing team and the US race debut of the Lamborghini (which has only raced once before in Europe), but that didn’t stop the newcomers from challenging more established runners.
The second Krohn-Barbour Racing Murciélago R-GT, to be driven by Scott Maxwell and team co-founder Tracy Krohn, was unable to start the race because of damage sustained in Friday’s test session at the Mid-Ohio circuit, when it was in collision with a Porsche 911 GT3.
The Lamborghini of Dutchman Kox and Australian Brabham qualified in fifth place in the GTS-class. Kox drove the first stint in the race, moving up to third after little more than an hour when the rival Saleen S7R of Terry Borcheller/Johnny Mowlem had a lengthy pit stop. The Saleen was the faster of the two cars, but was further delayed when it banged doors with one of the two pacesetting Corvettes, briefly skating off the circuit and then having to pit.
Kox said: “I tried to get a reasonable, consistent pace, so we could keep learning about the car. I wasn’t pushing 100 percent because at that stage in the race there was no point and what we needed most with a brand-new cars was miles and a finish.”
Brabham drove the Lamborghini for the remaining 90 minutes of the race, staying in the car during its second scheduled pit stop. With 35 minutes of the race to go, the Saleen was just 30 sec behind Brabham and closing fast enough to be right on his tail in the final ten minutes. Brabham picked up his pace, driving the car “as hard as I could. This car’s not very nice on the edge, because we still have to sort its handling, but that’s where I had to take it.”
Brabham held onto third place until just three minutes from the chequered flag, when the Saleen was in his mirrors. “Soon as he caught me,” Brabham said, “I knew he’d pass. The Saleen’s much quicker on the straights and better on the brakes.”
Brabham thrilled the crowd by fighting back, twice closing up on the Saleen as it caught slower cars on the last lap. At the line, the Lamborghini was denied third place by less than seven-tenths of a second. But as Tracy Krohn commented, “We’ve met our first objective: the car reached the finish.”
The two GM Racing Corvettes of Ron Fellows/Johnny O’Connell and Oliver Gavin/Olivier Beretta, the pre-race favourites in the GTS class, claimed first and second places (and third and fourth overall).
Team manager and co-founder Dick Barbour commented: “It’s not being beaten to third place that bothers me, it’s being beaten to first! This team is here to win. We all know we’ve got a lot of hard work ahead of us. But the team performed really well at its first event, and from taking delivery of two cars in the week we went out there and finished an international sports car race. Lamborghini’s built a very beautiful car and now we have to start development work on it.”
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