Braselton - September 30, 2006
First victory for a diesel engine in US classic
For the first time, a diesel-powered sportscar has won the American
Endurance classic "Petit Le Mans”. With victory at Road Atlanta (US state
of Georgia), Audi prematurely clinched the Manufacturers’ Championship
in the LM P1 "top class” of the American Le Mans Series having already
won the Drivers’ and Teams’ titles. The new Audi R10 TDI remains
unbeaten in the seventh race of its début season, having now won the
third most important Endurance race of the year after the 12 Hours of
Sebring in March and the 24 Hours of Le Mans in June.
Audi R10 TDI remains unbeaten
Audi triumphed at Road Atlanta despite its petrol-driven LM P1 prototype
competitors being allowed to race with 65 kilograms less weight making
them faster than the two R10 TDI prototypes. The key to success was the
reliability of the revolutionary diesel sportscar which ran throughout the
1000 miles without the slightest technical problem. Consistent lap times,
a good strategy, fast pit stops and the low consumption of the V12 TDI
engine made the Audi success possible.
In front of a record crowd of over 90,000 spectators, the Audi drivers had
to fight hard with the petrol-driven prototypes especially in the first half of
an incident-packed race. The lead kept changing before the two Audi R10
TDI cars finally settled themselves in the top two positions at the
beginning of the seventh hour and looked set for a commanding 1-2
result.
Audi clinch American Le Mans Manufacturers’ title
Thirteen minutes before the end of the 9-hour plus long race, however,
contact with a slower GT car ended the race of the R10 TDI of Frank
Biela/Emanuele Pirro/Marco Werner. Running in second position, Werner
had to pit with damaged front left suspension. The repairs were
completed exactly at the moment when Allan McNish crossed the finish
line as the winner in the "sister” car.
Biela/Pirro/Werner were classified 7th overall and 4th in the LM P1 class.
It was the sixth overall victory in nine races for the new ALMS Champions
Dindo Capello and Allan McNish. Audi celebrated its seventh "Petit Le
Mans” victory in a row – and the first one with the new R10 TDI.
Quotes after the race
Dr Wolfgang Ullrich (Head of Audi Motorsport)
"Due to the situation regarding the regulations we did not have the speed
to control this difficult race. But we were consistently fast enough to be at
the front in the end, thanks also to a good strategy, and the problems of
others. We have earned this victory yet again with great reliability, team
work and consistency.”
Dindo Capello (Audi R10 TDI #2)
"We struggled a little at the beginning but from the second stint we got
better pace. Both Allan and I were consistently fast – we needed to be
because the Zytek and Creation were very quick. I had some anxious
moments lapping slower traffic but managed to keep out of trouble in the
traffic which was very important. It is an awesome feeling to have won
Petit three times.”
Allan McNish (Audi R10 TDI #2)
"It was an extremely hard race from the start with a very fast pace of the
Zytek and Creation. The race came to us as the ambient temperature
dropped and our car got quicker and quicker. It feels good to have scored
a diesel’s first ‘Petit’ win – like we achieved in another of America’s
sportscar ‘classic’ races at Sebring. I’m very proud to have achieved a
record seventh LM P1 class win in a season but obviously disappointed
for the ‘sister’ car.”
Frank Biela (Audi R10 TDI #1)
"It looked pretty good for us for quite a while. I was happy with my stints, I
was running at the front. Emanuele (Pirro) and Marco (Werner) also did a
great job and were fighting hard. At the end we simply had bad luck. You
can’t blame anybody for this.”
Emanuele Pirro (Audi R10 TDI #1)
"This has been a very competitive race from lap one to the end. We tried
everything we could. Marco was very strong at the end and stayed in the
car for a long time. He did what a race driver should do: Not to sit for
second place. It was tough luck. But we support him 100 percent.”
Marco Werner (Audi R10 TDI #1)
"The race started with a good first stint. But then somehow things did not
continue as good, neither for Emanuele (Pirro) nor for me. During the final
Safety Car period a Panoz suddenly braked extremely hard in front of me. I
tried to avoid him, but spun over the kerbs and hit him. That sent me to
the back of the field. When I tried to catch up a Panoz hit me quite hard.
Shortly later the front suspension broke when I braked for the final
chicane. I was able to bring the car back to the pits, but it was
unfortunately too late for the repairs.”
Dave Maraj (Team Director Team Audi Sport North America)
"This is Audi’s seventh consecutive Petit win which is a remarkable
achievement. Both of our cars ran like clockwork until the dying moments
when the #1 Audi suffered a problem which was a great shame because
a deserved 1-2 had looked likely. Audi Sport North America once again
displayed good race strategy with the entire team playing a big role.”
The results at Road Atlanta
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