Maserati
finished the 24 Hours of Spa late on Sunday afternoon with
four cars in the top seven places. It was another solid
display of the Modenese cars’ reliability and performance in
a race where the outcome was affected by wet weather.
The Vitaphone Racing Team can feel a little regret at the
second place taken Bartels, Biagi, Van de Poele and Lamy as
the crew was leading by a lap just 58 minutes from the end.
However, the expert Belgian spun on the slippery surface
during an especially heavy downpour. He finished up in the
sand and lost the lead and a lap because of the time it took
to fish him out. The car, long in second, had moved into
first place as the eighteenth hour struck. The German team’s
crew of Montanari, Ramos, Bobbi and Lemeret deserve a
mention owing to their fantastic showing as they finished
fourth after long holding third position.
Playteam Sarafree ended its debut outing in the 24 Hour with
a solid fifth spot courtesy of Bertolini, Piccini, De Simone
and Pier Guidi. The quartet held the lead before a banal
problem forced them into the pits for over three laps. The
team’s other line-up had to retire a few minutes from the
end after a clash with another car sent Giambattista
Giannoccaro into the crash barriers.
The fifth and final MC12 to take on the Ardennes test was
that fielded by JMB Racing for Peter, Franchitti, Macari and
Aucott. The crew took the car to seventh. Despite the fact
that this was the first time the four had been brought
together and that two are true gentleman drivers (Macari and
Aucott compete in and lead the Citation Cup), the crew
managed to steer clear of the trouble that put paid to many
other drivers’ chances.
The 24 Hours of Spa is very important in terms of the
championship as points are awarded at the end of six, twelve
and twenty-four hours. Maserati has increased its advantage
in the Manufacturers’ Cup. It now stands on 117.5 points, 35
more than Corvette who are second on 82.5. Thomas Biagi
still heads the Drivers’ championship with 45 points. He has
a nine point lead over the Hezemans and Deletraz pairing
(36), eleven more than the Bertolini and Piccini duo (34)
and sixteen up on Bartels, Montanari and Ramos (29). The
Vitaphone Racing Team (Maserati MC12) has extended its lead
in the Teams’ championship and now has 74 points. Next come
Scuderia Playteam Sarafree (Maserati MC12) who have earned
40.
The Race
Following an incident-free start with the five MC12s
occupying places in the top ten, Massimiliano Busnelli had
an unfortunate clash with a GT3, ran off the track and
damaged his car. The driver from Lombardy managed to make it
back to the pits to rebuld the front and rear ends, a job
the Playteam Sarafree mechanics took just 13 laps to
complete.
The safety car came on on lap 77 and the group bunched up
again as the three hour mark was reached. At this point, the
number 11 Playteam Sarafree car was in fifth and the
Vitaphone Racing entrants in sixth and seventh. The
situation was unchanged at the restart, apart from Pedro
Lamy setting the fastest lap time during his stint (2´16"452
on lap 142) as he upped the tempo. It was at this stage that
a few drivers retired, just as the number 12 MC12 was making
a superb comeback to 22nd place.
Approaching the six hour mark, the first of three where
championship points would be awarded, a terrible crash
involving a GT2 car meant the safety car was once more
called on. The positions were fixed and Bertolini was
holding second behind the number 33 Aston Martin. Lamy was
in fifth and Montanari sixth. However, between hours six and
nine, the race order changed with the retirement of
Wendlinger, Sharp, Lichtner and Lechner's car. After nine
hours, three MC12s were in the top four with Alessandro Pier
Guidi heading Matteo Bobbi and Eric Van de Poele.
|
|
The Spa 24 Hours saw another solid display of the
Modenese cars’ reliability and performance in an
endurance race where the outcome was affected by wet
weather. |
|
|
|
Maserati finished the Spa 24 Hours with four cars in
the top seven places but missed out on a third
consecutive victory 58 minutes from the finish when
the race leading Vitaphone MC12 spun out. |
|
Another important stage of the race in terms of championship
points came after twelve hours. The Corvette driven by
Deletraz, Hezemans, Gollin and Fassler led with a one lap
advantage over Bartels, Biagi, Van de Poele and Lamy's and
Bertolinim Piccini, De Simone and Pier Guidi's Maseratis.
The MC12 crewed by Montanari, Ramos, Bobbi and Lemeret was
fourth, two laps down. The JMB Racing Team car was
continuing its good form in eighth even though it was a
little way off the leaders, as was the second Playteam MC12
in fifteenth.
With the drivers nearing their 300th lap, Andrea Piccini, in
third, was forced to pit with a rear light problem. This
cost the quicker Playteam MC12 three laps. The problem,
repaired by the mechanics, appeared again a few laps later
when Alessandro Pier Guidi was at the wheel. Another pit
stop was inevitable but this time the problem was resolved
in record time. It was now that the rain, long expected by
all the teams, began to come down. In these difficult
conditions, Fabrizio De Simone and Pedro Lamy produced a
series of fast laps that saw De Simone consistently outpace
the other drivers, thanks also to his Pirelli wet weather
tyres. The Portuguese driver, meanwhile, quickly closed the
1´40" gap that separated him from the race leader, Fabrizio
Gollin, and hit the front.
On lap 425, the safety car made yet another appearance and
the teams took the chance to make their pit stops. The race
order at this point was: Biagi, Fassler (2´33" down), Kumpen
(3 laps down), Montanari (3 laps down) and De Simone (4 laps
down). The Roman driver headed back out for his third stint
having refuelled but sporting the same set of tyres.
The safety car turned off its lights and left the scene on
lap 440. This was the signal for the race to start up again.
Montanari appeared determined to chase third place and
earned it on lap 458 by overtaking Kumpen. However, the
safety car had come back on lap 457 because of the difficult
track conditions and Fassler’s spin while chasing down
Thomas Biagi was testimony to the tricky surface. The
Vitaphone Racing Team made the most of the fact that the
cars had bunched up to switch Thomas Biagi with Eric Van de
Poele in the number 1 car and Matteo Bobbi with Christian
Montanari in car number 2. Playteam Sarafree also took the
opportunity to replace Fabrizio De Simone with Andrea
Bertolini.
Rain continued to fall during the closing stages of the
race, forcing the safety car back out on lap 490. It stayed
on for ten laps and the field came together once more. Van
de Poele built a one-minute lead over Fassler when it left
but then came his unfortunate spin. The incident cost the
Belgian a lap and saw Fassler inherit the lead. The
Vitaphone Racing Team made their final driver switch early
and replaced Van de Poele with Pedro Lamy for the last 58
minutes. Christian Montanari also got into some difficulty
after a planned pit stop and had to come in again to swap
his tyres. This added delay saw him slip to fourth.
With the drivers secure in the top positions, the teams were
only waiting for the chequered flag to be flown. At the
finish, the Corvette C6R crew of Hezemans, Deletraz, Fassler
and Gollin crossed the line first, in second came Poele,
Bartels, Biagi and Lamy’s MC12 (1’17”756 down) with the
Corvette C5R driven by Kumpen, Longin, Mollekens and Bouvy
in third (3 laps off the pace). The MC12s driven by Lemeret,
Ramos, Montanari and Bobbi and Bertolini, Piccini, De Simone
and Pier Guidi closed out in fourth and fifth, respectively
while Macari, Aucott, Peter and Franchitti took their JMB
Racing MC12 to a fine seventh.
|
|
|