18
Oct -Team
ADT Champion Racing brought down the curtain on the 2003 American Le
Mans Series in spectacular style, leading every lap on the way to
victory in the prestigious “Petit Le Mans” 1,000-mile race at Road
Atlanta.
Johnny Herbert and JJ Lehto scored the
Florida-based team’s fourth ALMS victory of the season courtesy of a
comfortable eight-lap win over the Panoz of Olivier Beretta/David
Saelens/Max Papis.
Lehto and Herbert had to be content with
third and fourth places in the final Driver’s standings after Frank
Biela and Joest Audi co-driver Marco Werner recovered to claim third
place and take the title with Team ADT Champion Racing netting second
in the Teams’ category.
JJ had started third on the 36-car grid
but completed the opening lap in the lead, after slipping ahead of the
pole-starting Werner on the exit of Turn 1 while the front row
starting James Weaver (Lola MG) was instructed to drop behind Werner
having jumped the rolling start and soon afterwards retired.
The two Audis were never more than
12-seconds apart for the opening 96-minutes of hard racing but then
Biela, having taken over from Werner during the third full course
yellow, collided with a backmarker which sent the Joest Audi in to the
outside wall.
Major repairs were made and Biela
resumed in 27th place (sixth in class LMP900) over
10-minutes later which left the ADT Champion Audi two-laps clear of
Gunnar Jeanette/Ben Leuenberger/Scott Maxwell (Panoz).
At one-third distance, Herbert led
Beretta/Saelens/Papis (Panoz) by almost three laps while the
Biela/Joest Audi had clawed its way back to ninth overall (fourth in
class). With 500-miles run, all in warm sunshine and under a clear,
blue sky, JJ had extended the advantage to almost five laps with the
Joest Audi now sixth overall (fourth in class).
After six hours Biela/Werner had worked
their way back up to third but lost time having a battery change - a
problem that had affected the Champion Audi an hour earlier but which
now enjoyed a four-lap lead advantage.
Joest
Audi duo Biela and Werner began the race with a 14-point lead over
Lehto and needed only to complete 70% of the “Petit Le Mans” to claim
the Driver’s and Teams’ titles. Incredibly, Werner spun on the very
lap equating to that distance, requiring a tow out of the gravel trap
followed by a precautionary pit-stop and so won the titles in the
pit-lane.
The ADT Champion Audi R8, which was able
to cruise home in darkness to an untroubled victory, made five of its
10 pit-stops under racing conditions in a race that included eight
full course yellow caution periods accounting for approximately 112
minutes in the 9hrs 31mins 10.608secs race. Stefan Johansson, who had
helped the team achieve second and third places in the Sebring
12-Hours and the 24 Hours of Le Mans, was on hand in case either Lehto
or Herbert suffered from fatigue but ultimately did not drive in the
race.
It was a stunningly successful weekend
for Dave Maraj’s Pompano Beach-based Champion Racing squad in
Georgia. In addition to scoring its fourth ALMS victory, Randy Pobst
earned the team its first Speed GT World Challenge victory of the
season the previous day.
Johnny Herbert:
Driving stints: 1:54-3:51 (117mins); 6:07-8:19 (132mins). Total =
249mins
“The nose section was changed during my first
stint [after 3hrs] as a precaution because the brake cooling louvers
were becoming damaged due to tire pick-up. At the end of my second
stint, there was a massive hole in the bodywork where the louver had
totally disintegrated again and torn away much of the bodywork over
the wheel. I was able to relax and take no risks whatsoever during my
second stint - there was no pressure. From a personal point of view,
having missed out on victory at Sebring and at Le Mans, to win the
“Petit” is very satisfying and I’m delighted for Dave Maraj whose team
has shown this year that it can not only match but now regularly beat
the hugely respected and successful Joest Audi team.”
JJ Lehto:
Driving stints:
Start-1hr 54mins (114mins); 3:51-6:07 (136mins); 8:19-Finish.
(72mins). Total = 322mins
“I dived inside
Marco [Werner] exiting Turn 1 at the start and then James [Weaver] had
to pull over coming down the hill so I led at the end of the first
lap. We had to change a battery during my second stint when the Audi
refused to fire-up [after 4hr 47min]. But I had to pit again moments
later when the crew noticed the nose had worked lose which was
replaced [after 5hr 10min]. I needed to win this race to stand any
hope of snatching the title - we gave it our best shot and Johnny and
I achieved the necessary race victory but in terms of the
championship, it wasn’t quite enough.”
Dave Maraj,
Team ADT Champion Racing, Team Owner:
“I am extremely
proud of what my team has achieved this year in terms of the American
Le Mans Series and at Le Mans itself. I aim to be back next year to
win the championship.”
2003 America Le
Mans Series – Driver’s Standings (final)
1= Frank Biela
(D)/Marco Werner (D), 170
2 JJ Lehto (Fin), 163
3 Johnny Herbert (GB), 160
4 Olivier
Beretta (F), 127
5 David Saelens
(Bel), 101
2003 America Le
Mans Series – Teams’ Standings (final)
1 Infineon Team Joest, 170
2 Team ADT Champion Racing, 163
3 JML Team
Panoz, 130