Author Topic: Really? Nobody's started a thread about this?  (Read 1842 times)

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Offline Dan Speed

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Really? Nobody's started a thread about this?
« on: January 27, 2007, 11:43:38 AM »
The 24 Hours of Daytona starts in less than 2 hours.
Quote
MILLER: The Real International Race of Champions
Written by: Robin Miller Daytona Beach, Fla. – 1/25/2007



It’s the real International Race of Champions since there are drivers from all over the planet with 78 titles to their credit on the entry list. For sports car enthusiasts, it’s great names driving racy but ugly cars. For open-wheel fans, it’s how we want the Indianapolis 500 to look again before it’s too late.

But, any way you want to frame it, this weekend’s Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona is unequalled in star power.

The finest racers in North America descend on Daytona and, while they aren’t wheeling thoroughbred machines like the Audi, Porsche and Acura in ALMS, it’s the melting pot of talent that makes this a must-see event.

“The competition is like nothing else you see all year and it really has almost everybody in it,” said Scott Dixon, the 2003 Indy Racing League king who won this event last year with teammates Dan Wheldon and Casey Mears. “You get to race against a lot of people you’ve raced with over the years or guys you watch in other series all the time.

It’s got the flavor of the good old days of Indy when stars from Formula 1, sports cars and NASCAR went after the Indy car regulars.

OK, so Michael Schumacher and Fernando Alonso would be nice additions, but with Juan Pablo Montoya suiting up, the F1 faction has respectable representation, even though JPM is now in tin-tops.

No less than six Indy 500 winners (Sam Hornish Jr., Helio Castroneves, Eddie Cheever, Buddy Rice, Montoya and Wheldon) are entered and, if you go by the video replay, that number is seven since Paul Tracy is running again. U.S. 500 winner Jimmy Vasser, too.

NASCAR champs Tony Stewart, Jeff Gordon, Bobby Labonte and Jimmie Johnson are unwinding before their 36-race grind kicks off next month and it’s a first for Gordon in the enduro while Stewart came within a lap of victory three years ago.

A.J. Allmendinger and Ryan Hunter-Reay, the fresh faces of Champ Car just the other day, are looking for new identities and a Daytona win (A.J. was runner-up in his 2006 debut) as is former CART regulars Patrick Carpentier, Michel Jourdain Jr., Max Papis, Christian Fittipaldi, Memo Gidley, J.J. Lehto and Roberto Moreno.

Besides Dixon, Wheldon, Hornish and Castroneves, the Indy Racing League is also represented by Tomas Scheckter, Scott Sharp, Ed Carpenter, A.J. Foyt IV and Tony George, providing the IRL founder’s ribs have sufficiently healed.

Champ Car’s Justin Wilson (second in 2006), Graham Rahal, Katherine Legge and Oriol Servia are also looking forward to a sleepless night.

Grand-Am regulars with open wheel ties and road racing savvy who figure to figure in the final result are Alex Gurney, Jon Fogarty and Scott Pruett, a six-time class winner who also won overall in 1994.

Of course, the veterans of this classic race will likely have something to say about who climbs the top step of the podium. Three-time winners Andy Wallace and Butch Leitzinger are always in the hunt, along with Wayne Taylor, Max Angelelli and Jorg Bergmeister – last year’s prototype winner. But it’s the overall depth of this field that impresses Pruett.

“I’ve been here in the past, you came here with four drivers, one of those drivers you knew was going to give up some amount of time on the track because he’s one of those guys that either was paying some of the bills or was a sponsor,” he said. “Now, you don’t have that. It’s very much a situation where you have three top guys in the car running at 95 percent in every stint.”

And it’s 100 percent entertaining.
I make poor decisions, but I have a good time.

Offline Ultra

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Re: Really? Nobody's started a thread about this?
« Reply #1 on: January 27, 2007, 01:21:49 PM »
After I am done catering the Sno-Drift rally today,  I will tune into to this for a while tonight.
“Honi soit qui mal y pense”


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Montoya wins the Daytona 24
« Reply #2 on: January 28, 2007, 04:32:18 PM »
From Autosport.

Ganassi Racing took their second consecutive win in the Rolex 24 endurance race at Daytona today, after a flawless drive that saw Juan Pablo Montoya take a pass for the lead in the 24th hour, and teammate Scott Pruett thereafter maintaining the advantage to the finish flag.

Pruett, Montoya and Salvador Duran covered in their Toyota Lexus a total of 668 laps - 2,378 miles - to beat the SAMAX team Pontiac of Patrick Carpentier, Ryan Dalziel, Milka Duno and Darren Manning. Sun Trust's Pontiac No. 10 - with Jan Magnussen, Max Angelelli, Wayne Taylor and Jeff Gordon - finished third.

The victory was a milestone for Colombian Montoya, who previously won a Champ Car title, the Indy 500 and several Grands Prix in F1, including the 2003 Monaco Grand Prix.

Montoya will start his first full NASCAR season in just three weeks at the same venue, as the Nextel Cup season begins in Daytona.

"It's an amazing feeling," Montoya said after the race. "It's incredible: after 20 hours, there were three cars on the same lap, but it was like qualifying speed every lap. Very exciting."

For Ganassi, the achievement was emotional. "This was just a total team win," the team owner said after becoming the first to win the Daytona 24 Hours consecutively team owner Al Holbert achieved this in 1986 and 1987.

"Al was somebody I wanted to be like when I was growing up, so I'm going to think about this one for a long time."

Ganassi won the event last year with Dan Wheldon, Scott Dixon and Casey Mears driving the Lexus Riley Daytona Prototype. This year, however, Wheldon and Dixon - joined by Mexican driver Memo Rojas - were having a race to forget.

That trio were running strong during the night but were out of the race when Rojas spun out early in the morning, hitting a tyre barrier on a damp track. The car was classified in 41st.

challenged for the lead through the night, came back to race in the top five after Rojas knocked off the nose cone and then went out of the race when Rojas spun on a wet track and hit a tire wall after daylight Sunday. They finished 41st.

Outstanding performances were registered by soon to be Champ Car rookie Ryan Dalziel, who put up a feisty fight in the closing hours of the race, holding on to the lead until he had to pit on the final hour.

Another great showing belonged to Magnussen/Taylor/Gordon/Angelelli - as they drove most of the race without a clutch, yet held on to the leaders throughout to finish third, just two laps behind the winners. It would have been second place had it not been for a final brake problem sent Magnussen off in the final minutes of the race.

More significant trouble came late last night when former F1 driver Gaston Mazzacane spun off and hit a guardrail in the infield section of the track. The Argentinean was unconscious and taken to a nearby hospital, where he is reported to be in good condition but will remain for observation.

The accident led to a 78-minute caution period, as the Porsche Fabcar prototype tore down a significant portion of the guardrail, which had to be fixed.

While the top ten spots were predictably taken by the Daytona Prototype cars, the Porsche GT3 of Jean-Francois Dumoulin, Carlos de Quesada, Scooter Gabel and Marc Besseng took the highest spot among the GT cars, ending the race some 42 laps behind the Ganassi winners.

Taking the chequered flag for the No. 01 car, Pruett paid tribute to his machine: "This is very cool. It's a huge thing for Ganassi and Lexus.

"The car never missed a beat. I was getting a little nervous there at the end, but the car was just rock solid the whole time. We never spent any time in the pits."

“Honi soit qui mal y pense”


Click the pic....... Name the car

Offline Tifosi

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Re: Really? Nobody's started a thread about this?
« Reply #3 on: January 29, 2007, 03:25:43 AM »
The 24 Hours of Daytona starts in less than 2 hours.
Quote
MILLER: The Real International Race of Champions
Written by: Robin Miller Daytona Beach, Fla. – 1/25/2007



It’s the real International Race of Champions since there are drivers from all over the planet with 78 titles to their credit on the entry list. For sports car enthusiasts, it’s great names driving racy but ugly cars. For open-wheel fans, it’s how we want the Indianapolis 500 to look again before it’s too late.

But, any way you want to frame it, this weekend’s Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona is unequalled in star power.

The finest racers in North America descend on Daytona and, while they aren’t wheeling thoroughbred machines like the Audi, Porsche and Acura in ALMS, it’s the melting pot of talent that makes this a must-see event.

“The competition is like nothing else you see all year and it really has almost everybody in it,” said Scott Dixon, the 2003 Indy Racing League king who won this event last year with teammates Dan Wheldon and Casey Mears. “You get to race against a lot of people you’ve raced with over the years or guys you watch in other series all the time.

It’s got the flavor of the good old days of Indy when stars from Formula 1, sports cars and NASCAR went after the Indy car regulars.

OK, so Michael Schumacher and Fernando Alonso would be nice additions, but with Juan Pablo Montoya suiting up, the F1 faction has respectable representation, even though JPM is now in tin-tops.

No less than six Indy 500 winners (Sam Hornish Jr., Helio Castroneves, Eddie Cheever, Buddy Rice, Montoya and Wheldon) are entered and, if you go by the video replay, that number is seven since Paul Tracy is running again. U.S. 500 winner Jimmy Vasser, too.

NASCAR champs Tony Stewart, Jeff Gordon, Bobby Labonte and Jimmie Johnson are unwinding before their 36-race grind kicks off next month and it’s a first for Gordon in the enduro while Stewart came within a lap of victory three years ago.

A.J. Allmendinger and Ryan Hunter-Reay, the fresh faces of Champ Car just the other day, are looking for new identities and a Daytona win (A.J. was runner-up in his 2006 debut) as is former CART regulars Patrick Carpentier, Michel Jourdain Jr., Max Papis, Christian Fittipaldi, Memo Gidley, J.J. Lehto and Roberto Moreno.

Besides Dixon, Wheldon, Hornish and Castroneves, the Indy Racing League is also represented by Tomas Scheckter, Scott Sharp, Ed Carpenter, A.J. Foyt IV and Tony George, providing the IRL founder’s ribs have sufficiently healed.

Champ Car’s Justin Wilson (second in 2006), Graham Rahal, Katherine Legge and Oriol Servia are also looking forward to a sleepless night.

Grand-Am regulars with open wheel ties and road racing savvy who figure to figure in the final result are Alex Gurney, Jon Fogarty and Scott Pruett, a six-time class winner who also won overall in 1994.

Of course, the veterans of this classic race will likely have something to say about who climbs the top step of the podium. Three-time winners Andy Wallace and Butch Leitzinger are always in the hunt, along with Wayne Taylor, Max Angelelli and Jorg Bergmeister – last year’s prototype winner. But it’s the overall depth of this field that impresses Pruett.

“I’ve been here in the past, you came here with four drivers, one of those drivers you knew was going to give up some amount of time on the track because he’s one of those guys that either was paying some of the bills or was a sponsor,” he said. “Now, you don’t have that. It’s very much a situation where you have three top guys in the car running at 95 percent in every stint.”

And it’s 100 percent entertaining.

It's the real IROC, no doubt about it.


Dan
"Like most of life's problems, this one can be solved with bending..."

Bender B.Rodrigues

Offline Jagman

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Re: Really? Nobody's started a thread about this?
« Reply #4 on: January 29, 2007, 04:12:44 PM »
I watched a lot of this race, could not believe how many hours of coverage Speed had on this.

One thing I wish tho, is that they could teach the announcers that every second of every broadcast does not have to be filled with their inanities - just shut the hell up unless you have someting informative to say that hasn't just been said by your partners....

Montoya was awesome, and driving this race should help him some in 2 weeks when he comes back for the Cup race .....

The end was fairly dramatic - at least till the last hour - with three cars only seconds apart and chasing for the lead and race win.........amazing racing after 24 hours!

Offline lynxd67

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Re: Really? Nobody's started a thread about this?
« Reply #5 on: February 19, 2007, 10:30:03 AM »
Don't think that it is only over your side of the pond that you get inane commentaries. Here we have, during the 24 hours, Radio Le Mans and oh how I remember one time when the commentator said "and here come a car into the pits - who is taking over the wheel Janine?".

The expert reply came back after a thoughtful second or two:-

"Not sure but he has Shoei written on his helmet".

Perhaps we'll send the commentators over to you sometime for a different take on things......................

Offline porridgehead

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Re: Really? Nobody's started a thread about this?
« Reply #6 on: February 19, 2007, 11:06:57 AM »
I would actually pay money to hear a commentator say  "Judging from the helmet, It seems that Derek Bell is driving for this team too!"
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