2013 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach – IndyCar

Grand Prix of Long Beach

The IZOD IndyCar Series took to the most famous street course in the US for the 39th Grand Prix of Long Beach on a perfect California day.  The IndyCar series comes to the Monaco of North America with some new faces at or near the top of the standings with James Hinchcliffe having won the season opener at St. Petersburg and favorites like Will Power and Dario Franchitti having difficulties in both the opener and the second race at Barber Motorsports Park.

Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach – Qualifying

An event filled qualifying session left the Target Ganassi racers split with Dario Franchitti on pole and Scott Dixon next to last on the grid due to a penalty.  Second was reigning champion Ryan Hunter-Reay of Andretti Autosport, and third was Team Penske’s Will Power.

The first five rows at the start of the Grand Prix of Long Beach were:

  1. Dario Franchitti
  2. Ryan Hunter-Reay
  3. Will Power
  4. Takuma Sato
  5. Mike Conway
  6. Helio Castroneves
  7. James Hinchcliffe
  8. Tony Kanaan
  9. Charlie Kimball
  10. E.J. Viso

Grand Prix of Long Beach - Dario Franchitti

Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach – The Race

On lap 1,Tristan Vautier clipped Scott Dixon approaching Turn 5 spinning Dixon, damaging his wing, and flattening his right rear tire.  On the second lap, Sebastian Saavedra brought out a full course caution when he slammed into the wall at the exit of Turn 9 after passing Simona de Silvestro and carrying far too much speed into the turn.  For much of the early part of the race, Franchitti lead from Hunter-Reay, Sato, Power, and Hinchcliffe.  Charlie Kimball and Alex Tagliani tangled going into Turn 7 while drivers were making their first green lap pit stops, bringing out a full course yellow on lap 31.  Kimball was on cold tires and overshot the corner on the inside carrying both cars into the tire barriers on the exit.

The lap 34 restart was messy from the start with the running order Sato, Power, Franchitti, Conway, and Rahal.  James Hinchcliffe had the door to Turn 1 slammed shut by Tony Kanaan bringing out another caution and taking Hinchcliffe out of the race and also damaging E.J. Viso’s car.  Green flag racing resumed on lap 39 with Sato leading from Franchitti, Rahal, Power, and Kanaan.  Will Power struggled mightily throughout the middle part of the race, steadily dropping back into the middle of the pack while Takuma Sato built up a big gap.

On lap 50, Ryan Hunter-Reay carried too much speed into Turn 7 and buried it in the tire barriers bringing out another full course yellow.  During the caution period pit stops, Vautier was released into Power, damaging Power’s right rear, extending his pit stop, and necessitating a second stop as his day went from bad to worse.

With 25 of 80 laps to go at the restart they were running Sato, Rahal, Franchitti, Wilson, and Kanaan with the top four on softer red tires and Kanaan on more durable blacks.  Takuma Sato, who really had the pace all day long, ran easily to victory.  Graham Rahal who also ran a solid race took the second spot on the podium with Justin Wilson climbing from a 24th place start to finish third.

Grand Prix of Long Beach - Takuma Sato

The win at the Grand Prix of Long Beach was Takuma Sato’s first in 52 attempts, and it was the first win for A.J. Foyt Enterprises since July 7, 2002.

Top ten finishers:

Position Driver Car No. Start Laps Led Points
1 Takuma Sato 14 4 50 53
2 Graham Rahal 15 11 40
3 Justin Wilson 19 24 35
4 Dario Franchitti 10 1 27 34
5 JR Hildebrand 4 12 30
6 Oriol Servia 22 18 28
7 Marco Andretti 25 25 26
8 Simon Pagenaud 77 17 24
9 Simona de Silvestro 78 19 22
10 Helio Castroneves 3 6 20

Grand Prix of Long Beach - Graham Rahal

2013 ALMS Long Beach

ALMS Long Beach

The 2013 American Le Mans Series at Long Beach marked the seventh and final ALMS race held as part of the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach weekend.  ALMS has been a fantastic addition to the Grand Prix weekend with the open and accessible ALMS paddock and the Saturday afternoon race being fan favorites.  The United SportsCar Racing schedule won’t be released until much later this year, but I cannot imagine a Long Beach Grand Prix weekend without sportscar racing.

ALMS Long Beach

2013 ALMS Long Beach Race Results

Class Position Number Team Drivers Car
P1 1 6 Muscle Milk Pickett Racing Klaus Graf / Lucas Luhr HPD ARX-03a
P1 2 12 Rebellion Racing Nick Heidfeld / Neel Jani Lola B12/60 – Toyota
P1 3 16 Dyson Racing Chris Dyson / Guy Smith Lola B12/60 – Mazda
P2 1 01 Extreme Speed Motorsports Scott Sharp / Guy Cosmo HPD ARX-03b
P2 2 02 Extreme Speed Motorsports Ed Brown / Johannes van Overbeek HPD ARX-03b
P2 3 551 Level 5 Racing Scott Tucker / Ryan Briscoe HPD ARX-03b
PC 1 05 Core Autosport Jonathan Bennett / Colin Braun Oreca FLM09
PC 2 52 PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports Mike Guasch / Luis Diaz Oreca FLM09
PC 3 9 RSR Racing Bruno Junqueira / Duncan Ende Oreca FLM09
GT 1 55 BMW Team RLL Bill Auberlen / Maxime Martin BMW Z4 GTE
GT 2 56 BMW Team RLL Dirk Müller / Joey Hand BMW Z4 GTE
GT 3 91 SRT Motorsports Mark Goossens / Dominik Farnbacher SRT Viper GTS-R
GTC 1 20 NGT Motorsports Henrique Cisneros / Sean Edwards Porsche 911 GT3 Cup
GTC 2 45 Flying Lizard Motorsports Nelson Canache, Jr. / Spencer Pumpelly Porsche 911 GT3 Cup
GTC 3 44 Flying Lizard Motorsports Brian Wong / Dion von Moltke Porsche 911 GT3 Cup

ALMS Long Beach

ALMS Long Beach – The Final Chapter

This Saturday’s Tequila Patrón American Le Mans Series at Long Beach marks the final ALMS Long Beach race before next year’s merger with (takeover by?) Grand-Am as United SportsCar Racing.  Just six years ago in 2007 we saw the last Champ Car race at Long Beach before open wheel racing reunification under the IndyCar brand.  Somewhat ironically, that was also the first year that ALMS came to Long Beach.

ALMS Long Beach

The ALMS scene has changed rather remarkably since 2007.  Back then we had only four classes: LMP1, LMP2, GT1, & GT2.  Although the field of two Corvettes in GT1 pretty much played by themselves, GT2 was very competitive, and the LMP2 cars of Penske, Highcroft, Dyson, and Andretti Green could actually beat the LMP1 Audis on slow, tight courses like Long Beach.  And that’s exactly what happened at ALMS Long Beach in 2007.

ALMS Long Beach 2007 – Prototype Classes

Penske Racing took the top two spots with the #7 LMP2 Porsche RS Spyder driven by Romain Dumas and Timo Bernhard and the #6 driven by Sascha Maassen and Ryan Briscoe.  Dumas and Bernhard would go on to win the LMP2 Drivers Championship that season.  The Dyson Racing #16 RS Spyder driven by Butch Leitzinger and Andy Wallace took the third spot on the podium.  The nearest LMP1 Audi Sport North America R10 TDI came in seventh, piloted by Dindo Capello and Allan McNish, who would go on to win the LMP1 Drivers Championship in 2007.  The other Audi, driven by Emanuele Pirro and Marco Werner, came in ninth.  Pirro and Werner would be joined by Frank Biela to win Le Mans later that year.  Other notable entries in the prototype classes at ALMS Long Beach that year included David Brabham driving for Highcroft Racing, Bryan Herta and Dario Franchitti driving for Andretti Green Racing, and Adrian Fernandez with Lowe’s Fernandez Racing.

ALMS Long Beach 2007 – GT Classes

As mentioned earlier, the GT1 class consisted entirely of the two Corvette Racing cars with the #4 Corvette C6.R driven by Oliver Gavin and Olivier Beretta taking the top spot both at Long Beach and for the season.  GT2 was an entirely different story consisting of two Panoz Esperantes, three Ferrari F430s, and  six Porsche 911 GT3s.  Risi Competizione took first and third with the #62 Ferrari F430 driven by Mika Salo and Jaime Melo on the top spot and the #61 driven by Niclas Jonsson and Anthony Lazzaro taking third.  Again, the winners at ALMS Long Beach, Salo and Melo, would go on to take the Drivers Championship.  Between the two Ferraris were Darren Law and Patrick Long in the #44 Flying Lizard Motorsports Porsche 911.  Wolf Henzler and Robin Liddell drove a 911 to fourth for Tafel Racing.  In fifth was the first of the Panoz Esperantes driven by Bill Auberlen and Joey Hand.  Other interesting GT entries were Tim Bergmeister and Dirk Müller in the Petersen White Lightning Ferrari F430 (6th), Johannes van Overbeek and Jörg Bergmeister in the #45 Flying Lizard 911 (9th), Bryan Sellers in the second Panoz (DNF) and Tommy Milner in the Rahal Letterman Racing Porsche (DNF).

ALMS Long Beach 2013

The world economic collapse and tepid recovery in the intervening years have effected all of motorsports: Honda, Toyota, and BMW left F1; Peugeot left sportscar racing entirely from a position of great competitive strength in the Le Mans prototype class; and both IndyCar and ALMS have been affected by attempted cost containment.

Since 2007, ALMS has grown from four classes to five – adding a prototype spec class (PC), collapsing GT1 and GT2 into GT, and adding the Porsche GT3 Cup spec class (GTC).  P1 is no longer the premier class attracting the Le Mans cars that it was back in 2007.  The Le Mans LMP1 cars now run in the World Endurance Championship sanctioned by the FIA.  Neither can the P2 cars beat the P1 cars any longer.  This year’s ALMS Long Beach prototype field has three P1 cars, four P2 cars, and seven PC cars; back in 2007, there were eight LMP2 cars alone joined by another five LMP1 cars with the top seven prototypes finishing on the lead lap in a really competitive race.  This year’s P1 teams are Muscle Milk Pickett Racing (HPD ARX-03a with HPD engine), Rebellion Racing (Lola B12/60 with Toyota engine), and Dyson Racing (Lola B12/60 with Mazda engine).  P2 has two cars each from Extreme Speed Motorsports (who left GT for P2 since last year) and Level 5 Motorsports.  All P2s are HPD ARX-03bs running HPD engines.

The GT class also looks dramatically different.  And not just compared to 2007; big changes have happened just since last year.  This year’s grid includes two Corvette C6 ZR1s, two Ferrari 458s, two Porsche 911s, two BMW Z4s, and two SRT Vipers.  Corvette Racing are the stalwarts of GT coming off both team and driver championships in 2012.  Risi Competizione returns in one of the Ferraris after a hiatus; they are a real asset to the class and the series.  Flying Lizard Motorsports have left the GT class for the less costly GTC – perhaps to await a new GT3 RSR – after struggling in an aging 911 platform the last two years.  The BMW M3s of Rahal Letterman Racing have been replaced by the Z4s.  Team Falken Tire has picked up the baton as the leading Porsche GT team, while the SRT Vipers have returned to ALMS for a second year after more than a ten-year break.  As mentioned earlier, the popular Extreme Speed Motorsports team traded their Ferrari 458s for P2 cars.

The final ALMS Long Beach race should be competitive across all five classes; I hope the finale is a good one!

The full entry list for ALMS Long Beach 2013 can be found here.

The entire Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach weekend schedule is here.

Connor De Phillippi – Porsche Junior Driver

Connor De Phillippi Interview

Connor De Phillippi

Connor De Phillippi is smiling. The affable SoCal native recently learned that he earned a spot on the Porsche Junior Team and along with it a Porsche funded scholarship to race in the Carrera Cup Deutschland.  I guess we’d all be smiling with that kind of news.  To say the last year has been eventful for the 20 year old from San Clemente would be a gross understatement.  He went from a very difficult – not of his doing –  sophomore year in Star Mazda to his dream of a racing career in tatters to a spot on the professional ladder of the premier sportscar racing company.  All in the span of a few months.  Soon he will be following in the footsteps of the first and so far only Porsche Factory Driver, Patrick Long, a fellow SoCal racer, who also happens to be his mentor.

Connor and I met for a chat at Avila’s El Ranchito in his native San Clemente.

Chet: How did you get started in motorsports?

Connor De Phillippi: When I was 5, I was living here in San Clemente and some neighbors were driving go karts in a big, open cul de sac area at the bottom of my hill.  My Dad and I stopped by – we were on our way home from somewhere.  They had a little cone circle going on.  Running little 50cc engines, a beginner class of go kart.  Every day after that I just annoyed my parents until they said I could do it.  That was then I was 4 and finally on my 5th birthday I got my first kart.  And I started karting and racing.  It all started then.

 

Chet: How long was it until you were competing?

Connor De Phillippi: Right away.  Five was when you could legally start racing.  When I first started out, I was part of the first wave that generation.  Before then, the youngest you could start karting was 8 or 9.  They just introduced what they called kid kart, which is where you could be 5.  It was like 5 to 8.  So I got into it right away when I was 5.  For the about the first 6 month we were just practicing and feeling it out; then my Dad and I got a taste racing and it took off from there.  We would race at Adams Kart Track in Riverside.  Also El Cajon at the speedway down there.  And Willow; I would got to Willow a lot.  There was a group that raced there almost every week.  Between Riverside and Willow, those were our two spots.  Lots of seat time.  Originally it was something that my Dad and I just did as a fun sport that we really liked doing.  Then we started getting deeper and deeper into things, and it started turning into something I wanted to do for my career.

 

Chet: When did you realize ‘this is it; this is what I want to do professionally’?

Connor De Phillippi: It was in my final years of karting.  When I was about 14 it came to deciding do I stay in karting, what do I want to do after this, do I move to cars, do I plan on doing this as a career?  When I was 15, I won the Skip Barber Karting Scholarship Shoot Out, and do that gave me the funding to move up into cars.  So I raced in the Skip Barber National Championship on a fully funded ride from Mazda in their scholarship system.  And then Ford pitched in my first year in cars.  Then with family money and a couple of sponsors we funded my second year in Skip Barber National Series.

In my second year in Skip Barber Nationals, I won the championship, so that gave me the funding to move up to Star Mazda.  If it wasn’t for Mazda’s scholarship program I would not have been able to keep moving up.  It was a $350,000 scholarship I won from Mazda to move up to Star Mazda – that’s how much it costs.  So that was a fully paid ride; I just had to pay for traveling and hotels, which is expensive in itself.  I did well that year; I ended up third in the championship and won Rookie of the Year.  And that was finally a full wing and a proper race car.  With Skip Barber cars it’s just a bit lower tech than Formula Ford, and basically you race that series to get your race craft down and understand the race car.

 

Chet: Is that the same car as the Skip Barber Open Wheel School.?

Connor De Phillippi: Yes, that’s the same car.  So then I transitioned to Star Mazda, which was a big step up.  Double the horsepower, real downforce, slick tires, so it was a real eye opener.  It took me about half the season to really get it wired, and then I won the last race of the year and ended on a high note.  Then in 2011 we had to raise the sponsorship for the full Star Mazda season, and managed to do that.  We did really well and won a lot of races.  We had a tire failure in the middle of the season, which at the end of the season ended up costing us the championship – the points we lost that weekend were what we lost by at the end of the year.  It was kind of a shame, but it was a good year: we got second in the championship and won the team championship.

Then for 2012 I had the partners and investors in place to try to make the jump to Indy Lights, and then one of the people pulled out like two weeks before the start of the season, so I had no ride.  Luckily my sponsors kept with me, so I did Star Mazda one more year, but by that point, all the good teams were filled up.  There were no slots available.  So I went with a team that I thought was good enough for me to still win the championship, but there were a lot of internal problems with the series regarding engines.  Needless to say we competed the entire season about 20 HP down.  We still managed to win a race, but we weren’t able to produce the results, to really be competitive for the championship.

 

Chet: The winner of Star Mazda gets a fully funded Indy Lights ride right?

Connor De Phillippi: Yes, exactly.  That’s what I was shooting for.  Around August or September of last year, I reached out to Patrick Long.  Throughout the season I was thinking ‘this is not looking good’ with all the engine problems we were having.  We went through 7 engines last year just trying to find one that was competitive.  At one point we were losing a half second just down the straightaway.

 

Chet: Aren’t they all spec engines in Star Mazda?

Connor De Phillippi: Yes they are spec engines., but with the rotary not in production before there was a problem.  We had gotten rid of our original OEM engines from the factory because Star Mazda was going to be rebuilding them and freshening them up.  We started buying the fully rebuilt ones from Star Mazda, and they were having 35 psi less compression than the ones we got OEM.  When word got out that the rebuilt engines were down on compression and horsepower, anyone who still had OEM engines from last year just kept them instead of trading them in.  But we had already turned all of our in, so for the rest of the year there was nothing we could do about it.  It was a growing year.

So around August or September I started talking to Patrick.  I realized I wasn’t going to win the championship so I needed to realistically look at things.  Directionally wise, I was at the point where if I was going to make the commitment to switch to sports cars and try to get with a manufacturer I need to do it now before I get too old.  So I spoke with Patrick quite a bit, and he mentioned that there might be a chance for me to be part of a scholarship shootout.  So I said alright, it’s either that, and hopefully I win it, or I go to college.  Those were really my two options because I didn’t have the $800,000 to go to Indy Lights, and I didn’t really want to go find investors to invest in me to go race in Indy Lights and compete against 7 guys – it wasn’t really going to prove anything.

So from there things developed, and I met with Jens Walther from Porsche Motorsport North America.  We got along really well, and he offered me a place to go to the shootout, and that was in October.  Things went really well, and I made it through the first stage.  I did really well in the car as well, and I got one of the spots.

Patrick’s been a big help.  He’s mentoring me.  When it came to picking a team, he helped me go over things, the pros and cons of each one, what might be the best option.  He’s taken me under his wing, and I think he definitely wants to see me succeed, which is a good thing to have in my corner.  He’s even helping me to sort out the living stuff.  There’s a lot to get done.  I’ve finally finalized the primary sponsor, so we’re working on the contract with them. The team wants to do a test in a VLN Race at the Nurburgring Nordschleife, so I need to get all the contracts sorted here and then move there and get ready to start driving by a few weeks from now.

Connor De Phillippi

Chet: So back to the Porsche Junior Driver selection.  It happened in two stages, right?

Connor De Phillippi: Yes, we started with nine, and six made it to the second stage, and from those six they chose two drivers.  When they went to six, it was two Swiss drivers, a Spanish driver, two Dutch drivers, and me.  All the German guys were eliminated at the first stage, which was really interesting because we all thought at least one of them was staying.  I became pretty good friends with one of the Swiss guys and he said for sure one of the German guys would make it.  So we were all pretty nervous waiting the couple of weeks for the decision.  But that wasn’t the case

 

Chet: So the two people selected, Alex Riberas Bou from Spain and you, get to drive in Carrera Cup Deutschland, right?  How does the program work?

Connor De Phillippi: We’re considered Porsche Junior Drivers.  Porsche gives each of us 150,000 Euros, which is about 60% of the budget, so we still have to find a hefty chunk of money.  We also have to pay for our own traveling expenses and living expenses.  So the first year in the program, they really make you work for it.  They want to see that you’re business savvy.  Obviously they know the money is hard to come by, so it’s really a test your first year having to put all that together.  So far, I’ve been able to do it.  The Junior Program a handful of years ago was fully funded.  It was an in-house, factory effort.  The factory ran their own program.  The drivers made salaries, they were given Porsche cars to drive, they lived in Europe, they paid living expenses.  Now they only fund 60%, they don’t give you a car, they don’t pay expenses.  They give you the money, and you have to go out to teams and negotiate rides.  Also, the two Juniors are not allowed to be on the same team.  The reason they did all this is because this its a customer based series, and if they just have the Juniors show up every week and wax everyone else, it doesn’t look good for them, the customers aren’t happy.  So they got away from that and made the Juniors go to the teams.

So Alex is working on his sponsorship still.  Especially with the horrible economy in Spain; its worse than ours.  Our economy is a little better, but its not much better, and trying to convince people and finding an international company that’s willing to listen to a 20 year old on putting together a marketing campaign over there is quite difficult.

 

Chet: Does Porsche help you with sponsorship at all, or are you completely on your own?

Connor De Phillippi: If we ask for ideas or ‘what do you guys think about this?’ they’ll give us feedback, but they’re not necessarily hands on.  If we have questions or want to bounce ideas off them, they’re definitely willing to listen.  My primary sponsor is an anti-virus software company up in San Francisco, and their parent is a Korean company that’s the biggest anti-virus company in Asia.  They’re looking to grow here in the US. They came to the US the beginning of last year.  They’ve grown quite a bit here, and now they’re looking to grow in Europe as well.  And being an American, I can offer them exposure here, so I’m hoping to do a couple of races here as well, and also in Europe.

 

Chet: What’s the name of the company?

Connor De Phillippi: It’s Roboscan Internet Security.  ESET, Roboscan’s competitor, has a lot of cars in Europe.  In the series I’ll be racing in as well as a couple of other sportscar series over there they have ESET Farnbacher Racing.  So I showed them that if they are trying to compete with ESET, they should be doing what ESET is doing.  Plus, I can offer it to them at a fraction of the price because of my Porsche funding.

 

Chet: Where will you race over here?

Connor De Phillippi: We’re still working on that.  Probably the Rolex 24 at Daytona next year.  I’d like to race with an F1 event and a couple of other IMSA Challenge events.

 

Chet: So it was something that you went to the Junior Driver selection having never driven a Porsche or the Vallelunga track.  Do you have a process for learning a new care or track so quickly?

Connor De Phillippi: A lot of it was repeating what I have been doing for so long, kind of instinct.  I obviously did my homework.  I watched as much video as I could.  I watched some onboard to find starting brake points.  As far as learning a new track, that’s always been something I’ve been good at.  I always like doing at least two really slow laps.  Forget about the car and just focus on the line of the track.  Learn all the bumps and observe everything.  Pick out what you can use as references.  If you go out of the box and just start pushing hard, I feel like it’s a lot more difficult to find really good references.  So I always take a few laps just to paint the picture, and then I’ll get on it.  The third lap is when I’ll start working on my brake zones.  With a Porsche it’s all in the brakes.  It’s all about getting in and getting out. If you can get in good, you’ll gain a lot of time.  If you get in okay and you focus on getting a good exit – okay, a good exit is important, but you’ll always gain more time by hustling the car in.  Even if you get back to power a little later, the time you gain on entry will be more.  I focus on braking later and later.  At the end of the second day my fastest lap was my very last lap, and  everywhere I was braking later.  Braking with fenders was really difficult.  It was so much different than what I was used to.  Even in my fastest lap, I had a really big lockup.  You can’t see it, and you can’t feel it because of power steering.  You can hear it a little bit, and then you see smoke coming into the cockpit.  In the race car, you can set it up so that a light will come on saying that your right front is locked up or your left front is locked up, but for the test day, they had all that off, so you really had to go by the seat of your pants.

 

Chet: What’s the name of the team?

Connor De Phillippi: Lukas Motorsport, a Polish team.  They are based in Bielsko Biala in Southern Poland.  My first couple of weeks over there, I plan to live near the team in Poland just to get used to everybody, get to know the guys, and work in the shop a little bit.  I’ll travel with them to the first couple of races; then I’ll move to Stuttgart later on.  We have a two car team.  Robert Lukas is my teammate; he’s been doing Super Cup and Carrera Cup for a couple of years now.

Lukas offered me a really good deal.  I was able to cover all of my costs with my primary sponsor.  They also have a guy named Frank Funke, who is one of the best Porsche engineers.  They hired him last year, and we really get along well.  He worked with Patrick Long at White Lightning when they won the ALMS title.

 

Chet: In Carrera Cup, is it a mix of gentleman drivers, people who are trying to move up, and paid drivers?

Connor De Phillippi: That’s right.  People like Sean Edwards and Rene Rast, who was part of the Junior Program in 2007.  There’s a lot of really talented drivers.  Porsche does not expect us to go in there and clean house.  If we get a couple of podiums and make no mistakes, I think we’ll be looking good.  Obviously as a driver though, you want to go over there and win, so my goal is to win.

 

Chet: You’re just starting on a great journey here.  What are your goals going forward?  What path would you like to take?

Connor De Phillippi: I would like to stick with Porsche for the rest my career.  I’d say short term is to do well this year, do Supercup in 2014, and hopefully third year by signed in a factory role.  The ultimate goal would is to be part of the LMP program at some point.

 

Chet: Thanks for your time, Connor.  I wish you all the best.

 

You can follow Connor De Phillippi’s Carrera Cup Deutschland season here: Porsche Carrera Cup Deutschland

Watch Connor’s races live here: Porsche Carrera Cup Deutschland Live

I’ll also be posting frequent updates on this site.

Note: Unfortunately Connor’s debut with Lukas Racing at the VLN Nurburgring race was cancelled due to lots of snow.  Instead of a Porsche Cup Car in his hands, he had a snow shovel.

 

12th Annual California Festival of Speed

California Festival of Speed – Day 1, 04/05/13

The Porsche Club of America (PCA) and the Porsche Owners Club (POC) joined forces for the 12th Annual California Festival of Speed, which began today at the Auto Club Speedway in Fontana.  The first day was primarily a practice day as racers rolled out their cars for the first of three days on the track.  Saturday and Sunday promise warmer and sunnier weather as well as lots of activities – both on and off the track.  Saturday’s schedule features four races including a 60 minute enduro.

Here’s a few shots from todays action:

More here.

California Festival of Speed – Day 2, 04/06/13

Now this is what the SoCal sports car scene is supposed to be like!  The 12th Annual California Festival of Speed has to rank as one of the best – certainly the best in recent years.  Full grids, lots of vendors, great cars, and beautiful weather drew Porsche and sports car enthusiasts in the many hundreds from across the southwest.  In addition to Porsches, a couple of Audi R8s and Lotus Exiges also competed on track.  Auto Club Speedway was host to a big, happy, sports car celebration featuring the best amateur Porsche racers in the West.

California Festival of Speed

Fifty Years of the Porsche 911

Aside from the racing, one of the most popular attractions was the Fifty Years of 911 parade and display.  Some of my favorites included:

Chiffonweiss 1978 930 Turbo
California Festival of Speed

1980 911SC Coupe
California Festival of Speed

1987 Sunroof Coupe
California Festival of Speed

1998 TT S Coupe
California Festival of Speed

California Festival of Speed – The Races

Three Sprint Races, a 60 minute Enduro, and Time Trial practice kept lots of people in the seats on top of the corporate boxes in the Auto Club Speedway infield.  In the Blue, Green, and Enduro races, the grid was composed of many classes of cars and drivers from both the PCA and POC.  Overall results:

Blue Sprint Race

  1. Drake Kemper
  2. Mike Monsalve
  3. Roger Lai

Green Sprint Race

  1. Craig Ames
  2. Chip Romer
  3. Daniel Davis

Pirelli GT3 Cup Race

  1. Jim Walsh
  2. Kevin Woods
  3. Jesse Menczer

Enduro Race

  1. Chip Romer
  2. Tom Haacker
  3. Frederick Chin / Elliott Skeer

Detailed results by class can be found on the PCA San Diego Region results web page.

Time Trial grid:
California Festival of Speed

California Festival of Speed – Day 3, 04/07/13

Sunday brought warmer weather, four more races, and the Time Trial.

Blue & Green Combined Race start:
California Festival of Speed

California Festival of Speed

Blue Sprint Race

  1. Drake Kemper
  2. Bob Mueller
  3. Roger Lai

Green Sprint Race

  1. Craig Ames
  2. Chip Romer
  3. Bob Rodriguez

Blue & Green Combined Race

  1. Chip Romer
  2. Dan Aspesi
  3. Jesse Menczer

Blue & Green Combined Race action:

California Festival of Speed
California Festival of Speed
California Festival of Speed

 

What a great weekend of racing at a super facility!  Both PCA and POC will be back to Auto Club Speedway in the next month, and HSR West will have their Historic Sportscar Festival there in June.  Look for details on the Calendar.