The formbook held true in both GT classes at qualifying for Saturday's
24 Hours of Le Mans as teams primarily worked on race setups. A factory
Corvette Racing C6.R took the GT1 pole, while the Flying Lizard
Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 RSR scored the top starting position in GT2.
The lone yellow Corvette, the #63 of Jan Magnussen, Johnny O'Connell
and Antonio Garcia, set the quick lap in GT1. Half a second separated
the #63 from its sister car, the jet black #64 driven by Oliver Gavin,
Olivier Beretta and Marcel Fassler.
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#63 Corvette Racing Corvette C6.R: Johnny O'Connell, Jan Magnussen, Antonio Garcia. Photo by Eric Gilbert.
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Magnussen said, like many in the GT field, setups were focused on the
race in comparison to setting aside a separate qualifying setup.
"There was no traffic or anything on the quick lap," Magnussen said.
"It was a race setup, it's not really productive to spend time on
qualifiers. The race is most important."
Aston Martin managed to squeeze into third fastest, Alex Muller quickest
of the three drivers in the light blue and white Jetalliance Racing GMBH
#66 DBR9. The car may not have the standard British racing green color
but it does have a chandelier in its team garage as a tribute to its
sponsors.
Muller was two seconds off Magnussen's pace; the Dane running a best
time of 3:54.230 to Muller's 3:56.126. The #64 was in between at
3:54.702. The #66 car is co-driven by Muller, Lukas Lichtner-Hoyer and
Thomas Gruber in the Austrian effort.
The Alphand Corvettes, aiming more for race pace and reliability than
quickness in qualifying, are fourth and fifth in GT1. The lead #72 car
driven by team owner Luc Alphand, Patrice Goueslard and Stephan Gregoire
beat home the trio of Le Mans youngsters Yann Clairay in his second Le
Mans start and Julien Jousse and Xavier Maassen, Le Mans 24H rookies.
Naturally, Magnussen admitted the battle for what could be the final
race of the GT1 class at Le Mans will be an intra-squad duel of the two
Corvette C6.Rs.
"Absolutely -- it will be a great challenge from Aston and Luc Alphand,
but at the end the 63 and 64 will be fighting for the win," Magnussen
said.
In GT2, Porsche 911 GT3 RSRs swept the top two positions with Flying
Lizard Motorsports pulling a proverbial rabbit out of the hat late in
the session, edging the Team Felbermayr-Proton #77 entry.
Jorg Bergmeister beat the quickest lap set by Marc Lieb, 4:03.202 to a
4:03.232. The Lizard car was languishing down the order for most of the
first half of the session, with Bergmeister's co-drivers Darren Law and
Seth Neiman behind the wheel.
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#80 Flying Lizard Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 RSR: Jorg Bergmeister, Darren Law, Seith Neiman. Photo by Eric Gilbert.
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After the team admitted no worries and merely a focus on race setup,
since the GT2 fight is likely an all-out sprint rather than just
surviving, Bergmeister set down the pace to knock Lieb off the pole.
Neiman admitted surprise at the pole while Law remained akin to a kid
in a candy store, so absorbed and engaged in his inaugural Le Mans
experience.
"As we worked through practice, we didn't think it was possible," Flying
Lizard team principal Neiman said. "Jorg proved once again a difficult
to drive car can still be a very fast car. It was a really great lap by
Jorg, after some very tough competition with Lieb."
"I really don't know how to explain it," Law said. "Growing up as a kid
you dream of being here, and I'm so excited and so happy to be here."
The Lizards are looking for their maiden class win here in five starts,
but secured their first pole position here this evening. In a bit of
trivia, Law discovered his Rolex Series teammate and sports car legend
Hurley Haywood of Brumos Racing won his Le Mans debut, in a Porsche, 32
years ago. So it's up to Law to see if he can emulate it.
The Lieb/Richard Lietz/Wolf Henzler car is second on the grid, with
the Risi Competizione Ferrari F430 GT head of the Italian car class
in third. The #82 Risi is driven by Mika Salo, Jaime Melo and Pierre
Kaffer.
Risi searches for its fourth consecutive endurance win having won last
year's 24 Hours of Le Mans, Petit Le Mans and this year's 12 Hours of
Sebring in succession. They will do so with a new engine, installed
before qualifying, in an attempt to match the straight line speed the
Porsches are expected to have.
The two non-Ferraris and Porsches finished ninth and 11th on the grid.
The #87 Drayson Racing Aston Martin Vantage of Paul Drayson, Jonny
Cocker and Marino Franchitti led the #85 Snoras Spyker Squadron C8
Laviolette of Tom Coronel, Jeroen Bleekemolen and Jarek Janis.
Crowd favorite Patrick Dempsey, co-driving with Joe Foster and Don Kitch
Jr. in the #81 Team Seattle Advanced Engineering Ferrari F430 GT, had a
rough go of it in qualifying.
The team was slowest of all cars bar the drivetrain-plagued GT1
JLOC Lamborghini Murcielago, and Dempsey spun off at one point at
Indianapolis corner. The good news is the car suffered no damage and
should be set to go in a quest to raise as much money as possible for
the hospitals and charities it is running here to support.
See also:
Sarrazin takes Le Mans pole for Peugeot