DTM Nurburgring: On-form Van der Linde brothers lock out front row
DTM points leader Sheldon van der Linde pipped his brother Kelvin to pole in qualifying at the Nurburgring in a repeat of their finishing order from race one.
After qualifying for Saturday’s first race was cancelled due to fog, which caused the race to be delayed by several hours, conditions on Sunday morning were much improved and dipped under the pace-setting practice times set on Friday by SSR Porsche driver Dennis Olsen.
The Norwegian would end up third behind the on-form South African brothers, while Lucas Auer tumbled to tenth in the final classification after heading the times into the closing minutes.
Confirming that his pace on Friday had been no fluke, Olsen set the early running and led teammate Laurens Vanthoor at the halfway point in the quick-fire 20-minute session.
Auer, who had elected to stay in his garage during the early exchanges, then emerged to make the most of the free track and pumped in two laps good enough to usurp Olsen before the remainder of the field re-entered the fray.
But the Winward Mercedes’ spell atop the leaderboard was short-lived as Sheldon van der Linde whisked his Schubert BMW to the top of the times on a 1m25.945s.
Thomas Preining’s Bernhard Porsche also ducked under Auer’s 1m26.126s to go second, before Olsen deposed both of them on a 1m25.973s.
That time was then matched by Mirko Bortolotti, despite the addition of 20kg to his Grasser Lamborghini in the latest Balance of Performance tweak, although the Italian will take a five-place grid penalty for his contact in race one with Felipe Fraga and start ninth as a result.
But both Olsen and Bortolotti were demoted by a last-gasp effort from Kelvin van der Linde, who had been 18th prior to setting a time just 0.010s slower than his younger brother.
The Abt Audi man’s effort was all the more impressive as teammates Rene Rast and Ricardo Feller both struggled to 17th and 23rd fastest respectively.
Kelvin van der Linde, Team ABT Sportsline Audi R8 LMS GT3
Photo by: DTM
Preining is elevated to fourth by Bortolotti’s penalty, ahead of Philipp Eng (Schubert BMW), and defending champion Max Gotz, Auer’s teammate the leading Mercedes in sixth.
Luca Stolz, who was turned around on the opening lap of Saturday’s race, will start seventh in the Haupt Racing Team Mercedes ahead of Vanthoor, Bortolotti and Auer.
After his race one disappointment, Fraga could only qualify 16th with 15kg added to his Red Bull Ferrari in BoP weight.
Qualifying results:
Cla | Driver | Car / Engine | Time | Delay |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sheldon van der Linde | BMW | 1'25.945 | |
2 | Kelvin van der Linde | Audi | 1'25.955 | 0.010 |
3 | Dennis Olsen | Porsche | 1'25.973 | 0.028 |
4 | Mirko Bortolotti | Lamborghini | 1'25.973 | 0.028 |
5 | Thomas Preining | Porsche | 1'26.009 | 0.064 |
6 | Philipp Eng | BMW | 1'26.032 | 0.087 |
7 | Maximilian Götz | Mercedes | 1'26.053 | 0.108 |
8 | Luca Stolz | Mercedes | 1'26.097 | 0.152 |
9 | Laurens Vanthoor | Porsche | 1'26.123 | 0.178 |
10 | Lucas Auer | Mercedes | 1'26.126 | 0.181 |
11 | Nico Müller | Audi | 1'26.127 | 0.182 |
12 | Marco Wittmann | BMW | 1'26.137 | 0.192 |
13 | Mikaël Grenier | Mercedes | 1'26.143 | 0.198 |
14 | Arjun Maini | Mercedes | 1'26.200 | 0.255 |
15 | Maro Engel | Mercedes | 1'26.216 | 0.271 |
16 | Felipe Fraga | Ferrari | 1'26.220 | 0.275 |
17 | René Rast | Audi | 1'26.226 | 0.281 |
18 | Maximilian Buhk | Mercedes | 1'26.230 | 0.285 |
19 | Nick Cassidy | Ferrari | 1'26.256 | 0.311 |
20 | Rolf Ineichen | Lamborghini | 1'26.271 | 0.326 |
21 | Clemens Schmid | Lamborghini | 1'26.459 | 0.514 |
22 | David Schumacher | Mercedes | 1'26.470 | 0.525 |
23 | Ricardo Feller | Audi | 1'26.587 | 0.642 |
24 | Dev Gore | Audi | 1'26.609 | 0.664 |
25 | Esteban Muth | BMW | 1'26.638 | 0.693 |
26 | Marius Zug | Audi | 1'26.786 | 0.841 |
27 | Alessio Deledda | Lamborghini | 1'27.239 | 1.294 |
28 | Theo Oeverhaus | BMW | 1'27.370 | 1.425 |
Be part of Motorsport community
Join the conversationShare Or Save This Story
Top Comments
Subscribe and access Motorsport.com with your ad-blocker.
From Formula 1 to MotoGP we report straight from the paddock because we love our sport, just like you. In order to keep delivering our expert journalism, our website uses advertising. Still, we want to give you the opportunity to enjoy an ad-free and tracker-free website and to continue using your adblocker.