(Michelin Motorsport)
Acura dominated the IMSA WeatherTech Championship Sahlen's Six Hours of The Glen Watkins Glen International on Sunday. Filipe Albuquerque and Ricky Taylor (No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing Konica Minolta Acura ARX-05) led the Tom Blomqvist/Oliver Jarvis No. 60 Meyer Shank Racing with Curb-Agajanian Acura ARX-05 to a 1-2 finish for the Japanese manufacturer. With a bold move, little fuel and a broken car, Albuquerque turned a weather delay into victory.He took the lead with a daring pass late in the race, then swerved through traffic with a damaged car while saving fuel for the win. “It was really crazy,” Albuquerque said. “When you believe in it, you just keep your foot down.”After a lengthy red flag for severe weather, the race restarted with 21 minutes on the clock and Albuquerque second behind Tom Blomqvist, who had teamed with Oliver Jarvis in the No. 60 Meyer Shank Racing with Curb-Agajanian Acura ARX-05 to lead most of the endurance race. After the restart, Albuquerque chased Blomqvist through the first four turns before pulling alongside heading into the inner loop. The two cars made contact, Albuquerque pulled ahead, and then somehow managed to hold off Blomqvist’s tenacious challenge to the finish. The drama didn’t end there. Shortly after he passed Blomqvist, Albuquerque made contact with a GTD car, knocking the left mirror askew on the No. 10 car. In spite of that and the low fuel, he made it work. “The mirror was gone, the car was bent,” Albuquerque said. “I just put full throttle to try to get it to the (inner loop). I was like, ‘This is going to be funny now.’ The car was going sideways. It was really weird. And then (strategist) Brian (Pillar) was saying, ‘You need to save fuel.’ I had bigger problems than this. I didn’t know if I could finish the race.” The last-minute victory had a dramatic effect on the standings in the Daytona Prototype international (DPi) class. Albuquerque and co-driver Ricky Taylor came into the race trailing Blomqvist and Jarvis by 13 points. With the victory, Albuquerque and Taylor regained the championship lead, taking a 17-point advantage into next Sunday’s Chevrolet Grand Prix at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Bowmanville, Ontario. (Thank you to Jeff Olson/IMSA Wire Service)
(Michelin Motorsport)
(IMSA)
Twenty-one-year-old Scott Huffaker made the most of the opportunity to win Sunday’s LMP2 portion of the race – barely. The talented young Californian held off a charging Louis Deletraz (No. 8 Tower Motorsport ORECA) win by a tenth of a second. Mikkel Jensen normally finishes in the No. 52 PR1 Mathiasen Motorsports ORECA LMP2 07 when he, Huffaker and Ben Keating are paired. Huffaker was driving when the race was stopped by the weather delay and the team opted to keep him in the car for the conclusion rather than take time to pit and change drivers. (Thank you to Mark Robinson/IMSA Wire Service)
(IMSA)
There’s something about Watkins Glen that suits Gar Robinson, Felipe Fraga and the No. 74 Riley Motorsports Ligier JS P320. Returning this weekend after winning a pair of Le Mans Prototype 3 (LMP3) races at the track in 2021, they rolled into victory lane again Sunday. Robinson, Fraga and third driver Kay van Berlo won by a full lap over the No. 54 CORE autosport Ligier. After Robinson negotiated the caution-heavy start of the race, van Berlo and Fraga pulled away. (Thank you to Mark Robinson/IMSA Wire Service)
(IMSA)
A 60-minute stoppage for lightning three-quarters of the way through the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen threw calculations for minimum drive time and fuel strategy into disarray in Round 7 of the 2022 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. That resulted in the No. 23 Heart of Racing Team Aston Martin Vantage GT3 driven by Ross Gunn and Alex Riberas being awarded the GT Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) class victory after the No. 25 BMW M Team RLL (drivers: Connor De Phillippi, Augusto Farfus, and John Edwards) that crossed the line first was put to the back of the field because one of the drivers failed to meet the adjusted minimum drive time for each driver of 1-hour, 17-minutes during the six-hour endurance race. (Thank you to John Oreovicz/IMSA Wire Service)
(IMSA)
There was no shortage of irony for the GTD class winners Sunday. After a season of frustration and near-misses, the No. 27 Heart of Racing Team hoisted its first trophy of 2022 on Sunday – declared the class victor about 20 minutes after taking the checkered flag in second place. The Winward Racing Mercedes team – first across the finish line and also looking to take its first win of the season – was penalized for not meeting drive-time requirements with its drivers. It was only the second top five of the year for the Heart of Racing GTD team – improving on a runner-up showing in the previous race at Detroit. The team’s second car also won in the GTD PRO class giving the Heart of Racing organization its first double class victory. “We always know our car is strong here, this is a really good track for us,’’ said Heart of Racing driver Roman De Angelis who drove the Aston Martin Vantage GT3 in the final stint. “We had really good results last year here so we came in here with a lot of confidence.“I thought second would have been a good result for us and it was very close. As I came to the last corner and got out of the throttle, we ran out of gas, so we coasted across [the finish line]." “We got really lucky and so obviously, with the drive-time [penalty] everything worked out for us,’’ added a smiling De Angelis, who co-drove with Maxime Martin and Ian James. “We haven’t had a win in a while. We’ve had a pretty rough start to the year, so obviously, super happy to get that result." It marked the 10th career IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship win for James, second for Martin and fourth for De Angelis. “For sure we had some luck but at the end of the day, it was good racing," James said. With the drive-time infraction by the Winward team, the No. 70 inception racing McLaren 720S GT3 team of Brendan Iribe, Ollie Millroy and Jordan Pepper were officially scored in second place. And the No. 96 Turner Motorsport BMW M4 GT3 team moved onto the podium. For Turner drivers Robby Foley, Bill Auberlen and Michael Dinan, it marked their third podium finish this year and was best among the championship leaders heading into Watkins Glen. (Thank you to Holly Cain/IMSA Wire Service)