Motorock Trans-Am Tour Ready for First Caribbean Run
SAN JUAN, Oct. 20, 2003 Puerto Rico ‹ The Puerto Rico Grand Prix, Round 11 and the season
finale for the Motorock Trans-Am Tour for the BFGoodrich Tires Cup, will
herald firsts for both the Tour and the island of Puerto Rico. Scheduled for
Sunday, Oct. 26, the Puerto Rico Grand Prix will mark the first time the
Trans-Am Tour will race in the Caribbean. In fact, the event will mark the
first time the Tour has raced anywhere other than on the contiguous North
American continent. The race will be held on a temporary circuit at Isla
Grande Airport, part of the Fernando Luis Ribas Dominicci Airport complex in
the island¹s capital, San Juan.
Coming to Puerto Rico will be newly crowned Trans-Am Tour champion Scott
Pruett. Pruett hopes to put a fitting end to his dominant season here,
driving a Jaguar XKR, equipped with Jaguar¹s new four-valve,
dual-overhead-cam, fuel-injected AJ-V8. Pruett, driver of the No. 7
Motorock/Jaguar R Performance XKR, clinched the title after winning the
Motorock Miami 100, his eighth victory in 10 races this season.
Rookie points leader Jorge Diaz, Jr. (No. 8 Don Q Rum Jaguar XKR),
meanwhile, is looking forward to racing in his hometown. Diaz comes into the
final race of the season with a 27-point lead on Bobby Sak in the Rookie of
the Year Championship, and needs merely to finish 17th or better to secure
the title.
³I think that this is the largest auto event in the history of Puerto Rico,²
said Diaz. ³There is going to be a great build up of enthusiasm. Everyone
here follows the sport. They have favorite drivers and know a lot about auto
racing history. There is a lot of enthusiasm about all of the series and the
combination of the Trans-Am Tour with the SPEED World Challenge Series is a
good fit.²
Diaz¹s track record this year speaks for itself. Four top fives and nine top
tens in 10 starts this season are surpassed only by his two podiums: a third
at Lime Rock, and a runner-up effort at Cleveland. Diaz¹s Cleveland finish
is most significant, as Puerto Rico¹s Isla Grande Airport circuit is very
similar to the Burke Lakefront Airport course in Cleveland.
³Cleveland definitely helped my confidence,² said Diaz. ³What I noticed is
by the end of the race, we were doing extremely well. The weather was hot,
but back home, it¹s always hot, and I¹m used to racing in the heat. But my
helmet cooler failed five laps into the race. At that point, I couldn¹t wait
for the race to be over.
³However, it was just a fun race,² added Diaz. ³It wasn¹t easy to get
around, especially on the last restart. I thought I had the car to beat, and
it worked out. I wish all of the tracks we visited were new to me. I like it
better when I¹m racing it for the first time, because I have no
expectations. I was a little bit upset about qualifying eighth, but I was
just happy about the raceŠand the race is all that counts.²
Diaz did have a bit of learning curve at the beginning of the season.
Everything was new for the young hotshoe who previously competed in just
three Trans-Am Tour events.
³I had a little bit of work to do at the beginning of the season, getting
used to the new Jaguar XKR body,² said Diaz. ³It creates a greater amount of
downforce in the front, and that¹s something you have to work with and get
used to. We also worked on our brakes, and that was something that I also
had to adapt to. With this new body, and the work we¹ve done, we were very
confident this year.²
Local drivers Edison Lluch and Felix Serralles will make their Trans-Am
debut here. Both hail from Puerto Rico, and will be fired up to turn in a
good performance in front of their home crowd.
The younger Sak will be joined by his father and team owner, Trans-Am
veteran Don Sak, while Tomy Drissi is seeking to end his competitive season
on a high note. Michael Lewis, Randy Ruhlman, Simon Gregg, John Baucom, and
Joey Scarallo are also hoping to complete the season with strong finishes
here. Glenn Andrew, Kenny Bupp, Jon ³Chevy² Leavy, Garrett Kletjian, Bob
Ruman, Peter Rogal, George Nolte, Marvin Jones, Rick Lee, and Claudio Burtin
contribute to an already strong entry list.
Promoter Jorge Diaz, Sr. is pleased to be hosting the initial Puerto Rico
Grand Prix. The affable Puerto Rico native hopes this race will mark the
beginning of a legacy of racing on his island home.
³I think this is the first step into a great and bright future for racing in
the Caribbean,² said Diaz. ³Puerto Rico is the gateway to the Caribbean and
South America. This race will show the world that Puerto Rico has the
commitment and dedication required to put together a first-class
international racing event.²
The 1.6-mile, 10-turn circuit, which was laid out by renowned race track
designer Martyn C. Thake. The picturesque circuit, which uses San Juan
Harbor as its backdrop, boasts a wide racing surface and 100-percent
visibility for fans.
³We couldn¹t find a more fitting location to put an exclamation point on the
2003 season,² said Tour Executive Director John Clagett. ³The Isla Grande
Airport is the perfect venue for this race, and it¹s convenient to the
bustling city of San Juan. It will pose its own unique challenges, and we¹re
looking forward to a thrilling race for both the drivers and fans.
³When we began planning this year¹s schedule, we wanted to make the season
finale a truly special event, and there is no doubt that the Puerto Rico
Grand Prix will fit the bill,² added Clagett. ³The venue will offer fans an
up-close experience with our race cars on an extremely competitive circuit.
³Additionally, we have a virtually untapped market in the Caribbean, a part
of the world well known for its enthusiastic race fans,² he explained. ³I
guarantee those fans will not go home disappointed.²
The Puerto Rico Grand Prix will air LIVE on SPEED Channel Oct. 26 at 1 p.m.
The Motorock Trans-Am Tour for the BFGoodrich Tires Cup features
closed-fendered, production-based, V-8-powered sports cars. The Trans-Am
Tour is America¹s oldest continuously running sports car racing series and
celebrates its 38th anniversary in 2003.
Fast Facts:
What: Puerto Rico Grand Prix, Round 11 of the 2003 Motorock Trans-Am Tour
for the BFGoodrich® Tires Cup championship
When: Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 24-26, 2003
Race Day: Sunday, Oct. 26, at 2 p.m. (Atlantic Time)
Distance: 63 laps/100.8 miles
Where: The race will be run on the 1.6-mile, 10-turn temporary airport
course
Series PR Contact: Justin Anderson, 517-927-3614, cell at the track,
janderson@trans-amseries.com
Puerto Rico Preview:
n With a win here, Scott Pruett¹s career record will jump to 23 victories,
and will move him to within just one triumph of car owner Paul Gentilozzi,
who sits third on the all-time Trans-Am win list behind leader Mark Donohue
and Tommy Kendall. Pruett (No. 7 Motorock/Jaguar R Performance XKR) eclipsed
fellow Jaguar pilot Bob Tullius for fourth on the all-time win list with his
win in Miami. Interestingly, Tullius earned Jaguar its first manufacturers¹
title in 1978, the year he also won the Drivers¹ Championship in a Jaguar
XJS.
n With a pole here, Pruett, who has started on the pole eight times this
year, will take sole possession of second on the all-time fast qualifier
list from Gentilozzi. Pruett is currently tied with Gentilozzi with 28 pole
positions.
n Jorge Diaz, Jr. (No. 8 Don Q Rum Jaguar XKR) has a 27-point lead in the
Rookie of the Year Championship coming into Puerto Rico. If Diaz finishes
17th or better here, even if his closest pursuer Bobby Sak earns a maximum
of 36 points, he will clinch the rookie title.
n Pruett¹s pole record this year makes him the odds-on favorite to win a
one-year lease on a Jaguar XKR, the British carmaker¹s premiere grand
touring car. Pruett, through the Jaguar R Award‹given to the driver who
earns the most points toward Jaguar winning the manufacturers¹ title‹already
won a one-year lease on an XK8, and will attempt to win the annual Jaguar
Pole Award here. The Jaguar Pole Award is a performance-based initiative
that rewards drivers who win the pole at each of the Trans-Am Tour¹s events
this season. Polesitters receive a key‹regardless of what type of car they
race‹which, at the culmination of the season, they will use to attempt to
open the door to a 2004 Jaguar XK8, during a formal ceremony. The driver
whose key opens the vehicle will win a one-year lease on the car. Pruett won
the pole seven times this year (and also started on the pole at Denver after
the field was set by practice times), and therefore has received seven keys.
Johnny Miller, who won two poles this year, will have two chances. If a
driver wins both the Jaguar R Award and the Pole Award, that driver will
receive a one-year lease on the XKR. Interestingly, Tomy Drissi, who only
received one key during the 2001 season, ended up with the winning key and
the XK8.
n Although the Puerto Rico Grand Prix is the first time the Trans-Am Tour
has competed in Puerto Rico, it¹s not the first time the Caribbean island
has hosted a major international sports car race. In fact, this year¹s
Puerto Rico Grand Prix will be contested just short of 41 years after Puerto
Rico¹s November 1962 Caguas Grand Prix de Puerto Rico. A variety of events
were held in Caguas during the first two weekends of November, 1962. Caguas
is located in the mountainous interior of eastern Puerto Rico, about 25
minutes from San Juan. Although that race preceded the Trans-Am Tour by four
years, several drivers who became part of the Trans-Am legacy competed at
Caguas. Those taking part in the Caguas events included legendary Trans-Am
team owner Roger Penske; 1977 Category II champion Ludwig Heimrath; and
early Trans-Am Tour drivers Dan Gurney, Don Yenko, Peter Revson, Dick
Thompson and Howard Hanna.
n If Pruett sets the fast race lap here, he¹ll move into a tie for second on
the all-time fast-race-lap record book with Kendall. In fact, Pruett has set
the fast lap in every race this year except Lime Rock Park.
n As Pruett takes the track in his No. 7 Motorock/Jaguar R Performance XKR
on Sunday, history will be made as he will be racing into the Trans-Am
Tour¹s future. Under the hood of the car will be Jaguar¹s new four-valve,
overhead-cam, fuel-injected 4.5-liter AJ-V8, which was unveiled recently at
a press event held at Putnam Park Road Course in Brownsburg, Ind. and during
a practice session at the Motorock Miami 100. The engine uses the stock
aluminum block and alloy heads from the Jaguar XKR road car. In fact, other
than the connecting rods, crankshaft, pistons, injector hat, and ignition
system, the engine is completely stock. The engine¹s stroke has been
shortened, and its bore was increased, raising the stock displacement from
4.2 liters to 4.5 liters for the race engine. The engine weighs
approximately 100 pounds less than the current corporate pushrod V8 used in
the Jaguar XKR and uses an all-new ignition system developed by Rocketsports
and Bosch. It will rev to 9,000 rpms, up from 8,200 in the current engine.
It also uses a dry-sump oil system.