Petersen/White Lightning's Love Affair with Road America
Continues
Petersen/White Lightning’s Love Affair with Road America Continues
2005 GT2 Champions Fight for American Le Mans GT2 Win; Add to Streak
ELKHART LAKE, Wisc., August 20, 2006 – Petersen Motorsports/White Lightning
Racing has a love affair with the beautiful Road America facility here in
Elkhart Lake, Wisc. Since debuting the No. 31 MMPIE/PAWS/Michelin Porsche
911 GT3 RSR at the 4.048-mile course in 2002, the Michael Petersen-owned
operation has tallied trio of American Le Mans Series GT2 class victories
including today’s Generac 500 at Road America. Today’s one minute, 3.389
second victory, the Dale White-managed team’s eighth in the Series, did not
come easy. Despite starting from the class pole position Patrick Long (Las
Vegas, Nev.) and Jörg Bergmeister (Langenfeld, Germany) had to battle
nose-to-tail for most of the day to take the checkered flag first. It was
the 2005 American Le Mans Series GT2 Champions second victory of the season.
Long started the race and was caught in the street fight from nearly the
drop of the green flag. He fought tooth-and-nail with Mike Rockenfeller in
the No. 23 for much of his stint, separated by less than one second most of
the time. He would hand over the No. 31 to Bergmeister at the one hour, 18
minute mark while still in the lead. Bergmeister would then battle for the
remainder of the two hour, 45-minute race losing and then capturing the lead
in a dramatic battle with the No. 21 BMW M3. Despite leading late, the
closing stages still had much drama left for the Las Vegas-based team.
Bergmeister went off course due to a slick track with ten minutes remaining.
He then started to carve into the lead that the BMW gained during the
incident. Bergmeister pounced on the No. 21 in traffic getting around him
for the lead but not before being caught-up again, this time with an Audi
LMP1 car. Bergmeister made slight contact with the Audi as it slowed
suddenly ahead of him. Unaware of a potentially race-ending hole in the
center radiator of the Porsche as a result of the contact, the German
recaptured his momentum and got around the leader with just over five
minutes remaining. Then, at five minutes to go, the final alarm went off on
the roller-coaster ride that the team was on. That alarm was for a coolant
temperature spike as a result of the hole in the radiator. Relying on the
professional preparation of the Dennis Chizma-led Petersen/White Lightning
crew, Bergmeister pushed-on taking the win despite coolant leaking at a
rapid rate.
Today’s Generac 500 trophy will take its place along other significant race
wins here in the team’s history. In 2003, Petersen/White Lightning earned
their first-ever American Le Mans Series GT, now GT2, class win. They
followed that in 2005 with the closet victory ever in the class with
Bergmeister and Long bettering the No. 23 Porsche by a scant 0.298 seconds.
In 2005, the victory here at Road America spurred an amazing come-back in
the championship chase that saw the team earn wins in each of the final four
races. They took their first American Le Mans Series championship in style
with those successes. Today the team and the drivers closed on their
championship rivals again. Bergmeister is now within nine points of the top
spot with three races remaining.
Bringing the weekend completely into focus, Petersen/White Lightning won the
class pole position, the race and was quickest in the race morning warm-up.
They also captured the Klein Pit Crew Challenge. That win came in dominating
fashion with a time 1.1 seconds quicker than its nearest competitor in the
head-to-head battle that pitted the eight strongest pit crews in the
American Le Mans Series, regardless of class, against one another. They will
now progress to the finals at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca where they will face
three other teams for the $100,000 prize.
Quotes:
Michael Petersen, Team Owner: “What a day. It was a day filled with major
drama. All I can say is the championship is definitely within our reach and
that has been our goal all year long. Championships are won by podium
finishes and not by getting lucky. That is our goal; to get podium finishes.
What a small team like ours can do is unbelievable. It has been an
incredible weekend of first-place finishes.”
Dale White, Team Manager: “We had a different strategy all day. We knew we
had a fast car, fast drivers and a fast crew. We relied on those today and
it worked just like we had planned. We sure didn’t plan for all the drama
but the strategy worked through all of that. This is a great victory for the
team.”
Jörg Bergmeister, Driver: “Definitely one of the most exciting stints I have
had in the last couple of years. We were on a different strategy than the
other cars in the lead. We definitely had the quickest car thanks to Frank
[Funke, engineer] and the team. It really got exciting when I went off in
the Carousel. I really still have no idea what happened. Usually we had a
lot of oversteer there and I think maybe the Aston Martin put up some dirt
there because I just went straight. I managed to get out again right behind
the BMW. In a couple of laps I caught him again and made a move on him going
into turn-five. There were two Audis there ahead of me and one of them
slowed down. I had to brake late; otherwise the BMW would have gotten back
around me again. So, I tapped him and put a hole in the radiator.
Fortunately it was just a little hole so we managed to finish the race I
just love the track. It is my favorite track in the States.” (about
championship): “The championship definitely looks much better now. But we
have to keep our heads down and do what we are doing right now. I am not
focusing on the championship right now. We just need to keep winning races.”
Patrick Long, Driver: “The excitement level was a lot like last year but in
a much different sense. With the coolant leak there at the end and the Aston
Martin going off and the Audi getting in the way; I think Jörg did a great
job of keeping his head and getting back around the BMW. Today we had the
car to win the race. It was only the wild antics of the race, the strategy
and all the yellow flags that were going to get in our way. Everybody kept
their heads. The guys are just fighting so hard. My first stint was pretty
eventful with the 23 car so I was happy to get around him, although we were
on different strategies. In the end the car was perfect.”
More on Petersen Motorsports/White Lightning Racing can be found at
www.PetersenMotorsports.com <http://www.petersenmotorsports.com/> .
Please visit www.Porsche.com <http://www.porsche.com/> for more on the
Porsche’s line of products.
For more on the ALMS please visit www.AmericanLeMans.com
<http://www.americanlemans.com/> .
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Digital images and complete team and driver bios available upon request.
A .PDF version of this release has been attached for your convenience.
Editors, please do not publish any contact information other than web sites.
Thank you.
Contact: Tom Moore, Petersen Motorsports/ White Lightning Racing,
615-778-1614 (office), 615-509-5000 (cell), tom@darkhorsecom.com