T-Minus 20 Months: Daytona
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June 28, 2010
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<http://www.caracingnews.com/event.asp?id=235> Rolex 24 At Daytona
Daytona (FL), USA
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T-MINUS 20 MONTHS: DAYTONA AND LE MANS FOR ULTIMATE ENDURANCE RACING
Anticipated by drivers, auto manufacturers and race fans everywhere, the
Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona is the first major race of the world's motor sport
season. Every January, the Daytona International Speedway (Daytona Beach,
Florida, USA) comes to life in celebration of this incredible endurance
race, known by drivers as one of the most difficult in the world to win.
Building anticipation for 2012 50th Running
The 2012 edition will mark the 50th running of sports car racing at the
Speedway, home of the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona. As a lead-up to this
important anniversary, we will be presenting a once-a-month look back
through the history, people and events that have made this race what it is
today.
For this month, (June), we examine what it means to compete in endurance
racing and take a look at what the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona and the world's
other twice-around-the-clock challenge, the 24 Hours of Le Mans, which just
took place this month, have in common along with where they differ. Each may
be unique, but together they make up two of the three peaks on the triple
crown of endurance racing.
Endurance Racing: through the night, the ultimate test of man and machine
The main connection between the 24 Hours of Le Mans and the Rolex 24 Hours
of Daytona is clear: the race entails non-stop racing meant not only to test
a car and driver's ability to be quick, but also the team's ability to last
over a 24-hour period. In these races, the purpose is to determine which
team of drivers can take their sports car the farthest in a fixed time
period, as opposed to determining who can travel a fixed distance in the
shortest time, as in most auto races. This sort of racing reveals both the
reliability of the machines, as well as the physical and mental stamina of
the drivers, as they push themselves and their vehicles to the limit.
In addition to the differences in track length (Le Mans is 13.629-kilometres
vs. Daytona with 5.729-kilometres), the Le Mans race takes place on a
combined course: part public roads and stretches of the Bugatti circuit,
built in 1965 and also used for other competitions. The Daytona race is
conducted entirely over a closed course within the speedway arena without
the use of any public streets. Most parts of the steep banking are included,
interrupted with a chicane on the back straight and a sweeping, fast infield
section that includes two hairpins. Winning teams often cover over 700 laps
in the 24 Hours of Daytona and the 2010 winning Porsche team (Action Express
Racing) completed 755 laps - that's 4,325.395 kilometres - the second
longest distance ever covered in the history of the Rolex 24 Hours of
Daytona. This year the winning Audi team at the 24 Hours of Le Mans
completed 397 laps (5,410.713 kilometres), breaking the 1971 record of
distance driven, originally set by Dr. Helmut Marko and Gijs van Lennep in
the Porsche 917 (5,335.313 km).
While some races are limited to a specific class or type of car, these
24-hour races have several race categories that take to the track
simultaneously. This means that drivers have to work with each other in
order to avoid traffic or worse yet, accidents. Even a minor
"fender-benders" can have devastating effects on final results so drivers
must be extra cautious in their navigation of track traffic and when passing
one another, both common occurrences in endurance racing. "When you come
here it's a motor racing festival," said record eight-time 24 Hours of Le
Mans winner Tom Kristensen. "OK you tell me there are four different
categories racing here in Le Mans, but that doesn't matter: we are all
fighting for the corners and we are all fighting to be first. This is the
kind of action you want to see in motor sports."
Although similar in that many classes race at the same time, an essential
difference between these two long races is that the 24 Hours of Le Mans
takes place in June, when the days are the longest and the nights the
shortest, while for Daytona it's just the opposite. "Because of its timing
on the calendar," continues Kristensen, "the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona does
have another unique element to it: it's the darkest 24-hour race of them
all!" The January date of this race means that it gets dark, and stays dark,
very early, whereas at the 24 Hours of Le Mans the darkest racing only lasts
a couple of hours.
Racing at night is something distinctive to endurance racing, something many
first-timers, or "rookies," find themselves having to adapt to quickly.
"Night racing is absolutely new to me, it's something I've never done
before," said Rachel Frey, one of the Le Mans rookie drivers of Matech
Competition's all-women's team (CHE) that raced this year in the 24-hour
race. "The LM P1 cars pass so fast it's unbelievable and during the night,
all you see are some flashing lights coming up behind you and it's really
hard to judge the distance. But this is just something you have to learn to
deal with when you come here."
And before one even begins racing, there's the unique starting procedure
that was made famous at endurance races, something that became known as a
"Le Mans start." The drivers stood on one side of the track and their cars
were parked at an angle on the opposite side. When the signal was given,
they had to run across the track, jump into their cars and roar off.
Accidents were frequent and the Daytona circuit only used a running start
once, for the Daytona Continental in 1962. The running start was used in Le
Mans for many years until in 1969, when driver Jacky Ickx, in his first 24
Hours of Le Mans, expressed his objection to this dangerous practice by
walking slowly to his car. Despite starting in last place, he won the race
in a spectacular finish, snatching victory with a mere 120-metre (130-yard)
lead. In 1971, the organisers decided to change the start procedure and from
then on, the drivers would begin the race from within their vehicles.
The 2010 24 Hours of Le Mans paid tribute to this old tradition by reviving
the running start as a prelude to the conventional rolling start. Just after
14:00 on Saturday, 12 June, the 56 drivers ran across the track to be
strapped into their cars that were facing them in herringbone formation just
like in former times. Cars were then released one by one to take their
places on the grid for the now regular rolling start at 15:00. This
ceremonial start before the "real thing" was welcome on the track; it added
additional anticipation, was a nod to improved track safety and at the same
time, paid tribute to drivers past.
But while the start in this type of racing is important, it is truly the
finish that makes the race. A lot can happen in 24 hours, and as Allan
McNish said at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, "You've got to first finish, before
you finish first." Finishing a 24-hour race is a victory in of itself and
many teams compete in the race with this "simple" goal in mind- only the
best will actually win.
This season, German driver Mike Rockenfeller made history at the finish, as
he and his Porsche team came in 1st at both the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona
(#9 Action Express Racing with co-drivers, Borcheller (USA), Dalziel (GBR),
Barbosa (POR)) and at the 24 Hours of Le Mans (#9 Audi Sport North American
team with co-drivers Bernhard (DEU), Dumas (FRA)). Rockenfeller is one of
only four drivers in history who has achieved this double. "I am so excited
about this win," said Rockenfeller at Le Mans, "and after my Rolex 24 win
earlier this year, I couldn't be happier."
All in all, these endurance races may be long, but they are as far from
dreary as anything, and everything can happen in 24 hours. Where man and
machine go to the limit and beyond, prepare to be surprised!
Rolex Cosmograph Daytona: for Champions
The Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona and the 24 Hours of Le Mans are world-class
races, rewarding its deserving winners with a place in motor sports history
and a steel Rolex Cosmograph Daytona, named "the world's rarest watch" by
WatchTime magazine.
Winners receive their timepiece as a tribute to their great achievement in
endurance racing, exclusively engraved with the event logo, year and, of
course, the mythical word that any driver would cherish: "Winner."
Top prize in European motor sport: free spot in Daytona 2011
Racers in several major European series have a unique opportunity to land a
spot in the driver's seat of a Daytona Prototype for the 2011 Daytona race
through the Sunoco Rolex 24 Hours at Daytona Challenge.
This season-long competition pits racers from high-caliber race
championships in Europe, such as the British GT Championship and the British
F3 International, against one another for one spectacular prize: a race seat
in a 500 bhp, 190 mph Daytona Prototype at the 2011 24-hour race.
The point system includes 100 points for a victory, 80 points for second, 75
for third, down through 15th place. In addition, 25 points is awarded to
both the driver who wins the pole and the one with the fastest race lap. At
the end of the season, the driver with the most points will win a fully-paid
drive in a front-running Daytona Prototype in the 2011 Rolex 24 Hours of
Daytona.
The number of points separating the drivers registered in the Challenge in
just the Top 10 is widening. Top-placed Jean-Eric Vergne (F3) from France is
on 98.13 average points, while 360 Racing's Terrence Woodward (UK) at No 10
is on 51.25. That said, there are many laps yet to be raced and it is still
too early to make predictions about the final outcome.
About the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona
The Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona, America's most prestigious sports car race
and one of only two 24-hour sports car events in the world, will mark its
50th running at Daytona International Speedway in 2012. The
twice-around-the-clock challenge kicks off the international motorsports
calendar as well as the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series and features a
star-studded line-up of drivers from around the world on Daytona's demanding
3.56-mile road course.
For more information about the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona or to download
free, high-resolution images for editorial purposes, please register online
at www.caracingnews.com <http://www.caracingnews.com/>
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