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Move of the race was the fact that after the spin, the #83 recovered to get a podium finish.
Indeed. This I could not have pulled off in my Mazda...or any Mazda for that matter
EDIT: Roo beat me to it
Move of the race was the fact that after the spin, the #83 recovered to get a podium finish.
Truth and justice was served in many ways.As much as people hate the Fords (Well Ganassi if we're honest), they played the strategy in the rain pretty well (Something that rarely happens) while everyone else struggled so its kinda earned really.
Great job with the 5 and 31, I was so sure the way the pace was going and the way the 54 was pushing that the win was gonna slip away but I was wrong.
And good job to Grasser Racing, they had to start way in the back so its even more impressive they got it done. Also a Lamborghini winning the Rolex 24, never thought I'd see that happen but here we are.
It's funny. I've never typed "#x right rear tire flat." as many times as I did for this race.The big takeaway for me: tires. What was going on? I can't remember so many failures in recent memory. It's really rather remarkable there were so few cautions given how many blowouts were suffered. Luckily most were slow leaks and not catastrophic failures.
Joest has never faced such a challenge in its life.I think the race certainly highlighted why IMSA is moving to Michelen after this year. Granted they had some blowouts too but not more than you would expect in this long of a race.
I really hope Mazda can get their issues sorted and at least be competitive for the “sprint” races but those hopes are admittedly low.
It might take more than 1 race for them to get up to speed.Remember kids, even the power of Joest cannot dispel the Mazda bbq.
It may be the one exiting the bus stop.I forget which corner it was but one of the broadcasts mentioned that some of the curbing might of worn down to where the bolts were sticking out, and happened to be where the right rears were crossing if cars were getting a good piece of the curbs when running through the corner, so it may have been a track issue.
The big takeaway for me: tires. What was going on? I can't remember so many failures in recent memory. It's really rather remarkable there were so few cautions given how many blowouts were suffered. Luckily most were slow leaks and not catastrophic failures.
I think the race certainly highlighted why IMSA is moving to Michelen after this year. Granted they had some blowouts too but not more than you would expect in this long of a race.
Joest has never faced such a challenge in its life.
I forget which corner it was but one of the broadcasts mentioned that some of the curbing might of worn down to where the bolts were sticking out, and happened to be where the right rears were crossing if cars were getting a good piece of the curbs when running through the corner, so it may have been a track issue.
It may be the one exiting the bus stop.
The defending race-winning No.10 Konica Minolta Cadillac DPi-V.R was officially retired early in the 18th hour, shortly after pole winner Renger van der Zande pulled off course at the West Horseshoe with a cut right-rear tire.
Van der Zande used a public road to get back to the garage. The team replaced all four tires so he could continue. Moments later, though, the car was retired.
"We have to figure out what's happening, but it's not safe to continue," van der Zande said. "We had a lot of tire failures, and we don't know why, so it was not safe to do it anymore and keep going. The pace was good, but the only thing that was holding us back was the tires. We'll figure out why."
Team owner Wayne Taylor said that his son Jordan Taylor had a tire problem early in the event, but he thought it was an isolated incident.
"We have been running within the tire pressures that we've run forever and ever," Taylor said. "But then Renger had six or seven failures, and we went through three sets of bodywork. Now, I can't afford to put a driver at risk."
Very curious case of Wayne Taylor claiming Van Der Zande had "six or seven failures", while Continental Tire tweeted WTR had 5 issues, two of which were identified as punctures. Quite frankly, I've seen dear old Wayne go off the deep end of the emotional spectrum numerous times over several years now. One heartless wag in the Comments section linked below refers to him as "Whine Tielor".
Perhaps his engineer was pushing both camber and pressure right to the edge of limits, and then double-stinting. Maybe the diff set-up, bump-steer, toe-in, spring, shock, weight distribution or downforce balance were factors. Perhaps the drivers were going so far over the curbs the vulnerable inboard edge of the tire was exposed to the roughest "teeth" on the curb - or even exposed bolts. And we know from NASCAR experience that some oval drivers are simply harder than others on their right rear tires.
It will be good to get some sober analysis which answers these questions more definitively.
http://www.racer.com/imsa/item/147054-defending-rolex-24-winners-retire-with-tire-problems
I'm a little disappointed that out of 20 Prototypes to only have 3 at the end with a realistic shot at winning and that is mainly due to the #5 cooling issues that forced them to slow down so much.
I guess with that much green flag running the emphasis was on reliability and so many cars didn't have it.
I do think that Penske is going to have something for the Cadillacs this year. The only problem is if JPM doesn't cost them a win somewhere being well, himself.
Only 4 cautions. Goes to show you the relentless caution fests of the past were a joke and not necessary for compelling racing.
I don't have words for how happy I am that IMSA has made the Daytona 24 hours a proper endurance race again. It's now worthy to be mentioned alongside Sebring and Lemans as the triple crown of sportscar racing
Only 4 cautions. Goes to show you the relentless caution fests of the past were a joke and not necessary for compelling racing.
Thank you IMSA
In more ways than one without the PC drinking game.I'll second that! It was kinda sobering to just have a standard endurance race with close calls, strategy and only a few FCYs.