Category: Auto Sport

  • Friday favourite: The long-standing team-mates who dug into F1’s trenches

    Friday favourite: The long-standing team-mates who dug into F1’s trenches

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    Karun Chandhok has had a lot of team-mates in his eclectic career, but one name stands out when it comes to choosing his favourite. Bruno Senna immediately comes to mind for the Indian and not just because the duo ended up as colleagues in GP2, Formula 1 and Formula E.

    “From the first GP2 test we did together at Jerez [in 2007], we just got on really well,” says the Sky F1 pundit, who raced alongside Ayrton Senna’s nephew at iSport in the 2008 GP2 Asia series as a prelude to contesting the regular season. “Of course, we wanted to beat each other, but we were very open.

    “It was a really enjoyable year. We’d arrive at a race weekend and we’d start with two different programmes, compare data and it was all very open sharing information.

    “It was funny because I was always very open about the fact that Alain Prost was my childhood hero and I became really good friends with all of Bruno’s family.”

    Senna won that first contest in Asia, finishing fifth in the standings to Chandhok’s 13th. Both finished on the podium at Monaco and Hockenheim, as Senna finished runner-up in the regular season to Giorgio Pantano. But the next time they teamed up they faced much bigger challenges. Chandhok joined Senna at the troubled HRT operation which took over Adrian Campos’s entry as they both stepped up to F1 in 2010, Chandhok directly from GP2 and Senna after a year in sportscars racing for ORECA.

    PLUS: How HRT made it onto the F1 2010 grid

    “We were in this rollercoaster of chaos together,” says Chandhok. “We were a very close unit, with his manager Chris Goodwin, my father and Bruno’s sister Bianca.

    “So many days it felt like the five of us trying to push the team forward and trying to find where the whole project was going.”

    Senna and Chandhok first raced together in GP2 for iSport in 2008

    Photo by: Alastair Staley / Motorsport Images

    Perhaps surprisingly, given HRT’s lack of pace and results (14th was the best finish of 2010), Chandhok believes there was potential.

    “When they had the fallout with Dallara that was really painful because when we went there to do the seat-fitting, we saw on the CAD drawings and in the wind tunnel they had 60 points of downforce they were going to bring to the car for Barcelona [round five],” says Chanhok, who was replaced after 10 races. “And that would have put us with the Toro Rossos, in the midfield.

    “When you look at what Dallara did with Haas, that’s where they arrived. There was so much unfulfilled potential in that project because everyone fell out, it got political and it just got messy.”

    Throughout it all, the working relationship between Chandhok and Senna remained strong. Having similar driving styles was also a bonus.

    “I would feel confident taking Bruno’s set-up from free practice to qualifying if he found something that worked, and vice versa” Karun Chandhok

    “We wanted similar things from the car,” says the 39-year-old. “That was useful when we went testing – generally, what worked for one worked for the other.

    “I would feel confident taking Bruno’s set-up from free practice to qualifying if he found something that worked, and vice versa.”

    Interestingly, Chandhok feels their relative strengths changed over time: “In GP2 he was generally a better qualifier than me, when we had races where we had to do tyre management I was generally pretty good.

    Insight: Karun Chandhok picks his favourite car

    “When we got to F1 it swapped around a little bit. He’d had a year out in sportscars and a couple of big shunts, so when he came back I think he’d lost a little bit of the edge from qualifying.

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    “I don’t think there was a clear trend, he was better than me at energy management in Formula E.”

    Their final season together was also a tricky one. They raced for Mahindra in the inaugural season of Formula E, with Senna finishing 10th and Chandhok 17th.

    Chandhok reckons his strengths relative to Senna evolved over time

    Chandhok reckons his strengths relative to Senna evolved over time

    Photo by: James Moy

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  • Wadoux to make IMSA debut for AF Corse at Watkins Glen

    Wadoux to make IMSA debut for AF Corse at Watkins Glen

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    Wadoux will share the #88 AF Corse ORECA LMP2 with her current team-mate in the World Endurance Championship, Luis Perez Companc, and Ferrari Hypercar driver Nicklas Nielsen for the six-hour race on 25 June.

    The car is making its first IMSA appearance since the season-opening Rolex 24 at Daytona, where Nielsen shared duties with Julien Canal, Francois Perrodo and Matthieu Vaxiviere.

    It will mark a first LMP2 outing for Wadoux since the final round of the 2022 WEC season, which she contested for Richard Mille Racing.

    She switched to the GTE Am class this year upon being signed by Ferrari, joining Perez Companc and Alessio Rovera.

    Wadoux suffered a spectacular early exit from last weekend’s Le Mans 24 Hours as she aquaplaned off the track at barely abated speed at the Porsche Curves during a heavy rain shower, but walked away from the incident unharmed.

     

    Elsewhere on the entry list for the Watkins Glen IMSA race, Jota Porsche driver Will Stevens is joining the Tower Motorsports LMP2 squad, taking the seat that was occupied by Louis Deletraz for the most recent race at Laguna Seca last month.

    Deletraz is otherwise engaged as he joins the Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti Autosport squad in the top GTP class, sharing the team’s Acura ARX-06 with regular pair Filipe Albuquerque and Ricky Taylor.

    The only other GTP team running a third driver at the Glen is Cadillac outfit Action Express Racing, with Jack Aitken returning to partner Pipo Derani and Alexander Sims.

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    Usual bronze Francois Heriau suffered a back injury in testing in the run-up to Le Mans and was unable to take up his seat at Graff Racing for the centenary running of the race.

    There is a new entry in the GTD Pro class in the form of the AF Corse #61 Ferrari 296 GT3 that will be shared by factory driver Miguel Molina, Simon Mann and Ulysse de Pauw.

    A total of 57 cars set to do battle at The Glen across all five classes, with nine each in GTP, LMP2 and GTD Pro, 10 in LMP3 and a bumper 20-car entry in GTD.

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  • Ford announces factory Dakar Rally tilt with NWM and M-Sport

    Ford announces factory Dakar Rally tilt with NWM and M-Sport

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    The Blue Oval announced today the formation of a full factory Dakar programme using a T1+ version of the Ranger, which will be run in collaboration with Neil Woolridge Motorsport in South Africa and M-Sport in the UK.

    The programme will effectively be launched in stages, with an existing NWM-built Ranger, powered by a 3.5-litre Ecoboost engine and based on the previous generation model, further developed for the 2024 Dakar.

    That will be an exploratory effort at the famous rally raid, rather than an effort aimed at victory.

    An all-new Ranger will then be developed by Ford Performance, NWM and M-Sport for the 2025 event, where Ford hopes to be in contention for the Dakar crown.

    What will power the new Ranger T1+ is yet to be revealed.

    “We know it’s a big endeavour that we’re taking on here, and not something where we can just show up and be successful,” said Ford Performance boss Mark Rushbrook.

    Ford Ranger Raptor for 2024 Dakar Rally

    Photo by: Ford

    “We’re certainly doing our homework with that. Neil Woolridge has an existing truck based on the previous-generation Raptor, and we are taking the truck to compete in the January 2024 effort at Dakar.

    “It’s a real test of the truck, so we can understand, what it takes in the truck to be successful. But also half the battle, maybe more, is the team logistics and execution, and going there in 2024 we need to learn about the logistics, the bivouac, picking up and moving almost every single day, what trucks and what support is necessary to be successful there.

    “In January 2024 it is very much a ‘finish and learn’ effort.

    “In parallel as we’ve been testing and preparing for the last nine months, we’ve been starting the design of an all-new truck. Our plan is to have an all-new test truck in the early part of 2024 that we will then continue testing and developing with the intent to go back in January 2025 with a ‘let’s compete and win’ effort.”

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    M-Sport, meanwhile, has been targeting a Dakar effort with Ford and NWM for some time. 

    “The Dakar Rally is truly among the pinnacle of global off -road racing events,” said Malcolm Wilson, M-Sport managing director.

    “We’ve achieved great success over the years with Ford in FIA WRC rally racing and can’t wait to apply this same level of focus, energy and effort to competing with Ranger in Dakar.”

    A production-based Ford Ranger off-road racer, built and developed in Australia and backed by the factory, has enjoyed success in recent months, including class wins at the Baja 1000 and, just last Monday, the Finke Desert Race.

    That car will now be mothballed following its Finke success.

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  • Dennis feels his Formula E title challenge is “back alive”

    Dennis feels his Formula E title challenge is “back alive”

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    Dennis enjoyed a strong showing in the Indonesian double header, qualifying on the front row for the first time since the season opener in Mexico City before going on to finish second in each of the two races.

    This made him the second highest points-scorer over the course of the weekend, only behind Race 2 winner Maximilian Guenther of Maserati.

    With five races remaining in Formula E’s first Gen3 season, Dennis finds himself right behind Porsche’s Pascal Wehrlein in the standings, having trailed erstwhile leader Nick Cassidy by 25 points going into Jakarta.

    The British driver hailed Andretti for delivering a big step-up in one lap performance in Indonesia, allowing him to qualify up front and score the big points he needed in order to strengthen his bid for a maiden title.

    “Honestly, just a big thanks to the team,” said Dennis. “That’s the biggest thing, [just] how much effort we put in from here to the previous races over qualifying.

    “It’s really shown and it’s really paid off because qualifying in the past few races hasn’t mattered all that much but this weekend it’s been crucial.

    “It really helps to bring my championship back alive.

    “We will see whatever happens in Portland. It’s completely different from how most FE circuits are, very fast, very flowing.

    “There will be lots of overtaking, similar to Berlin and yeah, just some time off now before we go again in a few weeks.”

    Another driver who was an outside bet for the Formula E title coming to Jakarta was Jaguar’s Mitch Evans, who had lost a big chunk of points in Hyderabad when his team-mate Sam Bird took him out of the race.

    Jaguar was unusually off the pace in Jakarta, with neither the factory team nor customer squad Envision featuring at the front, with Evans’ misery compounded by another crash with Bird in the opening race.

    Jake Dennis, Andretti Autosport

    Photo by: Andreas Beil

    But he bounced back from the incident to finish on the podium behind Guenther and Dennis in the second leg of the round, keeping a train of cars behind on the tight confines of the Jakarta track.

    Evans now faces a 25-point deficit in the standings, with Wehrlein, Dennis and Envision’s Nick Cassidy all in front of him, but the Kiwi isn’t ruling himself out of the title fight yet.

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    Asked if he felt his title challenge was still on, Evans replied: “For sure. There are still five races left, so loads of points.

    “It’s a shame we didn’t execute a better weekend. Also, could have been worse off the back of Saturday’s [race] in terms of pace, [but] I will look at the bright side. We are 100% still on this.

    “I’m sure when we go back to other tracks we should be more competitive and back to our usual pace. So hopefully this was a bit of a one-off.

    “We soon need to work out why, because we will be coming back next year etc. Strange but grateful for the points.”

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  • Tsunoda: AlphaTauri F1 braking issues carried over from Gasly in 2022

    Tsunoda: AlphaTauri F1 braking issues carried over from Gasly in 2022

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    Tsunoda had been well-placed to score points in the Monaco Grand Prix last month as he ran ninth with 20 laps to go. But in the final stages of the rain-hit race, he was passed by both McLarens and continued to slip down the order. He eventually finished in 15th as rookie team-mate Nyck de Vries grabbed 12th.

    The Japanese racer noticeably struggled with his brakes, voiced his complaints over team radio and ran off the track at Mirabeau as he struggled to manage temperatures. His brakes again caught the attention in Spain last weekend due to the excessive levels of dust they were producing when under heavy load.

    Asked by Autosport to explain the situation, Tsunoda said an “efficiency” issue that was exaggerated in wet conditions was long-running at AlphaTauri and had also blighted Alpine-bound Gasly during 2022.

    He said: “The brake issues we have are from probably last year. It happened more often towards Pierre rather than me. But this happens to me more [this season].

    “Literally, I don’t feel any efficiency from braking. It just doesn’t warm up, doesn’t feel any efficiency so you cannot push as much as I want to in the rain conditions.

    “Obviously, that makes the tyres colder, it just goes worse and worse.

    “[In Monaco] I had [problems] from FP1, which also affected my qualifying performance as well. 

    Yuki Tsunoda, AlphaTauri AT04

    Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

    “It’s a bit of a shame because I have to do extra build-up compared to other competitors just to warm the brakes, which is a bit unnecessary.”

    Tsunoda said the issue was solely a brake material hardware, rather than a calibration problem, that affected the cars independently of his particular driving style.

    He instead said it was “more towards the engineering side” when it came to finding a fix, which would enable him to move away from his current excessive use of engine braking to slow down.

    Tsunoda, who ranked 12th in Barcelona after serving a five-second penalty for forcing Zhou Guanyu off track, reckoned the team had made gains with the brakes across the double-header with Monaco.

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    He said: “We changed a little bit the brake approach to have more aggressive temperature and actually we had to slightly manage the brakes this time.

    “Actually, that was much better because efficiency was much better than Monaco.

    “I think the team did a good job and I’m pretty happy with it so we made a step.”

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  • Le Mans 24 Hours: Ferrari snatches lead from Toyota, drama for Porsche

    Le Mans 24 Hours: Ferrari snatches lead from Toyota, drama for Porsche

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    The #8 Toyota had been at the head of the field as dawn broke at the Circuit de la Sarthe, but Ryo Hirakawa started to lose time with a damaged front splitter and a slow right-rear puncture to his hybrid-powered LMH contender.

    This brought the #51 Ferrari of Alessandro Pier Guidi into play, with the Italian rapidly closing an 11s gap with a series of rapid laps.

    Pier Guidi was able to bring himself right on the tail of Hirakawa but couldn’t make a move by the time the two drivers simultaneously headed to the pits at the end of lap 207.

    Toyota elected to change the front end of the #8 Toyota during the pitstop, which proved crucial in the battle for the lead as it allowed the #51 Ferrari now driven by James Calado to surge to the front.

    The gap between the two cars stood at five seconds after the pitstops, and Calado was able to extend that advantage to well over 13 seconds as the Ferrari enjoyed a pace advantage over the Toyota.

    During the next round of pitstops, Hirakawa took on new tyres while Calado continued on old rubber, with the gap between the two expanding to 25s as they rejoined the track.

    Using fresher tyres, Hirakawa was able to bring the deficit down to 20s but Calado maintained his own to maintain Ferrari’s advantage at the head of the field.

    #8 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 – Hybrid of Sebastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley, Ryo Hirakawa

    Photo by: Rainier Ehrhardt

    Calado and Hirakawa handed over their cars to Antonio Giovinazzi and Sebastien Buemi and, as the clock struck the 18th hour, Ferrari’s advantage had ballooned to nearly a minute, aided by the deployment of a slow zone that appeared to cost the Toyota.

    The #2 Cadillac consolidated third position after some quick stints from Alex Lynn and Richard Westbrook, although it continues to circulate 3m off the lead, making the race a two-horse battle between Ferrari and Toyota.

    Scott Dixon runs a lap down in the #3 Cadillac in fourth, Mikken Jensen holding fifth in the #93 Peugeot.

    Porsche’s challenge crumbled at the start of the 17th hour when Kevin Estre crashed the best of the three 963 LMDhs while trying to lap an LMP2 car.

    Running in fifth position behind the #3 Cadillac of Sebastien Bourdais, Estre made a mistake as he attempted to pass on one of the two WRT Orecas and went straight off at Porsche Curves, skating through the gravel before hitting the tyre barriers side-on.

    The Frenchman was able to reverse out of the barriers and rejoin the track but eventually had to bring the #6 Porsche back into the garage, where it spent a whopping 43 minutes undergoing repairs.

    It promoted the #5 car of Michael Christensen as the leading Porsche in sixth, albeit six laps down on the #51 Ferrari with six hours of racing remaining.

    #708 Glickenhaus Racing Glickenhaus 007 of Romain Dumas, Olivier Pla, Ryan Briscoe

    #708 Glickenhaus Racing Glickenhaus 007 of Romain Dumas, Olivier Pla, Ryan Briscoe

    Photo by: Marc Fleury

    Both Glickenhaus cars suffered crashes in the 18th hour, with Olivier Pla going wide at the exit of Indianapolis and slamming the barriers on the inside of the corner in the #708, before Franck Mailleux had a similar – but slightly less impactful – shunt in the sister #709 car.

    Both drivers were to rejoin the race, albeit with some damage to their cars.

    In LMP2, InterEuropol continues to hold the class lead despite the best efforts of Robert Kubica in the #41 WRT to snatch the top spot.

    Now driven by Albert Costa, the #34 InterEuropol Oreca remains over 30s clear of the #41 WRT car piloted by Rui Andrade, with Job van Uitert moving the #65 Panis Racing ahead of the #30 Duqueine Oreca of Neel Jani in the battle for the final spot of the podium.

    The GTE Am saw a number of lead changes with the Kessel Racing Ferrari that had led in the hands of gentleman driver Takeshi Kimura dropping to seventh place.

    Kimura was passed by the #85 Iron Dames Porsche of Rahel Frey on the Mulsanne Straight in the 17th hour, with Frey staying in the car to strengthen the lead of the all-female crew.

    Second place is held by the #25 ORT by TF Aston Martin of Charlie Eastwood, who overtook the #33 Corvette of Ben Keating just before the end of the 18th hour.

    Meanwhile, Mike Rockenfeller runs 29th overall in the Garage 56 Chevrolet Camaro, ahead of all GTE Am runners in the field.

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  • GTE drivers “gutted” class will no longer be part of Le Mans

    GTE drivers “gutted” class will no longer be part of Le Mans

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    GTE cars have featured in the World Endurance Championship since its rebirth in 2012 but, from next year, will be replaced by the new LMGT3 class.

    The GTE Pro division was already axed for 2023 amid dwindling numbers, leaving only the GTE Am division that will also disappear at the end of this season.

    Despite a plethora of manufacturers having GT3 machines – with Ford revealing its new Mustang GT3 on Friday – and interest in the new class high, drivers have lamented the end of the GTE era.

    Charlie Eastwood, who won the GTE Am class at Le Mans with a TF Sport Aston Martin in 2020 and is starting second for this year’s race, believes the presence of ABS on GT3 cars will diminish the driving challenge.

    “I’m absolutely gutted,” he told Autosport about the demise of GTE. “I drive round here and I know GT3 will just never feel the same.

    “For me, ABS takes out 80% of the driving for the driver and what made qualifying so difficult was going from the highest speeds the GTE can go to right down to the lowest at the chicanes.

    “You’re on the verge of missing the corner and that’s the bit that, when you then get to the line, it’s so satisfying.

    “I have no doubt the racing is still going to be incredible [with GT3], but I absolutely love the GTE.”

     

    His thoughts are echoed by Ben Keating, the polesitter for this year’s GTE Am race with Corvette Racing and one of the leading bronze-graded amateurs, winning at Le Mans in 2022 in a TF Aston.

    “In WEC, a bronze driver’s time behind the wheel really makes a big difference in the race,” he told Autosport. “Without ABS, the difference between bronze drivers is much higher.

    “With GTE, there’s a huge risk that if you lock up you’re going in the wall or you flat spot a tyre. You can ruin the race with one lock-up, so you have to be more conservative.

    “If you go to GT3, you have ABS and I want to learn being closer to the Pro, I don’t want the computer to do it for me.

    “I have a little pain in my heart it’s going away because it’s such a special part of history.”

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    Keating, a LMP2 regular in the IMSA SportsCar Championship, is instead evaluating a return to the LMP2 category at Le Mans for next year, after previous entries in 2016-17.

    However, Kessel Racing Ferrari driver Daniel Serra – who has taken two GTE Pro victories at Le Mans in both Ferrari and Aston machinery – still believes the GT3s will be great to drive around the La Sarthe circuit.

    “I’m trying to enjoy as much as I can this last dance with the GTE, but I know next year it will be an amazing car as well with the 296 that I’m driving and developing,” he told Autosport.

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  • Friday favourite: The Le Mans-winning Sauber behind a heroic solo drive

    Friday favourite: The Le Mans-winning Sauber behind a heroic solo drive

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    The unmistakable rumble of the Sauber-Mercedes C9’s V8 was the soundtrack to a breakout year in Kenneth Acheson’s racing career. Two wins in the 1989 World Sports Prototype Championship and second at the Le Mans 24 Hours marked a remarkable return to the international racing scene for the Ulsterman, who had four years earlier struggled with desperately uncompetitive Formula 1 machinery before making a career in Japan that put his name back on the map.

    Acheson points out that the honour bestowed by Autosport readers in voting it as the Racing Car of the Year in 1989 must have made the C9 pretty special, and that it most certainly was. Having just been pipped to the title in 1988 by Martin Brundle’s Jaguar XJR-9, Jean-Louis Schlesser made amends in 1989 to see off Acheson’s co-driver Mauro Baldi in a season-long fight as the Swiss operation was only beaten once in eight world championship rounds by Joest’s 962 at Dijon when tyre preservation played a significant role in the result.

    “That whole year was great,” says Acheson. “Dave Price ran that car, I got on well with Mauro [Baldi], the team was just an incredibly nice place to be where they were competitive and very good at what they did. The car was a pleasure to drive.”

    Such was its impact that for Acheson the C9 even usurps “the only car I’ve driven and realised I’d got a smile on my face”. The 1987 Japanese Group C champion believes the Toyota TS010 in which he again finished second at Le Mans in 1992 had the edge on Peugeot for pace the following year, “but our reliability just fell apart”.

    “It was just ridiculously fast compared to what we’d driven before,” Acheson says of the Toyota, which “gripped like you wouldn’t believe”.

    Acheson’s first outing with the C9 in 1988 was curtailed when an unexplained tyre blowout for team-mate Klaus Niedzwiedz prompted Sauber to withdraw. But he was asked back for the Fuji 1000km WSPC round, sharing with Schlesser and Jochen Mass. He led during the race but delays caused by a loss of boost and subsequent repairs, attributed to a loose bolt in the turbo wastegate, cost four laps and limited their C9 to fifth at the flag. However Acheson had made enough of an impression to contest the full 1989 season and Le Mans, now a non-championship event.

    Acheson was accepting of his number two role, which in the fuel-limited Group C formula meant he was the foil responsible for keeping the car in contention during the middle stint without abusing his consumption. A difficult tightrope to walk, but one which in the C9 he didn’t find an arduous task.

    The Toyota TS010 is the only car that ever knowingly brought a smile to Acheson’s face while driving it – but can’t match the C9

    Photo by: William Murenbeeld / Motorsport Images

    “In my mind it was [Baldi’s] car, it was always he was going to start the races and my job was to fill in the gaps,” says Acheson. “Whenever I was needed to make a difference, I think I was always able to do that. But certainly I was never somebody who would go and use up too much fuel, I was always sensible with fuel.

    “I wasn’t their person to be starting the race or to set the car up for what I wanted. I wasn’t their person to have the same amount of laps in practice and qualifying. I didn’t feel I had to make it a big deal and maybe that’s why at the end of the year they probably thought I wasn’t driven enough, maybe I didn’t create enough trouble. But Jochen was very similar with Schlesser, he was more or less always second driver as well and never dropped the ball. That in my mind is what I saw my job being.

    “I didn’t have to really be in the spotlight that much, I was quite happy quietly getting on and doing a good job. And I think that’s part of the reason why people did choose me, to be a team player.”

    “With the Mercedes we just always drove to the fuel or very slightly over it and I remember early on for the first dozen or 15 laps it was really difficult to overtake. Then when they have to settle down, I made real progress” Kenneth Acheson

    Acheson fulfilled all those criteria and more in the opening round of 1989 at Suzuka, which he selected as the race of his life in the 11 September 2014 issue of Autosport. Driving the 480km race solo in an unfamiliar car, he came through from 30th to the lead before heeding team orders to finish second.

    The #62 entry was qualified by Schlesser and Mass, the latter only setting a nominal time after crashing in the wet on his second flying lap. Schlesser (who had qualified 10th) was moved across to join Baldi in #61 when the team doctor advised Mass – who was struggling with his vision – to withdraw and so Acheson took his place, having not driven his race chassis until warmup.

    “Circumstances were thrown upon me,” he says.

    Acheson recalls that Suzuka “was actually the first race that we used carbon brakes”, which hadn’t previously managed a race distance. The decision to run them was made in the expectation that there was nothing to lose if Acheson couldn’t physically last the distance – a point he too had doubts about.

    Acheson reckons that his wealth of track knowledge “would have helped a little bit” on a circuit that “was a lot bumpier than it is now” and retained the old “more intimidating” 130R, but reckons it was more a matter of patiently managing his pace.

    Mass joined him for the podium but played no part in the race as Acheson drove a stellar solo race to second at Suzuka in 1989

    Mass joined him for the podium but played no part in the race as Acheson drove a stellar solo race to second at Suzuka in 1989

    Photo by: Sutton Images

    “Maybe it helped more coming through the field because certainly early on it was very hard to overtake as a lot of the Porsches in the first stint would run a lot higher boost,” he says. “With the Mercedes we just always drove to the fuel or very slightly over it and I remember early on for the first dozen or 15 laps it was really difficult to overtake. Then when they have to settle down, I made real progress.

    “But I lost a load of time in the first dozen or 15 laps because I just couldn’t pass traffic. Everybody is racing and going mad and lots of boost, up and down, you just had to be patient. But the car was quick and I came through.”

    He never dipped under the 2m00s barrier during the first third of the race and progressed to ninth by lap 20, while others had to back off after charging too soon. By lap 48, Acheson had moved up to second and was in good shape, having taken 10 litres more fuel than Baldi-Schlesser at the first stops. He then closed significantly after the second stops on Schlesser, who had to stop for longer, and circulated 2-3s per lap faster before passing on lap 64.

    “I obviously knew that I’d be asked to give it back, which I didn’t have a problem with,” relates Acheson. “It was the right thing for the team. I was the new guy in the car, I was definitely the number two driver. When I got asked, I slowed down in front of the pits so that everyone at least knew that I had been leading!”

    Back with Baldi in #61 for the rest of the season, Acheson led briefly through traffic at Dijon before being hamstrung behind the slow-moving Almeras Porsche in the pits and dropping behind the #62 machine. He then did the bulk of the driving at Le Mans, where time lost to an off while Baldi was at the wheel combined with gearbox dramas allowed the Le Mans-only #63 entry of Mass, Manuel Reuter and Stanley Dickens to lead home Acheson, Baldi and Gianfranco Brancatelli in a 1-2.

    PLUS: How Sauber upset the odds to win Le Mans

    Acheson rates his first Le Mans start in three attempts – in 1985 the John Fitzpatrick 962C he’d been due to share with Schlesser and Dudley Wood was destroyed when Wood crashed in practice and vaulted the barrier on the Mulsanne Straight – as one of his stronger drives that year, although it left him with sore eyes for the following WSPC round at Jarama.

    “I wasn’t probably at my best at Jarama,” he reckons of a race he spun on his second lap out of the pits, with an inconsistent feeling in the brakes implicated. That was later validated as the car later lost three laps while the system was bled in the final pitstop.

    Acheson reaffirmed a gap built up by Baldi prior to a safety car en-route to their first win at Brands Hatch, before a frustrating day at the Nurburgring where the #61 car proved puzzlingly thirstier than the sister Sauber. Baldi was already over on his fuel allocation when he handed over to Acheson, who could do nothing to get back into the lead fight against Schlesser and Mass. “A bit messy,” is his memory of the event.

    Acheson and Baldi led home C9 1-2 at Brands Hatch

    Acheson and Baldi led home C9 1-2 at Brands Hatch

    Photo by: Motorsport Images

    Second again to their team-mates at Donington, Acheson upheld his end of the bargain at Spa on his first visit to the track since his Formula 2 days – despite precious little dry weather running in practice – to secure a second win of the season, but it wasn’t enough to keep his drive.

    Acheson knew before the Mexico finale that he wasn’t going to stay on for the arrival of the C11 in 1990. Mercedes was in the throes of setting up its young driver programme to develop Formula 3 drivers Karl Wendlinger, Heinz-Harald Frentzen and Michael Schumacher. “Obviously it was a bit disappointing,” is Acheson’s view, although he says he can understand Mercedes motorsport boss Jochen Neerpasch’s thinking.

    “I never really had a problem with that, I could understand it because by then my career wasn’t going to go forward,” he says. “Basically I was happy doing what I was doing, I was a really good second driver but they had the opportunity to bring in three young guys and they all did really well. And I guess my claim to fame is I got sacked for Michael Schumacher, you can’t really complain about that!”

    “I don’t sit at home and think bad about it. I actually sit at home and think I had a really good weekend other than that!” Kenneth Acheson

    Determined to bow out in style and secure the title for Baldi, who was five points behind Schlesser (although ahead before dropped scores) heading into the race, Acheson was on a tear in Mexico City. He reckons “that was the only weekend that Mauro was probably a bit slower than me” and attributes it to the knowledge he wouldn’t be returning for the following year meaning “I didn’t have to try and please everybody, which I guess through the year I was always trying to do”.

    Acheson took over before Mass, hunted him down and passed on the pit straight for the lead.

    He recalls: “I remember Pricey saying to me, ‘You just have to try and get ahead of Jochen and then hold him and take it from there’. And that’s what I did. I did get past him, but by then my tyres were not great. So it was a matter of trying to control that Jochen couldn’t pass me.”

    Approaching Peraltada, Acheson could see Tiff Needell’s Richard Lloyd Porsche up ahead and “backed off because I knew if I caught him halfway through the corner Jochen would just pass me halfway down the straight”.

    “I backed off to give myself a really good run,” explains Acheson, “but I probably mis-timed the run by a couple of car-lengths. So just as I came to the bump I think his downforce interfered a little bit and the car just spun.”

    The back end stepped out and there was little Acheson could do. He was spat into the tyres barriers on the outside, the impact causing heavy damage to the front end of the chassis. In the blink of an eye, the title race was over, Acheson no less gutted than Baldi.

    The 1989 WSPC title went down to the wire in Mexico, where a crash for Acheson handed the crown to Schlesser

    The 1989 WSPC title went down to the wire in Mexico, where a crash for Acheson handed the crown to Schlesser

    Photo by: Motorsport Images

    “It was disappointing, but I don’t have a problem with what I did or anything like that,” he says. “Obviously I felt sorry for Mauro, but everybody in the team – even Neerpasch said, ‘that was why you were there, you were excellent’. So they didn’t have a problem with me crashing, I crashed the car because I was trying to win the race so my team-mate could be world champion. That’s the way it is and obviously it didn’t work out.

    “I don’t sit at home and think bad about it. I actually sit at home and think I had a really good weekend other than that!”

    Fortunately for Acheson, that wasn’t to be his final outing in a C9. He was reunited with the car, an unraced chassis built up from spare parts, after a chance outing with its owner, historics racer Rupert Clevely, at the Goodwood Festival of Speed. That prompted Acheson to make a brief run in the car at Turweston airfield for an article in Motorsport magazine, before Acheson agreed to purchase the car “about a year or so later”.

    “When you sit in it, it’s just normal, like you were in it a couple of months ago,” says Acheson of a car that had previously been part of the Donington Collection. He has changed the livery so it now wears his 1989 Le Mans colours, complete with his #61: “It’s nice to take it out, I got invited to Goodwood [Festival of Speed] a couple of years ago [in 2021].”

    But perhaps unsurprisingly, it’s Suzuka 1989 that Acheson picks out as his C9 highlight today.

    “The two wins are nice to have, and I suppose you can say ‘I won a world sportscar race’ but to be honest finishing second at Suzuka was probably to me personally as good,” he says. “It was always nice to win because it showed that you could, but I know the races that I did well.

    “The overriding thing is I was just really fortunate to be picked by Sauber to race the car that year. Even when I got picked, I couldn’t believe I was picked! I was in Japan and I was doing a good job but nobody in Europe knew me, so to get that [drive] and have a year with it was really good.

    “And it was absolutely the nicest team I have ever driven for. You had just a real culture of getting on with it and everybody knew they were good at it. My overriding memory is just I was bloody lucky to be able to drive it and to be able to drive in that team.”

    Today Acheson has an example of the C9 he drove to second at Le Mans in 1989

    Today Acheson has an example of the C9 he drove to second at Le Mans in 1989

    Photo by: Rainer W. Schlegelmilch / Motorsport Images

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  • Magazine: F1 Spanish GP review

    Magazine: F1 Spanish GP review

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    On the one hand, we got exactly the winner we expected in Barcelona but, on the other, the track changes at the end of the lap made for more action and the revised Mercedes W14 suddenly came alive last Sunday.
    As Alex Kalinauckas explains in his weekly column and our in-depth report, there were several reasons why Mercedes jumped Aston Martin and Ferrari in Spain. Some of them were …Keep reading

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  • Piastri: Spanish GP race struggles a reality check for McLaren F1 team

    Piastri: Spanish GP race struggles a reality check for McLaren F1 team

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    McLaren had its strongest qualifying performance of the season in Barcelona with Lando Norris taking a surprise third on the grid, while Piastri earned 10th before gaining a spot from a penalty for Pierre Gasly.

    The drivers cautioned before the race that conditions in qualifying had flattered the car.

    However, the race proved to be even tougher than expected. Piastri slipped back to 13th, while Norris could only recover to 17th after first lap contact with Lewis Hamilton led to an early pitstop and ruined his day.

    “Yeah, it was just a long afternoon,” Piastri said. “I just didn’t have the pace to really do anything.

    “Pretty poor first lap for myself as well, which didn’t help things, but I don’t think we really had the pace to stay in the points anyways.

    “We’ll have a look at why we struggled so much today compared to yesterday. I think we’ve got some good ideas already. But yeah, disappointing afternoon.”

    Piastri stressed that cool conditions on Saturday had favoured the car over one lap on soft tyres.

    “I think yesterday [Saturday] was obviously not expected,” he said. “I don’t think we’re in normal circumstances able to put the car that high up on the grid.

    “Also, today [Sunday] was maybe a bit more back to reality. Probably a more difficult day than what we would have hoped, even considering.

    “We seem to switch on the tyres very well when it’s cold, when it’s difficult conditions. Monaco was the same story as yesterday on the inters. So I need to try and work on that with the team, I think, and see what we can do to make our lives easier on Sundays.

    “I don’t have that many answers at the moment. But others seem to just be able to push more when they wanted to and find an extra gear, and we were kind of flat after that. So I think something to do with that.”

    Oscar Piastri, McLaren MCL60, Nyck de Vries, AlphaTauri AT04

    Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

    Like fellow rookies Nyck de Vries and Logan Sargeant, Piastri had to get through a difficult run of street and temporary circuits prior to Spain.

    However he downplayed the suggestion that the greater margin provided by the Barcelona track had been a benefit.

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    “Not so much,” he said. “I think the risk of damaging the car here is lower, but I guess the lap time penalty for not finding the limit is probably higher than those circuits. Because everyone’s got a lot of laps especially around here you can really find the limit without too much risk.

    “So everybody is just really pushing to the max. From that point of view, I guess it’s a different risk. I definitely felt a little bit more comfortable here than I did in Monaco, especially in quali.

    “The last few weekends it just sort of comes alive in quali for me. So I still want to work on getting up to speed a bit earlier in the weekend. But yeah, looking forward to another new track [Canada] next time out. It’s a tricky one as well.

    “So that’ll be fun to learn a new track, but results-wise coming to a more familiar track didn’t really make much difference.”

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