Le
Mans Series 2009
Round 1. Catalunya 1000 Kilometres. April 3rd-5th 2009
Saturday Review
Saturday

Having
sorted out the previous day's "niggly problems",
it was all fairly relaxed in the RML pit garage on Saturday
morning as the final preparations were made for the weekend's
second free practice session. With the weather improving
steadily the conditions were starting to look good for some
improved times . . . .
Second
Free Practice
There
were some very keen drivers queuing up at the pit exit before
the track opened at 10:45 for the start of the session,
but Tommy wasn't long in following them out. As if to confirm
that Friday's vibration problems were a pleasantly distant
memory, his first Saturday flyer was a 1:41.473, and enough
to sweep him through to second fastest in LMP2, just behind
a quick-off-the-mark Olivier Pla in the QSM Zytek.
Tommy's
next lap looked better still, especially when he posted
the fastest time overall for the first sector, but the rest
of the lap didn't tie up quite so neatly and he crossed
the line just marginally down on his established best. Ten
minutes gone, and Erdos came good with the earlier promise,
and strung together the anicipated quick lap. Clocking a
new best of 1:37.837 not only took him to the top of the
class, but 5th overall as well.

Having
completed his designated six laps, Tommy headed back to
the pitlane as the clock registered 11:00. It was time for
a few tweaks and the #25 was in the garage for ten minutes,
during which the Racing Box Lola #29 popped up with a 1:37.691
to set fastest in LMP2.
With
Mike strapped into the car, the RML Lola was back out again
at 11:09 for ten minutes of consistent, untroubled lappery.
A brief pitstop visit, then another stint, before returning
to the pits at 11:40 to hand back to Tommy.
Meanwhile,
Olivier Pla revised his best with a 1:37.885 to move third
in the ASM Zytek. His next lap held the promise of improvement,
with the opening two sectors quicker still, but tailed off
to maintain the status quo. With Mike having just handed
over to Tommy in the pits, the session was red flagged after
two prototypes had a coming-together at turn two. It was
a lengthy stop while these, and two other stranded cars
were rounded up and returned to the pits.

The
session resumed at just before twelve, with Erdos back in
the cockpit of the RML Lola Mazda. His first two sectors
were to be his fastest yet, but the third wasn’t,
although another 1:37.9 was a reassuringly fair time. His
earlier 37.8 would prove to be his best for the session,
as Mike rounded off the final ten minutes.
A
final flurry of action saw
Jonny Kane move quickest in LMP2 with a new best of 1:37.032
for Speedy Racing Team Sebah Lola, demoting the #29 Racing
Box to second and Tommy’s earlier time to third. The
gentlemen back at Huntingdon would be pleased if this turned
out to be representative, with Lolas in the first three
slots.
LMP2
Times - Session 2
Pos |
No. |
Overall |
Team |
Driver |
Car |
Time |
1 |
33 |
12 |
Speedy
Sebah |
Belicchi/Pompidou/Zacchia |
Lola
B08/80 Coupé |
1:37.032 |
2 |
29 |
13 |
Racing
Box |
Ceccato/Francioni/Piccini |
Lola
B08/86 Coupé |
1:37.691 |
3 |
25 |
14 |
RML
AD Group |
Erdos/Newton |
Lola
B08/86 Coupé |
1:37.837 |
4 |
40 |
15 |
Quifel
ASM |
Amaral/Pla |
Ginetta
Zytek GZ09S |
1:37.885 |
5 |
30 |
16 |
Racing
Box |
Ceccato/Francioni/Piccini |
Lola
B08/86 Coupé |
1:39.423 |
6 |
41 |
17 |
GAC
Racing Team |
Ojeh/Gosselin/Peter |
Ginetta
Zytek GZ07S |
1:39.425 |
6 |
39 |
18 |
Kruse
Schiller |
Marsh/Noda
/Sini |
Lola
B05/40 |
1:40.306 |
9 |
26 |
19 |
Bruichladdich |
Bruneau/Moseley/Greensall |
Radical
SR9 AER |
1:41.132 |
10 |
35 |
20 |
Oak
Racing |
Ajlani/Lahaye |
Pescarolo
Mazda |
1:41.251 |
8 |
37 |
21 |
WR
Salini |
Salini/Salini/Gommendy |
WR
Zytek |
1:42.376 |
11 |
24 |
22 |
Oak
Racing |
Nicolet/Hein |
Pescarolo
Mazda |
1:42.984 |
12 |
38 |
24 |
Pegasus |
Schell/Thirion |
Courage
AER |
1:44.694 |
13 |
42 |
25 |
Ranieri
Randaccio |
Randaccio/Giammaria |
Lucchini
McLaren |
1:44.986 |
14 |
28 |
28 |
Ibanez
Racing |
Ibanez/da
Rocha/Cavailhes |
Courage
AER |
1:47.799 |
13 |
43 |
39 |
Q8
Oils Hache |
Moncado/Cortez/Armetta |
Lucchini
Judd |
1:50.821 |
Qualifying
The
pitlane opened for the twenty-minute prototype qualifying
session at just gone half-three, but Tommy stayed put in
the garage for several minutes more, waiting for the queue
to clear. While he sat patiently staring through the windscreen
towards the pitlane, Olivier Pla was setting his first flyer
in the ASM Zytek, and with a 1:36.844 he was making sure
of his mark. It was the fastest anyone in LMP2 had managed
all weekend, and it established an early benchmark for the
class.
Another
Olivier - in this case Panis - was doing much the same in
LMP1, although his gantlet of 1:34.832 immediately looked
more attainable. That assumption was swiftly confirmed by
the late-starting Danny Watts in the Strakka Racing Ginetta
Zytek #23. Like Erdos, he'd waited for the congestion to
clear before heading for the track, and timed his arrival
perfectly with an empty sector. His first flyer raised more
than a few eyebrows, when the newcomers to the championship
suddenly displayed a pace nobody else had anticipated. His
time of 1:32.492 was almost three seconds quicker than the
Ginetta-Zytek had recorded to date, and laid a claim to
overall pole that would never be bettered.

Erdos,
however, had yet to leave the garage. Jonny Kane in the
#33 Speedy Sebah Lola moved through onto Pla's tail to take
provisional second in LMP2, and Danny Watts headed back
into the pitlane, job done, before the RML Lola took on
warm tyres and accelerated out into the sunshine.
It
was only 15:36 and a lot had already happened in just a
few minutes. Tommy had just completed his out lap, and was
into his first flyer when the Bruichladdich Radical ploughed
off into the gravel at Turn 3. A red flag looked likely,
but Erdos pressed on until the situation became clear. The
lights duly came on around the circuit, and Tommy aborted
his next run having only posted a preliminary time of 1:38.744.
The tyres were still fresh, so no point in returning to
the garage, and the Brazilian burbled straight through to
join the queue at the exit, waiting for the green light
(below).
The
break lasted just a couple of minutes, and a steam of cars
was soon heading back out on track, with Tommy near the
front. His first real flyer was a 1:34.350, and slotted
the RML Lola into 3rd in LMP2. In the garage there was intense
concentration on the diverse array of screens - some displaying
live TV coverage, others giving the latest times and positions,
but many more relaying telemetry back from the car. “This
is the one!” came the words of encouragement from
one corner, hissed through gritted teeth. "He’s
a second up in the first sector!"
Others,
watching the live feed from the track, could see that Tommy
had come up rapidly behind Jean-Christophe Bouillion in
the #16 Pescarolo. Having just set a good time of his own
the Frenchman had apparently descended into a comfortable
dream world all of his own making, and was meandering along
gently, totally oblivious of anything else happening around
him - and that's being charitable. Just as the RML Lola
must have started looming very large in his rear-view mirrors,
Bouillion started weaving aimlessly, wandering across from
one side of the track to the other. Erdos had to brake,
and then follow the carbon and green Pescarolo through several
more corners before he could finally get by. He was livid.
With
what had looked like his best lap spoiled, Tommy had to
press on in the knowledge that Matteo Bobbi had just crossed
the line to slot the #30 Racing Box Lola into third. The
thought in the garage was that the tyres might give him
one more chance, and sure enough, his first two sectors
on the next lap were "greens", signifying that
he was on for an improvement. He crossed the line to set
a new best of 1:37.032, but it was a tantalising 7/100ths
of a second shy of taking the place.
The
screens warned of just a minute remaining when Giacomo Piccini
in the #29 popped in a 1:36.156 to snatch LMP2 pole. Tommy
crossed the line to start his final lap just before the
chequered flag fell. It was a last-gasp effort, but he gave
it a brave try. Once again he was quicker by half a second
through the opening sector and looking good perhaps for
third, but he couldn't maintain the charge. Baulked again
he was forced to abort the run, and he clocked 1:37.500
to stay 5th.

“Not
terrible,” shrugs Mike, “and much better than
last year (when engine management problems resulted in a
lowly start from tenth) but we’re within a second
of pole, which is encouraging."
Tommy
was still fuming when he emerged from the car, berating
Bouillion for having delayed him. "The guy clearly
drove with no concern for anyone else on the track. I was
on a qualifying lap, a good lap, about to make a definite
improvement, and he just started weaving around in front
of me!" Mike Newton, who'd been watching the incident
on the TV screens, was sympathetic to Tommy's dismay. "He
was clearly weaving around from side to side when he knew
that others would be on their hot laps, totally without
consideration for anyone else," said Mike. "It
may only have cost us a place, and perhaps not even that,
but that’s no excuse for bad driving."
Setting
aside his disappointment, Tommy was able to be positive
about the way things were shaping up. "The balance
feels good and the set-up has worked well. There’s
a touch of very slight understeer, but that’s down
to the track itself, and there’s not a lot we can
do about that. I feel we’ve now got a good car for
long distance racing, the engine feels strong, and we’re
in good shape."
"It’s
good to be up on expectations, compared to last year’s
performance," said Phil Barker. "With the changes
in regulations we hadn’t expected to be able to match
last year’s lap times, but we’re actually very
close."In fact, the Lola Mazda's 1:37.032 was nearly
a second and a half quicker than the EX265 had managed in
2008.
LMP2
Times - Qualifying
Pos |
No. |
Overall |
Team |
Driver |
Car |
Time |
1 |
29 |
12 |
Racing
Box |
Ceccato/Francioni/Piccini |
Lola
B08/86 Coupé |
1:36.176 |
2 |
40 |
13 |
Quifel
ASM |
Amaral/Pla |
Ginetta
Zytek GZ09S |
1:36.172 |
3 |
33 |
14 |
Speedy
Sebah |
Belicchi/Pompidou/Zacchia |
Lola
B08/80 Coupé |
1:36.328 |
4 |
30 |
15 |
Racing
Box |
Ceccato/Francioni/Piccini |
Lola
B08/86 Coupé |
1:37.026 |
5 |
25 |
16 |
RML
AD Group |
Erdos/Newton |
Lola
B08/86 Coupé |
1:37.032 |
6 |
41 |
17 |
GAC
Racing Team |
Ojeh/Gosselin/Peter |
Ginetta
Zytek GZ07S |
1:38.018 |
7 |
39 |
18 |
Kruse
Schiller |
Marsh/Noda
/Sini |
Lola
B05/40 |
1:39.130 |
8 |
37 |
19 |
WR
Salini |
Salini/Salini/Gommendy |
WR
Zytek |
1:39.184 |
9 |
35 |
20 |
Oak
Racing |
Ajlani/Lahaye |
Pescarolo
Mazda |
1:39.876 |
10 |
26 |
21 |
Bruichladdich |
Bruneau/Moseley/Greensall |
Radical
SR9 AER |
1:40.452 |
11 |
38 |
22 |
Pegasus |
Schell/Thirion |
Courage
AER |
1:43.426 |
12 |
42 |
24 |
Ranieri
Randaccio |
Randaccio/Giammaria |
Lucchini
McLaren |
1:45.150 |
13 |
43 |
28 |
Q8
Oils Hache |
Moncado/Cortez/Armetta |
Lucchini
Judd |
1:47.288 |
14 |
28 |
32 |
Ibanez
Racing |
Ibanez/da
Rocha/Cavailhes |
Courage
AER |
1:48.836 |
15 |
24 |
43 |
Oak
Racing |
Nicolet/Hein |
Pescarolo
Mazda |
no
time |
There
are high resolution images posted in the
Barcelona Gallery.
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