Audi Advances
Audi was running at Sebring this week. According to the best minds that analyze such things (Mulsanne Mike, for instance), the 2012 R18 really quite a different car than last year’s R18. Hopefully, the changes will improve the outward vision. A pal of a friend of the Bear drove the R18 a couple of months ago, and reported an “absolute blind spot out of the right hand side.” “It explains the McNish crash at Le Mans,” he said.
In other news from the Bear’s Chief European Correspondent, Romain Dumas is headed back to Porsche soon, there’s a big tug of war over Timo Bernhard, and Oliver Pla was quick at a secret Peugeot test.
Insiders in Europe believe ALMS will have Audi, Mercedes, and perhaps others not fully homologated by the ACO in some form of local GT class – but it’s unclear when that gets done.
The ALMS Field
The American Le Mans Series LMP1 and LMP2 fields, are slowly getting sorted out. In the premier class, it looks like Dyson will field two cars, though we don’t know yet who provides the second. It could be Humaid al Masaood again, or it could be someone else. A third entry seems a stretch, but remains possible. Cytosport is committed, but it now appears likely Mike Lewis’ Autocon partners won’t be able to save the entry and are looking for rides with others. The likely outcome for the class appears to be about what we had last season: two Dyson and one Muscle Milk prototypes.
LMP2 will be a bit stronger (that’s an ursine joke) than it was in 2011. Level 5 is reported to be a two-car entrant. Readers don’t have to be reminded that was last season’s expectation, too. Murphy’s is thus restrained in his excitement for Level 5 in 2012. Rumor has Newman Haas in the field, but if anyone’s seen any firm evidence, give a “holler.” The firmest entries appear to be Conquest and Black Swan. The Bear expects to see at least two LMP2 entries at every event, and as many as five at a few.
LMPC has six confirmed entries. None of those include Intersport, whose drivers and team employees seem to have fled to new team BAR 1 Motorsports, which the Bear believes is a probable entry. For those concerned with this and other LMPC teams obtaining funding, Murphy reminds you that in this class the drivers are the funding. With one more possible, the prototype Challenge class will be s-8 in 2012.
GT will struggle to reach 10 entries this season. The Lizards will return to try to recapture the hardware they believe they deserve – with some justification – every year. Extreme Speed is likely, but has one foot in Grand Am, and that might extend past Daytona. Falken is back and expecting to improve on its 2011 – which will make it a contender for some of that end-of-season bling. BMW wants a splash for its M3 ahead of its motorsports reorganization that will put that venerable racecar into DTM and hand the keys to GT/sports car racing to the Z4. Corvette has had a disappointing start to its GT(2) program, but is always in the mix (if not mixing it up). Driver changes are in the offing, primarily driven by a desire to provide more stable factory driver support to privateer Corvette teams in Grand Am and around the world. As the Bear tweeted, Antonio will take a full-time seat. Expect Olivier Beretta to be full time with Jack Laconte’s Larbre Racing. Other Corvette Racing drivers will moonlight at Grand Am’s “major” events (Daytona, the Glen, Indy), but will not routinely partner in Grand Am DP and GT entries as they did last year. Grand Am teams are demanding “dedicated” drivers, and to the extent it can, the KGeneral is obliging. The Bear believes the other three Corvette “regulars” – Gavin, Magnussen, and Milner – are set, though there’s been a bit of rumble around a Magnussen move.
The winter’s most popular parlor game has been “Where’s Risi?” in which players try to come up with the most convoluted 2012 racing solutions for America’s premier Ferrari team. A kind of “Where’s Waldo?” for Ferrari fans. 2011 wasn’t a good season for the Houston team, and they’ve responded with some big changes, including substantial personnel turnover. Included in that is driver Jaime Melo, who won’t be back. The early season is pretty well fixed. Risi will field two new 458’s at the Rolex 24 Hours at Daytona in January, replacing one previously entered under the Ferrari of Ft. Lauderdale name (you didn’t fall for that little ruse, did you?), then one at Sebring in March. It’s not so certain after that, but some Waldo players are putting their chips on Grand Am. In the end, the only player who counts is Guiseppe, and he hasn’t shown his hand – yet. There was momentary excitement, a kind of ripple in the force, when Canadian Scott Maxwell a journeyman driver at best, tweeted that he’d landed a drive with Aston Martin. ALMS was the assumption, the hope being it portended another GT entry; Grand Am’s Continental series with Multimatic’s Aston Martin Vantage is the reality.
Grand Am
Grand Am unveiled the Corvette-bodied Daytona Prototype, the first of its new “DP3’s”. Its initial pace at Daytona wasn’t very impressive, lagging behind the DP2’s. Was it just new car teething? Sandbagging? At the time the Bear dismissed its importance, but then heard differently. The Corvette is seriously slow, unable to crack 190 anywhere on the DIS layout. There might be some other “good news,” though, in that a rumored an insurer is weighing in with a desire for slower top ends. That will give the series “cover” to slow everyone else down without it looking like a blatant move to put the Corvette in the game. Murphy guesses that no “balancing” will be quite enough, however, so he’s putting his money on Ganassi Racing to dominate in 2012, just as it did in 2011, 2010…
Scheduling Struggles
While Grand Am announced a 2012 schedule with not much fuss (though it did add its Lime Rock date later), the American Le Mans Series has struggled to pin its calendar down. Not all of that has been the fault of the Braselburgers, the comedies at Baltimore and Texas being the principal culprits, with the ACO’s June big black hole blowing out any chance to get Detroit. It does demonstrate the lack of options the series has been left with, however.
Bernie and Red finally settled their differences, confirming Austin for November, but not before a self-imposed construction delay. The result of that is the ALMS date remains unannounced, its early October date in limbo – for now, at least – pending some assurance the track will actually be complete enough to host a “trial” date ahead of the F1 circus. Meanwhile, as if the current Baltimore (9/1) to PLM (10/20) gap isn’t enough, the Keystone Kops routine in Charm City has left that event with empty coffers and a $12 million debt. It has just two weeks to remedy that situation. Someone is going to have to come up with some serious cash or it’s buh-by to Baltimore. Necessarily, another Braseburg Two-Step – or perhaps a Cotton Eyed Joe – is underway, the dance partner this time being Virginia International Raceway, Murphy tweeting on December 7 that talks were underway, and AutoWeek chiming at about the same time. No announcement has been forthcoming, though, so as it stands now, the ALMS calendar could well have two gaps, eight weeks from May 12 to July 7, and nine weeks from August 18 (Road America), to October 20 (Road Atlanta).
There are real concerns about Bahrain’s appearance on both the F1 and WEC calendars. Regardless of the insistence by the FIA, ACO, and Bernie that everything is just hunky-dory, a bomb outside the British Embassy and rioting on the Pearl Roundabout doesn’t exactly contribute to any confidence amongst observers that either event will – or should – take place. More than 35 people have died in clashes and protest-related violence since February. Bahrain’s protests are the largest and most sustained to have hit the Arab monarchies and sheikdoms that line the Persian Gulf. There hasn’t been much progress on reforms promised after the February-March protests, contributing continued protests and clashes with security forces as recently as Thursday this week. Murphy is among many who think that both Bahrain race dates are questionable at best. The status of its putative replacement makes the dropping of Petit Le Mans as a round of the World Endurance Championship a real head scratcher, doesn’t it? There’s good new in this for the civilized world (lately that doesn’t seem to include much ground between the Mediterranean Sea and Delhi). If Bahrain’s WEC round is cancelled, where does that series go? If the FIA and ACO get their act together before March’s Sebring opener, perhaps Petit Le Mans is back. Otherwise, probably just a hole in the schedule between Japan and China.
The Andy Lally Challenge
At Murphy’s last report, the American Le Mans Series field had already closed out its 2011 with a total of $1,795,000 paid to all competitors.
When we last left Andy Lally, he had six races remaining on the Sprint Cup schedule, and he unfortunately struggled to the finish. For Sprint Cup’s Rookie of the Year, leading a lap at Talladega might have been a highlight, but his race ended in an accident after 162 laps in 39th place, with a purse of $81,300. In the previous race, at Charlotte, a brake problem ended his race after just 20 laps, but the 42nd spot still paid $64,825. At Martinsville, Hermie Sadler filled in, as he had earlier in the season, but then Andy bounced back for a finish in 29th and a $101,475 purse at Texas Motor Speedway. That was it for the season; Andy failed to qualify at Phoenix, and Mike Bliss drove at Homestead in the season’s final race. The $246,800 earned in three races in which Andy drove brought his season total winnings to $2,865,656. That final total almost doubled the earnings of the entire American Le Mans Series field for 2011, and brings the Bear’s Andy Lally Challenge to a close.
Kevin Buckler’s No. 71 entry gave up the 35th spot in owner’s points at Talladega to Bob Jenkins and was unable to gain it back. Buckler’s driver, whether Andy or someone else, will start next season having to qualify to make the grid.
The Bear wishes you all a Happy Christmas and a Wonderful 2012.
Murphy H. Bear
Tags: Andy Lally, Audi, Austin, Bahrain, Baltimore, Bernie Ecclestone, Conquest, Corvette, Ferrari, Ganassi, Guissepe Risi, Intersport, Jaime Melo, Jan Magnussen, Kevin Buckler, Larbre Racing, Oliver Gavin, Olivier Beretta, Red McCombs, Risi Competizione, Scott Maxwell, Tommy Milner, Virginia International Raceway

With the latest new out of Bahrain, I am now completely convinced that the FIA was never fully confident about that event from the beginning, and scheduled it in conflict with PLM solely so they could make a quick event switch to save face when it goes south.
And yes, I’m willing to bet money that it was an FIA call rather than an ACO call on account of the FIA having a huge boner for Middle Eastern money these days.
Actually, Murph, I WOULD consider the addition of VIR to the ALMS schedule to be news. We’ve had rumros like this pointing strongly at certain venues before, only to have them suddenly collapse. The fact that this one actually came together makes this BIG news.
And as a fan of VIR, I approve of this news.
This was beyond rumor, however. There is a difference. We knew they would close a deal with VIR…or that there was at least a 95% chance they would.
With Baltimore on life support (or worse), VIR is the only thing connecting August to the middle of October, a gap perilously similar to the “summer Le Mans malaise.”
So I registered to ask, which team (assuming they’ve announced their plans) was clay organizing with?
You assume wrong. There’s been no announcement. Did/do you expect one?
I guess I had the impression that their program was intending to announce their plans for 2012 by the end of the year. Interested to see if there’s a new DP or ALMS prototype team.
Clem:
All I can tell you is, the first car is due in our shop this week. The engine has been worked out and I expect an announcement to be forthcoming from our partner in the next 2 weeks. It is amazing they have been able to keep this so quiet, but they have. Non disclouser agreements seem to work.
Awesome, always happy to hear about new teams. If the series you enter is televised I’ll be sure to root you on.
I plan on putting the announcement on Murphy’s site as well just because there are a lot of good people here and I respect the old “Bear”.
The Bear is waiting eagerly.
me too……..looking for some new cheese (This is a book reference……)
@clem kevin:
“If the series you enter is televised I’ll be sure to root you on.”
So basically, as long as it’s ALMS or Grand-Am and not WEC? (PLEASE tell me you’re just just shooting for hyperbole if you were taking a stab at the ALMS with that – I’m quite frankly sick of people acting like the ALMS isn’t on TV)
I lost touch with ALMS when the prototype fields disappeared(Acura and Penske,) but I still keep in touch with this blog for updates. I enjoy the GT racing in Grand Am not only because it’s entertaining, but I have a close friend racing in it as well and like to root him on in both series. Unless ALMS were to revitalize its prototype field, I have other series I would rather spend my time with (MotoGP, Moto2, Moto3, WSBK, F1, GP2, Grand-Am) which is hard enough when you’re a full time student and a wage slave already.
@clem kevin:
“I enjoy the GT racing in Grand Am not only because it’s entertaining”
So saying that the GT field with ALMS is unable to satisfy? I mean last year it was the most diverse and competitive GT field outside of the FIA GT1 racing some say ALMS was better.
So saying that you are only faithful to ALMS when the prototypes are playing? Well it seems that the LMP2 field is going to be in the range of 6 or more. LMP1 if you watched last year was better than the days of Audi when they won all the time. Granted that when Penske and Acura were there we did have more quality fields over all and great battles in every class Lmp2 included with the usual the leader in LMP2 was fighting for the lead was great. I say better this last season in LMP1 because there was 4 different winners (6 if you count the ILMC rounds) and three cars that fought for the win most of the season.
This season should be a better quality field this year than in the past few years in my opinion for ALMS. I hope the coverage will be better for those that are unable to stream the coverage (aka I am able to do it) and don’t have ESPN2 for second day coverage that I personally try and catch both of them.
Personally not much of a GA fan since the DP has come about but I will watch the GA 24 hour this weekend. Which I hope will be better to watch than the DP 24 hours of the past and should have the best GT field since the Corvettes and the Vipers raced there. I mean I might actually care who leads/wins GT now that there are some high profile drivers on multipule teams in the GT class with a class that has more “real sports cars” racing for the win not just some Mazda’s and a bunch of 911’s.
Also the VIR ALMS event I think should break the attendance record for the track it is a great venue and happy to say it will be 1 of 3 ALMS race venues that I will be attending for the year. Speaking of which does the “Bear” meet at the track? I annually attend Sebring and Petit let me know.
Murphy’s a great resource/meeting point. But just a brief shout out to Mariantic, who had to take his great site down because of copyright complaints about another one of his sites.