Quotes after the race at Barcelona
Dr Wolfgang Ullrich (Head of Audi Motorsport): "Second place in the first race of a new racing series is basically not a bad way to start. Unfortunately, this weekend we were lacking the speed as well as the required reliability. It was evident today that even in a 1000-kilometre race you can’t afford to make any mistakes. We’ll continue working on this. Particularly positive for me is the result achieved by our youngsters Mike Rockenfeller and Alexandre Prémat, who did everything right today and stayed in control in heavy traffic. That Dindo Capello and Allan McNish lost their chance for victory due to a technical problem is really unfortunate.”
Dindo Capello (Audi R10 TDI #1): "A small technical problem caused a delay and cost us the race and I’m certain, having been with Audi Sport for 14 years that they will react to these issues we’ve suffered here at Barcelona and in Sebring this year. Audi is famous for speed and reliability and I know that everyone back in Germany tomorrow will be working very hard and striving to achieve these goals once more. I’m certain that at Monza we will be fighting again for victory.”
Allan McNish (Audi R10 TDI #1): "To have any chance of a victory we had to attack immediately. I was able to snatch second place at the start and at the full course yellow, the team did a stunning job to leapfrog me ahead of the leading Peugeot. I was able to control the race and pull out a little gap to the Peugeot but unfortunately we got a puncture on the left rear which was immediately detected by our tyre pressure monitoring system. About 10 laps afterwards, the alternator belt broke costing us six laps in the pits which effectively put us out of contention. However we fought hard for the remaining four hours and came back to fifth position. We are currently not quite fast enough right now and we also have a couple of reliability issues. We all must work hard before the next race.”
The result at Barcelona
1 Gené/Minassian (Peugeot) 215 laps in 5h 59m 30.812s
2 Prémat/Rockenfeller (Audi R10 TDI) - 1 laps
3 Mücke/Charouz (Lola-Aston Martin) - 3 laps
4 Boullion/Collard (Pescarolo-Judd) - 5 laps
5 Capello/McNish (Audi R10 TDI) - 6 laps
6 van Merksteijn/Verstappen (Porsche) - 7 laps
7 Primat/Tinseau (Pescarolo-Judd) - 7 laps
8 Pompidou/Belicchi/Zacchia (Lola-Judd) - 8 laps
9 Elgaard/Nielsen (Porsche) - 11 laps
10 Barbosa/Ickx/Short (Pescarolo-Judd) - 11 laps |
In springtime weather, spectators lining the Circuit de Catalunya on the outskirts of Barcelona witnessed thrilling duels between the world’s fastest sports cars, particularly in the early stages of the race. Allan McNish in his Audi R10 TDI, after accelerating and overtaking one of the two Peugeot 908 prototypes, which had started from the front row, took the lead after one hour. The Scot defended his lead almost up until the end of the second hour when a puncture of the left rear tyre and a broken alternator belt forced him to make two unscheduled pit stops in short succession. McNish and his team-mate Dindo Capello lost a total of six laps and dropped to 18th position. In the remaining four hours, they fought back and made up ground again to fifth place in the field of 47 cars, capturing four valuable points in the drivers’ Championship.
The Audi R10 TDI driven by Alexandre Prémat and Mike Rockenfeller covered the entire distance without any technical problems whatsoever. The two youngsters had started the race from sixth position on the grid and continuously moved forwards without taking any unnecessary risks in the heavy traffic. Thanks to consistent lap times and good pit stops performed by Audi Sport Team Joest they were even leading the field during part of the race. At the finish, they just had to admit defeat to the Peugeot 908 driven by Marc Gené and Nicolas Minassian.
The next race of the Le Mans Series is scheduled to take place only three weeks from now on 27 April, at Monza (Italy).
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