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Special Edition: Le Mans Preview By Mark Alan Jones, Australia
Atlas F1 Magazine Writer
24 Heures Du Mans - Twice Around The Clock
Le Mans today is noticeably different from the Le Mans of yore. While in the early years there were many variations of the Le Mans circuit, by the 1920s it had settled roughly on its classic shape. Names like Ford, Dunlop, Indianapolis, Maison Blanche, and the biggest name of them all - the Mulsanne. It is a fast cricuit, a brave circuit, and it always has surprises. The ever present barriers reach out to grab you. A momentary error in the sleep-saddled hours of the morning with the dramatic closing speeds betwen the various classes of cars, from the quickest of the Audi prototypes to the slowest of the Porsche GT3s.
The strength of the Audis is obvious, from the depth of engineering, the resources available to Audi Sport North America and Joest Racing, and the strength of their driver line-ups. The two factory cars have car numbers 1 & 2, and despite the tragic loss of Michele Alboreto in testing leading up to the event, they lack for nothing. Car #1 is probably the favourite, with Frank Biela, Emanuele Pirro and Tom Kristensen on board, but Rinaldo Capello has been in hot form and leads Laurent Aiello and Christian Pescatori in the #2 car. Stefan Johansson leads car #4, his own car with Tom Coronel and occasional BAR tester Patrick Lemarie in the very familiar Gulf colours made famous around the world by Steve McQueen's Porsche 917. The #3 Champion Racing car is led by Johnny Herbert, a winner here with Mazda back in 1991, along with Ralf Kelleners and Didier Theys, the team's regular drivers. Any of the four Audis could win the race. One of them should.
Bentley however exude strength on the surface. Martin Brundle leads car #7 with regular Johansson Motorsport driver Guy Smith and Stephane Ortelli, and Andy Wallace leading Eric van de Poele and Butch Leitzinger in #8. Expect the dark green cars, the only cars entered under the LMGTP class to run hard and well, but whether they can last with minimal race testing under their belts is yet to be discovered. Subtle differences in the regulations from LMP900 to LMGTP, like fuelling for example, could bring the Bentleys undone.
Chrysler also step into the big time with ORECA leading the development of a trio of cars. In particular the #16 Playstation car of Olivier Beretta, Karl Wendlinger and Pedro Lamy looks strong, although the #15 car boasts multiple Le Mans winner Yannick Dalmas and Stephane Sarrazin. Chrysler have told ORECA they have two years to claim Le Mans. ORECA's Vipers have dominated the lower classes but the upward step to LMP900 class is steep.
Cadillac return with the strange Northstar program. Reliability is a big question mark for these cars, an odd mix of old and new, being run out of the Formula 3000 based DAMS organisation. Henri Pescarolo has also returned to Le Mans with a pair of Peugeot powered Courages with the #17 car of F3000 hotshot Sebastien Bourdais, former Sauber driver Jean-Christophe Boullion and Laurent Redon looking like a definite top ten threat, while SMG also have a Courage. There's also a pair of Japanese Dome S101s powered by the former Judd Formula One motor, with Jan Lammers leading the Dutch car and John Nielsen leading the Den Bla Avis car, and Klaus Zwart has entered two Ascaris.
In the LMGTS class, it is a clash of the Americans. The tried and tested Chrysler Vipers, against the pace of the Saleens, and the a pair of Chevy Corvettes thrown in for spice. It will be an interesting battle for the class win. The Saleens are being tended by Franz Konrad and Ray Mallock run teams, both class acts of the highest order. The Saleen is a new car however. The Vipers have been there, done that, but development has not been forthcoming recently. Interest is sparked by the presence of Vanina Ickx in one of the Paul Belmondo Vipers. The yellow Corvettes have the runs on the board this year, with an impressive run at Sebring and an outright victory at Daytona in the hands of the Gary Pratt run team. Each of the cars has its own strengths. Can the Corvettes run the Saleens into the ground and gap the Vipers sufficiently to coast home? This will be the most entertaining class in the race to watch.
There is always something interesting with Le Mans though, and as we circle the clock twice this weekend, the stories will unfold, as they always do.
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