Neel Jani, Andre Lotterer and Nick Tandy were the moral victors, but had to hand the lead over to their team-mates. Again.
Porsche was kept honest by Toyota in Austin. But not quite honest enough to prevent the German manufacturer being able to invoke team orders once again to reverse the positions of its two 919 Hybrids during the closing moments of last weekend’s US round of the World Endurance Championship.
That meant Timo Bernhard, Brendon Hartley and Earl Bamber swept through to take a fourth consecutive WEC victory as they continued their seemingly inexorable advance to the drivers’ title. This time, though, they were definitely in the shadow of team-mates Neel Jani, Andre Lotterer and Nick Tandy. There was no doubt who the moral winners were at the Circuit of the Americas.
Porsche realigned the cars’ order out on the track this time, not in the pits as at the Nurburgring in July. The #1 Porsche actually had to move over twice for the sister car. First, Tandy yielded to Bamber after he emerged from the pits following the penultimate round of stops with the #2 car right on his tail.
A shorter stop when the two Porsches came in for a final long splash put Tandy back ahead. While the threat from the best of the Toyotas was still real – although very much fading – he pushed on into a 10-second lead before backing off and moving aside for his team-mate with eight minutes to go.
It was pretty much plain sailing for the drivers of the #1 car before those fateful calls came from the pitwall. The biggest dramas came when Lotterer got involved in a dramatic scrap with Jose Maria Lopez in the #7 Toyota TS050 HYBRID during the second hour as he battled his way past on fresher rubber, and then again when he was tagged by Kamui Kobayashi, who was a lap down in the same car, later in the race.
“Congratulations to the #1 car – they drove a great race and would have deserved victory,” said Bamber. “And Toyota kept us on our toes too.”
Bu hikaye Autosport dergisinin September 21,2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Autosport dergisinin September 21,2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
The Shock Of The New
If the spectacle of Lewis Hamilton carving his way to the world title seems familiar, much is changing off-track in the new Liberty era.
Vettel Proves Ferrari Is Back
FORMULA 1'S NEW ERA IS ALL ABOUT BIGGER CARS, WIDER TYRES, MORE downforce, and greater performance than ever before. But this category remains one defined by small margins, and ultimately it was minor details that meant Ferrari rather than Mercedes went home victorious from the first grand prix of 2017.
Nigel Roebuck
A genuine threat to mercedes.
Dan Gurney 1931-2018
Dan Gurney 1931-2018
How Kubica's F1 Racing Dream Was Put On Hold
How Kubica’s F1 Racing Dream Was Put On Hold
Halo It's Here
Like it or loathe it, the halo safety structure is a fixture for Formula 1 in 2018. Here’s how it’s set to affect the cars.
Rosenqvist's 10-Step Guide To Beating Buemi
The Swede turned the tables on Formula E’s top dog, beating the reigning champion and taking the lead in the title chase.
Ferrari's Finest
A selection of the Italian marque's racing machinery provided a compelling centrepiece to Autosport International 2018.
Richards' Latest Task
The Prodrive boss andnewMSA chairman assessed the challenges and opportunities facing British motorsport in 2018.
Newey F1's Aero Artist On Its New Aero Era
The Red Bull design guru can see some interesting elements in the new rulebook.