Showing posts with label three. Show all posts
Showing posts with label three. Show all posts

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Global Motorsports Group Announces Three Car World Challenge Team for 2010


SANTA ANA, Calif. -- Coming off of its strongest season yet in the World Challenge Championship, Global Motorsports Group is announcing its return to the championship for the 2010 season.

GMG, based in Southern California, will return with a trio of Porsche 911 GT3s to compete in the World Challenge GT class. Leading the team will be team owner and driver James Sofronas of Newport Beach, Calif. Sofronas enjoyed a stellar 2009 season, in which he scored wins at the Long Beach Grand Prix and at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca on his way to finishing a career-best second in the championship.

Joining him will be series veteran Dino Crescentini, of Manhattan Beach, Calif., who is back for his third season in the Stoptech/GMG Porsche 911 GT3. Crescentini scored a win in 2009 at Watkins Glen International Raceway, on his way to finishing the season in ninth place. In the third GMG Porsche will be William Ziegler, the 2009 World Challenge Rookie of the Year. All three cars will be outfitted with GMG’s line of World Challenge parts, StopTech brakes, Sparco safety gear and BBS wheels. GMG also enjoys a close association with Porsche Motorsports North America.

“There is no doubt that World Challenge is one of the most competitive and demanding racing series in North America,” said Fabryce Kutyba, co-owner of Global Motorsports Group. “This allows us to develop and test our World Challenge line of components and complete packages for Porsche cars. GMG’s products are the direct result of our involvement in motorsport, and through this race winning experience we are able to develop the best products in the world to enhance performance and maintain factory reliability.”

“We are very happy and proud to announce that we are returning to World Challenge GT with all three of our 2009 drivers for this season,” said Sofronas. “World Challenge has been the foundation on which we have built our race team and our Porsche product line. GMG World Challenge parts can be found not only on our race cars, but our customer’s street and race cars. We are excited to see what 2010 holds for us.

“On a personal level, I can’t wait to get back into the No.14 GMG Porsche GT3 and fight for a championship. Finishing second last year and getting those two wins was great, but now it is time to go after the top spot at the awards banquet. I can’t wait for the lights to go out in St. Petersburg.”

Sanctioned by SCCA Pro Racing, the 12-race 2010 World Challenge Championship begins March 26-28 with a doubleheader race weekend at the Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. For more information, please visit www.world-challenge.com.


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Saturday, February 20, 2010

Hendrick Motorsports clinches top three starting positions for Daytona 500


DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. -- Hendrick Motorsports made NASCAR history last November by sweeping the top three positions in the battle for the 2009 Sprint Cup championship.

On Sunday, the Hendrick juggernaut will kick off NASCAR's season-opening Daytona 500 in the same dominant fashion, with Jimmie Johnson winning the first of two 150-mile qualifying races Thursday to lock up starting spot No. 3.

Johnson's teammates Mark Martin and Dale Earnhardt Jr. had claimed the front row last Saturday by running the fastest qualifying laps -- upwards of 193 mph -- around the high-banked, 2.5 mile oval.

On Thursday, Johnson prevailed in a furious, side-by-side battle with Kevin Harvick exiting Turn 4 on the final lap of the 60-mile event to roar across the finish line 0.005 of a second in front.

Kasey Kahne edged Tony Stewart in the second race in a last-lap duel that was just as heated and nearly as close, taking the checkered flag with 0.014 of a second to spare.

Both races featured plenty of bumping and jostling at nearly 200 mph down the straightaways. But the first race was a testament to Johnson's skill and his race team's might, given that he was skating around the track on worn tires over the final laps and competing in a backup car after his best Chevrolet was mangled in a pileup during Wednesday's practice.

The 150-mile qualifying races cull the 50-plus entrants for the Daytona 500 to 43 and set the starting order for positions No. 3 on back. They also serve as a preview of what's in store for the Daytona 500 -- a race that can be riveting one year and tedious the next, depending on many variables.

Last year's race ended on more of a whimper than a roar, with rain halting the proceedings 48 laps shy of the finish just after Matt Kenseth had taken the lead. NASCAR officials cut the event short and awarded the trophy to Kenseth, who had crept across the finish line at a 55-mph crawl under the caution flag.

NASCAR is unique among pro sports in starting its season with its marquee event. But last year's anticlimactic 500 was a buzzkill, generating little momentum for the races that followed. And the TV ratings were a disappointing 9.2 -- down 16 percent from 2005, when the 500 drew a 10.9 rating.

With an eye toward reversing the trend, NASCAR officials have given the racecars more horsepower and, in turn, more speed, for this year's race. They also lifted the ban on bump-drafting -- the practice of intentionally ramming a car ahead to create an aerodynamic boost through traffic. And on the eve of Thursday's 150-milers, NASCAR officials announced they'll make three attempts to finish races at top speed (under green-flag conditions) rather than having them end on a caution flag.

That new rule may come into play in Sunday's 500, which is notorious for multi-car wrecks as drivers jockey for position over the final laps. Each restart that follows a caution tends to breed subsequent wrecks as 43 drivers frantically accelerate from 55 to 190 mph as quickly as possible.

Martin, who will start Sunday's race from the pole, has warned that three attempts at a so-called "green-white-checkered finish" could result in "a circus."


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