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A chink in the armour

March 19th, 2008 | Rob Widdows | 5 Comments

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The men from Ingolstadt were in sombre mood at the end of the 2008 Sebring 12 Hours. For the first time this century they failed to win. Worse still, it was the men from Stuttgart who were first to reach the chequered flag. It could have been worse, it could have been the men from France.

Yes, there were chinks in the Audi armour at Sebring. But it could have been worse, it could have been Le Mans.

There is much to be done before June. And it will be done. Words were not minced in the debrief on Saturday night, nor in those that followed on Sunday. On Monday morning they were back at the circuit, gearing up for a 12-hour test. There will be no rest.

“There were technical problems, ones we had never had before,” said Dr Wolfgang Ullrich, “and there were some driver errors. We had to change the front discs on one car – that’s never happened before. We had to change a turbo on the other car, and there were issues with the front suspension. All these problems came our way this weekend and there is already a full investigation into why this happened.”

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When a car has a major problem at Sebring, it passes through the pits and “goes behind the wall” as they say down Florida way. When Marco Werner’s Audi went behind the wall, and into its paddock garage, I went to watch the mechanics go to work on changing the turbo on the engine’s right bank. After a few minutes I was aware of a person standing very close behind me. Looking over my shoulder, I came face to face with a man dressed in Peugeot fireproof overalls. This man proceeded to take a video camera from his pocket and record the surgery to the back of the R10, pausing only to jot some notes onto a small pad. The atmosphere was somewhat tense but he remained expressionless as he filmed over my shoulder. As soon as the work was done, and a swarm of mechanics began to re-fit the bodywork, the Frenchman sidled away. Espionage is alive and well. “It happens,” an engineer told me afterwards. “It is very open house in the paddock here and you can waste a lot of time and effort in trying to stop this kind of thing.” There were a lot of people working on that car, all highly focused on not losing too many laps. Maybe one extra person, looking at the onlookers, might just be a worthwhile idea.

Both Audi and Peugeot went to Sebring to try and break the cars ahead of Le Mans. And both teams succeeded. “If something is going to fail, it will fail at Sebring,” said Dr Ullrich. “It is the toughest race we do. So, we go away, we learn, and we get it right.”

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And then, of course, there is Peugeot to worry about. The new car was very quick all week in Florida, not reliable, but very fast. The duel of the diesels – Audi TDI versus Peugeot HDI – is well and truly on. We are on the cusp of a classic battle in sports car racing. If both teams have reliability at La Sarthe in June, the race will be sensational.

On Friday, in the heat of the Sunshine State, the Peugeot was fastest in qualifying but was not awarded pole. What? How so? Well, the session was red-flagged after a huge shunt that damaged the concrete barriers that surround much of this airfield circuit. Nothing unusual so far. But then IMSA decided not to re-start, and instead of giving pole to the quickest car so far (Peugeot) they averaged out all the times from Thursday and Friday and it was the Audi of Allan McNish that came out on top. Had the qualifying run its course, the story may have been different, but probably not.

“There’s no question the Peugeot has outright speed over one lap,” said McNish, “and really they should have had pole. But we are confident of our race pace and our strategy. The battle is on, though, you’d better believe it, and we have work still to do.” He was right about the race pace. Despite losing time in the pits, McNish, Rinaldo Capello and Tom Kristensen climbed back through the field in the evening and into the night, taking second place behind the Penske Porsche, which ran like clockwork. The Peugeot led from the start but was soon in the garage, finishing this gruelling test of endurance many laps down on the leaders.

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Sebring is a four-day party for the 100,000 fans who travel from all over the USA to make this event a most extraordinary happening. Camped out in tents and motorhomes, they make the Sebring infield their own for the best part of a week. It is surely the rowdiest and most bizarre motor racing party on the planet, smoke from the hundreds of barbecues drifting across the circuit, a cacophony of rock and country music sometimes drowning out the cars, and a lot of whooping and hollering from the rooftops of trucks, campers and enormous jeeps. This is down-home America. Forget Boston or Manhattan, this is party time down South. Creedence Clearwater Revival blasts out into the night, very scantily clad girls get them well revved up for the annual bikini contest, and there is beer, a very great deal of beer. “Helps ugly people have sex,” one fan told me. “There’s 24 cans in a pack, one for each hour of the day, man.” And in among this mayhem is a motor race. Down in the ‘zoo’ – otherwise known as Turn 10 – there is some serious frolicking, not all of it fully clothed. They have fun, these people, and they love their racing, especially the throaty roar of the Corvettes. They’re not so sure about the whooshing, whispering diesels and Peugeot fans seemed to be thin on the ground. “We hate the French, you know,” one group of ZZ Top lookalikes told me. Right, I see, I said.

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Team Audi does not hate the French. But they do respect them right now. We are in for a very exciting Le Mans. The R10 will take a lot of beating – it is a supremely good racing car – but Peugeot is coming.

Sebring 2008, the 56th running of this classic contest, resulted in Hans Stuck, Derek Bell and Roger Penske being inducted into the Hall of Fame. Everybody was very happy about that. And Roger Penske was the happiest of them all on Saturday night.

5 comments to “A chink in the armour”

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  1. I thoroughly enjoyed this year’s Sebring 12 Hours. I’m one of the folks who DOES like the diesels, even though they don’t sound as lovely as a Ferrari 3.0 litre V12 from “back in the day”. It would have been fantastic if the Peugeot had been able to remain a bit more reliable and battled the Audis some more, but they look great.

    I can’t wait for the 24 Hours of Le Mans! Looking forward to more great writeups on the site here, and the usual fantastic articles in the best automotive magazine, Motor Sport.

    Oh, and we don’t ALL hate the French here in the U.S. …

    Cheers,
    Rich Ambroson

  2. Dear Rich

    I hope I did not give the impression that Americans hate the French. It simply struck me as a funny comment to make!
    It was a terrific event and so much more fun and exciting than Le Mans. I’d love to go back.
    I miss the V12 Ferrari too, though you can hear it at the Goodwood Revival! There is something wonderful and mysterious about the sound of the diesels however.
    Anyway, thanks for your response.
    RW

  3. No worries, Rob, I totally got the humor of the comment. I have some great friends that aren’t necessarily fond of the French, as well as my best friend actually being French, so I know both sides. I could picture the cats you were talking to, the ZZ-Top beard description was classic!

    Really enjoy your work both online here and in the actual (Long Live Print!) magazine.

    Cheers,
    Rich

  4. Isn’t this the first time Audi have been pushed? That’s when things start breaking. I hope it’s sign that the competition is increasing and Le Mans will be a very good race, even if it is a bit quiet. Maybe Audi and Peugeot will push each other so hard that they all break and the Aston Lola wins, dreaming probably but it’s a nice idea. A better idea would be for Jaguar’s new owners to get hold of the Peugeot race engine and rebadge it, that’s what they do with XJ road cars. A Jaguar Le Mans return, even a diesel Jaguar Le Mans return, would be about as good as it gets.

  5. Dear Martin
    Yes,you’re right, it’s the first time they’ve been pushed,and it showed. Derek Bell said to me, “If it doesn’t break at Sebring, it’s not going to break,” which is another way of saying, “If it’s going to fail, it will fail at Sebring.” It is such a demanding track and, starngely, the Audis had never had brake or suspension problems in the past.
    You’re right, Le Mans has the makings of a great battle, if Peugeot can find reliability as well as speed.The car is very quick but it’s still fragile.
    I can’t get excited about Aston or Jaguar, sadly. I think Jaguar is a classic case of a lost opportunity - it’s such a great brand but it’s been diluted over the years by unimaginative management. Aston could still excite me if David Richards gets his way and turns it back into a real racing car again. I somehow feel that Audi and Peugeot have it right, they recognise the “green” pressures on the sport and they are constantly looking forward, not back. We may not like whispering turbo-diesels but they are the future.
    My Editor has asked me to be more controversial with my blogs - so let’s forget re-badging and bring on real British racing cars with real 21st century British engines, and all painted up in British Racing Green. We have the heritage, let’s use it, and improve it with new, young engineers………….!
    RW

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Rob Widdows

Rob was brought up on racing, being taken to Goodwood as a small child and devouring his father’s copies of Motor Sport. During a career in newspaper, radio and TV journalism he created the ‘Track Torque’ motorsport show on radio and was Indycar commentator for Eurosport before co-founding the Festival of Speed and Revival events. He was marketing director of the Goodwood Road Racing Company.

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