100th Porsche victory crowns championship
season
Porsche celebrated the 100th win in the American Le Mans Series at
Laguna Seca: With the Porsche 911 GT3 RSR fielded by Flying Lizard
Motorsports, Porsche works drivers Joerg Bergmeister (Germany) and
Patrick Long (USA) won the highly dramatic season final in California
and secured the GT2 class championship. Porsche also claimed the
manufacturers title, and team championship honours went to Flying
Lizard Motorsports.
“That was a great conclusion to a fantastic season. I did everything
for this win,” said Joerg Bergmeister, who is now the second most
successful driver in the American Le Mans Series with four championship
titles. Patrick Long was also delighted with his second title: “We were
the most consistent and our team made the least mistakes. We
experienced a couple of difficult races but remained cool. That was the
key to our success.”
With the Porsche 911 GT3 RSR run by Flying Lizard Motorsports, they
were the outstanding drivers of this season. The pair won five races in
a row and, with this excellent performance, built up a comfortable
points’ advantage over their strong rivals from Ferrari and BMW. With
victory number six they have now secured the title. For Joerg
Bergmeister, this is already his fourth championship title in the
American Le Mans Series after 2005, 2006 and 2008, and the second for
Patrick Long after 2005. Porsche holds nine GT titles in the race
series featuring the world’s fastest sports cars.
In the early stages of the four hour race on the 3.601 kilometre
circuit in the dunes of Monterey, the Porsche works pilots kept out of
any trouble. Tenth place would have been enough to win the title – for
this reason they were unwilling to take any unnecessary risks. When the
leading Ferrari - the only competitor that was a threat to them -
crashed out of the race in the 71st lap, they adjusted their race
tactic to the new situation. Joerg Bergmeister commented: “From that
moment on we went for victory.”
Putting in a spirited drive, they turned this plan into deeds. After
the retirement of the Risi-Ferrari, the Corvette with Jan Magnussen in
the cockpit became their greatest rival. And the final lap turned into
the most dramatic and gripping. In the dusk, Joerg Bergmeister and his
pursuer delivered a thrilling wheel-to-wheel duel. In an attempt to
snatch the lead shortly before the flag, Jan Magnussen drove over the
white line on the finish straight with all four wheels and almost put
the leading Porsche into a spin in the final corner. Joerg Bergmeister
said: “It took everything to stay on the track. I’m sorry that
Magnussen ended up flying off the track.”
At the wheel of Farnbacher Loles Racing’s 911 GT3 RSR, Porsche works
driver Wolf Henzler (Germany) brought home third place with his
compatriot Pierre Ehret after a breathtaking chase through the field.
“That was the toughest race of my career,” he said. “To secure third in
the championship I had to finish third in the race. Two laps before the
flag I finally managed the decisive manouevre. That was a great
conclusion to a season of mixed fortunes.”
There were smiles as well throughout the Cytosport team: Klaus Graf
(Germany) and Greg Pickett (USA) continued the successful comeback of
the Porsche RS Spyder in the American Le Mans Series with second
position in the LMP2 class. “What a race. We made several mistakes but
still managed to cross the finish line in second. That is thanks to the
unbelievable reliability and stability of the RS Spyder,” said Klaus
Graf. “We contested four races and climbed the podium four times –
that’s not bad for a start.”
For Porsche’s head of motorsport, Hartmut Kristen, Joerg Bergmeister
and Patrick Long’s victory “was the fitting end to an extremely
exciting race and rounds off the success in this fiercely-contested
series perfectly. The manufacturers’ title for Porsche, the team
championship for Flying Lizard Motorsports and the drivers’ title for
Joerg and Patrick – it doesn’t get better than that. This season has
again underlined that the world’s best sports cars come from
Stuttgart.” His satisfaction over the success, however, was not without
some frustration. “What really annoyed me was that the second-placed
Corvette made three serious fouls in this race, two of which went
unpunished. The IMSA must do something about this urgently. Fairness
must again stand in the foreground in the future.”
In addition to the three championship titles, Porsche also celebrated
winning the “Michelin Green X Challenge” environmental classification.
The #44 Porsche 911 GT3 RSR of Flying Lizard Motorsports won the
competition, run for the first time this season, for the vehicle with
the best overall efficiency in the ratio of lap times and fuel
consumption. In the “Michelin Green X Challenge” Porsche secured
individual wins in Long Beach, Salt Lake City, Lime Rock, Road Atlanta
and Laguna Seca. At the last two races, the award-winning GT3 RSR
trialed E85 fuel (85 percent bio-ethanol). “To win the environmental
award alongside all titles in the GT2 class makes me very proud,” said
Hartmut Kristen, head of motorsport at Porsche. “It is the right signal
to give the efficiency of a vehicle great importance in motorsport.”
Husband and wife Martin and Melanie Snow (USA) won the title in the
ALMS Challenge with the Porsche 911 GT3 Cup.
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Statistics:
10th of 10 races of the American Le Mans Series in Laguna Seca, CA
Result GT2 class
1. Bergmeister/Long (D/USA),
Porsche 911 GT3 RSR, 155 laps
2. Magnussen/O’Connell
(DK/USA), Chevrolet Corvette C6.R, 155
3. Henzler/Ehret (D/D), Porsche
911 GT3 RSR, 154
4. Farnbacher/James (D/USA),
Panoz Esperante, 154
5. Neiman/van Overbeek
(USA/USA), Porsche 911 GT3 RSR, 153
6. Müller/Milner (D/USA),
BMW E92 M3, 153
Points’ standings GT2 class
Drivers
1. Jörg Bergmeister,
Patrick Long, Porsche, 181 points
2. Jamie Melo, Pierre Kaffer,
Ferrari, 137
3. Wolf Henzler, Porsche, 102
4. Dirk Müller, Tommy
Milner, BMW, 100
5. Dominik Farnbacher, Ian
James, Panoz, 95
6. Jan Magnussen, Johnny
O’Connell, Chevrolet, 86
7. Seth Neiman, Porsche, 76

Manufacturers
1. Porsche 188 points
2. Ferrari 137
3. BMW 118
Teams
1. Flying Lizard Motorsports,
Porsche, 181 points
2. Risi Competizione, Ferrari,
137
3. BMW Rahal Letterman Racing
Team, 118

Facts and Figures
This is the American Le Mans
Series
The American Le Mans Series was
created in 1999 for sports prototypes and GT vehicles. The regulations
correspond to those of the Le Mans 24 hour race. Ten races in the USA
and Canada make up this year’s calendar. Traditional highlights are the
Sebring 12 hour race and the 1,000 mile Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta.
Most races run over 2:45 hours.

The starter field is made up of two different race car categories:
Sports prototypes and standard sports cars. These are divided into four
classes:
LMP1 class: Sports prototypes
with up to 750 hp and a minimum weight of 900 kilograms. Power to
weight ratio: ca. 1.2 kg/hp.
LMP2 class: Sports prototypes
with around 440 hp (normally aspirated engine) and an 825 kilogram
minimum weight. Power to weight ratio: ca. 1.8 kg/hp.
GT1 class: Heavily modified
standard sports cars with up to 650 hp and a minimum weight of 1,125 to
1,325 kilograms.
GT2 class: Slightly modified
standard sports cars with approx. 450 hp and a minimum weight of 1,125
– 1,325 kilograms (e.g. Porsche 911 GT3 RSR).

All race cars start together but are classified separately. Points are
awarded only for placings in each class. After 2006 and 2007, Porsche
again won the championship titles in the LMP2 class last year for
Drivers (Timo Bernhard/Romain Dumas) as well as for Chassis and Engine
Manufacturer and for Teams (Penske Racing) with the RS Spyder. In the
GT2 class, Porsche secured the championship titles for Drivers (Joerg
Bergmeister/Wolf Henzler) as well as for Manufacturers and Teams
(Flying Lizard Motorsports) in 2008 with the 911 GT3 RSR.


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