Audi Press
Release
- Current balance of performance hardly leaves any chances for Audi R8 LMS ultra
- Belgian Audi Club Team WRT takes third place after brilliant team performance
- High risk increased retirement rate
Third place for André Lotterer/Christopher Mies/Frank Stippler (D/D/D), following a nearly flawless drive of the best Audi R8 LMS ultra at Spa was an outstanding result. A puncture during the night was the only irregularity in the first 18 hours of the race. After three quarters of the distance, the GT3 sports car with red diamond graphics was running in third place – albeit with a four-lap gap. “Due to the current balance of performance our teams were clearly unable to keep the race pace at the front,” analyzed Head of Audi Motorsport Dr. Wolfgang Ullrich. “We were lapped several times, which shows how big the differences due to the regulations were in the field. If even our last year’s Spa winner Frank Stippler, Blancpain Endurance Champion Christopher Mies, DTM Champion Mattias Ekström and our two-time Le Mans winners André Lotterer and Marcel Fässler were chanceless in this race, this leaves no doubts. To compensate, our drivers had to take a very high risk. As in 2011 and 2012, Audi’s customers would have liked to have battled for victory again but that was impossible this time. This is very regrettable as the world’s biggest GT3 race certainly would have deserved a more intense competition of all nine brands.”
At the beginning of the race, car number 1 set the pace among the Audi customer teams. While running in fifth place, Stéphane Ortelli (MC) was unable to start his race car again at the beginning of the fourth hour of the race after a pit stop. The exchange of a defective starter relay cost the Belgian Audi Club Team WRT five laps. When a transmission problem occurred just shortly afterward, the team chose not to continue the race. The time loss had already caused Ortelli and his team-mates René Rast (D) and Laurens Vanthoor (B) to lose ground without any chance of recovery.
After 270 laps, the race of car number 0 was over as well. Matt Halliday (NZ) was in 26th place when he received a tire pressure warning in the cockpit. Shortly afterward, the WRT Audi hit the tire stack in the Raidillon corner, damaging not only the body parts and the rear suspension but the chassis as well. The Newzealander and his team-mates Niki Mayr-Melnhof (A) and Rahel Frey (CH) were forced to retire.
In view of these results, the assessment of Romolo Liebchen, Head of Customer Sport at quattro GmbH, was mixed: “After the class victory at Daytona, we very much would have liked to have won another 24-hour race with the R8 this year. Our customers were well prepared but it was obvious that even Audi’s best sports car drivers had no realistic chances at Spa this year. We’re hoping for the Audi R8 LMS ultra with a few title decisions in the second half of the year will be able to show its true form.”
1. Buhk/Götz/Schneider (Mercedes), 564 laps
2. Lieb/Lietz/Pilet (Porsche) – 1 lap
3. Lotterer/Mies/Stippler (Audi R8 LMS ultra) – 6 laps
4. Haase/Jarvis/Primat (Audi R8 LMS ultra) – 7 laps
5. Cameron/Griffin/Mortimer/Vilander (Ferrari) – 7 laps
6. Ladygin/Mediani/Salo/Shaitar (Ferrari) – 8 laps
7. Mardenborough/Ordonez/Pyzera/Reip (Nissan) – 11 laps
8. Christodoulou/Hummel/Jäger/Jans (Mercedes) – 13 laps
9. Hennerici/Maassen/Soulet (Porsche) – 14 laps
10. Babini/Ladygin/Persiani/Zlobin (Ferrari) – 17 laps
Photo credit: Audi Sport Communication / Media