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2019 24 Hours of Daytona

The 2019 24 Hours of Daytona (formally the 2019 Rolex 24 at Daytona) was an International Motor Sports Association (IMSA)-sanctioned endurance sports car race held at the Daytona International Speedway combined road course in Daytona Beach, Florida, on January 26–27, 2019. It was the 57th running of the race, and the first of 12 races in the 2019 IMSA WeatherTech Sportscar Championship, and the first of four rounds of the 2019 Michelin Endurance Cup.[1]

2019 24 Hours of Daytona
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Index: Races | Winners

Map of the Daytona International Speedway combined road course

The race was ended ahead of the 22nd hour, due to heavy rainfall.[2] The race was won overall by Renger van der Zande, Jordan Taylor, Fernando Alonso, and Kamui Kobayashi in the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R. The LMP2 class was won by the #18 DragonSpeed Oreca 07, piloted by Pastor Maldonado, Roberto Gonzalez, Sebastián Saavedra and Ryan Cullen. The GTLM class was won by the #25 BMW Team RLL BMW M8 GTE of Connor de Phillippi, Augusto Farfus, Philipp Eng, and Colton Herta. The GTD class was won for a second consecutive year by the #11 GRT Grasser Racing Team Lamborghini Huracan GT3 Evo of Rolf Ineichen, Mirko Bortolotti, Rik Breukers, and Christian Engelhart.[3]

Background

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Preview

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Daytona International Speedway in 2015

NASCAR founder Bill France Sr., who built the Daytona International Speedway in 1959, conceived the 24 Hours of Daytona as a race to attract European sports car endurance racing to the United States and provide international exposure to Daytona.[4] It is informally considered part of the "Triple Crown of Endurance Racing" with the 12 Hours of Sebring and the 24 Hours of Le Mans.[5]

International Motor Sports Association's (IMSA) president Scott Atherton confirmed the race was part of the schedule for the 2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship (IMSA SCC) in August 2018.[6] It was the sixth consecutive year it was part of the IMSA SCC, and the 57th 24 Hours of Daytona. The 24 Hours of Daytona was the first of twelve scheduled sports car endurance races of 2019 by IMSA, and the first of four races of the Michelin Endurance Cup MEC).[7] It took place at the 12-turn 3.56 mi (5.73 km) Daytona International Speedway combined road course in Daytona Beach, Florida, from January 26 to 27.[8]

Regulation changes

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Prior to the 2019 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, a raft of regulation changes were made, which saw significant changes to both Prototypes and GT3 cars entered in the 2019 event.[9] The Prototype class, which previously combined Daytona Prototype International cars, alongside Le Mans Prototype LMP2 cars was now split into 2 separate classes, the Daytona Prototype International (DPi) class, and the Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) class.[10] The DPi class would be the top class of the Championship, and will feature teams with full Professional Lineups running Daytona Prototype International cars, with its own class-based Balance of Performance (BoP). The LMP2 class would be the lower prototype class of the 2, featuring Global Specification LMP2 cars, and Pro-Am lineups, with no BoP being applied to the class. The Pro-Am classes in the Championship (LMP2 and GTD) were also now required to adhere to driver rating requirements, with each car being allowed only 2 Platinum/Gold rated drivers for the Rolex 24, and one Platinum/Gold rated driver for the other Endurance Races, alongside the requirement of 1 Bronze/Silver rated driver for every Sprint race. Bronze or Silver rated drivers would also be required to start the race in these categories.[11] Cars in the DPi, LMP2, as well as the GTD classes will also run on Michelin tyres, instead of Continentals while the GT Le Mans (GTLM) class would continue to be an open-tyre class.[12]

Entry list

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Ahead of the Roar Before the 24 tests at the track, IMSA released an entry list of the teams due to participate in the compulsory 3 day tests.[13] The entry list listed 47 teams across the four classes: 11 entries in the DPi class, 4 in the LMP2 class, as well as 9 in the GTLM class, featuring Group GTE Cars, as well as 23 in the GT Daytona (GTD) class. Each car was driven by two drivers who were to complete in the whole WeatherTech Sportscar Championship season, alongside 1–2 additional drivers, with one of the two additional drivers participating in the whole Michelin Endurance Cup season. These drivers came from a variety of categories, such as the FIA World Endurance Championship (Fernando Alonso, Kamui Kobayashi, Harry Tincknell), the IndyCar Series (Simon Pagenaud, Alexander Rossi), the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (René Rast, Loïc Duval).

Testing

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Pre-testing Balance of Performance (BoP)

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Ahead of the Roar Before the 24 Tests, IMSA issued a pre-test BoP, on December 21, 2018, aiming to create parity in each class among the cars, as well as to separate the performances of cars in each class. The DPis were given a 10 kg weight reduction, as well as increased boost pressure for Turbocharged Engines, while Naturally Aspirated Engines received a larger air restrictor. The LMP2 cars were given a 10 kg weight addition, alongside a five-litre reduction in fuel capacity, and a 4 second increased refuelling time.[14] Changes were also made to both the GTLM class, with the BMW M8 GTE, and the Porsche 911 RSR getting a weight break, with the Ferrari 488 GTE was given a 5 kg weight increase, the Ford GT a 20 kg weight increase, and the Corvette C7.R remaining unchanged. The GTD class saw several changes[15]

Roar Before the 24 Tests

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The Roar Before the 24 tests occurred from January 4 to 6, 2019, with all cars participating in the test.[16] The first session on Friday morning saw the #77 Mazda RT-24P entered by Mazda Team Joest top timesheets with a 1:35.989 lap, while the #52 Oreca 07 entered by PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports topped the LMP2 category with a 1:39.828 by Gabriel Aubry. GTLM was topped by #911 911 RSR, with Patrick Pilet at the wheel setting a 1:44.866, while Jeroen Bleekemolen set a 1:47.188 in the #33 AMG GT3.[17] The second session on Friday afternoon had the #10 Cadillac DPi-V.R of Wayne Taylor Racing top the session with a 1:36.596 by Kamui Kobayashi, while Gabriel Aubrey topped the LMP2 category again with 1:39.575. Davide Rigon set a 1:44.718 in the #62 Risi Competizione Ferrari 488 GTE Evo, to top GTLM, while the #33 topped GTD once more with a 1:46.452 from Jeroen Bleekemolen.[18]

The first session on Saturday morning saw the #55 Mazda RT-24P set the pace, with Harry Tincknell setting a 1:34.925. The #52 Oreca 07 topped the timesheet again in LMP2 with a 1:38.107 from Matt McMurry. The #912 Porsche 911 RSR topped GTLM, with a 1:43.862 from Mathieu Jaminet, while the #540 Black Swan Racing 911 GT3 R topped the GTD category with a 1:45.919 from Matteo Cairoli.[19] The Afternoon session was led by the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R with Renger Van Der Zande setting a 1:34.534, with LMP2 being led once more by Gabriel Aubry in the #52 Oreca with a 1:37.083 lap. GTLM was led by the #67 Ford GT with Richard Westbrook setting a 1:43.148, with GTD being led by Trent Hindman in the #86 Meyer Shank Racing w/ Curb-Agajanian Acura NSX GT3, with a 1:45.533 lap.[20] The Night session saw Jonathan Bomarito set the pace in the #55 Mazda RT-24P, with a 1:34.533, while the #52 led LMP2 once more, with a 1:36.990 from Gabriel Aubry. GTLM saw Nick Tandy set a 1:43.402 in the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, with GTD led by the #13 Via Italia Racing Ferrari 488 GT3 Evo with a 1:45.842 from Victor Franzoni.[21] GTD had a Qualifying session on the day itself, which was meant to allocate garages for the teams, with Ana Beatriz securing the top spot with a 1:45.537 in the #57 Meyer Shank Racing Acura NSX GT3, after P1 Motorsport was disqualified from the session for using a gold driver (Dominik Baumann), in spite of it setting the fastest time.[22][23]

The morning session on Sunday saw Harry Tincknell top the lap times in the #55 Mazda RT-24P, with a 1:34.224, while Ben Hanley led LMP2 with a 1:35.975 in the 81 DragonSpeed Oreca 07, and GTLM was led by Richard Westbrook in the #67 Ford GT with a 1:43.083.[24] The Last Session on Sunday, where only 14 cars ran, saw the #54 CORE Autosport Nissan-Onroak DPi top the times with a 1:35.176 from Loic Duval, while LMP2 was led by the #81 DragonSpeed Oreca 07, with a 1:36.188 from Nicolas Lapierre, and GTLM led by the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, with a 1:43.848 from Patrick Pilet.[25] The Qualifying for DPi, LMP2 and GTLM saw Oliver Jarvis earn the top spot for Mazda Team Joest in the #77 Mada RT-24P, with a 1:33.398 which also unofficially broke the track record,[26] while the #52 topped the LMP2 class with a 1:35.930 from Gabriel Aubry, while GTLM was led by the #3 Corvette C7.R with a 1:42.651 from Jan Magnussen.[27]

Post-testing Balance of Performance Adjustments

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On January 16, 2019, IMSA released a technical bulletin with regards to the Balance of Performance of the cars competing in the Rolex 24.[28] Unlike previous years. there were only minor tweaks to selected cars, and saw no significant performance related adjustments. In the Daytona Prototype International class, 3 of the 4 cars saw changes to their fuel capacity, with the Acura ARX-05 and Mazda RT24-P each losing 2 liters and the Cadillac DPi-V.R being reduced by 1 liter. The Nissan-Onroak DPi, meanwhile, has an adjusted Lambda, while the Mazda RT-24P was mandated to run its high downforce rear wing package instead of “2019 Opt. 1” that was outlined in the initial pre-testing BoP. In GT Le Mans, the BMW M8 GTE received a 2-liter fuel capacity increase, while an adjustment was made to the Ferrari 488 GTE’s RPM redline. The GT Daytona class saw the Lamborghini Huracan GT3 Evo get a 1 mm larger air restrictor, along with a related 2-liter increase in fuel capacity, while the BMW M6 GT3 received a 15 kg weight break. Fuel capacities were also adjusted for the new-for-2019 Porsche 911 GT3 R (+3 liters) and Acura NSX GT3 Evo (−3 liters), while IMSA elected to not slow down the GTD Class.[29]

Practice

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Four practice sessions were held before the start of the race on Saturday, three on Thursday and one on Friday.[30] The first two sessions on Thursday morning and afternoon were 45 minutes and 75 Minutes in length, while third held later that evening ran for 90 minutes, and the fourth on Friday morning lasted an hour.[31]

In Practice 1, which was held in damp conditions, Felipe Nasr set the fastest lap, in the #31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac DPi-V.R, with a best of 1:36.108, in a session which saw just four of the eleven DPi cars set flying laps on slick tires during the damp session.[32] Behind Nasr was Filipe Albuquerque, who gave the Action Express Racing a 1–2, in the #5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac, with a best of 1:36.707. Tristan Vautier's 1:37.595 effort in the No. 85 JDC-Miller Motorsports Cadillac and Jonathan Bomarito’s 1:38.561 in the No. 55 Mazda RT-24P were the only other competitive times set on Thursday morning. The 5th best time, and the top time in the GTLM class was set by Frederic Makowiecki, in the #911 Porsche 911 RSR on slick Michelins putting a gap of eight-tenths over Mathieu Jaminet in the German manufacturer's No. 912 car, whilst Joey Hand moved Ford Chip Ganassi Racing up to third late on, although his final effort was over a second off the Porsche pace up front. In GTD, Corey Lewis ended the morning quickest with a 1:46.577 in the #48 Paul Miller Racing Lamborghini Huracan GT3 Evo. This lap came during the 15-minute extension of the event's first practice session dedicated to silver and bronze drivers in the secondary GT class. Henrik Hedman topped the charts in LMP2 for DragonSpeed with a 1:46.657 in the team's FIA World Endurance Championship Oreca 07 Gibson.[33]

In Practice 2, Jonathan Bomarito, driving the #55 Mazda RT24-P, setting a 1:34.672, was a full 0.711 seconds faster than second place Filipe Albuquerque in the No. 5 Mustang Sampling Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R. Colin Braun checked in with the third fastest time, set early in the session, in the #54 CORE Autosport Nissan Onroak DPi, while Ricky Taylor and Agustin Canapino completed the top five for Acura Team Penske and Juncos Racing, respectively. In LMP2, a late effort from James Allen put the No. 81 DragonSpeed Oreca 07 Gibson at the head of the four-car class by 0.257 seconds over Gabriel Aubry in the No. 52 from PR1/Mathiasen, with a 1:37.255. In GTLM, Nick Tandy was quickest in the GT Le Mans class in the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, with him setting a 1:43.475, followed by the #3 Corvette C7.R of Jan Magnussen with a 1:43.561, and the #67 Ford Chip Ganassi Racing Ford GT of Ryan Briscoe 1:43.755. Daniel Serra turned in the fastest lap in GTD, in the #51 Spirit of Race Ferrari 488 GT3 with a 1:45.936, while Trent Hindman and Ben Keating completed the top three in class for Meyer Shank Racing and Mercedes-AMG Team Riley Motorsports, setting a 1:46.184 and 1:46.244 respectively.[34]

In Practice 3, which was held at night, Loic Duval put the #54 CORE Autosport Nissan DPi at the top, with a 1:34.786, while a 1:34.905 was set by Filipe Albuquerque in the #5 Action Express Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R. None of the Mazda RT24-P prototypes turned laps in Thursday evening practice after the Joest Racing team elected to carry out separate planned engine changes.[35] In LMP2, Ben Hanley led the class, with a 1:36.521 in the #81 Dragonspeed Oreca 07. In GTLM, Augusto Farfus set the fastest lap, with a 1:43.315, just 0.002 seconds ahead of the 2nd placed #911 Porsche 911 RSR. In GTD, Bill Auberlen posted a 1:45.165 to put his #96 Turner Motorsport BMW M6 GT3 in the lead, with Daniel Serra coming in 2nd in the #51 Spirit of Race Ferrari 488 GT3, 0.109 seconds behind.[36]

Qualifying

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Oliver Jarvis, pictured here in 2009, secured pole position for Mazda Team Joest, and broke the Track Record in the process

On Thursday's Qualifying session, which was divided into 3, with one session for the Prototypes, GTLM and GTD classes, which lasted for 15 minutes each, and a ten minute interval between the sessions.[37] The rules dictated that all teams nominated a driver to qualify their cars, with the Pro-Am (LMP2/GTD) classes requiring a Bronze/Silver Rated Driver to qualify the car.[38] The competitors' fastest lap times determined the starting order. IMSA then arranged the grid such that the Prototype and GTLM cars began ahead of the GTD field.

In the Prototype Qualifying session, Oliver Jarvis, driving for Mazda Team Joest, broke the Daytona International Speedway Road Course lap record to clinch pole position for the race, bringing the #77 Mazda RT-24P to the top of the timing screens early in the 15-minute prototype qualifying session before shaving his best effort down to a 1:33.685. This was two tenths quicker than the previous record around the road course of the Daytona International Speedway, that had remained unbeaten for over 25 years, and had been set by P. J. Jones in 1993 behind the wheel of a GTP Toyota Eagle MkIII.[39] This pole position was the first ever for Mazda Team Joest, and the Mazda RT24-P. He was joined on the front row of the grid by Ricky Taylor in the #7 Acura Team Penske ARX-05, who interrupted a Joest 1–2 held by Jarvis and Jonathan Bomarito, until his Penske team-mate Juan Pablo Montoya jumped up to third shortly before the checkered flag. Bomarito's time of 1:34.212 however, held out as the fourth-best, while Felipe Nasr brought the highest-placed Cadillac DPi-V.R to fifth on the grid. He was followed by another 4 more Cadillacs, with Jordan Taylor going sixth in the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing car, ahead of Juncos Racing's Agustin Canapino, and the JDC-Miller Motorsports cars driven by Tristan Vautier and Stephen Simpson, while Jon Bennett propped up the running DPi field in the CORE Autosport run Ligier Nissan DPi. The defending race winning #5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac DPi-V.R failed to post a time during the session, after Filipe Albuquerque radioed his crew about engine problems.[40]

In LMP2, James Allen took pole in the #81 DragonSpeed Oreca 07 Gibson, recording a time which was half a second quicker than the 2nd placed #52 PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports Oreca 07 driven by Gabriel Aubry.[39]

In GTLM, Nick Tandy set a new qualifying track record for the class, taking pole position for the Porsche GT Team, driving the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, with his best lap of 1:42.257 being a full 0.326 seconds faster than the effort by the previous year's GTLM pole sitter Jan Magnussen in the #3 Corvette Racing Corvette C7.R. Ryan Briscoe in the #67 Ford Chip Ganassi Racing team Ford GT finished 3rd, to bring three different manufacturers into the top 3 starting spots for the . Davide Rigon came in fourth fastest in the No. 62 Risi Competizione Ferrari 488 GTE, and was followed by Earl Bamber in the sister car to the #911, the #912. It was a tight qualifying session for the class, with all nine cars being covered by 0.982 seconds, and with the top four qualifiers in the class posting times under the previous class track record.

In GTD, Marcos Gomes set a track record for the class, while en route to taking the class pole position in the #13 Via Italia Racing Ferrari 488 GT3. The Brazilian broke Daniel Serra’s previous class qualifying record which had been set the previous year, while marking the third straight year that a Ferrari has taken the GTD class pole. Gomes’ best lap of 1:45.257 was 0.067 seconds faster than that of the second placed #33 Mercedes-AMG Team Riley Motorsports Mercedes-AMG GT3, driven by Ben Keating. Trent Hindman came third in the #86 Acura NSX GT3 Evo for Meyer Shank Racing. Lamborghini then took the next two spots on the grid with Giacomo Altoe and Rolf Ineichen for Ebimotors and GRT Grasser Racing Team, respectively. The top 13 cars in the GTD class were covered by less than one second, making for a closely packed qualifying session.[41]

Qualifying results

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Pole positions in each class are indicated in bold and by ‡.

Pos. Class No. Entry Driver Time Gap Grid
1 DPi 77 Germany  Mazda Team Joest United Kingdom  Oliver Jarvis 1:33.685 1‡
2 DPi 7 United States  Acura Team Penske United States  Ricky Taylor 1:33.873 +0.188 2
3 DPi 6 United States  Acura Team Penske Colombia  Juan Pablo Montoya 1:34.095 +0.410 3
4 DPi 55 Germany  Mazda Team Joest United States  Jonathan Bomarito 1:34.212 +0.527 4
5 DPi 31 United States  Whelen Engineering Racing Brazil  Felipe Nasr 1:34.433 +0.748 5
6 DPi 10 United States  Konica Minolta Cadillac United States  Jordan Taylor 1:34.479 +0.794 6
7 DPi 50 Argentina  Juncos Racing Argentina  Agustín Canapino 1:34.679 +0.994 7
8 DPi 85 United States  JDC-Miller MotorSports France  Tristan Vautier 1:35.369 +1.684 8
9 DPi 84 United States  JDC-Miller MotorSports South Africa  Stephen Simpson 1:35.442 +1.757 9
10 LMP2 81 United States  DragonSpeed Australia  James Allen 1:35.904 +2.219 12‡
11 LMP2 52 United States  PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports France  Gabriel Aubry 1:36.427 +2.742 13
12 DPi 54 United States  CORE Autosport United States  Jon Bennett 1:36.686 +3.001 `10
13 LMP2 18 United States  DragonSpeed Mexico  Roberto González 1:37.377 +3.692 14
14 LMP2 38 United States  Performance Tech Motorsports United States  Kyle Masson 1:38.121 +4.436 15
15 GTLM 911 United States  Porsche GT Team United Kingdom  Nick Tandy 1:42.257 +8.572 16‡
16 GTLM 3 United States  Corvette Racing Denmark  Jan Magnussen 1:42.583 +8.898 17
17 GTLM 67 United States  Ford Chip Ganassi Racing Australia  Ryan Briscoe 1:42.634 +8.949 18
18 GTLM 62 United States  Risi Competizione Italy  Davide Rigon 1:42.712 +9.027 19
19 GTLM 912 United States  Porsche GT Team New Zealand  Earl Bamber 1:42.796 +9.111 20
20 GTLM 66 United States  Ford Chip Ganassi Racing United States  Joey Hand 1:42.920 +9.235 21
21 GTLM 24 United States  BMW Team RLL United States  John Edwards 1:42.953 +9.268 22
22 GTLM 25 United States  BMW Team RLL United States  Connor De Phillippi 1:42.986 +9.301 23
23 GTLM 4 United States  Corvette Racing United Kingdom  Oliver Gavin 1:43.239 +9.554 24
24 GTD 13 Brazil  Via Italia Racing Brazil  Marcos Gomes 1:45.257 +11.572 25‡
25 GTD 33 United States  Mercedes-AMG Team Riley Motorsports United States  Ben Keating 1:45.324 +11.639 26
26 GTD 86 United States  Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb-Agajanian United States  Trent Hindman 1:45.396 +11.711 27
27 GTD 46 Italy  Ebimotors Italy  Giacomo Altoè 1:45.475 +11.790 28
28 GTD 11 Austria  GRT Grasser Racing Team Switzerland  Rolf Ineichen 1:45.816 +12.131 29
29 GTD 51 Switzerland  Spirit of Race Austria  Mathias Lauda 1:45.852 +12.167 30
30 GTD 44 United States  Magnus Racing United States  Spencer Pumpelly 1:45.855 +12.170 31
31 GTD 9 Canada  Pfaff Motorsports Germany  Lars Kern 1:45.945 +12.260 32
32 GTD 48 United States  Paul Miller Racing United States  Corey Lewis 1:46.040 +12.355 471
33 GTD 73 United States  Park Place Motorsports United States  Patrick Lindsey 1:46.103 +12.418 33
34 GTD 57 United States  Heinricher Racing w/Meyer Shank Racing Brazil  Ana Beatriz 1:46.116 +12.431 34
35 GTD 14 Canada  AIM Vasser Sullivan United States  Richard Heistand 1:46.214 +12.529 35
36 GTD 540 United States  Black Swan Racing Germany  Marco Seefried 1:46.231 +12.546 36
37 GTD 12 Canada  AIM Vasser Sullivan United States  Frankie Montecalvo 1:46.270 +12.585 37
38 GTD 29 Germany  Montaplast by Land-Motorsport Canada  Daniel Morad 1:46.309 +12.624 38
39 GTD 63 United States  Scuderia Corsa United States  Cooper MacNeil 1:46.321 +12.636 39
40 GTD 99 Germany  NGT Motorsport Germany  Alfred Renauer 1:46.669 +12.984 40
41 GTD 8 United States  Starworks Motorsport Argentina  Ezequiel Pérez Companc 1:46.710 +13.025 41
42 GTD 19 United States  Moorespeed United States  Andrew Davis 1:46.781 +13.096 42
43 GTD 88 Belgium  WRT Speedstar Audi Sport United Kingdom  Ian James 1:47.368 +13.683 43
44 GTD 71 United States  P1 Motorsports Colombia  JC Perez 1:47.447 +13.762 462
45 GTD 47 United States  Precision Performance Motorsports United States  Don Yount 1:47.809 +14.124 44
46 DPi 5 United States  Mustang Sampling Racing did not participate 11
47 GTD 96 United States  Turner Motorsport3 did not participate 45
Sources:[42][43]

Notes

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^1  – The #48 Paul Miller Racing entry was moved to the back of the GTD field as per Articles 40.1.4. and 43.5 of the Sporting regulations (Change of qualifying tires) and (Change of starting driver).[44]

^2  – The #71 P1 Motorsports entry was moved to the back of the GTD field as per Article 40.1.4. of the Sporting regulations (Change of qualifying tires).[44]

^3  – The #96 Turner Motorsports car had all its qualifying times forfeited as per Article 40.2.9. of the Sporting regulations (car was touched by the crew during qualifying without permission by the officials).[42][44]

Race report

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After the green flag dropped on Saturday, Acura Team Penske held the advantage thanks to a strong performance from Juan Pablo Montoya, who passed Oliver Jarvis in the #77 Mazda RT24-P 30 minutes into the race. Though running strong, the Acura and Mazda cars faced pressure from the Action Express Racing Cadillacs in 5th and 6th two hours in.[45] Kyle Masson and the #38 Performance Tech Motorsports team led the LMP2 class in their Oreca. In GTLM, Porsche and Ford's early challenge suffered teething troubles, after a splitter issue had put the #912 Porsche 911 RSR a lap behind class leader, and a three lap loss due to mechanical failure for the #67 Ford GT. Regardless, the sister car of the former manufacturer, #911, held the lead in the opening hour. In the GTD class, the #86 Meyer Shank Racing Acura NSX assumed a lead over the #33 Riley Motorsports Mercedes in 2nd, and the GRT Grasser Racing Lamborghini Huracan in 3rd.

After a Full-Course Yellow, which was triggered from an engine explosion from the #99 NGT Motorsport Porsche 911 GT3, the standings in DPi shuffled, with Dane Cameron holding a small lead over Felipe Nasr in the #31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac. Behind them were both Mazdas, continuing to put pressure on the leaders. A similar shuffle occurred in GTLM, with the #66 Ford GT of Chip Ganassi Racing emerging the leader ahead of the #4 Corvette Racing C7.R in second and #911 Porsche RSR in third. In the GTD class, Rik Breukers of the #11 GRT Grasser Racing Team emerged the leader, but was handed a four-minute pitlane penalty for ignoring full course caution procedures. James Allen led a 1-2 for the DragonSpeed team in the LMP2 class.

The defending overall winning team, the #5 Mustang Sampling Racing Cadillac had suffered a major blow to their challenge when, in the 3rd hour, an electrical issue had seen them initially out of the race. After 25 minutes in the garage, the #5 car returned to the track. The #6 Acura ARX-05 in the hands of Dane Cameron continued to lead in the DPi class, with the sister car in 3rd in the hands of Hélio Castroneves. Mazda driver René Rast set in between them in second, posing a challenge to Cameron's lead.[46]

As evening fell, two-time Formula One World Driver's Champion Fernando Alonso began his first stint in the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac. He muscled his way into the overall lead of the Rolex 24, after inheriting the car from Jordan Taylor in 7th position. Alonso took the lead from Rene Rast in the #77 Mazda. After a third Full-Course Yellow flag, Alonso maintained his overall lead, and handed the car over to Toyota Gazoo Racing team-mate Kamui Kobayashi with a 15-second advantage over the #77.[47]

The #52 PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports Oreca 07 collided with the #85 Cadillac DPi-V.R. of JDC-Miller Motorsports, thus triggering a fourth Full-Course Yellow just before the 6-hour-mark of the race. Action Express Racing debutante Pipo Derani elected not to go to the pits when all other cars in the DPi class had, thus putting the #31 Cadillac in the lead. Prior to this, Kamui Kobayashi in the #10 Cadillac set the fastest lap of the race up to that point. In the GTLM class, Porsche GT Team driver Nick Tandy lost two places from pit stops after holding the lead, thus promoting the #4 Corvette C7.R to the lead, and the #62 Ferrari 488 GTE of Risi Competizione to an impressive second. The #33 Mercedes-AMG GT3 of Riley Motorsports held the lead in the GTD class, while DragonSpeed continued to be first and second in LMP2.[48]

Post-race

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Since it was the season's first race Jordan Taylor, Renger van der Zande, Fernando Alonso, and Kamui Kobayashi led the DPi Drivers' Championship with 35 points each. Derani, Curran and Nasr were in second with 32 points. Helio Castroneves, Ricky Taylor, and Alexander Rossi were third with 30 points. Saavedra, Maldonado, Cullen, and González led the LMP2 points standings, ahead of Kyle Masson, Robert Masson, Kris Wright, and Cameron Cassels. De Phillippi, Eng, Herta, and Farfus led the GTLM Drivers' Championship with 35 points. Calado, Pier Guidi, Molina, and Rigon were second with 32 points. Bamber, Vanthoor, and Jaminet were third with 30 points. Bortolotti, Breukers, Ineichen, and Engelhart led the GTD Drivers' Championship, followed by the second-placed Montecalvo, Bell, Segal, and Telitz. Vervisch, van der Linde, James, and De Angelis were third.[49] Konica Minolta Cadillac, DragonSpeed, BMW Team RLL, and GRT Grasser Racing Team became the leaders of their respective class Teams' Championships. Cadillac, BMW, and Lamborghini assumed the lead of their respective Manufacturers' Championships with 11 races left in the season.[49]

Results

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Class winners are denoted in bold and ‡.

Pos Class No. Team / Entrant Drivers Chassis Laps Time/Retired
Engine
1 DPi 10 United States  Konica Minolta Cadillac Netherlands  Renger van der Zande
United States  Jordan Taylor
Spain  Fernando Alonso
Japan  Kamui Kobayashi
Cadillac DPi-V.R 593 21:59:13.350‡
Cadillac 5.5 L V8
2 DPi 31 United States  Whelen Engineering Racing Brazil  Felipe Nasr
United States  Eric Curran
Brazil  Pipo Derani
Cadillac DPi-V.R 593 +13.458
Cadillac 5.5 L V8
3 DPi 7 United States  Acura Team Penske Brazil  Hélio Castroneves
United States  Alexander Rossi
United States  Ricky Taylor
Acura ARX-05 593 +13.964
Acura AR35TT 3.5 L Turbo V6
4 DPi 54 United States  CORE Autosport United States  Jon Bennett
United States  Colin Braun
France  Romain Dumas
France  Loïc Duval
Nissan DPi 589 +4 Laps
Nissan VR38DETT 3.8 L Turbo V6
5 DPi 85 United States  JDC-Miller MotorSports Canada  Misha Goikhberg
France  Tristan Vautier
Canada  Devlin DeFrancesco
Brazil  Rubens Barrichello
Cadillac DPi-V.R 586 +7 laps
Cadillac 5.5 L V8
6 LMP2 18 United States  DragonSpeed Mexico  Roberto González
Venezuela  Pastor Maldonado
Colombia  Sebastián Saavedra
Republic of Ireland  Ryan Cullen
Oreca 07 582 +11 Laps‡
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
7 LMP2 38 United States  Performance Tech Motorsports United States  Kyle Masson
United States  Robert Masson
United States  Kris Wright
Canada  Cameron Cassels
Oreca 07 578 +15 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
8 DPi 6 United States  Acura Team Penske United States  Dane Cameron
Colombia  Juan Pablo Montoya
France  Simon Pagenaud
Acura ARX-05 576 +17 Laps
Acura AR35TT 3.5 L Turbo V6
9 DPi 5 United States  Mustang Sampling Racing Portugal  Filipe Albuquerque
Portugal  João Barbosa
Brazil  Christian Fittipaldi
Cadillac DPi-V.R 573 +20 laps
Cadillac 5.5 L V8
10 GTLM 25 United States  BMW Team RLL Brazil  Augusto Farfus
United States  Connor De Phillippi
Austria  Phillipp Eng
United States  Colton Herta
BMW M8 GTE 571 +22 Laps‡
BMW S63 4.0 L Twin-turbo V8
11 GTLM 62 United States  Risi Competizione United Kingdom  James Calado
Italy  Alessandro Pier Guidi
Spain  Miguel Molina
Italy  Davide Rigon
Ferrari 488 GTE 571 +22 Laps
Ferrari F154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
12 GTLM 912 United States  Porsche GT Team New Zealand  Earl Bamber
France  Mathieu Jaminet
Belgium  Laurens Vanthoor
Porsche 911 RSR 570 +23 Laps
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
13 GTLM 67 United States  Ford Chip Ganassi Racing1 Australia  Ryan Briscoe
New Zealand  Scott Dixon
United Kingdom  Richard Westbrook
Ford GT 570 +23 Laps
Ford EcoBoost 3.5 L Turbo V6
14 GTLM 911 United States  Porsche GT Team France  Frédéric Makowiecki
France  Patrick Pilet
United Kingdom  Nick Tandy
Porsche 911 RSR 569 +24 Laps
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
15

DNF

LMP2 81 United States  DragonSpeed Sweden  Henrik Hedman
United Kingdom  Ben Hanley
France  Nicolas Lapierre
Australia  James Allen
Oreca 07 567 Wheel
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
16 GTLM 3 United States  Corvette Racing Spain  Antonio García
Denmark  Jan Magnussen
Germany  Mike Rockenfeller
Chevrolet Corvette C7.R 563 +30 Laps
Chevrolet LT5.5 5.5 L V8
17 GTD 11 Austria  GRT Grasser Racing Team Italy  Mirko Bortolotti
Netherlands  Rik Breukers
Germany  Christian Engelhart
Switzerland  Rolf Ineichen
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 561 +32 Laps‡
Lamborghini 5.2 L V10
18 GTD 12 Canada  AIM Vasser Sullivan United States  Frankie Montecalvo
United States  Townsend Bell
United States  Aaron Telitz
United States  Jeff Segal
Lexus RC F GT3 561 +32 Laps
Lexus 5.0 L V8
19 GTD 88 Belgium  WRT Speedstar Audi Sport Belgium  Frédéric Vervisch
South Africa  Kelvin van der Linde
United States  Ian James
Canada  Roman De Angelis
Audi R8 LMS Evo 561 +32 Laps
Audi 5.2 L V10
20 GTD 86 United States  Meyer Shank Racing with Curb-Agajanian Germany  Mario Farnbacher
United States  Trent Hindman
United States  Justin Marks
United States  A. J. Allmendinger
Acura NSX GT3 Evo 561 +32 Laps
Acura 3.5 L Turbo V6
21 GTD 14 Canada  AIM Vasser Sullivan United States  Richard Heistand
United Kingdom  Jack Hawksworth
United States  Austin Cindric
New Zealand  Nick Cassidy
Lexus RC F GT3 560 +33 Laps
Lexus 5.0 L V8
22 GTD 33 United States  Mercedes-AMG Team Riley Motorsports Netherlands  Jeroen Bleekemolen
Brazil  Felipe Fraga
United States  Ben Keating
Germany  Luca Stolz
Mercedes-AMG GT3 560 +33 Laps
Mercedes-AMG M159 6.2 L V8
23 GTD 73 United States  Park Place Motorsports United States  Patrick Long
United States  Patrick Lindsey
Australia  Matt Campbell
United States  Nick Boulle
Porsche 911 GT3 R 560 +33 Laps
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
24 GTD 13 Brazil  Via Italia Racing Brazil  Chico Longo
Brazil  Victor Franzoni
Brazil  Marcos Gomes
Italy  Andrea Bertolini
Ferrari 488 GT3 560 +33 Laps
Ferrari F154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
25 GTD 96 United States  Turner Motorsport United States  Bill Auberlen
United States  Robby Foley
United States  Dillon Machavern
Germany  Jens Klingmann
BMW M6 GT3 560 +33 Laps
BMW 4.4 L Turbo V8
26 GTD 44 United States  Magnus Racing United States  Andy Lally
Italy  Marco Mapelli
United States  Spencer Pumpelly
United States  John Potter
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 559 +34 Laps
Lamborghini 5.2 L V10
27 GTLM 66 United States  Ford Chip Ganassi Racing France  Sébastien Bourdais
United States  Joey Hand
Germany  Dirk Müller
Ford GT 559 +34 Laps
Ford EcoBoost 3.5 L Turbo V6
28 GTLM 4 United States  Corvette Racing Switzerland  Marcel Fässler
United Kingdom  Oliver Gavin
United States  Tommy Milner
Chevrolet Corvette C7.R 555 +38 Laps
Chevrolet LT5.5 5.5 L V8
29 DPi 50 Argentina  Juncos Racing United States  Will Owen
Austria  René Binder
Argentina  Agustín Canapino
United States  Kyle Kaiser
Cadillac DPi-V.R 555 +38 Laps
Cadillac 5.5 L V8
30 GTD 19 United States  Moorespeed United States  Andrew Davis
Spain  Alex Riberas
United States  Will Hardeman
Germany  Markus Winkelhock
Audi R8 LMS Evo 555 +38 Laps
Audi 5.2 L V10
31 GTLM 24 United States  BMW Team RLL United States  John Edwards
Australia  Chaz Mostert
Italy  Alex Zanardi
Finland  Jesse Krohn
BMW M8 GTE 553 +40 Laps
BMW S63 4.0 L Twin-turbo V8
32 GTD 57 United States  Heinricher Racing w/Meyer Shank Racing Switzerland  Simona de Silvestro
United Kingdom  Katherine Legge
Denmark  Christina Nielsen
Brazil  Bia Figueiredo
Acura NSX GT3 Evo 550 +43 Laps
Acura 3.5 L Turbo V6
33 GTD 8 United States  Starworks Motorsport United Kingdom  Ryan Dalziel
United States  Parker Chase
Argentina  Ezequiel Perez Companc
Germany  Christopher Haase
Audi R8 LMS Evo 547 +46 Laps
Audi 5.2 L V10
34 GTD 540 United States  Black Swan Racing Germany  Marco Seefried
United States  Tim Pappas
Germany  Dirk Werner
Italy  Matteo Cairoli
Porsche 911 GT3 R 545 + 48 Laps
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
35 LMP2 52 United States  PR1/ Mathiasen Motorsports United States  Matt McMurry
United States  Mark Kvamme
France  Enzo Guibbert
France  Gabriel Aubry
Oreca 07 512 +81 laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
36

DNF

GTD 48 United States  Paul Miller Racing United States  Corey Lewis
United States  Bryan Sellers
Italy  Andrea Caldarelli
United States  Ryan Hardwick
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 491 crash
Lamborghini 5.2 L V10
37

DNF

GTD 9 Canada  Pfaff Motorsports Canada  Scott Hargrove
Germany  Lars Kern
Norway  Dennis Olsen
Canada  Zacharie Robichon
Porsche 911 GT3 R 470 crash
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
38

DNF

GTD 46 Italy  EBIMOTORS Italy  Fabio Babini
Italy  Emanuele Busnelli
United Kingdom  Taylor Proto
Italy  Giacomo Altoè
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 470 crash
Lamborghini 5.2 L V10
39 GTD 47 United States  Precision Performance Motorsports United States  Don Yount
Serbia  Miloš Pavlović
United States  Steve Dunn
Sweden  Linus Lundqvist
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo 442 +151 Laps
Lamborghini 5.2 L V10
40

DNF

DPi 55 Germany  Mazda Team Joest United Kingdom  Harry Tincknell
France  Olivier Pla
United States  Jonathan Bomarito
Mazda RT24-P 440 suspension
Mazda MZ-2.0T 2.0 L Turbo I4
41

DNF

GTD 71 United States  P1 Motorsports Germany  Fabian Schiller
Austria  Dominik Baumann
Germany  Maximilian Buhk
Colombia  JC Perez
Mercedes-AMG GT3 431 withdrawn[50]
Mercedes-AMG M159 6.2 L V8
42 GTD 51 Switzerland  Spirit of Race Canada  Paul Dalla Lana
Portugal  Pedro Lamy
Austria  Mathias Lauda
Brazil  Daniel Serra
Ferrari 488 GT3 349 + 244 Laps
Ferrari F154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
43 DPi 84 United States  JDC-Miller MotorSports Switzerland  Simon Trummer
Colombia  Juan Piedrahita
United States  Chris Miller
South Africa  Stephen Simpson
Cadillac DPi-V.R 225 + 368 Laps
Cadillac 5.5 L V8
44

DNF

DPi 77 Germany  Mazda Team Joest United Kingdom  Oliver Jarvis
United States  Tristan Nunez
Germany  René Rast
Germany  Timo Bernhard
Mazda RT24-P 220 fire
Mazda MZ-2.0T 2.0 L Turbo I4
45

DNF

GTD 99 Germany  NGT Motorsport by Herberth Austria  Klaus Bachler
Germany  Sven Müller
Germany  Alfred Renauer
Germany  Juergen Haering
Germany  Steffen Görig
Porsche 911 GT3 R 47 engine
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
46 GTD 29 Germany  Montaplast by Land-Motorsport2 Canada  Daniel Morad
Germany  Christopher Mies
Switzerland  Ricardo Feller
Belgium  Dries Vanthoor
Audi R8 LMS Evo 561 +32 Laps
Audi 5.2 L V10
47

DNF

GTD 63 United States  Scuderia Corsa3 Finland  Toni Vilander
Germany  Dominik Farnbacher
United States  Cooper MacNeil
United States  Jeff Westphal
Ferrari 488 GT3 547 crash
Ferrari F154 3.9 L Turbo V8
Source:[51][52]

Notes

edit

^1  – The #67 Ford Chip Ganassi Racing car was assessed a 1 min 48 sec time penalty post race, for violating emergency fuel obligations.[49]

^2  – The #29 Montaplast by Land-Motorsport Audi R8 LMS was moved to the back of the class per Article 12.12C for a drive time infringement.[49]

^3  – The #63 Scuderia Corsa Ferrari 488 GT3 was moved to the back of the class per Article 12.12C for a drive time infringement.[49]

Standings after the race

edit
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for all sets of standings.
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for all sets of standings.
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for all sets of standings.


References

edit
  1. ^ "IMSA releases 2019 schedule". RACER. August 3, 2018. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
  2. ^ Dagys, John. "WTR Wins Rain-Shortened Rolex 24 – Sportscar365". sportscar365.com. Retrieved January 29, 2019.
  3. ^ Myrehn, Ryan. "Grasser: Back-to-Back Rolex 24 Wins its "Biggest Achievement" – Sportscar365". sportscar365.com. Retrieved January 29, 2019.
  4. ^ Edelstein, Stephen (January 27, 2016). "Daytona 101: Everything you need to know about America's 24-hour endurance race". Digital Trends. Archived from the original on June 10, 2016. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
  5. ^ Pose, Sam (December 7, 2011). "24 Hours of Daytona: A short history of a long race". Road & Track. Archived from the original on October 3, 2015. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
  6. ^ Klein, Jamie (August 4, 2018). "IMSA reveals largely unchanged 2019 schedule". motorsport.com. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
  7. ^ Pruett, Marshall (August 3, 2018). "IMSA releases 2019 schedule". racer.com. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
  8. ^ "2019 IMSA Schedule Released". dailysportscar.com. August 4, 2018. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
  9. ^ Klein, Jennifer (August 3, 2018). "Return To Two Prototype Classes Among Key Competition Changes To WeatherTech Championship Beginning In 2019". IMSA. Archived from the original on January 6, 2019. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
  10. ^ "IMSA splits DPi and LMP2 into two classes for 2019". www.motorsport.com. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
  11. ^ "IMSA Announce Sporting Regulation Changes – dailysportscar.com". www.dailysportscar.com. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
  12. ^ Klein, Jennifer (September 20, 2017). "IMSA Names Michelin Official Tire Beginning In 2019". IMSA. Archived from the original on November 7, 2017. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
  13. ^ "Roar Before the 24 updated entry list" (PDF). www.imsa.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 4, 2019. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
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  17. ^ Myrehn, Ryan. "Joest Quickest in Roar Session 1 – Sportscar365". sportscar365.com. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
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  23. ^ Myrehn, Ryan. "Beatriz Tops GTD Roar Qual; P1's Times Disallowed – Sportscar365". sportscar365.com. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
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  28. ^ Dagys, John. "No Major Changes in Pre-Rolex 24 BoP – Sportscar365". sportscar365.com. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  29. ^ "Post-Roar BoP Tables" (PDF). competitors.imsa.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 17, 2019. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
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  49. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "00_Championship Points - Official.pdf" (PDF). results.imsa.com. February 1, 2019. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
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  52. ^ "01/27/2019 race: Rolex 24 at Daytona (WSCC) - Racing-Reference.info". www.racing-reference.info. Retrieved February 4, 2020.


IMSA SportsCar Championship
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