Mazda Team Joest Breaks Through For First WeatherTech Championship Win, 1-2 Sweep in Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen

June 30, 2019
Staff Report
IMSA Wire Service

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – “It’s our day!” screamed Mazda Director
of Motorsports John Doonan immediately after the pair of soul red
Mazda RT24-P Daytona Prototype international (DPi) race cars took
the checkered flag after six grueling hours of racing at Watkins Glen
International.
It’s been a long time coming, but Mazda Team Joest is finally a
winner in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.
No. 55 Mazda RT24-P DPi co-drivers Harry Tincknell, Jonathan
Bomarito and Olivier Pla delivered the program’s first victory in
a dominating performance at the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen,
leading a 1-2 sweep for the team. No. 77 Mazda DPi co-drivers Oliver
Jarvis – who started the race from the pole position, Tristan Nunez
and Timo Bernhard finished second, with Jarvis crossing the stripe
0.353 seconds behind Tincknell.
The scene in the Mazda Team Joest pits was sheer pandemonium,
with screams, hugs and high fives all around. It was the culmination
of six years of hard work and dedication amid struggles, close calls
and heartbreak.
The pair of Mazdas were the class of the field throughout the six
hours, but entering the final hour, they both were trailing Juan
Pablo Montoya – winner of the previous two consecutive
WeatherTech Championship races in the No. 6 Acura Team
Penske ARX-05 DPi – who grabbed the lead through pit strategy.
Tincknell spent the better part of the next 30 minutes pressuring
Montoya and looking for any opportunity to pass. He finally took
his shot with 45 minutes to go, diving to the inside going through
the “heel” of the famed Watkins Glen International “boot” section
and came away as the leader.
“I had to attack and it was difficult to pass,” Tincknell said. “I tried
once around the outside and he kind of had a little bit of rubbin’
is racin’ and kind of pushed me off, so I knew it was going to have
to be a super-bold move. In those circumstances you’re better off
committing 100 percent. It’s the 95 percent commitment move that
causes the crash, so I think I was probably 110 percent committed
going into that corner, a little bit of rubbin’ is racin’ at the apex, and
luckily we came out unscathed.”
Jarvis got past Montoya and into second a few minutes later, and
both Mazdas then pulled away from the field as they’d done for
most of the race. But that didn’t mean the ending was without drama.
With under 20 minutes to go in the race, the cover on the left side
of the No. 55’s engine dislodged and came to a rest on the car’s
sidepod, wreaking havoc on the car’s aerodynamics and allowing
Jarvis to close up and potentially overtake Tincknell for the victory.
But with little to no pressure from behind, the pair of Mazdas
elected to remain in formation where they finished.
“It sounds like it was more terrifying outside the car than it was
in it,” said Tincknell of the bodywork damage. “I certainly started
to feel the car was a little bit freer on the rear, a little bit more loose,
but I just thought it was the tires, to be honest. I didn’t quite realize
it was the damage that was there. Where that was caused and why,
I’m not 100 percent sure.”
“Me and Olly (Pla) were way more nervous, I can tell you that,”
added Bomarito.
It was the first overall IMSA race victory for Mazda since the
American Le Mans Series (ALMS) Baltimore Grand Prix on
Sept. 3, 2011, when Humaid Al Masaood and Steven Kane co-drove
the No. 20 Oryx Dyson Racing Mazda-Lola to the win. It was Mazda’s
first IMSA win of any kind since Sylvain Tremblay and Tom Long
co-drove the diesel-powered No. 70 Mazda 6 GX to the GRAND-AM
Rolex Sports Car Series GX class victory at Lime Rock Park on
Sept. 28, 2013.
“It’s been an amazingly long journey,” said Doonan. “All we wanted
to do was to reach the top step for all the Mazda fans, all the Mazda
owners, all of our Mazda racers, our dealers, our employees, it was
trying to have a Mazda day and we finally got there. We didn’t quit.
There was plenty of times where faced insane challenges, so many
close calls. We almost thought we had it so many times.”
It was Tincknell’s first IMSA victory and the third for Pla, whose
most recent WeatherTech Championship win came in the Prototype
class at Motul Petit Le Mans in 2016. It was Bomarito’s seventh
IMSA win (three WeatherTech Championship, four GRAND-AM)
and first since a GTLM class win at Circuit of The Americas in 2014.
The No. 55 led 106 of the 291 total laps in the six hours, with the
No. 77 leading – appropriately enough – another 77 laps.
“Oh man, it’s so amazing, so amazing,” said Bomarito, who rejoined
Mazda’s WeatherTech Championship Prototype team prior to the
2015 season and is a graduate of Mazda’s driver development
ladder system. “A Mazda 1-2, this has been a long, long time coming.
I’ve been with this program for so long, seen so many ups and
downs, but both cars, both crews, amazing job. It’s just as important
for the 77. We’ll share it all together tonight.”
In addition to winning the race, the No. 55 team also was the
Round 3 winner of the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup as the DPi
team that scored the most points in the race.
Speaking of points, it was a huge points day for Montoya and
co-driver Dane Cameron, who finished third in the Six Hours.
After qualifying second on Saturday, Cameron noticed the No. 6 car
had a flat tire on the starting grid, forcing the team to change tires
and start the race from pit lane.
They battled back from the early setback and Montoya led 19 laps
before taking the team’s fourth consecutive podium result, and
second consecutive third-place run at Watkins Glen. That result
coupled with a seventh-place result by the No. 31 Whelen
Engineering Cadillac DPi-V.R shared by Felipe Nasr, Pipo Derani
and Eric Curran moved the No. 6 driving duo into the DPi
championship lead by one point, 177-176, over full-season co-drivers
Derani and Nasr.
In the LMP2 class, No. 52 PR1 Mathiasen Motorsports ORECA
co-drivers Matt McMurry, Gabriel Aubry and Eric Lux took the class
victory by 20 laps over the No. 38 Performance Tech Motorsports
ORECA squad of Cameron Cassels, Kyle Masson and Andrew Evans.
It was the second consecutive victory for McMurry, the team, and
was especially big for Lux, who hails from nearby Buffalo, New York.
“It felt really good,” Lux said. “This is a home track for me, just a
two-hour drive from Buffalo. I don’t know how many times I’ve
tried to do this race now. My best finish was fourth, so it feels really
good to be on the top step today. It’s constant fighting out there with
all the classes. It was great battles. Really hats off to my co-drivers
for the great driving all weekend.”
It’s a quick turnaround for the next IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar
Championship, which heads directly to Canadian Tire Motorsport
Park for next Sunday’s Mobil 1 SportsCar Grand Prix presented by
Acura. It will be the first IMSA race to be televised live on the NBC
network, beginning at 1 p.m. ET.
IMSA Radio also will have live coverage throughout the weekend on 
IMSA.com and RadioLeMans.com, with race coverage airing on
SiriusXM Radio.
Tickets are available now at CanadianTireMotorsportPark.com.