Five Takeaways: Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen

July 1, 2019
Staff Report
IMSA Wire Service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen was
an unforgettable race, especially for the Mazda Team Joest program,
which earned its first IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship
Daytona Prototype international (DPi) victory in a dominating team
performance.
The Porsche GT Team earned its fourth consecutive GT Le Mans
(GTLM) class victory between its two cars, matching a similar
four-race run of victories achieved by Ford Chip Ganassi Racing
and its pair of GTLM machines last year.
The GT Daytona (GTD) class featured the first win of the season
for the class-leading No. 86 Meyer Shank Racing Acura team as
a two-race GTD win streak for the No. 14 AIM Vasser Sullivan
Lexus RC F GT3 came to an end, while PR1 Mathiasen Motorsports
celebrated in LMP2 victory lane for the second consecutive race.
The 3.4-mile Watkins Glen International circuit is now in the
rearview mirror of all WeatherTech Championship team
transporters, which now are on their way to Canadian Tire
Motorsport Park for this weekend’s Mobil 1 SportsCar Grand
Prix presented by Acura.
But before we shift our focus north of the border and IMSA’s
first race to be televised live on NBC network television
(Sunday, 1 p.m. ET), let’s take one more look back and what
we learned from the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen:
Celebrations Continues for Mazda Team Joest
It’s a good possibility the victory celebration for Mazda Team
Joest is still in progress, more than 24 hours after the checkered
flag flew and sealed the team’s 1-2 result in the Sahlen’s Six
Hours of The Glen.
Make no mistake, the celebration included the entire team and
drivers for both cars. Obviously, the No. 55 RT24-P DPi won in
the hands of Harry Tincknell, Jonathan Bomarito and Olivier Pla;
but there was an incredible sense of pride in the second-place
finishing No. 77 team of Oliver Jarvis, Tristan Nunez and
Timo Bernhard as well.
Jarvis started the race from the pole position in the No. 77 – the
third time this year that he’s won the Motul Pole Award – but
the No. 55 car seemed to have slightly more pace on race day.
That’s not to say the No. 77 couldn’t have won. When the
left-side engine cover dislodged on the No. 55 in the closing
minutes of the race, Jarvis easily could have pounced on the
opportunity to take the win for himself and his co-drivers.
Instead, he was the ultimate team player.
“I mean, this has been a huge team effort,” Jarvis said. “Huge
congrats to the 55, what a drive from them three. The whole
team did an amazing job. They had a bit of damage at the end,
but they hung on. It’s been a long while coming, but it’s worth
the wait. We’re going to enjoy tonight, but we’ve got another
race next week. We want to go win again.”
If the No. 77 wins – which could happen as early as next Sunday’s
Mobil 1 SportsCar Grand Prix presented by Acura at Canadian
Tire Motorsport Park – it’s likely to be another emotional one,
especially for Nunez.
He started as a Mazda factory driver as a teenager and has been
part of the team’s driver lineup dating back to 2015 when it
entered the WeatherTech Championship with a pair of
diesel-powered LMP2 prototypes. With that much history in
the program, Nunez had some postrace tears of joy himself on
Sunday.
“I was wiping tears from my face,” said the now 23-year-old driver.
“At this point, it didn’t matter which car won. I’m crying tears of
joy because a Mazda won a race. It’s something we needed for
so long and it’s finally showed the hard work and dedication
that’s gone into this program.
“We have everything now, an amazing team, the best drivers –
I think – in the world, and it shows today. A really dominant 1-2
finish from Mazda and nothing can beat these emotions right now.”
Meet The New Boss… It’s the No. 6 Acura Team Penske DPi Squad
Besides the Mazdas, there was one other car in the DPi field to
lead more than a handful of laps in the Sahlen’s Six Hours and
that was the No. 6 Acura Team Penske ARX-05 co-driven by Dane
Cameron and Juan Pablo Montoya, which led a total of 19 laps in
the fifth and sixth hours after battling back.
In fact, Montoya had both Mazdas in his rearview mirror – albeit
close behind him – until Tincknell fought his way past with 43
minutes left in the race. Montoya eventually surrendered second
place to Jarvis and brought the No. 6 home in third place.
“We had nothing for them,” said Montoya of the Mazdas’ pace.
“They were in their own league. You could see the speed traps
and every sector. In qualifying, we can normally get the car really
close and Dane did an amazing lap. In optimum lap time, I think
Dane had the lap to beat him and everything, but realistically
today, we didn’t. We got a BoP adjustment from the last race to
this race, and those extra 15 kilos really hurt the tires on the long
runs. On one lap, it isn’t the end of the world, but over a run, it
makes it a lot harder. It’s part of the balancing process, but I think
we’re in a good place.
“We still ended up with the sort of result – this morning I was
talking to Dane and we said, ‘We’ve got to get podiums from here
to the end.’ If we can be on the podium every race, we’ll have a
strong shot at winning this, so we’ve just got to keep doing it.”
The podium result was the No. 6 duo’s fourth straight, including
back-to-back victories at May’s Acura Sports Car Challenge at
Mid-Ohio and the Chevrolet Sports Car Classic in Detroit on the
first weekend of June. As a result, they’ve moved into the
WeatherTech Championship DPi points lead by one point,
177-176, over the No. 31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac DPi-V.R 
pairing of Felipe Nasr and Pipo Derani, who had a problem in
the first hour of the race and wound up seventh in the final
race standings.
“That was the goal, to keep slashing the deficit, so to take it all
and take the points lead for the first time is wonderful,” said
Cameron. “I’m super-excited about that. It was obviously a little
bit bumpy there at the start, and we just didn’t quite have the
pace of the Mazdas for what they had here.”
Corvette So Close… Again
It’s been well documented how the No. 3 Corvette Racing Chevrolet
Corvette C7.R and co-drivers Antonio Garcia and Jan Magnussen
have parlayed tremendous consistency into WeatherTech
Championship GTLM titles each of the past two years.
They had eight podium finishes in 11 races last year to score
their second consecutive series championship. In 2017, they
had five podiums – and three wins – to win that year’s GTLM title.
This year, they’ve finished on the podium in each of the past four
consecutive races and are currently just one point behind GTLM
points leaders Nick Tandy and Patrick Pilet in the WeatherTech
Championship standings after five of 11 races. But it’s clear that –
while podiums are nice – Garcia and Magnussen really want to
win again, as Tandy and Pilet did Sunday.
That’s why there was a tone of disappointment in Garcia’s voice
after the race. He and the No. 3 Corvette had plenty of pace to win –
as evidenced by Garcia’s pole-winning performance in qualifying
on Saturday – but the way the race played out didn’t align with
the team’s strategy. Garcia finished 0.452 seconds behind Tandy.
“It was a difficult race,” Garcia said. “Tandy was, like, six, seven
seconds up the road if not more (in the final hour). At this level,
even if you have almost half an hour to do it, I mean, it’s very,
very difficult. It’s a shame that I got all the way there, but again,
that makes it feel like it didn’t make a ton of difference if you’re
finishing four-tenths behind or seven seconds behind, because
the end result is the same.
“But at least I gave it a try. The Corvette was really good. It’s a
shame. I mean, we led a lot of parts of the race but not the ones
that counts. It’s a difficult race, but I think we have to be happy
for, again, this consistency car, but not the winner car.”
Strong Weekend for Shank Squad
The pair of Meyer Shank Racing-prepared Acura NSX GT3s had
an outstanding weekend in the GTD class at the Sahlen’s Six
Hours of The Glen.
Trent Hindman won his second Motul Pole Award of the season
in Saturday’s qualifying session aboard the No. 86 Acura. Teammate
Christina Nielsen turned in her best WeatherTech Championship
qualifying result of the season in the No. 57 Heinricher Racing
with Meyer Shank Acura to line up alongside Hindman in
second place on the grid.
Both cars led at different times throughout the Sahlen’s Six Hours
of The Glen, with the No. 86 car shared by Hindman, Mario
Farnbacher and Justin Marks leading when it counted – at the
drop of the checkered flag. The win allowed Hindman and
Farnbacher to extend their lead in the GTD championship
standings to 16 over No. 14 AIM Vasser Sullivan Lexus RC F GT3
co-drivers Jack Hawksworth and Richard Heistand, who finished
fifth in class.
The No. 14 team came home one spot behind Nielsen and her
co-drivers, Katherine Legge and Bia Figueiredo, who finished a
season-best fourth.
“What a great weekend for the Heinricher Racing and Meyer
Shank Racing team,” said Heinricher Racing Principal Jackie
Heinricher. “Yes, we wanted to be on that podium with our
winning sister car. Huge congratulations to them.
“But, to have the cars qualify on the front row and then take
two of the top four places in the race is the level of consistent
success we’ve been building towards this season. I am so proud
of our drivers and the entire crew for their level of performance.”
Front Runners Pick Up First Half Awards from VP Racing
Fuels at Watkins Glen
Twice per season – once at the halfway point and once at the
season-ending WeatherTech Night of Champions – VP Racing
Fuels presents “Front Runner Awards” to the teams in each class
that have led the most laps in the most races.
With the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen marking the halfway point
in the 2019 season, it was time for some hardware to be handed
out by IMSA’s official fuel supplier. And the winners were…
In the DPi class, the No. 6 Acura Team Penske Acura ARX-05 squad.
In LMP2, the VP Front Runner Award went to the No. 38
Performance Tech Motorsports ORECA team. The GTLM VP Fuels
Front Runner for the first half of 2019 was the No. 912 Porsche
GT Team Porsche 911 RSR squad, and in GTD, the award went
to the No. 86 Meyer Shank Racing Acura NSX GT3 team.
Interestingly enough, all four VP Fuels Front Runner Award
recipients also happen to be leading the WeatherTech
Championship standings in their respective classes.