ALTON, Va. – Giacomo Altoè is doing his part to support Albert Costa’s run for the title in the Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) class of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. Altoè earned the Motul Pole Award on Saturday in GTD PRO for Sunday’s Michelin GT Challenge at VIRginia International Raceway in the No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3. It was his third pole of the 2025 campaign (WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca and Road America) and the fourth for the No. 81 car (Costa at Sebring International Raceway). Costa entered the weekend 30 points behind class leaders Antonio Garcia and Alexander Sims (No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R). With Garcia qualifying fourth, the No. 81 Ferrari will gain seven championship points on the No. 3 Corvette heading into Sunday’s race. Altoè has been the most frequent co-driver alongside Costa this year, and their efforts have put Costa in position to challenge for the GTD PRO crown. Davide Rigon and three other drivers have also shared the No. 81 at various stages. Neil Verhagen (No. 1 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO) swapped the top spot with Altoè no fewer than five times in the 15-minute qualifying session. Altoè’s pole lap was timed at 1 minute, 44.433 seconds for an average speed of 112.722 miles per hour, while Verhagen was a fraction slower at 1:44.478 (112.674 mph). Perhaps surprisingly, Altoè was unaware of his position as he turned a series of ever-faster laps culminating in the pole effort with just under four minutes remaining. “I was absolutely alone in the car, just focusing on myself and on my delta in every corner,” Altoè said. “We built up the qualifying like that. I knew I could improve, so I stayed out and kept pushing. The lap came together, and it was a really nice lap on the limit.” Because Altoè has competed in only four of the seven prior GTD PRO races in 2025, he’s not in contention like Costa for the driver’s championship. But he’s proud of his contribution to DragonSpeed and Ferrari’s strong performance in the team and manufacturer’s championships. “The championship fight for me is the team championship; this is our goal, and I am focusing on that,” he added. “We have been working so hard, and every small detail makes the difference because the gaps are always so tight. This was the first goal of the weekend, and we achieved it. Staring on pole will make the race a little bit easier. We need points for the championship.” Paul Miller Racing BMWs took second and third, with Verhagen second in the No. 1 car and Dan Harper inside of the second row in the No. 48 entry. Verhagen’s co-driver, Madison Snow, has won at VIR the last two years – once apiece in GTD in 2023 and GTD PRO and overall in 2024. The two Pratt Miller Corvettes rounded out the top five, with Garcia in the No. 3 topping Nicky Catsburg in the No. 4. GTD: Lexus Looks Good In Pursuit of First 2025 Win |