Long History, Fantastic Racetrack Makes Six Hours of The Glen A Crown Jewel of Endurance Racing

June 25, 2019
Staff Report
IMSA Wire Service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen is a
crown jewel of endurance racing.
With a history dating back to the late 1960s and a list of winners
that includes some of the greatest road racers of all time, the
annual six-hour battle on the 3.4-mile Watkins Glen International
circuit is a bona fide big one.
This Sunday, the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship
returns for another six-hour battle at The Glen, beginning at
9:45 a.m. ET. The race, which also marks the third round of
the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup, will be televised on NBCSN
beginning at 7 p.m. ET this Sunday, June 30, with live streaming
of the race in its entirety on the NBC Sports App and 
NBCSports.com beginning at 9:30 a.m. ET.
IMSA Radio also will have live coverage throughout the
weekend on IMSA.com and RadioLeMans.comwith complete
race coverage also airing on SiriusXM Radio (Sirius Channel
218/XM Channel 202/Streaming 972).
The list of previous Six Hours of The Glen winners reads
like a motorsports “Who’s Who.” Legendary names in road
racing like Jacky Ickx, Mario Andretti, Brian Redman, Jo Siffert,
Peter Gregg and Hurley Haywood were among the winners
in the first 10 years of the event. The late ‘70s and early 1980s
saw more legendary names – like Hans-Joachim Stuck,
Rick Mears, Johnny Rutherford, Derek Bell and Al Holbert –
added to the Six Hours of The Glen’s winners list.
Beginning in September 1984 and running through the
mid-‘90s, the race length changed to 500 kilometers, but still
more legendary names – like Geoff Brabham, Chip Robinson
and Juan Manuel Fangio II – were winners at The Glen.
The Six Hours returned in 1996 and aside from 1998, has been
run every year since. Over the past 20 years, even more legends –
names like Scott Pruett, Bill Auberlen, Andy Lally, Christian
Fittipaldi and Joao Barbosa – have pulled into Victory Lane
after six grueling hours.
“Watkins Glen is, hands down, my favorite racetrack on the
planet,” said Lally, a four-time Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen
winner who will share the No. 44 Magnus Racing Lamborghini
Huracán GT3 with John Potter and Spencer Pumpelly in the GT
Daytona (GTD) class in Sunday’s race. “For me, it’s my home state.
It’s where I grew up, not too far, and it is a special place for me,
not only for endurance racing, but for NASCAR racing.
“I’ve raced prototypes and GT cars there, I’ve races open-wheel
formula cars there and I’ve raced stock cars there. And every
time, it’s always a battle. On the short course or the long course,
for me, it just doesn’t get any better than Watkins Glen.”
To Lally’s point, the Watkins Glen International circuit is another
key contributor to the event’s prestige. Between 1948 and 1952,
racing in Watkins Glen was done on a 6.6-mile course utilizing
streets and roads in and around the small village in the Finger
Lakes region of Western New York.
The permanent road course began at its current location in 1956,
and Watkins Glen hosted Formula 1 Grand Prix races for
20 years beginning in 1961. The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup
Series has raced on the 2.45-mile Watkins Glen “short course”
every year since 1986, and IndyCar also has raced there several
times, which all adds to the mystique of “The Glen.”
“I think Watkins Glen is an amazing track,” said Juan Pablo
Montoya, who heads into Sunday’s race riding a two-race
WeatherTech Championship winning streak in the No. 6 Acura
Team Penske ARX-05 DPi with co-driver Dane Cameron. “It’s a
really fast, flowing track and it really suits our cars.
“It’s tough. It’s one of the hardest races of endurance racing,
because there’s so many fast corners. Physically, it’s very
demanding and it makes it fun. It’s a place where you can
push so hard.”
It’s also a place where Montoya has raced not only in the
Acura DPi, but also in IndyCar and NASCAR, making him
uniquely qualified to compare the experiences at The Glen.
“This (Acura DPi) is very close to the IndyCar,” Montoya said.
“It’s actually shockingly close, how fast you can go, compared
with the IndyCar. It’ll be interesting to see how much closer
we get this year with the Michelins this year and the extra
power. It should be at least two seconds a lap quicker than the
last time we were there, so I don’t know. It’s going to make it a
really, really brave place.”
Whose bravery will be rewarded on Sunday? Who will join
the illustrious list of Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen winners?
Tune into NBC Sports or IMSA Radio, or get your tickets now
at TheGlen.com to find out.
IMSA TWITTER, INSTAGRAM and FACEBOOK
Follow on Twitter @imsa, use the hashtag #IMSA, follow on
Instagram @imsa_racing and ‘like’ IMSA on Facebook –
www.facebook.com/imsa. For further information logon
to www.imsa.com.