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Updates from the Rest of the Racing World By Mark Alan Jones, Australia
Atlas F1 Magazine Writer
Tommi Makinen Survives the Safari
Makinen took the lead on Stage 2, and it was a lead he'd never relinquish, storming home to a 12 minute victory over Peugeot's Harri Rovanpera. Suspension dramas and even a smashed windscreen from a bird strike could not stop the popular Finn. It could have been even better for Mitsubishi, but turbo failure struck down Freddy Loix and dropped him out of contention for third spot, eventually finishing fifth.
For Peugeot, Rovanpera's second place salvaged something from a very tough rally for them. Peugeot lost two cars on the first day of the event in Stage 4, when Marcus Gronholm retired with suspension failure and Didier Auriol rolled in the wet conditions, his car briefly catching fire.
The car Makinen took over the lead from rallied on for a remarkable third place. By the end of the rally, that team had run seriously short of spares, particularly suspension componentry and had taken to repairing rather than replacing. It was the best ever result for the ecstatic Skoda team and Armin Schwarz, especially after recently rallies and the disaster in Spain which saw the team's lead engineer seriously injured by an errant fire tender. And it could have been better for them with Bruno Thiry racing well into the last day until power steering failure started to seriously fatigue the Belgian. Thiry required medical attention after Stage 12 but rolled the car on the final stage, Stage 13. Thiry's navigator Stephane Prevot was taken to hospital after the rollover but was not seriously hurt.
It was even worse for Subaru, with all three cars retiring. Richard Burns deranged the left front corner on the first stage. Punctures to Toshihiro Arai's car would eventually lead to suspension collapse and retirement at the end of Day 1. Petter Solberg got to Day 3 but had wheel bearing failure. They retired the car before they did too much damage to it but tried valiantly to stay in the rally - even resorting to navigator Phil Mills climbing into the boot to help weight distribution.
Results of World Rally Championship Round 8, Safari Rally, Kenya:
Drivers' standings: Tommi Makinen 40, Colin McRae 30, Carlos Sainz 26, Harri Rovanpera 20, Richard Burns 15, Francois Delecour 14, Didier Auriol 10, Petter Solberg and Freddy Loix 9, Armin Schwarz 7 etc.
Manufacturers' standings: Mitsubishi 66, Ford 60, Subaru 28, Peugeot 26, Skoda 15, Hyundai 10
Debut Win For Carpentier As Team Rahal Crash Out
In a breathking final lap dive for the line, Patrick Carpentier took advantage of a favourable draft off the back of lapped teammate Alex Tagliani to arrive at the line first, after a fantastic late race dice between Carpentier, Dario Franchitti and Michel Jourdain Jnr. Franchitti and Jourdain arrived at the line side by side, with second place later being awarded to Franchitti by the smallest of margins. It was the debut CART win for Carpentier and an excellent follow up for the Player's/Forsythe squad after Tagliani's second place the week before in Toronto.
For Kenny Brack, it was a disappointing race. Brack and Team Rahal teammate Max Papis had dominated the race, leading for more than half the race between them, when with 17 laps to go, the two touched and locked wheels after Brack lost downforce in Herta's wake and understeered into Papis's car. While a mortified team watched in horror, both cars spun into the wall hard, throwing away a potential 1-2 result.
Among other drivers, Christian Fittipaldi spun while entering the pits from the lead of the race. His race would end later with a crash into the wall at turn 4. Memo Gidley received a stop-go penalty for pit lane speeding, while Michael Andretti retired while running in third place.
Despite two consecutive DNFs, Brack continues to lead the series, but Dario Franchitti has closed to within three points. Helio Castroneves and Michael Andretti are both within shouting distance. This title is a long way from being over.
Results of FedEx CART World Series, Round 11, Michigan Speedway, USA:
Michael Andretti Takes Seventh Win in Toronto
Andretti stalled his Reynard-Honda on the first lap of the race after a clash with Kiwi rookie Scott Dixon, which dropped the Team Green car to the tail of the field. From there, Andretti picked off cars one by one, and late in the race was picking off the cars in the top order at the rate of a position per lap, taking the lead with 24 laps to go.
Second was a career best finish for Alex Tagliani, all the sweeter for scoring the result in a home race for the young Canadian. 'Tag' spent most of the race fighting with Gil de Ferran for the lead. After the last pitstop, Andretti got in front of Tagliani, and much as he would have liked to attack the second generation champion, there was insufficient fuel for the job. In the end, maintaining second became the mission and that was succesfully achieved.
Penske dominated the first half of the race with Gil de Ferran and Helio Castroneves leading the first half of the race. Castroneves led during the first batch of pitstops, and was stopped early to set up for a long run to the finish but the engine expired 2 laps after his stop. De Ferran was called in for an extra pit stop and was fighting back through the field when he was punted out of the race by Cristiano da Matta. A late race collision also took Bruno Junqueira and Christian Fittipladi out of the fight for third spot.
Results of FedEx CART World Series, Round 10, Toronto, Canada:
Standings (after Michigan): Kenny Brack 84, Dario Franchitti 81, Helio Castroneves 75, Michael Andretti 73, Cristiano da Matta 67, Gil de Ferran 58, Scott Dixon 57, Paul Tracy 52, Jimmy Vasser 50, Christian Fittipladi 49 etc.
Biaggi and Yamaha Dominate Sachsenring
Max Biaggi re-established his claim on the World Motorcycle Championship, taking a lights to flag win in the German Grand Prix at Sachsenring. Yamaha dominated the event taking the top four positions with the only Honda rider providing any resistance being West Pons rider Alex Barros.
Biaggi led from the start with Norick Abe taking the fight to Biaggi initially. Biaggi's teammate Carlos Checa took second from Abe at around half distance. Shinya Nakano also kept pace in the battle for second and would relieve Abe of the final podium spot with two laps to go. Barros faded away to fifth over the course of the race, falling back into the clutches of the now fully-recovered Olivier Jacque, but the Frenchman ran out of laps to pass the Brazilian. Series leader Valentino Rossi was out of sorts and never in the hunt, just leading Loris Capirossi home for seventh ahead of the two Suzukis. Eleventh in his first race back from injury was Red Bull Yamaha rider Garry McCoy.
Biaggi has now cut Rossi's lead down to ten points. Rossi has consistently looked the better rider, but a couple of falls and this latest race has kept Biaggi in the hunt. Watching the races it seems there is little doubt Rossi will be world champion, but the points table tells a different tale.
Results of World Motorcycle Championship, Round 9, Sachsenring, Germany:
Standings: Valentino Rossi 170, Max Biaggi 160, Loris Capirossi 111, Alex Barros and Shinya Nakano 100, Norick Abe 87, Alex Criville 71, Carlos Checa 67, Kenny Roberts Jr 62, Sete Gibernau 60 etc
Bourdais's Bastille Day
Qualifying was won by Tomas Enge from teammate Justin Wilson, but was sharply contrasted by David Saelens, whose huge shunt left him with a fractured back and his immediate racing future in doubt, with at least a month on the sidelines. The European Minardi Lola was launched airborne across the gravel trap after running off at Becketts.
The start was all Nordic as Enge led Wilson away from the startline. Bourdais slotted into third with Mark Webber and Darren Manning battling close behind. Wilson was quickly looking for a way past Enge to consolidate his championship lead over Webber. Wilson started looking at Stowe each lap until finally attempting a pass, but the red cars touched, sending Wilson off the track and down to third.
Further back, Antonio Pizzonia was charging through the field, quickly dealing with Ricardo Mauricio and Darren Manning, with Mark Webber not holding the Petrobras driver back for long either. The top three though would be too far up the road for Pizzonia.
Wilson now leads Webber by four points and is nine ahead of teammate Enge. There are plenty of races remaining, so the championship race is far from over.
Results of International Formula 3000 Championship, Round 8, Silverstone, Great Britain:
Standings: Justin Wilson 43, Mark Webber 39, Tomas Enge 34, Sebastien Bourdais 18, Antonio Pizzonia and Bas Leinders 12, Darren Manning 9, Jaime Melo Jr and David Saelens 8, Ricardo Sperafico 6 etc.
Eleven Straight ALMS Wins For Audi
Le Mans winners Rinaldo Capello and Tom Kristensen notched another ALMS win for Audi as the Joest Audi Sport North America team clocked up a 1-2 victory with Frank Biela and Emanuele Pirro in second.
Fifth and sixth places were just reward for the GTS Le Mans champions, the Chevrolet Corvette team, with the Fellows/O'Connell car leading home the Pilgrim/Collins car. Early in the race the Corvettes had to give best to the Konrad team Saleen S7R, but the Saleen gradually dropped back during the race and a late race pitstop saw Franz Konrad and Terry Borcheller drop below the all-conquering GT BMWs down to 16th.
The remainder of the top ten was taken up by the GT class, all places filled by new BMW M3 V8s, completely swamping their Porsche 996 GT3 opposition with JJ Lehto and Jorg Muller taking the class victory in the BMW Motorsport car. The other three BMWs filled the top four positions, while their Porsche opposition conspired to ruin their own chances with a series of mechanical failures and crashes. Dirk Muller and Frederick Ekblom took second in class in the semi-factory car after Hans Stuck spun the BMW Motorsport car on the final corner of the race to drop to third in class. The first of the Porsches was the Alex Job Racing car driven by Sascha Maassen in eleventh place.
The LMP675 prototype class was won by the Reynard 01Q Judd of Didier de Radigues in 13th place after the Dick Barbour Lola-Judd was just not quick enough.
Results of American Le Mans Series, Round 3, Sears Point, California, USA:
RML Saleen Wins Controversial Estoril 1000
With the Audi out and the Courage disqualified, the new race winners were the Ray Mallock Limited Saleen S7R of Bruno Lambert, Ian McKellar Jr and Chris Goodwin. Despite a long history of sedan racing, including two recent British Touring Car Championships, it was RML's first sportscar race win. The battle for the GTS class amongst the Saleens had been closely contested, with the RML car gaining the upper hand over the Konrad entry at the first pitstop, with Bruno Lambert electing to double stint and save time in the pits. Eventually the Mallock car pulled out four laps over the Konrad car for what became the race win.
Henri Pescarolo has submitted an appeal to his team's disqualification.
Results of European Le Mans Series, Round 3, Estoril 1000, Portugal:
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