Bijoy Garg, currently leading the VP Racing SportsCar Challenge LMP3 points, will team up with 2022 Indy Lights champion Linus Lundqvist for the next two two races in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship driving a second Jr III Racing Ligier …
Bijoy Garg, currently leading the VP Racing SportsCar Challenge LMP3 points, will team up with 2022 Indy Lights champion Linus Lundqvist for the next two two races in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship driving a second Jr III Racing Ligier PS J320.
Lundqvist (pictured above) has had a GTD start in the Rolex 24 At Daytona, but Road America and IMS will be his first races in LMP3 and first WeatherTech Championship starts outside of Daytona.
“I’m excited to be competing in an LMP3, this will be a new experience for me,” said Lundqvist. “I’ve tested in an LMP3, but haven’t raced in one yet so it will be exciting to see how it goes. It will be fun to be back, especially in a different class and on a different circuit.”
The race at Road America will mark Garg’s WeatherTech Championship debut, two years after Jr III’s debut at the Wisconsin circuit in 2021, and will be followed by the new race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
“I’m excited to make the move to WeatherTech racing,” said Garg. “I believe the time I had in both the VP and Asian Le Mans Series really helped me prepare for the step up, but every field is different so you can’t really predict how it will go. I’m really looking forward to working with Linus and I think we will make a strong partnership.”
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Garg and Lundqvist will join WeatherTech Championship regulars Ari Balogh and Garett Grist for Jr III Racing. Grist is currently third in the points after Balogh had to miss a couple of races due to injury.
“We are beyond excited for the opportunity to run a second WeatherTech car,” said Jr III owner Billy Glavin. “We started out as a team running Prototype Challenge and have worked our way up to competing with two WeatherTech teams in just four seasons. The team has been working hard and we couldn’t have asked for a better team to do this with. I think Bijoy will do great in WeatherTech competition, he’s done really well in VP Challenge so I don’t see why this won’t be the same. This will be Linus ’first time with the team, but he has proved himself in an open wheel car and I believe he will do just the same in a P3.”
The Road America round of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship takes place on Aug. 4-6. After the GT-only race at Virginia International Raceway (Aug. 25-27), the full five classes will be back in action for the inaugural TireRack.com Battle on the Bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Sept. 15-17.
As IMSA wrestles with how to handle increased grid sizes as the GTP class grows, it has chosen to limit the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship to four classes, with LMP3 returning to IMSA’s VP Racing SportsCar Challenge, which was its home until …
As IMSA wrestles with how to handle increased grid sizes as the GTP class grows, it has chosen to limit the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship to four classes, with LMP3 returning to IMSA’s VP Racing SportsCar Challenge, which was its home until 2021. Most of those affected by the decision weren’t shocked, and are trying to figure out their next move.
“The announcement did not come as a surprise, and I appreciate that John [Doonan, IMSA president] called to confirm the news with me before it was made public,” says Jr III Racing owner Billy Glavin.
“Starting with our program in IMSA Prototype Challenge, the LMP3 platform has been a fantastic way for Jr III Racing to grow within IMSA to now compete in both VP Racing as well as in WeatherTech. Ligier has been a great partner to us over the course of the years and we look to finish the year on a high note. We are working to continue to race in WeatherTech in the future, and appreciate the clarity that this announcement is creating for everyone in the paddock.”
Glavin’s participation in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship has been centered on LMP3 – he also runs LMP3 cars in IMSA’s VP Racing SportsCar Challenge. He has enjoyed running the car for customers in the WeatherTech Championship not only because it’s the cheapest avenue to entry into the series, but because it’s a great platform.
“It’s a racer’s car, so it doesn’t have a lot of electronics to lean on,” he explains of the class’s appeal. “It’s a very safe package. You get a car that’s faster than a GT3 car for the price of a GT4 car – if not even a little cheaper, depending on which cars. And you just can’t beat that package. It’s relatively easy to run and relatively easy to fix. So in my opinion it makes great sense for the gentleman driver or the customer racer that just wants to drive something on track that is fun, safe and relatively easy to drive and something that you can fix regularly and pretty easily.”
While Glavin and other LMP3 teams had held hope that the class had a future in WeatherTech, they were also preparing for a future without it. Andretti Autosport and Jarett Andretti, a competitor in the class since 2021, is adding an Aston Martin Vantage GT3 to the stable to compete in the GTD class with Gabby Chaves, beginning with the Laguna Seca round next weekend. And Glavin is looking at GT3 options as well as LMP2.
“We’re excited about what we have for the rest of this year,” he says. “But after that, I really have no plans. I’ve certainly started looking at P2 programs or or GT3 programs. LMP2 is more in line with what we’ve been doing, right? It’s a prototype; a lot of similarities between the two classes. It’s a very sophisticated and expensive machine, especially coming from a P3 world. So that that makes things a little challenging to line up, because it’s just a different level of operating budget, both for the teams as well as the customer.
“But I feel like it’d be a relatively easy transition. We would be fighting against teams that have been running these cars for multiple years now, so we would definitely be at a little bit of a disadvantage from that standpoint.
“And then a GT3 machine… for me that would just be tied to whether whatever customer we found that would want to do it. The GT3 machines are great packages for customers that have come up through the ranks of an OEM like Porsche or BMW; they eventually work their way up and ultimately end up at the top of the manufacturer’s list, which is the GT3 car. So I feel like there are a lot of opportunities there. And those cars are constantly getting renewed and constantly have new ones coming out.”
LMP2 is secure for another two years with the current chassis. But all the LMDh manufacturers participating in GTP also have to make the backbone of their cars the basis for the next generation of LMP2 racers, so the grid will be full of all-new machinery in the not-too-distant future; any investment in an LMP2 car now will not be long-term one. From an operational standpoint, Glavin says the car’s take about the same manpower and effort. But the initial equipment costs going from LMP3 to LMP2 are much higher, and the engine service life is shorter. Glavin says Nissan P3 engines are owned and have a rebuild interval of 10,000km. The Gibson engines used in P2 are leased, and have a life of 30 hours between rebuilds.
Likewise, initial costs for a GT3 program are much higher than P3, but operationally not incredibly different. GT3 cars are a little more difficult to work on and repair, and like LMP2 a little more complicated. There are pros and cons to both. But whatever avenue he chooses, Glavin hopes that Jr III Racing can remain a part of the WeatherTech Championship.
“I think it’s a it’s a great time for IMSA,” Glavin says. “IMSA’s paddocks are full, they’re having to turn people away. That’s all great stuff. And I understand where LMP3 falls in the order and it’s been a great time to be a part of it. It’s a little bittersweet, but it’s still been a lot of fun to get to this level and hopefully we can find a way to stay at it and and keep racing at that level, or at least working our hardest to get back to it at some point down the road.”
In the meantime, he has a wishlist as a fan of endurance racing and LMP3 as the perfect entry point to the sport: While the VP Racing SportsCar Challenge fills a niche, he’d like LMP3 competitors to have the option of longer races with pit stops and driver changes, noting that the length of Michelin Pilot Challenge races seems pretty ideal.
“From a time perspective, I think that’s a two or a four hour race, or anywhere in between, it’s where an LMP3 car really excels,” he says.
“The longer races, some of the cost efficiencies of a P3 go away just because of the sheer logistical costs of running a longer race. And then the shorter races, you can’t share the car and you can’t do some of the stuff that’s really appealing to a lot of drivers – the strategy, the pitstops, the driver changes. So you take out some of that when you go to a sprint format, like you have in VP. So somewhere in between would be ideal for a customer racing program.
“Looking to Europe, you have Le Mans Cup-style race, which is two hours, two drivers; or ELMS-style race, which is four hours. Those fields are packed, those grids are packed, and that’s all customer racing. So there seems to be a strong market for that. It’s just a matter of finding a North American home for that.”
The removal of LMP3 as a class in the WeatherTech Championship was not at all unexpected, but that doesn’t mean that it wasn’t met with some disappointment for those participating in the class. But LMP3 seems to have a bright future in the VP Racing SportsCar Challenge, where drivers still get the experience of multi-class racing mixing it up with GT4 cars; Glavin and others just want a place to exercise their endurance racing chops with the cars.
In its third year as a class in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, LMP3 has proven a worthy addition to the series. The lower cost of running has allowed more drivers to participate, and the pros in the class are quality racers, as …
In its third year as a class in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, LMP3 has proven a worthy addition to the series. The lower cost of running has allowed more drivers to participate, and the pros in the class are quality racers, as evidenced by last year’s champ Colin Braun being pulled into duty for Meyer Shank Racing’s Acura ARX-06 in GTP.
With Braun exiting, his co-champion Jon Bennett has called time on CORE Autosport, leaving the championship open as its six-race schedule begins this weekend at Sebring International Raceway. It would be easy to think that the team that won the championship in 2021 and finished second to CORE last season would once again ascend to the top of the class. The No. 74 Riley Motorsports squad with core driver Gar Robinson has been reliably in the LMP3 fight, particularly when Felipe Fraga joins him in the car. But several teams have stepped up their game and the championship could be quite a fight.
One of those teams is the No. 36 Andretti Autosport Ligier with Jarett Andretti, Gabby Chavez and, for the endurance races, Glenn van Berlo who put the No. 36 (pictured above) on the Sebring pole with authority. The team finished last year on a high note by wining Petit Le Mans, and has potential to be a championship contender.
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“I think we’ve been really strong,” says Andretti. “I think at Sebring we were pretty good; we didn’t get to show our potential. I think we’ve had a really good car at Watkins though as well. I love going to Watkins Glen for a number of reasons. Personally, I think it’s the best road course in North America. That one’s circled on my calendar and would really like to win the Six Hour this year.”
Andretti says he expects the field to be very competitive this year, and hopes to be in that mix.
“There are a lot of good teams here. Riley is the first that comes to mind. They have a great program over there. Obviously, their results speak for themselves. And then you have Creech who have a a really nice program, winning at Sebring last year. Jr III will be back. And there’s a number of other really solid teams, I think the field is really competitive. And there’s been a lot of guys that have been in these cars for a long time and working on these cars. So in some ways, it feels still feels like we’re learning every time because we haven’t had as much time as a lot of these other guys,” he said.
Lance Willsey and Joao Barbosa are back for a full season in the No. 33 Sean Creech Motorsports Ligier, and hoping to build upon a fourth-place finish in the championship last year, including that Sebring victory. Nico Pino is campaigning the endurance races with the team.
“We have improved our knowledge of the Ligier each year, and I think we’ll be even more competitive this year than the past two years,” said Barbosa. “With two years of experience, the team knows exactly what to do.”
Billy Glavin’s Jr. III Racing has proven itself a force in LMP3, and Ari Balogh and Garret Grist finished third in the championship last year on the back of consistent finishes. The team has been working during the offseason and feels they’re ready to contend in the No. 30 Ligier.
“We are ready to be back at the track,” said Grist. “We have been lucky to have some time testing at Sebring before the Twelve Hour. It seems like it has been such a long off-season since we didn’t compete in Daytona for the 24 Hour, but I think that time has been used to our advantage because we’ve had more time to prepare for the season ahead. We’ve made many improvements during the offseason, and I can’t wait to see how the season plays out.”
AWA has made good strides in its two-car Duqueine program, and the No. 13 with Orey Fidani and the No. 17 with Anthony Mantella could make a mark in some races.
The six-race LMP3 schedule includes an equal number of sprint and endurance races. After the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring, LMP3 will be included at the Sahlen’s Six Hours of the Glen, Canadian Tire Motorsports Park, Road America, Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Petit Le Mans at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.