Paul Miller Racing finds all the cards to make a winning hand in GTD PRO

It was going to be easy, right? After all, the little independent GTD team had finished ahead of a bunch of the GTD PRO cars on a regular basis. Sometimes all of them. And the “Am” driver had outqualified all the Gold and Platinum drivers in GTD PRO …

It was going to be easy, right? After all, the little independent GTD team had finished ahead of a bunch of the GTD PRO cars on a regular basis. Sometimes all of them. And the “Am” driver had outqualified all the Gold and Platinum drivers in GTD PRO on at least one occasion. So taking them on head to head should be a walk in the park.

Not so fast, buster.

Paul Miller Racing, Bryan Sellers, Madison Snow and the No. 1 BMW M4 GT3 had beaten up on the GTD competition in GTD in 2023, winning five races and handily claiming the title — the second for the team and the drivers. Even after declaring their intentions to move to GTD PRO as the 2023 season wound down, the PMR group still had a couple of wins left in them, including an overall at VIRginia International Raceway plus an overall GT pole at Indianapolis.

As it turns out, the win at VIR was the team’s last for 12 months. This wasn’t going to be easy after all. And while to the outside world it seemed like PMR was sure to do well moving to the all-pro class — and there wasn’t an option if the team was to retain its core driver lineup of Sellers and Snow, as Snow was promoted to Gold after the 2023 season — internally, it was far from a sure thing. They knew it was going to be tough.

“I would say it’s as expected,” said Sellers before the first win in GTD PRO came at VIR. “I think that we have shown competitive ability for sure. But I think we’ve shown that we also are in a new class, and the new class is different, and our mistakes have come along with that. When you look at the difference between GTD and GTD PRO and the way the strategy plays out throughout a race, it’s very different. When you look at how the race unfolds based off of the combination of two pro drivers versus an Am driver and a pro driver, it changes how you approach the race. In all honesty, we’ve been caught out by that a couple of times.”

For Bryan Sellers, Madison Snow and their PMR team, the VIR breakthrough was the culmination of a year learning new ropes. Michael Levitt/Motorsport Images

Sellers is quick to point out that that’s not on the drivers, crew, engineers or strategy — everyone has had to adjust to the new way of racing in GTD PRO.

“When we’re on our A days, we can definitely compete with everybody out there and be up on the podium and do good,” said Snow prior to the Road America race, where the team’s second-place finish was its best to date. “We’ve just had a couple of off races, the last couple races, but we’ve also been learning as we go. So I think we’re still getting a lot stronger as the year goes on. There has been a learning curve with changing the class, with strategy and racing and a couple of things. But we’re getting better every race.”

That latter statement proved to be true, culminating so far in a victory at VIR in the GT-only round. An overall pole for Snow, taking the lead at the start, and executing a strategy that may have had them following for the middle portion of the race but left them in front when they needed to be, resulted in PMR’s first GTD PRO win.

Track position, they’ve discovered, is key in GTD PRO. Sellers noted that the focus previously wasn’t on qualifying, but having a good car for the race. In GTD PRO, qualifying becomes more critical — not only for the position at the start relative to the other PRO cars, but starting behind a bunch of GTD cars as well. Forcing yourself to pass a bunch of other cars before you get to the ones you’re actually racing can be disastrous.

But that’s one of only several differences.

“The drive time differentials factor a lot into the strategy and how you run the race,” Sellers explained. “Things that worked strategically previously no longer work because of the different drive times, the different ratings of drivers, the different calibers of drivers. Those things factor in such that the way we used to do things does not necessarily apply anymore. We were able to take strategic chances that paid off for us in the end for track position. And with the differentials in GTD and the Am drivers versus the pro drivers, those gaps change; they narrow drastically. So, that has been a curve for us. In GTD, it’s much easier not to have to worry about the [GTD] pro cars, whereas the pro cars have to worry about the GTD cars — where they sit and how they space and how it throws off your perception of the wave-arounds and the pass-bys. That’s been something that we have had to adapt to.

“I think the biggest differences is the margin of error is gone. When you go to GTD PRO, you’re competing against some of the best drivers and some of the best teams — not just in IMSA but in the world. So that margin of error has tightened up and because of our inexperience in the pro class, we have made a couple of mistakes that aren’t there to make.”

Richard Dole/Motosport Images

A big alteration the team has had to make is being reactive rather than proactive. When a car is out front, the team can dictate strategy. What they do, most teams will follow. There’s a different mindset when one has to acquiesce to the actions of others.

“The overall strategy doesn’t really change that much in terms of what our objective is and how we’re going to go about things,” notes PMR general manager Mitchell Simmons. “I think our biggest issue that we have had this year is we’re not always out front, so we don’t have the advantage over the other teams. We have had to change the way that we do things in terms of getting more creative, to be able to get to the position on track that we need to be. That has caused us some issues in the past where we have made some mistakes, and the mistakes have not been on the crew side, they’ve been on the pit stand.

“My belief is that we have kind of been overthinking it. We need to get back to basics and, and not beat ourselves. I think we historically have never had to fixate on strategy, because we basically set the strategy, and now we are reactive instead of proactive. That has been probably the biggest adjustment.”

At VIR, PMR was in a position to dictate strategy but Heart of Racing had a different idea. While Snow was stretching fuel and going as long as possible, the No. 23 Heart of Racing Aston Martin pitted almost as soon as the window opened to make it to the end with one more stop. So for the middle stint, Ross Gunn lead for Heart of Racing — the undercut worked for them. PMR, though, kept Snow circulating until the No. 1 BMW couldn’t go another lap on fuel before pitting and installing Sellers into the car. With nearly 20 minutes’ difference in running time when it came down to the final stop where Snow resumed driving duties, PMR’s fuel time was much shorter than the team’s closest rival for victory. Snow emerged from the pits ahead of Gunn in the No. 23 and that was the deciding factor.

“I think up until this point, we had made some mistakes and we had a lot of adaptations that we had to make internally and just start to figure things out. And I would say this was as close as it comes to a flawless race for us,” said Sellers.

With PMR seemingly on an upward arc, Sellers and Snow are now third in the GTD PRO standings, behind AO Racing’s Laurin Heinrich and Heart of Racing’s Gunn, and 111 points out of first. With two races left, the championship is wide open, and the GTD PRO rookies at Paul Miller Racing are in the fight.

PMR, Korthoff Preston celebrate firsts in IMSA GT Challenge at VIR

Two first-time winners celebrated jubilantly on the top step of the podium in the Michelin GT Challenge at VIR. The ninth round of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, the 2h40m GT-only event at VIRginia International Raceway, saw the first …

Two first-time winners celebrated jubilantly on the top step of the podium in the Michelin GT Challenge at VIR. The ninth round of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, the 2h40m GT-only event at VIRginia International Raceway, saw the first victory for Paul Miller Racing since moving to GTD PRO, and the first GTD win for Korthoff Preston Motorsport in its third full season.

Madison Snow led from pole in the No. 1 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 and then went long in the first stint before handing over to Bryan Sellers. Stopping for fuel and tires much earlier, Alex Riberas handed the No. 23 Heart of Racing Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo over to Ross Gunn in position to take the lead once the first round of stops was done, thanks to the undercut. However, Sellers’ short stint in the middle meant a shorter fuel time, and he returned the car to Snow, and Snow returned the car to the track in front, a lead he would never relinquish. The victory came at the same track the pair scored their last GTD triumph as they sailed to the championship in 2023.

“It’s an overall win in GT at VIR. It’s pretty spectacular, so it’s going to take a while to sink in, but I’m glad I was able to do it with my best friend Bryan,” said an emotional Snow before the podium celebrations began.

The No. 23 had a drive-through penalty for not meeting minimum refuel time on their final stop that dropped Gunn and Alex Riberas to third. That left the No. 64 Ford Multimatic Motorsports Mustang GT3 of Harry Tincknell and Mike Rockenfeller in second, the Mustang’s first podium finish.

Snow had scored the pole position with a new GTD PRO track record. The No. 1 was the last car to pit in the first round of stops. The No. 23, having pitted early in the first stop, needed fuel with an hour to go. PMR followed a lap later, but having gone only a little over 40m in the stint, the team was able to fill the car, give it fresh Michelins and install Snow back in the car in a shorter time.

After Heart of Racing served its penalty, Snow had a 15s lead over Rockenfeller in the No. 64 Mustang, but that lead was erased by the race’s only full-course caution with 35m to go, brought out by the No. 70 Inception McLaren losing its engine in spectacular fashion. Snow steadily pulled away from Rockenfeller after the restart, finishing with a 3.368s margin of victory. GTD PRO had been a tough transition for the team, but as they adapted to a new style of racing, the results kept improving.

“I think you just have to have resilience,” said Sellers. “You have to have fight. I think that’s what we’ve had so far up until this point. You’ve got to ride the waves, the ups and downs, and you’ve got to be able to take advantage of wins when they’re presented to you. What you saw from the team today was just that. Madison delivered a great performance all weekend, and I’m just super proud of everyone at Paul Miller Racing.”

Dirk Mueller brought the No. 65 FMM Mustang that was started by Joey Hand fourth to make it both GTD PRO Mustangs in the top five. Oliver Jarvis and Marvin Kirchhofer were fifth in the No. 9 Pfaff Motorsports McLaren 720S GT3 Evo.

It was a rough day for championship leader Laurin Heinrich. An early black flag for tire pressures outside the limit put the AO Racing squad onto a three-stop strategy. Then, after taking over from Klaus Bachler, Heinrich had contact with Jack Hawksworth’s No. 14 Vasser Sullivan Lexus RC F GT3, spinning it and earning himself a drive-through penalty. All that led to a seventh-place finish for Heinrich and Bachler.

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That tightened up the GTD PRO points considerably. The third-place finish for Heart of Racing means Gunn now has only a 17-point deficit to Heinrich’s 2519 total. Snow and Sellers moved past Hawksworth and Ben Barnicoat, who finished sixth, into third in the points at 2408, 111 points out of the championship lead.

As bad a day as Heinrich had, it was worse for Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports. A power steering issue for the No. 3 Z06 GT3.R saw the car need a full reset on track before it went behind the wall for repairs. Alexander Sims would later have an off-track excursion, ending the No. 3’s day with a broken suspension. The No. 4 had a starter issue on its final pit stop, putting it out of contention and into an eventual eighth-place finish.

Jake Galstad/Lumen

Kenton Koch took the GTD lead from second place at the start and, saving fuel through two stints before handing the No. 32 Mercedes AMG GT3 over to Mikael Grenier, helped deliver Korthoff Preston Motorsports its first victory in IMSA competition. It was Grenier’s first as well, and Koch’s first WeatherTech Championship win since 2016 when he took the Rolex 24 at Daytona victory in the Prototype Challenge category. Koch and Grenier have been partners for only two races – Koch was the endurance addition to Grenier and Mike Skeen in the No. 32, but took the full-time seat at Road America as Skeen moved to strategist.

“Man, that feels good,” declared Koch “I knew we had a good car, and I knew it was going to be tough, but it was just all down to strategy and me saving some fuel at the beginning that gave us the track position to be able to stay ahead of the guys behind.

“It feels really good to give a win to these guys and Mik did a phenomenal job at the end. We’ve got a good little Korthoff PrestonAMG GT3 race car here. Hopefully we can do better and keep improving, and continue this momentum into Indy and Road Atlanta.”

Grenier was aided through the restart and final run to the checker by having Jarvis in the Pfaff McLaren between him and fellow Canadian Roman De Angelis in the No. 27 Heart of Racing Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo. De Angelis got alongside Jarvis on the restart, but couldn’t make the pass stick. That left him with no chance to attack Grenier for the lead, and De Angelis and Zacharie Robichon finished second, 0.897s behind the No. 32 Mercedes AMG.

Loris Spinelli made a late-race charge in the No. 78 Forte Racing Lamborghini Huracan GT3 Evo2 to go from seventh to the podium and landing a third-place finish for himself and Misha Goikhberg.

Winward Racing was looking like it was going to leave VIR with a smaller lead in the GTD points until late in the race, as the No. 57 Mercedes AMG moved steadily up. Philip Ellis made a late-race move to pass Robby Foley in the No. 96 Tuner Motorsport BMW and score a fourth-place finish for him and Russell Ward. That allowed the Winward pair to put another 20 points between them and Turner’s Foley and Patrick Gallagher. The 2698-point total for Ellis and Ward has them 284 points ahead of Foley and Gallagher with two races left. Grenier moved into third in the points, another 236 back from the Turner pair, and 74 points ahead of Vasser Sullivan Racing’s Parker Thompson.

The polesitting No. 55 Proton Competition Mustang of Giammarco Levorato and Corey Lewis looked to be headed for a podium in GTD, but the full-course caution brought their pursuers close. Lewis first got passed by Foley, and then had a tank-slapper at the exit of Turn 4 and dropped down the order, eventually finishing eighth.

Attention now turns to the final two races of the season where all four IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship classes will again be featured, the six-hour Battle on the Bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Petit Le Mans at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.

RESULTS

Snow, Mustang secure respective maiden IMSA poles at VIR

It wasn’t rain, but Snow on the GTD PRO parade for everyone except Paul Miller Racing. At the track where he and Bryan Sellers captured their most recent victory, Madison Snow seized his first pole position since PMR moved to GTD PRO, as well as a …

It wasn’t rain, but Snow on the GTD PRO parade for everyone except Paul Miller Racing. At the track where he and Bryan Sellers captured their most recent victory, Madison Snow seized his first pole position since PMR moved to GTD PRO, as well as a new track record in qualifying for Sunday’s Michelin GT Challenge at VIR, the final sprint race and the lone GT-only race of the 2024 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.

Snow’s 1m43.206s lap around the 3.27-mile, 17-turn VIRginia International Raceway in the No. 1 BMW M4 GT3 was good for an average of 114.06mph, and beat the GTD PRO record as well as the quicker GTD record, which still stands for Ross Gunn. Snow turned his best time, good for his 13th pole position, on his fourth lap, which seemed to be the sweet spot for most competitors, although a few went faster on their fifth.

“It’s definitely a step in the right direction,” said Snow. “[It’s] the best we’ve done. We were on the podium last race, get the pole here…. We definitely have the right momentum headed towards the end of the season.”

The Ford Mustang GT3 had its best day in its inaugural season, with Giammarco Levorato capturing the GTD pole and sixth starting spot overall in the No. 55 Proton Competition Mustang GT3 with a 1m43.900s lap. Not only that, but it will be an all-Ford Multimatic Motorsports second row with Mustang GT3s qualifying second and third.

Richard Dole/Lumen

“It’s super satisfying, because we are working really a lot with with Ford, with Proton, with my teammate Corey [Lewis], also with my teammate Ryan [Hardwick] for the endurance races,” Levorato said. “We know how much work there is on this car, so this is the perfect start of the weekend, for sure.”

Antonio Garcia put the No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Z06 GT3.R on the outside of the first row with a 1m43.346s lap, ahead of the two GTD PRO Mustangs. Harry Tincknell, who like Levorato is racing at VIR for the first time, qualified third in the No. 64 with a 1m43.630, 0.099s better than Joey Hand in the No. 65. Tommy Milner was the last GTD PRO car ahead of Levorato, and will start the No. 4 Corvette inside the GTD polesitter on the third row.

Kenton Koch held the GTD pole briefly, but after setting a 1m44.106s time on his fourth lap, he couldn’t push the No. 32 Korthoff Preston Motorsports Mercedes AMG GT3 any faster on the fifth, while Levorato did. The No. 32 will line up second in GTD, on the inside of the fourth row. Outside Koch will be the No. 120 Wright Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 R after Elliott Skeer, who held the top time in Saturday morning’s practice, turned a 1m44.118s.

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It will be two GTD PRO cars on the fifth row. Vasser Sullivan Racing held Jack Hawksworth in the pits at the beginning of qualifying, hoping he’d have a clearer lap on a more-rubbered-in track later, but the strategy didn’t pan out and the No. 14 Lexus RC F GT3 will start ninth. The No. 9 Pfaff Motorsports McLaren 720S Evo will be alongside courtesy of VIR rookie Oliver Jarvis.

Zacharie Robichon (No. 27 Heart of Racing Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo) and Patrick Gallager (No. 96 Turner Motorsport BMW M4 GT3) qualified fourth and fifth in GTD and will make up the sixth row at the start.

It was a rough day for the championship leaders in both classes. The No. 77 AO Racing Porsche of GTD PRO championship leader Laurin Heinrich will start deep in the field, as Klaus Bachler could do no better than 13th overall and eighth in GTD PRO. If there’s a bright spot, Heinrich’s closest rival in the championship, Ross Gunn, will have a challenging race as the No. 23 Heart of Racing Aston Martin starts alongside Bachler. Russell Ward had a rough qualifying session in the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes AMG GT3, and he and partner Philip Ellis will have need to move up as they try to keep their healthy margin in the GTD championship over Gallagher and Robby Foley.

The 2h40m Michelin GT Challenge will get under way 12:10 p.m. ET on Sunday, with live coverage on USA Network and Peacock.

RESULTS

Snow puts PMR BMW on top in first practice at VIR

Madison Snow wasted no time putting in a statement at VIRginia International Raceway, posting a time better than the GTD PRO track record in the first 10 minutes of the first practice for the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship Michelin GT …

Madison Snow wasted no time putting in a statement at VIRginia International Raceway, posting a time better than the GTD PRO track record in the first 10 minutes of the first practice for the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship Michelin GT Challenge.

GTD PRO cars filled the first four slots in the test session for the sole GT-only race of the season, but none could get within half a second of Snow’s 1m43.561s (113.67mph) in the No. 1 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3. Championship leader Laurin Heinrich, paired with Klaus Bachler for the weekend, was closest to Snow at 1m44.070s in the No. 77 AO Racing Porsche 911 GT3 R.

Alexander Sims in the No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Z06 GT3.R was third in GTD PRO, nearly another quarter-second back of Heinrich with a 1m44.315s lap. Alex Riberas — whose partner in the No. 23 Heart of Racing Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo, Ross Gunn, holds both the GTD PRO and GTD records at VIR — was fourth in GTD PRO and overall, with a couple of GTD cars in between he and Nicky Catsburg in the No. 4 Corvette Z06 GT3.R in fifth.

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Frederik Schandorff was the fastest of those GTD cars, turning a 1m44.381s (112.78mph) in the No. 70 Inception Racing McLaren 720S GT3 Evo to lead championship leader Winward Racing’s Mercedes AMG GT3, courtesy of Philip Ellis’s 1m44.483s lap.

“It felt great when the tires were new, not in the end,” noted Schandorff. “We were actually struggling a bit in the end. So we’re just trying to work on the setup and then also to get Brendan [Iribe] in the groove. He did really well here in the end, so I’m really excited for for the next few days.”

Schandorff’s statement points not only to the importance of tire management at VIR, but also the changing nature of the track; most teams put in their best time in their first eight laps. Although with temperatures in the low 80-degree Fahrenheit range it was not exceptionally hot, the surface conditions can fluctuate with the weather.

“This track here at VIR seems to change quite a bit, especially with the heat in the track,” explained Ellis’s partner in the Winward Mercedes, Russell Ward, before he noted one thing that gives the team an edge. “So having the GT4 [Michelin Pilot Challenge] before us really helps you get track temperatures, get an idea of where we want our starting pressures to be, and stuff like that. So it’s a big advantage.”

Third in GTD and eighth overall was Stevan McAleer with a 1m44.573s lap in the No. 66 Gradient Racing Acura NSX Evo22 he shares with Sheena Monk. The two are fresh off their first podium together in the last outing at Road America.

Robby Foley was fourth for Turner Motorsports in the No. 96 BMW M4 GT3 as he and Patrick Gallagher look to back up their Road America win, with Elliott Skeer wrapping up the GTD top five in the No. 120 Wright Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 R.

The session was green for the entire 90 minutes, although there were numerous off-course excursions. Harry Tincknell had the lone contact with a barrier, but that only resulted in minor bodywork damage to the No. 64 Ford Multimatic Motorsports Mustang GT3, which finished the session sixth in GTD PRO.

The second free practice, a 1h45m session, takes place Saturday morning at 10:15am ET.

RESULTS

Corvette Racing wins again at VIR, PMR closes in on IMSA GTD title

Vasser Sullivan Racing and Corvette Racing looked pretty evenly matched on pace in GTD PRO, so it was pit stop strategy and execution on which the Michelin GT Challenge for the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship ultimately turned to the favor …

Vasser Sullivan Racing and Corvette Racing looked pretty evenly matched on pace in GTD PRO, so it was pit stop strategy and execution on which the Michelin GT Challenge for the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship ultimately turned to the favor of the No. 3 C8.R and delivered victory at VIRginia International Raceway to Jordan Taylor and Antonio Garcia. The boost to their championship hopes was small, however, as Ben Barnicoat and Jack Hawksworth finished second in the No. 14 Lexus RC F GT3 and carry a 144-point lead into the final two races.

GTD, on the other hand, was another flag-to-flag romp for Madison Snow and Bryan Sellers in the No. 1 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3, Snow taking a 12.187s victory over a fuel-saving Robby Foley in the No. 96 Turner Motorsport BMW M4 GT3. In the process, the team set a record of five wins in GTD during a season, and all but clinched the Sprint Cup Championship, which would make them the first team to score back-to-back Sprint Cups.

“It’s amazing. It’s really wonderful,” said team owner Paul Miller. “I’ve just given everybody a hug on the team. It’s an unbelievable record. We’ve never won anything like that. We’ve never won more than one or two races in a season, so it’s crazy!”

Sellers and PMR even had the No. BMW in the overall lead after the first round of pit stops, but eventually the two leading GTD PRO cars would get back to the front, with Snow and Sellers finishing third overall.

In a race interrupted by only two cautions, and neither coming at a time when it would have any real effect on strategy, the first indication that maybe this wasn’t going to be a cruise for the polesitting No. 14 Lexus came after the first round of pit stops. Taylor took over the No. 3 C8.R from Garcia, dispatched Jules Gounon in the No. 79 WeatherTech Racing Mercedes AMG rather quickly and immediately started knocking out fast laps. While Barnicoat would eventually take the fast lap back, it was an indication that Taylor had the bit between his teeth and intended to close the GTD PRO points gap to the Vasser Sullivan team.

Taylor’s first attack came as Barnicoat saw an opening to get by overall leader Bryan Sellers in Oak Tree. The move slowed Sellers enough for Taylor to also scoot past, but it also left Barnicoat vulnerable due to a lower corner exit speed. Taylor got alongside, had the inside line for Turn 14, but Barnicoat held the braking just a bit later and maintained the lead.

“I didn’t have a ton of confidence going there,” Taylor explained. “I think a lap before I braked kind of late and had a bunch of ABS interaction and almost hit the back of him. That lap I was going to be offline, so I wasn’t 100 percent confident that I would make the corner had I braked when he did on the inside. And yeah, he kind of did the exact same thing to me the last year when I had a similar run, so I knew he was going to go deep. At that point in the race, I knew had we got track position, it who would have transformed the race for us, but I also didn’t want to throw it away.”

Taylor would have to wait for the second round of pit stops to take the point. Corvette Racing brought Taylor in first, with just under an hour to go. The undercut strategy was compounded by the No. 14 Lexus stalling as Barnicoat was leaving the pits. He got it going quickly, and emerged from the pits ahead of Taylor; but Taylor was at full speed, and passed Barnicoat easily going into Turn 1. Barnicoat slid wide on cold tires, giving Taylor more of a buffer. Barnicoat kept the gap around 2s to Taylor until the end, but could never really close and attack, finishing second by 2.068s. It was a nice comeback from what was almost a sure win in the previous race at Road America, ruined by a penalty for insufficient fueling time.

“Pretty much that whole race I was pushing, even on the first cycle, just to close the gap to the Lexus and to see if we could make them make a mistake,” explained Taylor. “So when the [second] yellow came out, I wasn’t sure what was going to happen – those guys restarted really strong. The guys made an amazing call to kind of shortfill, get us out front track position-wise and then it was just down to saving fuel, managing tires and maintaining the gap. I was counting down the laps from about 25 to go, so I was very happy to see that checkered flag.”

The earlier stop left Taylor needing to save fuel, and he was denied his requested post-victory burnout because the team didn’t believe he had a sufficient supply to roast the rear tires and still get back to the pits.

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“It was amazing,” declared Taylor, whom his teammate compared to a Swiss watch. “That’s down to Corvette Racing, calling that strategy, getting us that track position. And then when they told me that fuel number, I was definitely worried. But the car was so good in fuel save mode, it actually helped me save the tires.”

The victory was the 115th for Corvette, 29th for Garcia and the 33rd for Taylor in IMSA competition as Taylor enters his final two races for the team. Next year he moves back to Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti Autosport to drive the team’s second Acura ARX-06 GTP car with Louis Deletraz. For Garcia, who moved the Corvette into second during the first stint, consistency was key to victory.

“Yesterday, we tried to do something different in qualifying, because everybody seemed to be so close,” he explained. “So that probably gave us some indication on how to set up for today and the car was pretty good. So I’m glad that during the first stint the car was where it needed to be. I was able to close to second. The Lexus was very, very strong today. So in a way we we kind of managed to stay in contention. We just had to be there and put pressure and at some point somebody will make a mistake, and it wasn’t us. Then Jordan worked really, really good for the rest of the race. Another great example of pure consistency and very, very well executed.”

Klaus Bachler and Patrick Pilet in the No. 9 Pfaff Motorsports was a distant third in GTD PRO. Their run was aided by a strategy that had the No. 9 topping off fuel during the second full-course caution, leading to a shorter second stop. But what really secured the podium for them was Bachler having a bit of contact with the No. 79 WeatherTech Racing Mercedes AMG driven by Jules Gounon a little past the halfway mark of the race. The Porsche suffered minor damage, but the Mercedes needed a long stop to get bodywork back in a position so that the car could continue.

Jake Galstad/Lumen

For Paul Miller Motorsports, the dream season continues. Snow put the No. 1 BMW on pole in yesterday’s qualifying, and never faced a serious challenge during the first stint. Sellers took over the car for the middle portion of the race, and because PMR was one of the first teams to pit and thus took less fuel, Sellers had the overall lead with PRO cars giving him a buffer behind. A slight bobble in Oak Tree let Barnicoat in the Lexus and Taylor in the Corvette get through, but the No. 1 never faced any real threat from another GTD car, either while Sellers was in the car or when Snow took it back over.

“If there was a secret, I definitely wouldn’t be trying to give it out,” said Snow of the team’s success this year. “But it’s really the team. We just worked really well together. We’re always trying to improve, we’re always helping each other out. But having grown as a co-driver really makes that possible. And Brian doesn’t get nearly enough credit for

how hard he works and how hard he brings the whole team together, but also car setup and strategy and everything else.”

But Snow was the driving force behind the victory today, countered Sellers.

“What [Madison] has stepped up and done this year has been has been unbelievable,” he said. “Like today, he, pardon my language, but he really saved my ass today. I didn’t feel well all weekend and I had to tell him last night, ‘Listen, if I don’t get better, I’m going to need you.’ You just have that trust in him all the time.”

The best opportunity for any team to stop the PMR juggernaut was Inception Racing. Frederik Schandorff was charging in the No. 70 McLaren 720S and had the car up to second. But during the final round of pit stops, a wheel nut rolled under the car and a mechanic reached under to retrieve it. Doing any work under the car during refueling is violation of IMSA rules, and the team was handed a drive-through penalty. Schandorff got the car back up to seventh, but a far cry from what might have been possible.

It was a BMW one-two on the GTD podium as Robby Foley and Patrick Gallagher finished second in the No. 96 Turner Motorsport M4 GT3. Gallagher was saving fuel during his first stint, and like PMR, Turner brought both the No. 96 and the No. 97 M4 of Bill Auberlen and Chandler Hull into the pits after only 50 minutes, 15 of which had been run under yellow. The shorter fill time helped propel the No. 96 from sixth to third, and eventually into second as Frankie Montecalvo in the No. 12 Vasser Sullivan Lexus RC F GT3 faded.

It was nearly a full BMW podium, until Philip Ellis pushed the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes AMG into third past Auberlen in the No. 97. The BMWs were clearly strong at VIR.

“I think it’s a combination of things,” said Sellers when asked why the BMWs were so good here. “The BMW was obviously fantastic today and Madison did a great job. You know, I think one of the things that fits it the most is the high-speed nature of the track. There are a lot of places where it’s small and tight and the cars struggles, but here at VIR, where it’s wide and sprawling, it really stretches its legs so we’re super happy to be a part of it.”

For third-place finisher Winward, it was a nice change for last year’s winners Ellis and Russell Ward. The team has had its struggles this season, so a podium was quite welcome.

The two caution periods were both caused by single-car crashes, the first coming only 10 minutes into the race when David Brule crashed the No. 92 Kellymoss with Riley Porsche 911 GT3 R in The Snake. The second occurred when Misha Goikhberg, attempting to get the No. 78 Forte Racing Powered by USRT Lamborghini Huracán back to the pits after a malfunctioning ABS system had sent him off course in Turn 1, lost the car under braking for Turn 14 and buried the Lamborghini in the tire wall. Neither driver was injured in their respective incidents.

RESULTS