Audi wins weather-shortened Nurburgring 24 Hours

The 52nd running of the Nurburgring 24 Hours – the legendary endurance race through “The Green Hell” – ended early this year due to poor visibility from heavy fog through the night and morning. When the race started at 4:00pm local time on Saturday, …

The 52nd running of the Nurburgring 24 Hours — the legendary endurance race through “The Green Hell” — ended early this year due to poor visibility from heavy fog through the night and morning.

When the race started at 4:00pm local time on Saturday, parts of the Grand Prix track and Nordschleife were wet. The pole-sitting No. 72 BMW piloted by Dan Harper was on the dry tires and pitted for rain tires at the end of the formation lap when the green flag was waved. It rejoined in the 21st position.

BMW M Team RMG handed the lead to the No. 911 Manthey Porsche, which Kevin Estre maintained into the first corner.

The No. 99 ROWE BMW of Augusto Farfus made a great start and managed to pull momentarily alongside Estre. The No. 130 GetSpeed Mercedes-AMG of Maro Engel gambled with dry tires and made an even better start.

 

Engel took the lead from Estre on the Grand Prix track, where it was drier, but Estre took the lead back on the wet Nordschleife. Engel was shuffled back to 24th position and pitted for rain tires after the first lap.

Then it was Farfus’s turn to fight for the lead with the ‘Grello’ Porsche of Estre. The two battled for several thrilling laps. The No. 99 of Farfus led after the first round of pit stops.

Meanwhile, the No. 16 Scherer Audi started by Frank Stippler held their qualifying position of third. Also, the No. 72 was clawing its way back into contention after the tire situation at the start.

Around three hours into the race, Sheldon Van der Linde in the No. 99 crashed out of the lead after contact with two lapped cars at the Foxhole resulting in a heavy crash. The drivers walked away, but the No. 99’s race was over.

As they raced into the darkness of night, Harper in the No. 72 and Christopher Mies in the No. 16 battled for the lead.

“It probably was the greatest fight I’ve ever had on the Nordschleife. We were passing each other. We didn’t even have the smallest contact, but still, we were racing super hard and fair. I really enjoyed that,” said Mies about Harper after the race.

The tension built as the fog began to descend onto the Nurburgring, which made it difficult to see the road as well as marshals and flags.

At 11:23pm, the race was red-flagged due to the intensity of the fog and lack of visibility. The No. 16 Audi was in the lead when the red flag came out.

The race was stopped for 14.5 hours. Race control released updates in the hopes that the fog would lift and racing could resume, but it was not to be.

 

Race director Walter Hornung decided at 1:30pm that the cars would return to the track and complete the minimum laps behind the safety car. If the conditions improved, then the race would continue with a couple of hours remaining. They did not improve.

At 3:00pm — one hour before the scheduled finish — Hornung waved off the race and the Scherer Sport PHX No. 16 Audi R8 of Stippler, Mies, Ricardo Feller, and Dennis Marschall were declared the winners.

Scherer Sport PHX team: Feller, Stippler, Marschall, Mies

“It was most likely the last chance to win a 24-hour race of the Nurburgring with an Audi, because Audi is disappearing from GT racing, as well as I’m getting older at 49 years old, so I don’t know how many chances there might be in the future,” said an emotional Stippler afterward.

The No. 911 Manthey Porshe of Estre, Laurens Vanthoor, Thomas Preining, and Ayhancan Güven finished in second place.

The No. 72 of Harper, Max Hesse, and Charles Weerts finished in third for BMW M Team RMG after their complications at the start.

Verstappen manages two wins in one day thanks to iRacing N24

Max Verstappen is known to participate in sim racing events during downtime from his busy F1 schedule. Impressively, this weekend the three-time world champion won both the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix and the Nürburgring 24-hour on iRacing. ! These …

Max Verstappen is known to participate in sim racing events during downtime from his busy F1 schedule. Impressively, this weekend the three-time world champion won both the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix and the Nürburgring 24-hour on iRacing.

On Friday, Team Redline announced that Verstappen would be driving the No. 20 BMW GT3, and naturally his fans wondered how he would participate during the F1 race weekend.

The Dutchman had a special racing simulator made that would be small enough to fit in his motorhome close to the Imola circuit.

“We were supposed to ship it in a Formula 2 trailer with MP Motorsport, but the sim was just a tiny bit too big, so it didn’t fit, but they helped us out greatly,” said Atze Kerkhof, Director of Team Redline.

MP Motorsport came up with a solution and sent the sim rig with a flower vendor who was headed to Imola anyway.

“The sim got shipped in a bus or in a trailer with flowers to Imola… He had everything pre-connected, so basically it was almost plug-and-play,” Kerkof said.

Verstappen took pole position in Imola qualifying, which ended at 5:00 p.m. CEST. Meanwhile, his Redline teammate Diogo Pinto was starting the 24-hour race. By 8:45 p.m. Verstappen was driving his first two-and-a-half hour night stint at the Nürburgring.

Verstappen racing in his motorhome at Imola from Team Redline Twitch Stream

After some sleep and solid stints by Pinto, Chris Lulham, and Florian Lebigre, Verstappen returned for another two hours at “the Ring” before doing 63 laps around Imola in his Red Bull.

At the end of his second and final stint, he joined the Discord channel with Twitch stream commentator Luke Crane and Team Redline teammates.

“Right, mate, that was lovely,” said Verstappen. Crane congratulated him on a nice final stint and Verstappen replied, “Yeah, extended the gap a bit, very lovely… I have to go.”

Chris Lulham drove the final stint for the No. 20 and secured the win for Team Redline after 24 hours. Fifteen minutes later, Verstappen took the green flag at Imola.

The Dutchman dominated the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix; McLaren driver Lando Norris was a close second and Charles Leclerc finished third for Ferrari.