News Archive » The Final Hours of Spa
July 29, 2007
The no.63 Scuderia Ecosse Ferrari, in the hands of Andrew Kirkaldy, crossed
the line at Spa in sixth place at 1600hrs today, after 24 hours of racing in
extremely difficult conditions. Along with Chris Niarchos and Tim Sugden, the
Scot raced hard right until the end of the race, snatching the sixth place
finish with just 20 minutes of the race remaining.
09:55: It’s the final leg of the Spa 24 Hours and Andrew Kirkaldy is
running in fifth place in torrential rain! A Porsche going off at Eau Rouge
prompts another safety car outing which is timely as Kirkaldy is reporting
that the conditions are worse than at the 2003 race, famous for its atrocious
weather.
10:00: If anything the rain is getting worse.
10:07: Kirkaldy moves up to fourth place due to the fourth-placed Porsche
going off a few laps earlier. He radios in to say that the conditions are so
bad he is aquaplaning, even along the straight in second gear.
10:17: The safety car comes in but not for long as there is a car off at the
pit lane exit.
10:45: The safety car is still out as Andrew pits for more fuel.
11:09: Andrew comes in to hand over to Tim Sugden. The rain has just about
stopped so a few laps later the safety car comes in and the race is on again.
12:00: The GT2 order is Malucelli, Long, Edwards, Sugden, Pompidou, Ruberti.
Or rather Porsche, Porsche, Porsche, Ferrari, Porsche, Ferrari.
12:10: Tim comes in for a scheduled pitstop and rejoins the race in fourth
position.
13:00: Tim radios in to report that there is an unidentified problem with
the 63 Ferrari.
13:03: Tim pits to hand over to Andrew and the team quickly check the car
over for anything obviously wrong. Nothing is found so Kirkaldy joins the race.
13:21: He is soon back in the pits though, reporting the same problem. The
car is pulled into the garage so the team can take a proper look. There is
a problem with the gearbox and lengthy repairs are required.
14:26: The safety car is still out so the team isn’t losing too many
laps during the repairs.
14:31: The safety car is in. The race is back on.
14:45: Kirkaldy rejoins the race in seventh place, with just over a hour to
fight for sixth place.
15:15: The GT2 order is Collard, Narac, Machitski, Pompidou, Case, Tenchini,
Kirkaldy. Porsche, Porsche, Porsche, Porsche, Ferrari, Ferrari, Ferrari. Kirkaldy
is just 59 seconds behind sixth place now and gaining fast.
15:28: The gap is now just 32 seconds.
15:39: The gap is less than four seconds.
15:42: Kirkaldy is through, overtaking Tenchini in the no.70 Ferrari, for
sixth place.
16:00: Kirkaldy takes the chequered flag in sixth place in the no.63 Scuderia
Ecosse Ferrari.
Chris Niarchos:
“We had a great result today considering the high attrition rate. The
team did a stellar job in frustrating conditions. I was pleased with my own
performance as I was fast yesterday and today and only cautious during the
night. I had a lot of fun!”
Andrew Kirkaldy:
“That was a really great effort by the whole team. The gearbox ran like
a dream once the guys had made the repairs. I really enjoyed the final hour
of the race as I enjoy hunting down the guy ahead and challenging for position,
especially when it’s successful. We were fast for the whole race, it’s
just a shame we didn’t make it to the podium.”
Tim Sugden:
“I really enjoyed racing with Chris and Andrew and the whole Scuderia
Ecosse team. I couldn’t believe it when we had the problem with the gearbox
at such a late stage of the race. I had just been thinking to myself how well
we were doing! It was good to be back in a GT car, especially at a great circuit
like Spa, so thanks to all the team for a great weekend.”
Stewart Roden, Team Principal:
“I think the guys deserved a lot better result today for the effort they
put in; they all made a brilliant effort. We salvaged sixth after losing over
an hour with the gearbox problem. All three drivers in no.63 did a great job,
especially Andrew when he was chasing sixth at the end. It was a shame that
no.62 crashed out last night. We’re not entirely sure what happened there
and we haven’t had the opportunity to see the car yet as it has been
in parc ferme since the accident. All in all it’s a shame to come away
with so little after everyone worked so hard.”
ENDS
« Back to news |