Review, IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, Race 11, Braselton, Georgia
- Porsche wins manufacturers’ championships in the GTP and GTD Pro classes
- Porsche Penske Motorsport secures team championship title
- Dane Cameron and Felipe Nasr are the new IMSA champions
- AO Racing successfully fights for GTD Pro honors with the 911 GT3 R
- Former Porsche Junior Laurin Heinrich crowned GT champion
Atlanta, Georgia. On Saturday, October 12, at the Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta finale, the factory team earned the full set of championship titles in the top GTP class. Porsche Penske Motorsport’s two Porsche 963s finished the ten-hour Petit Le Mans race in second and third place. Factory drivers Dane Cameron (Huntersville, North Carolina) and Felipe Nasr (Brazil) secured the drivers’ crown. The titles in the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup also went to the German sports car manufacturer. In the GTD Pro class, the customer team AO Racing clinched championship honors with the Porsche 911 GT3 R, and former Porsche Junior Laurin Heinrich (Germany) is the new champion in the GTD Pro class.
Witnessed by a record crowd at the picturesque Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta in Braselton, Georgia, Porsche Penske Motorsport headed into the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season finale as the favorites. Thanks to a healthy lead in the manufacturers’ championship, only one Porsche 963 had to start the 10-hour race to earn the final decisive points in the bid for the title. The sports car manufacturer accomplished this at 12:10 p.m. ET when a field of more than 50-strong rolled onto the grid. However, suspense remained high over the entire 443 laps of the 10-hour race.
The two Porsche 963 race cars crewed by Dane Cameron, Felipe Nasr and Matt Campbell (Australia) as well as Nick Tandy, Mathieu Jaminet and Kévin Estre (France) not only battled between themselves for the drivers’ and team titles but also dueled over ten hours for race victory at Petit Le Mans. For long stretches, the hybrid prototypes outpaced the rest of the field. It was only in the final 35-minute sprint after the last of five safety car phases that they had to admit defeat to the victorious Cadillac. Finishing third, Cameron/Nasr clinched the drivers’ championship, while Tandy/Jaminet finished the race and the IMSA season as runner-up. Accordingly, the two Porsche Penske Motorsport crews locked in the first two places in the final team standings.
The manufacturers’, team and drivers’ titles in the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup also went to Porsche. This separate championship includes the five endurance races in Daytona, Sebring, Watkins Glen, Indianapolis and Road Atlanta.
“It’s fantastic to see how happy the whole team is about the titles. We brought home everything we’d hoped for,” said a delighted Detlev von Platen, Member of the Executive Board, Sales and Marketing. “It’s obvious from everyone involved that it was incredibly hard work. Everyone is shedding tears of joy – what a wonderful sight!”
“It doesn’t get much better than this. We won all titles in the top GTP class. Nothing was left on the table,” rejoiced Thomas Laudenbach, Vice President Porsche Motorsport. “The impressive performance of the entire team and our crews in Weissach, Mannheim and Mooresville laid the foundation for this – these incredible accomplishments are no coincidence. I’m very proud! I’m also thrilled about AO Racing's title wins in the GTD Pro class and Laurin Heinrich’s championship crown. I think it’ll only really dawn on us in the coming days what we have achieved today and throughout the entire season.”
“Wow! I couldn’t be prouder,” says Urs Kuratle, Director Factory Motorsport LMDh. “Our drivers and every single team member did an incredible job throughout the year. That’s the only reason we’re where we are today. A banner season that we’ll never forget.”
“Our team is at the top of everything, it doesn’t get better than that,” states Jonathan Diuguid, Managing Director Porsche Penske Motorsport. “Narrowly missing out on winning the final race is a little painful. We looked extremely strong for ten hours and it was super close at the end – but of course that’s complaining at the highest level, because we’ve scooped all the titles. Now it’s time to celebrate and then we’ll look ahead to the start of the next season.”
Proton Competition’s Porsche 963 concluded the 10-hour race at Road Atlanta in sixth place. In the first half of the Petit Le Mans race, the seasoned squad led by works driver Gianmaria Bruni (Italy) put in an inspired performance and at times matched the pace of the frontrunners – only to lose ground after two penalties. For JDC-Miller MotorSports, the final IMSA round ended in disappointment. The distinctive yellow-liveried and privately entered No. 85 was forced into early retirement due to a power steering problem.
The new drivers’ champions of the GTP category
Brazilian Felipe Nasr joined Porsche’s factory – or “works” – driver squad in 2022. The 34-year-old began his racing career early in karts before progressing into single-seaters. In 2014, he advanced to Formula 1. There, he spent one season working as a test and reserve driver at Williams, followed by two years as a Grand Prix driver at Sauber. In 2018, Nasr returned to the American continent, where he promptly won the overall IMSA SportsCar Championship at the wheel of a DPi prototype. After finishing the 2019 season as runner-up in the championship, he repeated the title success in 2021. Nasr has been racing the Porsche 963 in the IMSA series since 2023. In January of this year, he won the 24 Hours of Daytona for the second time, this year with the Americans Dane Cameron and Josef Newgarden and the Australian Matt Campbell as teammates. Until the IMSA finale at Road Atlanta, he and Cameron pocketed five more podium finishes, including a win at the 6-hour race in Watkins Glen.
Dane Cameron (Huntersville, North Carolina) has also been a Porsche works driver since 2022. Born in Newport Beach, California, he also took his first motorsport steps in a kart before finding his way into sports car and prototype racing via championship titles in American and European formula series. In 2014, he won the GTD class of the United SportsCar Championship, the forerunner of today’s IMSA SportsCar Championship. In 2016 and 2018, the now 35-year-old clinched the overall title at the wheel of DPi prototypes. In 2023, Cameron shared the cockpit of the Porsche 963 with Denmark’s Michael Christensen and Frenchman Frédéric Makowiecki in the FIA World Endurance Championship WEC. On his return to the IMSA series, he celebrated his first Daytona victory together with Felipe Nasr, Josef Newgarden (Nashville, Tennessee) and Matt Campbell. Like Nasr, he crowned his career at Road Atlanta with a third IMSA title in the top prototype class.
GT classes: Laurin Heinrich and “Rexy” fulfill all dreams
In the GTD Pro category, Porsche celebrated the ultimate success with customer team AO Racing – but not before 911 GT3 R known as “Rexy” suffered a bitter setback early in the race. The bright green No. 77 racer had to make several unexpected pit stops due to a faulty cable connection on the steering wheel, which cost five laps. Nevertheless, Laurin Heinrich (Germany), Michael Christensen (Denmark) and Frenchman Julien Andlauer brought the car across the finish line in eleventh place. All three are former Porsche Juniors. This result was enough to hand Porsche the manufacturers’ championship, AO Racing the team title and Heinrich the drivers’ crown.
Dane Cameron, Driver, No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963:
“Heading into a new season, you always have big goals and wild dreams – winning the major event in Daytona, taking the drivers’ title as well as the manufacturers’ and teams’ championship. Add to that the crown in the Michelin Endurance Cup and securing the first two places as a team... We’ve now fulfilled all these dreams. This is almost extraordinary. I’m proud of everyone who worked so hard for our success.”
Felipe Nasr, Driver, No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963:
“What a day! So much happened in the race, but none of that matters now. We’ve achieved our dreams! I was involved in the Porsche 963 project from day one. It makes me incredibly proud that all the hard work is paying off like this. My first title as a Porsche works driver is hugely important to me: that was my big goal when I signed on with this great manufacturer. I wanted to reach the top with Porsche and Porsche Penske Motorsport – and I’ve done it! Thank you to everyone who worked with so much passion on this."
Mathieu Jaminet, Driver, No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963:
“We almost wrapped up our IMSA season with a third win, but things got super tight towards the end of Petit Le Mans. We’re delighted for our teammates – congratulations on winning the title. As vice-champions, we contributed to a perfect result for Porsche and Porsche Penske Motorsport. That makes me proud.”
Nick Tandy, No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963:
“Our race was strong, and we were leading for many laps. But then we experienced the typical Road Atlanta finish: yellow phase, gap gone, sprint to the finish. Unfortunately, we didn’t quite have the pace to win. The Cadillac was slightly faster in the end. Congratulations to our colleagues.”
Laurin Heinrich, Driver, No. 77 AO Racing Porsche 911 GT3 R:
“Unbelievable! On Friday I set pole position and earned critical points that ultimately decided the title at the finale. We led the race from the start and managed to control the front well. But then we were hit by a setback: we couldn’t shift up and lost five laps. Still, we kept our cool, worked perfectly and never gave up. That was enough. Huge thanks to the team and all my teammates this season. Winning the title is the greatest success in my still fledgling career!”
Gunnar Jeannette, Team principal AO Racing:
“Everything was running perfectly initially but then we suffered a steering wheel problem. Our drivers had their work cut out for them because the car only shifted up every third or fourth attempt. The team managed to quickly identify and solve the issue. After that, the race remained a nail-biter to the very end – and it was enough. To be honest, today’s eleventh place was the best of my life.”
Race result
GTP class:
1. Van der Zande/Bourdais/Dixon (Netherlands/France/New Zealand), Cadillac No. 01, 443 laps
2. Tandy/Jaminet/Estre (UK/France/France), Porsche 963 No. 6, + 2.948 seconds
3. Cameron/Nasr/Campbell (USA/Brazil/Australia), Porsche 963 No. 7, + 13.832 seconds
6. Bruni/Viscaal/Picariello (Italy/Netherlands/Belgium), Porsche 963 No. 5, - 2 laps
DNF Van der Helm/Westbrook/Hanson (Netherlands/UK/UK), Porsche 963 No. 85, - 283 laps
GTD-Pro class:
1. Perera/Pepper/Bortolotti (France/ZA/Italy), Lamborghini No. 19, 413 laps
2. Serra/Rigon/Pier Guidi (Brazil/Italy/Italy), Ferrari No. 62, + 2.361 seconds
3. Gunn/Riberas/De Angelis (UK/Spain/Canada), Aston Martin No. 23, + 4.206 seconds
11. Heinrich/Christensen/Andlauer (Germany/Denmark/France), Porsche 911 GT3 R No. 77, - 5 laps
GTD class:
1. Franco/Costa Balboa/Sbirrazzuoli (USA/Spain/Monaco), Ferrari No. 34, 411 laps
2. Goikhberg/Spinelli/Defrancesco (Canadian/Italy/USA), Lamborghini No. 78, + 0.718 seconds
3. Montecalvo/Thompson/Telitz (USA/Canadian/USA), Lexus No. 12, - 1 lap
16. Li/Fjordbach/Bachler (China/Denmark/Austria), Porsche 911 GT3 R No. 86, - 14 laps
DNF Adelson/Skeer/Heylen (USA/USA/USA), Porsche 911 GT3 R No. 120, - 38 laps
Full results and championship standings: https://imsa.alkamelsystems.com.