
Michael Levitt/IMSA
Porsche seizes Sebring 12 Hours advantage at quarter-distance
After three hours of racing in the 12 Hours of Sebring, it’s all Porsche at the head of the field. The two Penske-run 963s sit first and second after charging to the front in the laps following the most recent safety car restart in the third hour.
Laurin Heinrich stole the headlines with his performance, carving through the field from ninth at the green flag, eventually making the pass for the lead in traffic on Louis Deletraz’s No. 40 Cadillac through traffic at T16 before opening out a 12-second lead. It was a remarkable turnaround for the No. 7, which was recovering from a drive-through penalty that cost the Rolex 24 winners valuable track position in the second hour.
Behind sits Laurens Vanthoor, who steered the sister No. 6 Penske Porsche to second. The No. 10 Wayne Taylor Cadillac hit the race's quarter mark in third place, with the field back under a safety car due to a huge multi-car incident at the final corner in the closing minutes of the hour.
The original shuffle to the GTP order, after the opening hour, came as a result of the first major incident of the race, which occurred in the closing stages of Hour 2.
Henrik Hedman caused the caution after being on the receiving end of a swipe from PR1’s Parker Thompson heading into Turn 3. The Swede was rudely sent off track and hard into the guardrails and tire barriers by the front-running ORECA, severely damaging the front-right corner of the DragonSpeed team’s Corvette. UPDATE: Nearly three hours after the hit from the No. 52 LMP2, the No. 81 Corvette is back on track. Main repairs were bodywork, driveshaft and a handful of other parts. Giacomo Altoe took the car back out.
Fortunately, Hedman climbed out on his own after the hard hit. Thompson, meanwhile, was handed a five-minute penalty for his role in the incident, dropping him from second to 11th in LMP2 and two laps down.
During the safety car period for the clean-up, the Whelen Cadillac – which had already lost the lead in the pits and dropped to third – suffered a significant setback. Earl Bamber was forced to take an unscheduled stop for rear-end bodywork repairs after being hit while in the safety car queue.
The pole-sitting V-Series.R required a new engine cover and rear wing following the contact, which came from the No. 6 Porsche Penske 963 of Vanthoor. The Cadillac came off the worst of the two and dropped to ninth, but rose to sixth by the end of the third hour. The 963 didn't get away unscathed, though, as it has taken headlight damage from the impact.
The second major incident of the race occurred as the third hour drew to a close. It all began when Sebastien Priaulx in the No. 65 Ford Mustang and Alessandro Pier Guidi in the Risi Competizione Ferrari were caught on camera spinning at the exit of the final turn.
The Mustang ended up in the barriers with light contact, while the Ferrari ended up stranded in the middle of the road. Unfortunately for Pier Guidi, he was hit hard by Russell Ward in the No. 57 Winward Mercedes-AMG, forcing both cars into retirement with accident damage. The hit between the Ferrari and AMG put a sudden end to Risi’s chances of a fourth Sebring win and reigning GTD winner Winward’s defense.
“I just got tagged from the rear – our car is struggling in the last corner and I just got hit," related Priaulx. "It was unfortunate to get tagged; we’re struggling with understeer after the contact. Luckily, it wasn’t race-ending.”
Race control deemed that no further action was necessary after an investigation.
Back to the running order, which will undoubtedly shuffle again during the round of stops under safety car, the No. 60 Acura MSR ARX-06 sat fourth in GTP, with the No. 24 BMW fifth as the third hour ticked over.
In LMP2, it’s the No. 8 Tower ORECA out front, with the No. 22 United Autosports example second and the AO’s car third.
Manthey’s strong start to the race in GTD Pro continued through the second and third hours of the race. It leads the class with Klaus Bachler in the "Grello" 911. The No. 77 AO Porsche added another 1-2 to the list for the German brand. The pole-sitting No. 14 Lexus completes the top three.
It’s better news for Ferrari in GTD, as AF Corse’s No. 21 296 leads the way. The Heart of Racing Aston Martin, which has led the class for much of the opening portion of the race, is second.
Stephen Kilbey
UK-based Stephen Kilbey is RACER.com's FIA World Endurance Championship correspondent, and is also Deputy Editor of Dailysportscar.com He has a first-class honours degree in Sports Journalism and is a previous winner of the UK Guild of Motoring Writers Sir William Lyons Award.
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