Audi and Mercedes share Crowns after thrilling 8H California

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The second edition of the California 8 Hours proved to be an exciting end to the 2018 Intercontinental GT Challenge. Only in the final minutes of the race on the Laguna Seca Raceway were the drivers’, manufacturers’ and Bronze drivers’ titles decided.

In the end Audi claimed a third consecutive manufacturers’ crown, while third was enough to let Tristan Vautier become the new drivers’ champion. Although he did not have the easiest of races, Kenny Habul became the inaugural Bronze Drivers’ champion.

Sunny, but slightly chilly conditions met the competitors for the start of the second edition of the California 8 Hours, which took place at 9.15 on Sunday morning. Kelvin van der Linde, at the wheel of the polesitting #29 Audi Sport Team Land, held on to first place, even though Raffaele Marciello tried to pass him on the outside of the first corner. The #29 Audi and the #43 Mercedes-AMG Team Strakka Racing stayed close to each other for the first hour of the race, up until the moment that Marciello found his way past Van der Linde.

The Strakka Racing machine remained among the frontrunners up until the sixth hour, when a Safety Car-intervention – caused by an off for the #2 GMG Racing Audi – cost the #43 Mercedes-AMG a lot of time and five positions, handing the lead of the race to the #29 Audi Sport Team Land. That car had lost plenty of time earlier in the race, due to two drive-through penalties. Thanks to an intelligent race strategy Christopher Haase, Christopher Mies and last year’s California 8 Hours winner Kelvin van der Linde fought their way back to the top.

With two hours to go Raffaele Marciello switched on the afterburners, determined to reclaim a position which would give him the drivers’ title and Mercedes-AMG that of the manufacturers. However, contact with the #17 Audi Sport Team WRT car of Alex Riberas resulted in an impressive off. The airbox of the black-and-green Mercedes-AMG was filled with dust, together with the cockpit of Marciello’s car, hampering the Italian’s progress.

Once the final pitstops were over and done with, the #29 Audi Sport Team Land car had less than five seconds in hand over the #19 Audi Sport Team WRT R8, but the latter never managed to close that gap. A quarter of a minute down the road the #175 Mercedes-AMG Team SunEnergy1 Racing car held on to third. This was enough to give Tristan Vautier the 2018 Intercontinental GT Challenge drivers’ title, but insufficient for Mercedes-AMG to hold on to the lead in the manufacturers’ standings. Although Maro Engel (#175 Mercedes-AMG) tried his utmost to gain a couple of positions, the order remained the same until the end of the race, bringing the manufacturers’ title to Audi for the third year straight.

With Marciello dropping back in the dying minutes of the race – another contact caused a puncture – the #911 Wright Motorsport Porsche crossed the line in fourth. Makowiecki, Dumas and Werner lost some time early on, but a strong finish meant they beat the #8 Bentley Team M-Sport Continental of Abril, Soucek and Soulet in the battle for fourth. In the first half of the race the Continental had led the race thanks to a different strategy, but a puncture threw them out of contention.

The battle for the Bronze drivers’ title seemed over very quickly for championship leader Kenny Habul, after the Australian, at the wheel of the #75 SunEnergy1 Racing Mercedes-AMG, made contact with the #46 PPM Lamborghini. Both cars were towed back to pitlane, and when Habul’s car regained the track, it was over 80 laps down. With Habul needing 70 percent of the race distance to be classified and score points, it was clear that the Australian could not afford to lose more time. In the end, the car covered 71 percent of the winner’s race distance, enough for Habul to claim the very first Intercontinental GT Challenge Bronze Drivers’ title.

At the front of the Bronze Drivers’ race-in-the-race, Nick Leventis took his second maximum score of the season, sharing the #42 Strakka Racing Mercedes-AMG with David Fumanelli and Felipe Fraga. They held off the #54 Black Swan Racing Porsche of Tim Pappas and his co-drivers Jeroen Bleekemolen and Patrick Long. Leventis and his team-mates also took the top step in the GT3 Pro-Am category.

The GT4 class was also decided in the final half an hour of the race, when the #12 Ian Lacy Racing Ginetta had to stop for fuel. Due to the small differences in the category, that meant that the Ginetta dropped to fourth. At the front the #66 TRG Porsche Cayman had a close fought duel with the #626 Rearden Racing Audi. In the end the latter – with David Roberts, Vesko Kozarov and Max Faulkner at the wheel – took the class win with under half a minute in hand.

The sole GTC car in the race, the #6 US RaceTronics Lamborghini Super Trofeo, tried to take the fight to some of the GT3 cars, eventually finishing a very creditable 14th place overall. In TCR the fraternal duel between the Bryan Herta Autosport Hyundai cars was decided early in the race, when the #99 i30 lost a wheel. The car later had to retire, after making contact with the #87 Vital Speed Motorsports Ferrari, that was spun around at the Corkscrew.

With the 2018 Intercontinental GT Challenge now fully wrapped up, all attention now goes to the opening race of the 2019 edition, the Liqui-Moly Bathurst 12 Hour on February 2nd -3rd 2019.