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Strakka
Racing has been delighted to extend a welcome this weekend
to His Royal Highness Prince Michael of Kent, who is attending
the 77th running of the Le Mans 24 Hours as a guest of the
team.
During
the Saturday morning build-up to the race, Prince Michael
visited the Strakka Racing garage, met members of the team,
and viewed the engineers and mechanics as they completed their
final preparations for the race. Once the car had been pushed
out onto the track for the pit straight walkabout, the Prince
joined Nick Leventis, Peter Hardman and Danny Watts to see
the team’s Ginetta-Zytek GZ09S taking up its position
on the grid.
During
the course of the morning Prince Michael met a number of prominent
members of the Le Mans community, including Daniel Poissenot,
Sport Vice President of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO);
Stephane Sarrazin, the pole setter for Team Peugeot Total;
and Dr Ulrich Bez, CEO of Aston Martin. He subsequently watched
the start of the race from the private box of the President
of the ACO, Jean-Claude Plassart.
“There
is tremendous excitement in seeing a new British privately
owned team doing so well in its first year, and I am delighted
to be here at Le Mans to support Strakka Racing and wish it
every success,” said Prince Michael.
“We
are enormously fortunate to have Prince Michael’s interest
and support,” said Nick Leventis, who drove second stint
during the opening hours of the race. “It is a great
privilege to have him here as our guest, and we appreciate
his good wishes for the race.”
Strakka
Racing’s fortunes during the first quarter of the race
fluctuated slightly. Peter Hardman drove a strong opening
stint, and found himself battling with both the Kolles Audi
R10s and also the #009 Lola Aston Martin, but his early defence
paid dividends, and he started to ease clear. He completed
a solid double-stint before handing on to Nick Leventis.
In
his first Le Mans 24 Hours as a prototype driver Nick (right)
demonstrated his ever-increasing pace and ability by circulating
as one of the fastest in his class, regularly lapping quicker
than a number of highly regarded professional drivers. His
mature and consistent double-stint ended at six o’clock,
when he handed over to Danny Watts,
The
A1GP Team Great Britain driver showed further speed and skill
as he started to reduce his lap times steadily, topping out
with a best of 3:33.276 on lap 76. Nearing the end of his
third stint at the wheel, Danny was holding a comfortable
13th position overall when he returned to the pits for a refuel
and driver change to Peter Hardman. Unfortunately, the crew
found it impossible to remove the right-rear wheel using conventional
pit-box tools, and the car then had to be hauled back into
the garage, where more mechanics could attend to the problem.
The full repair cost forty minutes and, as the race entered
the seventh hour, one quarter distance, the car was holding
35th position overall.
Peter
Hardman began the team’s spirited recovery at nine o’clock,
and with him the sequence of drivers was reset. Nick Leventis
followed on, and as Saturday moved through to Sunday, the
Strakka Racing Ginetta-Zytek had moved up to 25th position
overall, a full ten places recovered since the extended pitstop.
Click
the images to access high resolution versions of each photograph.
Images 1, 2 and 3, credit Regis
Lefubure. Image 4: John
Brooks
Further
information:
For
further information please visit the Strakka
Racing website.
You may also telephone 01327 351134
Ginetta-Zytek:
08452 105050
Zytek Engineering: 01283 707000
For details relating
directly to this release, please contact James
Turner, Marketing Consultant to Strakka
Racing.
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