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1998 PETIT LE MANS

The '1998 Petit Le Mans' was the seventh race for the 1998 IMSA season, then known as the Professional SportsCar Racing series. It was also the first race of Don Panoz's American Le Mans Series developed with the backing of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO), the ruling body of the 24 Hours of Le Mans. It took place on October 11, 1998.

Contents
Development
Official Results
Statistics
Post-Race
External Links

Development


Following the demise of the World Sportscar Championship in 1992, sportscar racing was left without a major worldwide series in which to compete. The 24 Hours of Le Mans remained a remanent, still competed by a large number of sportscars, but mostly on a single race basis. Various sportscar leagues had sprung up since the WSC's demise, including the International Motor Sports Association's replacement for their Camel GTP series, the Prototype SportsCar Racing series. In Europe, two series were also developed, the FIA Sportscar Championship and the FIA GT Championship, although they were not combined like IMSA's series.
The Automobile Club de l'Ouest, wanting to create a new worldwide series, made an agreement with Don Panoz, owner of the Road Atlanta racing course. The ACO would agree to lend the Le Mans name out to Panoz for the creation of an event called the Petit Le Mans (French for ''little Le Mans''). The race would be similar to the 12 Hours of Sebring, in that it did not run a full 24 hours like Le Mans. Instead, the race would be 10 hours or 1000 miles, whichever came first. The series would become an experiment for the ACO, in which if enough teams showed interest in Petit Le Mans, the ACO would look into developing a series around the same formula. In order to help drive interest, the ACO promised that the winners of Petit Le Mans would earn automatic invitations to the 24 Hours of Le Mans without having to apply or earn favor with the ACO.
IMSA, which normally ran at Road Atlanta during their seasons, agreed to allow a joint race for their series and the 24 Hours of Le Mans competitors. However, each series ran slightly different formulas for their competitors, thus forcing the organizers to create seven different classes. LMP1, LMGT1, and LMGT2 for the ACO compliant cars, and WSC, GT1, GT2, and GT3 for IMSA's competitors. Even though both organizers used the GT1 and GT2 names the classes were not actually the same, which is why the ACO classes are preceded by LM.

Official Results


Class winners in 'bold'. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).
Pos Class No Team Drivers Chassis Laps
Engine
1 LMP1 7 Doyle-Risi Racing Eric van de Poele
Wayne Taylor
Emmanuel Collard
Ferrari 333 SP 391
Ferrari F310E 4.0L V12
2 LMP1 77 Porsche AG
Joest Racing
Michele Alboreto
Stefan Johansson
Jörg Müller
Porsche LMP1-98 391
Porsche Type-935 3.2L Turbo Flat-6
3 LMGT1 38 Champion Motors Thierry Boutsen
Bob Wollek
Ralf Kelleners
Porsche 911 GT1-98 381
Porsche 3.2L Turbo Flat-6
4 WSC 8 Transatlantic Racing Services Butch Leitzinger
Scott Schubot
Henry Camferdam
Riley & Scott MkIII 378
Ford 5.0L V8
5 WSC 88 Dollahite Racing Bill Dollahite
Mike Davies
Anthony Lazzaro
Ferrari 333 SP 365
Ferrari F310E 4.0L V12
6 LMP1 63 Autoexe Motorsports
Downing Atlanta
Yojiro Terada
Jim Downing
Howard Katz
Autoexe (Kudzu) AE99 349
Mazda 2.6L 4-Rotor
7 LMGT2 81 Freisinger Motorsport Michel Ligonnet
Lance Stewart
Porsche 911 GT2 337
Porsche 3.6L Turbo Flat-6
8 GT1 4 Panoz Motorsports Scott Pruett
Eric Bernard
Andy Wallace
David Brabham
Panoz Esperante GTR-1 335
Ford (Roush) 6.0L V8
9 GT3 76 Richard Raimist Peter Argetsinger
Richard Polidori
Angelo Cilli
Porsche 911 Carrera RSR 335
Porsche 3.8L Flat-6
10 GT3 6 Prototype Technology Group (PTG) Ross Bentley
Darren Law
Jeff Schafer
David Besnard
BMW M3 328
BMW 3.2L I6
11 LMGT2 72 Konrad Motorsport Franz Konrad
Jan Lammers
Porsche 911 GT2 322
Porsche 3.6L Turbo Flat-6
12 LMGT1 07 Panoz Motorsports Doc Bundy
John Nielsen
Christophe Tinseau
Panoz Esperante GTR-1 Q9 317
Ford (Roush) 6.0L V8
Zytek Hybrid Electric
13 GT2 04 CJ Motorsport John Morton
Ron Fellows
John Graham
Porsche 911 GT2 311
Porsche 3.6L Turbo Flat-6
14 LMGT2 00 Larbre Compétition Patrice Goueslard
Stéphane Ortelli
Jack Leconte
Porsche 911 GT2 311
Porsche 3.6L Turbo Flat-6
15 GT2 75 Cameron Worth Cameron Worth
Scott Sansone
Mazda RX-7 294
Mazda 2.0L 3-Rotor
16 GT3 1 Prototype Technology Group (PTG) Peter Cunningham
Brian Simo
Terry Borcheller
Javier Quiros
BMW M3 289
BMW 3.2L I6
17
DNF
GT3 10 Prototype Technology Group (PTG) Bill Auberlen
Mark Simo
Andy Pilgrim
BMW M3 281
BMW 3.2L I6
18
DNF
WSC 39 Matthews-Colucci Racing David Murry
Jim Matthews
Hurley Haywood
Riley & Scott MkIII 273
Ford 5.0L V8
19
NC
GT3 86 G&W Motorsport Steve Marshall
Danny Marshall
Sylvain Tremblay
Porsche 911 Carrera RSR 271
Porsche 3.8L Flat-6
20
DNF
LMGT1 26 Porsche AG Allan McNish
Uwe Alzen
Yannick Dalmas
Porsche 911 GT1-98 235
Porsche 3.2L Turbo Flat-6
21
DNF
WSC 28 Intersport Racing Jon Field
Jeret Schroder
Joaquin DeSoto
John Mirro
Riley & Scott MkIII 229
Ford 5.0L V8
22
DNF
LMGT2 73 Konrad Motorsport Angelo Zadra
Peter Kitchak
Charles Slater
Porsche 911 GT2 157
Porsche 3.6L Turbo Flat-6
23
DNF
GT3 12 T.C. Kline Randy Pobst
Peter Halmser
Shane Lewis
BMW M3 96
BMW 3.2L I6
24
DNF
GT3 96 Henry Taleb Henry Taleb
Xavier Collado
Rob Wilson
Nissan 240SX 63
Nissan 2.4L I4
25
DNF
WSC 27 Doran Enterprises Didier Theys
Fredy Lienhard
Mauro Baldi
Ferrari 333 SP 59
Ferrari F310E 4.0L V12
26
DNF
GT2 68 Charles Coker Jr. Charles Coker Jr.
Joe Varde
Joe Foster
Dave White
Porsche 968 Turbo RS 50
Porsche 3.0L Turbo I4
27
DNF
LMGT2 59 Marcos Racing International Cor Euser
Christian Vann
Harald Becker
Marcos Mantara LM600 49
Chevrolet 6.0L V8
28
DNF
WSC 29 Intersport Racing Sam Brown
Ken Dromm
Simon Gregg
Jacek Mucha
Riley & Scott MkIII 31
Ford 5.0L V8
29
DNF
GT3 23 Alex Job Racing Kelly Collins
Darryl Havens
Cort Wagner
Porsche 911 Carrera RSR 0
Porsche 3.8L Flat-6
DNS GT1 5 Panoz Motorsports Johnny O'Connell
Jamie Davies
Éric Bernard
Panoz Esperante GTR-1 -
Ford (Roush) 6.0L V8
DNS LMP1 21 Solution F Philippe Gache
Anthony Beltoise
Jérôme Policand
Riley & Scott MkIII -
Ford 5.0L V8

Statistics


★ Pole Position - #26 Porsche AG - 1:13.754

★ Average Speed - 164.62km/h

Post-Race


With a total of 31 entrants, including a large number of European teams, the ACO considered the race a success. The only downside was that BMW, who had initially entered their BMW V12 LMs, did not show up for the race. However, the ACO and Don Panoz pushed ahead with their plans and announced the American Le Mans Series for 1999. IMSA, whose own racing series was faultering, decided to take instead take over as sanctioning body for the new American Le Mans Series.
The ACO would repeat this kind of one-off experimental race in preparation for a series in the future, with the 1999 Le Mans Fuji 1000km and 2003 1000km of Le Mans.

External Links



1998 Petit Le Mans results (WSRP)

1998 Petit Le Mans results (WSPR-Racing)

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