Daytona 24H: Taylor beats Westbrook in frantic race for pole

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From pole position, Tristan Vautier’s JDC Miller MotorSports Cadillac DPi-V.R made a brilliant start as Tristan Nunez came up from the second row to claim second but only until the twisty infield when Renger van der Zande made several brave passes to claim second – up from sixth – in the Chip Ganassi Racing #01 Cadillac.

Tom Blomqvist of Meyer Shank Racing slotted his Acura ARX-05 into fourth ahead of the Wayne Taylor Racing Acura of Filipe Albuquerque. Alex Lynn was treading cautiously in the second Ganassi car and fell to sixth but ahead of Jimmie Johnson in the Ally Racing AXR Cadillac.

Nunez got ushered off the road while lapping GTD cars early on, allowing both Blomqvist and Albuquerque to move their Acuras into third and fourth respectively, and Nunez would soon lose fifth to Lynn’s Ganassi car.

Nunez handed off the AXR #31 to Pipo Derani at lap 15, with Blomqvist giving up his MSR Acura to Oliver Jarvis at the same time. Simultaneously, van der Zande was applying pressure to leader Vautier, and only half a second back Albuquerque was watching his mirrors for Ganassi debutant Lynn.

The two Ganassi cars pitted on lap 18, van der Zande giving the wheel to Sebastien Bourdais and Lynn being replaced by Earl Bamber. Next time by Vautier stopped to let Richard Westbrook in, handing the lead to Albuquerque, but both Ganassi cars had to serve drive through penalties for exceeding the pitlane speed limit.

After the pitstop cycle MSR and AXR were in front, Jarvis leading Derani by 2.5s with Ricky Taylor pedalling the WTR Acura a further six seconds back and under pressure from Westbrook. Kamui Kobayashi had taken over the Ally Cadillac from Johnson but was fifth, 22s off the lead.

Westbrook passed Taylor for third as they negotiated traffic, and started trying to close the 5s gap to Jarvis and Derani battle up front.

#5 JDC Miller MotorSports Cadillac DPi: Tristan Vautier, Richard Westbrook, Loic Duval, Ben Keating

#5 JDC Miller MotorSports Cadillac DPi: Tristan Vautier, Richard Westbrook, Loic Duval, Ben Keating

Photo by: Art Fleischmann

Derani would then make his second stop with 40 minutes to go, leaving Jarvis with 2.3s ahead of Westbrook and Taylor. But two laps later, MSR pitted Jarvis and the rest of the DPi cars swiftly followed suit. 

Taylor and Westbrook pulled away from the pack to enjoy a thrilling battle up front, each showing great judgment as they picked their way through traffic. Derani passed Jarvis for third with less than 15 minutes remaining, and Kobayashi also passed the MSR car as Jarvis desperately tried to fuel save. Derani could not, however, and ducked into the pits with four laps remaining, dropping to the back of the class, and promoting Kobayashi to third.

On the very last lap, Westbrook saw a Cadillac-sized hole down the inside of Taylor at Turn 1, and nudged the Acura, causing Taylor to wiggle and Westbrook to spin. The JDC Miller driver recovered in time to beat Kobayashi for second, with Jarvis beating the two Ganassi cars and Derani.

In LMP2, Steven Thomas beat PR1 Mathiasen Motorsports Ben Keating to claim the lead but on lap six Keating repassed for the class lead as, while the pair of them dropped the rest of the field.

Once all the LMP2 cars had made their pitstops, Mikkel Jensen and Jonathan Bomarito continued their team-mates’ good work in a PR1 Mathiasen 1-2 ahead of Devlin DeFrancesco in the DragonSpeed car.

Further back, James Allen ran fourth for G-Drive by APR ahead of Dylan Murry in the Racing Team Nederland car, but these two exchanged places on lap 26.

In the second half of the race, Jensen kept pulling away from team-mate Bomarito, who turned 40 on Sunday, whose nearest pursuers following their second stops were Fabio Scherer in the High Class car, and Rene Rast of G-Drive.

In the closing laps, Rast demoted Scherer and closed up on Bomarito but was never close enough to try and grab runner-up spot.

#11 PR1 Mathiasen Motorsports Oreca LMP2 07: Steven Thomas, Jonathan Bomarito, Josh Pierson, Harry Tincknell

#11 PR1 Mathiasen Motorsports Oreca LMP2 07: Steven Thomas, Jonathan Bomarito, Josh Pierson, Harry Tincknell

Photo by: Jake Galstad / Motorsport Images

In LMP3, Cameron Shields of Muehlner Motorsport led from the start Andretti Autosport and Gar Robinson’s Riley Motorsports entry, but the car went behind the wall within the first six laps, allowing Orey Fidani of Forty7 Motorsport into third.

However, with barely more than 40 minutes to go, Shields pitted apparently terminally, handing the class lead to Josh Burdon who was now driving the Andretti car. Burdon came home over one minutes ahead of the other Muehlner car, shared by Moritz Kranz and Ayrton Ori, with Kuno Wittmer bringing the Forty7 car home third, albeit three laps down.

Mathieu Jaminet led GTD Pro for Pfaff Motorsport at the start, beating polesitter Alex Imperatori of KCMG in the similar Porsche 911 GT3Rs, while Ross Gunn of Heart of Racing Aston Martin ran third ahead of Andrea Caldarelli (TR3 Racing Lamborghini) and Ben Barnicoat on his Vasser Sullivan Lexus RC F debut. They were chased by WeatherTech Racing pair – Maro Engel’s Mercedes AMG GT3 passed Julien Andlauer’s Porsche on lap five.

Caldarelli passed Gunn to claim third, while by lap 18 Andlauer had not only re-passed Engel but was up to fifth ahead of Barnicoat’s Lexus.

Following the pitstops at around half distance, Pfaff continued to lead with Felipe Nasr in the driving seat, and it was still pursued by another Porsche but it was now Alessio Picariello in the #79 WeatherTech Porsche who was in second, three seconds adrift, and the KCMG Porsche had tumbled to 10th in class with Patrick Pilet at the wheel, IMSA Radio reporting a refuelling issue that had cost the team half a minute.

The battle for the lead between Nasr and Picariello closed right up with 30 minutes to go and finally the WeatherTech car got past with less than 25 minutes remaining, leaving Nasr to try and fend off Bortolotti. He succumbed to the Lambo driver with 19 minutes remaining and Bortolotti claimed the lead on their 47th lap with 14 minutes remaining.

#9 Pfaff Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3R: Matt Campbell, Mathieu Jaminet, Felipe Nasr

#9 Pfaff Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3R: Matt Campbell, Mathieu Jaminet, Felipe Nasr

Photo by: Jake Galstad / Motorsport Images

In GTD, Winward Racing’s Mercedes led in the hands of Russell Ward, chased by John Miller in the Crucial Motorsport McLaren 720S, while Kenny Habul retained his remarkable third place from qualifying, ahead of Michael De Quesada in the Alegra Motorsport Mercedes.

After the stops, Lucas Auer kept Winward up front, with Paul Holton chasing him from behind the wheel of the Crucial McLaren.

However, Jan Heylen, taking over the Wright Motorsports Porsche from Ryan Hardwick, had been charging hard throughout his stint and passed Townsend Bell in the #12 VSR Lexus for third at the last gasp, while Raffaele Marciello claimed fifth in the SunEnergy1 Mercedes ahead of Cosmo. Up front, Auer held on to claim class honours by a mere half second ahead of Holton.

Daytona 24 Hours – qualifying race results

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