2009 24 Hours of Le Mans explained

The 2009 24 Hours of Le Mans (French: 24 Heures du Mans 2009) was the 77th Grand Prix of Endurance, an endurance auto race run over 24 hours. It took place at the Circuit de la Sarthe, Le Mans, France, and was organised by the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) over 13–14 June 2009 and was started by Fiat and Ferrari chairman Luca Cordero di Montezemolo at 15:00 local time (13:00 UTC). A test day was initially scheduled for 31 May that year, but was canceled by the ACO due to economic concerns.[1] The race was attended by 234,800 spectators.[2]

Peugeot succeeded in winning the race in the third year of the 908 HDi FAP program with drivers David Brabham, Marc Gené, and Alexander Wurz driving the No. 9 car for 382 laps; an all-French driving squad secured second place for Peugeot as well. Audi, who had won eight of the last ten Le Mans, finished third in their new R15 TDI. Team Essex gave Porsche their second LMP2 victory in a row, while the American Corvette Racing team earned their first GT1 win since . Risi Competizione Ferrari led the GT2 category for their second straight victory in the class.[3]

Schedule

Events for the 24 Hours of Le Mans began on 8 June with technical inspections, before initial practice began on 10 June. Due to the cancellation of the May test session, the Wednesday track session has been altered to free practice only, with no qualification times being recorded in the mostly wet session. Qualifying therefore only took place on Thursday, which remained dry.

Schedule
DateTime (local)Event
Monday, 8 June14:30 – 18:00Sporting Checks and Administrative scrutineering
Tuesday, 9 June08:30 – 17:00Sporting Checks and Administrative scrutineering
Wednesday, 10 June18:00 – 24:00Free practice
Thursday, 11 June19:00 – 21:00Qualifying
22:00 – 24:00
Friday, 12 June10:00 – 20:00Pit Walk
18:00 – 19:00Drivers' parade in Le Mans City center
Saturday, 13 June09:00 – 09:45Warm-up
14:22Beginning of starting procedure
15:00Start of the 24 Hours of Le Mans
Sunday, 14 June15:00Finish of the 24 Hours of Le Mans

Entries

Automatic invitations

Automatic entry to the 2009 24 Hours of Le Mans was granted to teams that had performed well in the previous year's 24 Hours of Le Mans, as well as the 2008 seasons of the American Le Mans Series, Le Mans Series, FIA GT Championship, and the Petit Le Mans.[4] New for 2009 was an automatic invitation awarded to the team which accumulated the most points in the Michelin Energy Endurance Challenge, as part of the Le Mans Series. The award was based on fuel economy of competitors during each event.[5]

On 20 January 2009, the ACO announced that 15 of the 29 automatic invitations had been accepted by their recipients.[6] Entries with a blue background were granted entries, but did not accept their invitations.

Reason enteredLMP1LMP2GT1GT2
1st in 24 Hours of Le Mans Audi Sport North America Van Merksteijn Motorsport Aston Martin Racing Risi Competizione
2nd in 24 Hours of Le Mans Team Peugeot Total Team Essex Corvette Racing BMS Scuderia Italia
1st in Le Mans Series Audi Sport Team Joest Van Merksteijn Motorsport Luc Alphand Aventures Virgo Motorsport
2nd in Le Mans Series Team Peugeot Total Team Essex Team Modena Team Felbermayr-Proton
1st in Petit Le Mans Audi Sport North America Penske Motorsports, Inc. Corvette Racing Risi Competizione
1st in American Le Mans Series Intersport Racing1 Penske Racing Bell Motorsports2 Flying Lizard Motorsports
1st in FIA GT Championship Vitaphone Racing Team AF Corse
2nd in FIA GT Championship Phoenix Carsport Racing BMS Scuderia Italia
1st in Energy Endurance Challenge Horag Racing

1. Due to Audi Sport North America already earning two entries (first in previous 24 Hours of Le Mans and first at Petit Le Mans), they could not receive the automatic invitation for also winning the American Le Mans Series championship. The entry was instead given to the team which finished second in the championship.

2. Due to Corvette Racing already earning two entries (second in previous 24 Hours of Le Mans and first at Petit Le Mans), they could not receive the automatic invitation for also winning the American Le Mans Series championship. The entry was instead given to the team which finished second in the championship.

Applications

Prior to the deadline for applications, 82 separate entries by teams representing 17 countries were received by the ACO. This amount is only six less than the total of applications received for the previous running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans. The ACO Selection Committee decided on which teams were invited to fill the remaining 40 positions alongside those teams who had already received automatic invitations, along with ten reserve entries.[7]

Entry list

On 26 February, the ACO announced their list of 55 entries which will be invited to take part in the 2009 24 Hours of Le Mans. 21 cars within the LMP1 category include Audi, Peugeot, and Aston Martin with three cars each, as well as private entries for the Kolles Audis, Pescarolo Peugeot, and Speedy-Sebah Aston Martin. This also made a total of nine cars which would be using diesel fuel. LMP2 featured previous race winners Team Goh in a previous winning car, the Porsche RS Spyder, joined by last year's runner-up Team Essex. Mazda supplied engines for four entries, split amongst the Lola and Pescarolo chassis.

The GT1 category was fought amongst three manufacturers, as Corvette Racing and Luc Alphand Aventures attempted to overcome the two private Aston Martin and Lamborghini entries. GT2 was once again dominated by the Ferrari and Porsche battle, although Ferrari had the power of numbers with its ten entries compared to Porsche's five. Sole entries from Spyker and the Drayson Aston Martin completed the GT2 field.[8]

Reserve entries

Ten entries are granted a reserve entry, in case an entry from the list of 55 withdraws prior to the event. These ten entries will be allowed to join the race entry list in the order they are listed here, regardless of their class.

On 31 March, Gigawave Motorsport withdrew their Aston Martin from the GT1 category of the entry list in order to concentrate on their development of the Nissan GT-R program. This promoted Advanced Engineering/Team Seattle from the reserve list to the entry list.[9] Three days later Epsilon Euskadi withdrew their LMP1 entry which was replaced by the Endurance China Team. Epsilon Euskadi also withdrew their second entry from the reserve list.[10] On 29 April, it was announced that Vitaphone Racing withdrew their LMP2 entry and was replaced by a second IMSA Performance Matmut GT2 entry. Racing Box also announced that they withdrew their LMP2 reserve entry.[11] IPB Spartak Racing announced their withdrawal from the event on 15 May because one of their drivers, Peter Kox, was unable to participate in the race. It was replaced by the Barazi-Epsilon LMP2 entry.[12]

On 22 May, reserve entries were no longer able to be accepted into the race, regardless of further withdrawals. The entries of Gerard Welter's WR-Zytek LMP2, Team Felbermayr-Proton's Porsche GT2, Snoras Spyker Squadron's Spyker GT2, and Larbre Compétition's Saleen GT1 were the only remaining reserves at the time of the entry list closure.

Free practice

After the cancellation of the test session, Wednesday's schedule was changed from a qualifying session to a six-hour free practice. Track conditions varied as rain arrived several times during the practice, limiting the amount of time available with a dry circuit. Audi led the session with Allan McNish setting a fastest lap of 3:30.708 in the No. 1 car, followed immediately by the No. 2 Audi. The best Peugeot was the No. 9 car, followed immediately by the privately entered Pescarolo Sport Peugeot. The fastest LMP1 not running a diesel engine was the second Pescarolo entry with a time of 3:35.868, followed by the No. 008 and No. 007 Aston Martins.

The LMP2 category was led by the Porsche RS Spyders, with Team Essex's 3:46.426 ahead of the Navi Team Goh entry. Quifel ASM Team's Ginetta-Zytek was a distant third, ten seconds behind Team Essex. Corvette Racing were at the front of GT1, with the No. 63's 3:57.876 lap time ahead of the No. 64 car. Jetalliance Racing were third while the two Luc Alphand Corvettes did few laps after fixing an incorrectly installed rollcage and the JLOC Lamborghini did not complete a lap after breaking a driveshaft. Porsche were ahead of Ferrari in the GT2 category, with Felbermayr-Proton ahead of the Risi Competizione. Spyker Squadron were able to reach third in the class.[13]

The only major incident of the practice session was an accident by KSM's driver Jean de Pourtales. The driver spun approaching the Dunlop Chicane, impacting a concrete barrier before sliding into a tire barrier. The second impact ripped much of the rear of the car off.[14]

Qualifying

Stéphane Sarrazin claimed his third consecutive pole position at Le Mans,[15] planting the No. 8 Peugeot at the front of the field with a lap time of 3:22.888. He set the lap on the third of his flying laps during a run near the end of the four-hour qualifying session, bettering Allan McNish's lap time by 0.8 seconds. McNish's lap was set on the final lap of the first two-hour qualifying session,[16] beating the Peugeot of Franck Montagny who led much of the first session.[17] McNish's lap remained at the top of the charts for much of the second session until Sarrazin's performance. Peugeot planned to practice race setups during the entire qualifying session, and were not seeking to obtain the pole position.[18]

At the end of qualifying Peugeots filled the next three places on the grid behind the front row with the car of Pescarolo Sport settling in at fourth fastest. Aston Martin were able to secure the fastest lap for a petrol-powered car, with the No. 007 entry on a few thousandths of a second behind the No. 3 Audi and followed by the No. 008 Aston Martin and No. 13 Speedy Racing Team Sebah Aston Martin.

The Porsche RS Spyders continued their dominance in the LMP2 category, with Casper Elgaard of Team Essex ahead of Team Goh with a lap time of 3:37.720. Third in the category was the No. 33 Speedy Racing Team Sebah Lola-Judd which was over three seconds behind the Porsches. Corvette Racing secured the front row in the GT1 category, with Jan Magnussen's No. 63 entry half a second ahead of the No. 64 sister car. Jetalliance Racing's privately entered Aston Martin was under two seconds behind, and followed immediately by the two Luc Alphand Corvettes. The JLOC Lamborghini struggled with mechanical issues and was never able to lift itself from last place on grid.

The GT2 category was led by Porsche who bested their rivals Ferrari with two cars. Pole winner Flying Lizard Motorsports' 4:03.202 was less than a tenth of a second ahead of the No. 77 Felbermayr-Proton car. Risi Competizione led the Ferrari fight with a third place qualifying time, joined by JMB Racing and BMS Scuderia Italia. The Aston Martin of Drayson Racing was ninth in the category, while the Spyker was eleventh.

Several incidents occurred during the qualifying session. The Pescarolo Peugeot drive by Jean-Christophe Boullion spun at the Tetre Rouge corner and ripped the left front fender off the car after impacting the wall. The Peugeot was able to return to the pits and be repaired.[19] The No. 007 Aston Martin also hit a wall after losing control during braking for the second chicane on the Mulsanne Straight. Jan Charouz was traveling at 270km/h at the time of the incident. The incident occurred in the closing minutes of qualifying, but the car was repaired.[20]

Qualifying results

Class leaders are in bold.[21]

PosNo.TeamCarClassTimeGap
18Team Peugeot TotalPeugeot 908 HDi FAPLMP13:22.888
21Audi Sport Team JoestAudi R15 TDILMP13:23.650+0.762
37Team Peugeot TotalPeugeot 908 HDi FAPLMP13:24.860+1.972
417Pescarolo SportPeugeot 908 HDi FAPLMP13:25.062+2.174
59Peugeot Sport TotalPeugeot 908 HDi FAPLMP13:25.252+2.364
62Audi Sport North AmericaAudi R15 TDILMP13:25.780+2.892
73Audi Sport Team JoestAudi R15 TDILMP13:27.106+4.218
8007AMR Eastern EuropeLola-Aston Martin B09/60LMP13:27.180+4.292
9008Aston Martin RacingLola-Aston Martin B09/60LMP13:27.704+4.816
1013Speedy Racing Team SebahLola B08/60-Aston MartinLMP13:28.134+5.246
1123Strakka RacingGinetta-Zytek GZ09SLMP13:29.798+6.910
1216Pescarolo SportPescarolo 01-JuddLMP13:30.466+7.578
1315KollesAudi R10 TDILMP13:31.192+8.304
1414KollesAudi R10 TDILMP13:31.548+8.660
1510Team Oreca Matmut AIMOreca 01-AIMLMP13:33.514+10.626
1611Team Oreca Matmut AIMOreca 01-AIMLMP13:33.860+10.972
17009Aston Martin RacingLola-Aston Martin B09/60LMP13:33.968+11.080
186Team LNTGinetta-Zytek GZ09SLMP13:35.804+12.916
194Creation AutosportifCreation CA07LMP13:36.552+13.072
2031Team EssexPorsche RS Spyder EvoLMP23:37.720+14.832
215Navi Team GohPorsche RS Spyder EvoLMP23:37.802+14.914
2212Signature PlusCourage-Oreca LC70E-JuddLMP13:39.326+16.438
2333Speedy Racing Team SebahLola B08/80-JuddLMP23:41.724+18.836
2425RMLLola B08/80-Mazda MZR-RLMP23:41.952+19.064
2540Quifel ASM TeamGinetta-Zytek GZ09S/2LMP23:42.012+19.124
2630Racing BoxLola B08/80-JuddLMP23:42.848+19.960
2741GAC Racing TeamZytek 07S/2LMP23:44.830+21.942
2835OAK RacingPescarolo 01-Mazda MZR-RLMP23:45.032+22.144
2932Barazi-EpsilonZytek 07S/2LMP23:52.956+30.068
3039KSMLola B07/46LMP23:53.072+30.184
3163Corvette RacingChevrolet Corvette C6.RGT13:54.230+31.342
3264Corvette RacingChevrolet Corvette C6.RGT13:54.702+31.814
3326Bruichladdich-Bruneau TeamRadical SR9-AERLMP23:55.320+32.432
3466Jetalliance RacingAston Martin DBR9GT13:56.126+33.238
3572Luc Alphand AventuresChevrolet Corvette C6.RGT13:57.170+34.282
3624OAK RacingPescarolo 01-Mazda MZR-RLMP23:57.524+34.636
3773Luc Alphand AventuresChevrolet Corvette C6.RGT14:00.528+35.676
3880Flying Lizard MotorsportsPorsche 997 GT3-RSRGT24:03.202+40.314
3977Team Felbermayr-ProtonPorsche 997 GT3-RSRGT24:03.232+40.344
4082Risi CompetizioneFerrari F430 GT2GT24:04.056+41.168
4199JMB RacingFerrari F430 GT2GT24:04.084+41.196
4297BMS Scuderia ItaliaFerrari F430 GT2GT24:04.222+41.334
4376IMSA Performance MatmutPorsche 997 GT3-RSRGT24:04.648+41.760
4478AF CorseFerrari F430 GT2GT24:04.938+42.050
4592JMW MotorsportFerrari F430 GT2GT24:05.168+42.280
4687Drayson RacingAston Martin V8 Vantage GT2GT24:06.482+43.594
4789Hankook Team FarnbacherFerrari F430 GT2GT24:06.612+43.724
4885Snoras Spyker SquadronSpyker C8 Laviolette GT2-R-AudiGT24:08.348+45.460
4984Team ModenaFerrari F430 GT2GT24:08.508+45.620
5083Risi CompetizioneFerrari F430 GT2GT24:08.758+45.870
5170IMSA Performance MatmutPorsche 997 GT3-RSRGT24:10.014+47.126
5275Endurance Asia TeamPorsche 997 GT3-RSRGT24:10.456+47.568
5396Virgo MotorsportFerrari F430 GT2GT24:10.664+47.776
5481Advanced EngineeringFerrari F430 GT2GT24:13.920+51.032
5568JLOCLamborghini Murciélago R-GTGT14:21.812+58.924

Race

New rules have caused the diesels to become considerably slower than the previous year. Peugeot qualified 4 seconds slower than 2008 but still maintained the speed advantage over the new Audi R15. Audi's lack of testing meant that the cars struggled to get any sort of a good setup. All works drivers complained about understeer in the Le Mans aero package on the R15. Tom Kristensen commented that the high-downforce package like the one used at Sebring were much better. The R15 also struggled to get beyond a double-stint.

The race began at 15:00 local time (UTC+2) 13 June 2009, with Franck Montagny in the pole position Peugeot 908 HDi FAP leading the field. The race was started by the waving of the French tricolour by Fiat and Ferrari chairman Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, honoring the 60th anniversary of Ferrari's first victory at Le Mans.[22]

In the LMP1 class, the Peugeots showed they could maintain a pace that the Audis struggled to maintain over the full run. The #7 Peugeot was released too early and hit from the side by the Pescarolo Peugeot. The initial damage was a small puncture but the resulting damage destroyed the whole left rear end of the car. Two of the three Audis had off-track excursions in the first 12 hours; one resulting in the #2 car being out of the race on lap 104. During the early evening, the #1 Audi lost a lap to the leading Peugeot. Further technical issues would see it lose another seven laps in total to the winner. In LMP2, the Navi Team Goh Porsche RS Spyder qualified 2nd overall and maintained a solid pace until crashing heavily with one hour to go, allowing the pole-sitting #31 Team Essex Porsche to carry on to the win.

In GT1, the final outing of the Chevrolet Corvette C6.R as a factory team at Le Mans ended well, with the #63 car driven by O'Connell, Magnussen and García sitting on the pole and finishing first in class. Magnussen was sick early on, which left O'Connell and Garcia to finish the race as a two-driver team. Several other teams were stricken with the loss of a driver, most notable being the LMP1 #009 Lola-Aston, whose driver Stuart Hall was excluded when he collided with the LMP2 #26 Radical, and the stewards determined his fault to be substantial. Another team with a driver that was excluded was Kolles' Narain Karthikeyan as he dislocated his shoulder going over the pitwall before the race, leaving Charles Zwolsman Jr. and André Lotterer to do the whole 24 hours, yet they finished a respectable 7th in P1 and 7th overall.

In GT2, Ferrari celebrated their 60th Anniversary win with Ferraris taking the first 4 spots, the Risi Competizione #82 Ferrari F430 GT2 heading the class.

New rules requiring only one man with one airgun in the pits were aimed to lower the overall costs of the event by causing teams to double or triple stint tires due to the time needed to replace them.

Race results

Class winners are marked in bold. Cars running at the finish but failing to complete 70% of the winner's distance are marked as Not Classified.[23]

PosClass
Pos.
ClassNoTeamDriversChassisTyreLaps
Engine
11LMP19 Peugeot Sport Total David Brabham
Marc Gené
Alexander Wurz
Peugeot 908 HDi FAP382
22LMP18 Team Peugeot Total Franck Montagny
Sébastien Bourdais
Stéphane Sarrazin
Peugeot 908 HDi FAP381
Peugeot HDi 5.5 L Turbo V12
(Diesel)
33LMP11 Audi Sport Team Joest Tom Kristensen
Allan McNish
Rinaldo Capello
Audi R15 TDI376
Audi TDI 5.5 L Turbo V10
(Diesel)
44LMP1007 AMR Eastern Europe Jan Charouz
Tomáš Enge
Stefan Mücke
Lola-Aston Martin B09/60373
Aston Martin 6.0 L V12
55LMP111 Team Oreca Matmut AIM Olivier Panis
Nicolas Lapierre
Soheil Ayari
Oreca 01370
AIM YS5.5 5.5 L V10
66LMP17 Team Peugeot Total Nicolas Minassian
Pedro Lamy
Christian Klien
Peugeot 908 HDi FAP369
Peugeot HDi 5.5 L Turbo V12
(Diesel)
77LMP114 Kolles Charles Zwolsman Jr.
André Lotterer
Audi R10 TDI369
Audi TDI 5.5 L Turbo V12
(Diesel)
88LMP116 Pescarolo Sport Christophe Tinseau
Bruce Jouanny
João Barbosa
Pescarolo 01368
Judd GV5.5 S2 5.5 L V10
99LMP115 Kolles Christian Bakkerud
Christijan Albers
Giorgio Mondini
Audi R10 TDI360
Audi TDI 5.5 L Turbo V12
(Diesel)
101LMP231 Team Essex Casper Elgaard
Kristian Poulsen
Emmanuel Collard
Porsche RS Spyder Evo357
Porsche MR6 3.4 L V8
1110LMP112 Signature Plus Pierre Ragues
Franck Mailleux
Didier André
Courage-Oreca LC70E344
Judd GV5.5 S2 5.5 L V10
122LMP233 Speedy Racing Team
Sebah Automotive
Benjamin Leuenberger
Xavier Pompidou
Jonny Kane
Lola B08/80343
Judd DB 3.4 L V8
1311LMP1008 Aston Martin Racing Anthony Davidson
Darren Turner
Jos Verstappen
Lola-Aston Martin B09/60342
Aston Martin 6.0 L V12
1412LMP113 Speedy Racing Team
Sebah Automotive
Andrea Belicchi
Nicolas Prost
Neel Jani
Lola B08/60342
Aston Martin 6.0 L V12
151GT163 Corvette Racing Johnny O'Connell
Jan Magnussen
Antonio García
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R342
Chevrolet LS7.R 7.0 L V8
162GT173 Luc Alphand Aventures Xavier Maassen
Yann Clairay
Julien Jousse
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R336
Chevrolet LS7.R 7.0 L V8
1713LMP13 Audi Sport Team Joest Timo Bernhard
Romain Dumas
Alexandre Prémat
Audi R15 TDI333
Audi TDI 5.5 L Turbo V10
(Diesel)
181GT282 Risi Competizione Jaime Melo
Pierre Kaffer
Mika Salo
Ferrari F430 GT2329
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
192GT297 BMS Scuderia Italia Fabio Babini
Matteo Malucelli
Paolo Ruberti
Ferrari F430 GT2327
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
203LMP224 OAK Racing
Team Mazda France
Jacques Nicolet
Richard Hein
Jean-François Yvon
Pescarolo 01325
Mazda MZR-R 2.0 L Turbo I4
2114LMP123 Strakka Racing Nick Leventis
Peter Hardman
Danny Watts
Ginetta-Zytek GZ09S325
Zytek ZJ458 4.5 L V8
223GT283 Risi Competizione
Krohn Racing
Tracy Krohn
Eric van de Poele
Niclas Jönsson
Ferrari F430 GT2323
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
234GT292 JMW Motorsport Rob Bell
Andrew Kirkaldy
Tim Sugden
Ferrari F430 GT2320
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
2415LMP14 Creation Autosportif Jamie Campbell-Walter
Vanina Ickx
Romain Iannetta
Creation CA07319
Judd GV5.5 S2 5.5 L V10
255GT285 Snoras Spyker Squadron Tom Coronel
Jeroen Bleekemolen
Jaroslav Janiš
Spyker C8 Laviolette GT2-R319
Audi 3.8 L V8
266GT278 AF Corse Gianmaria Bruni
Luis Pérez Companc
Matías Russo
Ferrari F430 GT2317
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
277GT284 Team Modena Leo Mansell
Pierre Ehret
Roman Rusinov
Ferrari F430 GT2314
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
284LMP232 Barazi-Epsilon Juan Barazi
Phil Bennett
Stuart Moseley
Zytek 07S/2306
Zytek 2ZG348 3.4 L V8
298GT299 JMB Racing Manuel Rodrigues
Yvan Lebon
Christophe Bouchut
Ferrari F430 GT2304
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
309GT281 Advanced Engineering
Team Seattle
Patrick Dempsey
Don Kitch Jr.
Joe Foster
Ferrari F430 GT2301
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
313GT166 Jetalliance Racing Lukas Lichtner-Hoyer
Thomas Gruber
Alex Müller
Aston Martin DBR9294
Aston Martin 6.0 L V12
3210GT296 Virgo Motorsport Sean McInerney
Michael McInerney
Michael Vergers
Ferrari F430 GT2280
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
Not Classified
3311GT275 Endurance Asia Team
Perspective Racing
Darryl O'Young
Philippe Hesnault
Plamen Kralev
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR186
Porsche 3.8 L Flat-6
Did Not Finish
345LMP25 Navi Team Goh Seiji Ara
Keisuke Kunimoto
Sascha Maassen
Porsche RS Spyder Evo339
Porsche MR6 3.4 L V8
354GT164 Corvette Racing Oliver Gavin
Olivier Beretta
Marcel Fässler
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R311
Chevrolet LS7.R 7.0 L V8
366LMP225 RML Thomas Erdos
Mike Newton
Chris Dyson
Lola B08/86273
Mazda MZR-R 2.0 L Turbo I4
3712GT287 Drayson Racing Paul Drayson
Jonny Cocker
Marino Franchitti
Aston Martin V8 Vantage GT2272
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8
3813GT276 IMSA Performance Matmut Patrick Pilet
Raymond Narac
Patrick Long
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR265
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
397LMP239 KSM Hideki Noda
Jean de Pourtales
Matthew Marsh
Lola B07/46261
Mazda MZR-R 2.0 L Turbo I4
4016LMP1009 Aston Martin Racing Stuart Hall
Harold Primat
Peter Kox
Lola-Aston Martin B09/60252
Aston Martin 6.0 L V12
4117LMP110 Team Oreca Matmut AIM Stéphane Ortelli
Bruno Senna
Tiago Monteiro
Oreca 01219
AIM YS5.5 5.5 L V10
4218LMP117 Pescarolo Sport Simon Pagenaud

Benoît Tréluyer
Peugeot 908 HDi FAP210
Peugeot HDi 5.5 L Turbo V12
(Diesel)
438LMP235 OAK Racing
Team Mazda France
Matthieu Lahaye
Guillaume Moreau
Karim Ajlani
Pescarolo 01208
Mazda MZR-R 2.0 L I4
449LMP230 Racing Box Andrea Piccini
Thomas Biagi
Matteo Bobbi
Lola B08/80203
Judd DB 3.4 L V8
4514GT280 Flying Lizard Motorsports Jörg Bergmeister
Darren Law
Seth Neiman
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR194
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
4615GT289 Hankook Team Farnbacher Dominik Farnbacher
Allan Simonsen
Christian Montanari
Ferrari F430 GT2183
Ferrari 4.0 L V8
4719LMP16 Team LNT Lawrence Tomlinson
Richard Dean
Nigel Moore
Ginetta-Zytek GZ09S178
Zytek ZG408 4.0 L V8
4820LMP12 Audi Sport North America Marco Werner
Lucas Luhr
Mike Rockenfeller
Audi R15 TDI104
Audi TDI 5.5 L Turbo V10
(Diesel)
4910LMP241 GAC Racing Team Karim Ojjeh
Claude-Yves Gosselin
Philipp Peter
Zytek 07S/2102
Zytek ZG348 3.4 L V8
5016GT270 IMSA Performance Matmut
Team Felbermayr-Proton
Michel Lecourt
Horst Felbermayr
Horst Felbermayr Jr.
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR102
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
515GT172 Luc Alphand Aventures Luc Alphand
Stéphan Grégoire
Patrice Goueslard
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R99
Chevrolet LS7.R 7.0 L V8
5211LMP226 Pierre Bruneau
Marc Rostan
Tim Greaves
Radical SR991
AER P07 2.0 L Turbo I4
5312LMP240 Quifel ASM Team Miguel Amaral
Olivier Pla
Guy Smith
Ginetta-Zytek GZ09S/246
Zytek ZG348 3.4 L V8
5417GT277 Team Felbermayr-Proton Marc Lieb
Wolf Henzler
Richard Lietz
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR24
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
556GT168 JLOC Atsushi Yogo
Yutaka Yamagishi
Marco Apicella
Lamborghini Murciélago R-GT1
Lamborghini 6.0 L V12

Statistics

Peugeot protest

On Monday, 8 June, following scrutineering and approval of the Audi R15 TDI by the ACO, Peugeot Sport director Olivier Quesnel stated that the team may file a protest over the legality of certain elements of the R15 TDI's design. This protest was officially filed two days later, immediately before the start of practice. Peugeot believes that the R15 features aerodynamic elements on the front of the car which violate the ACO's regulations about devices which may increase the amount of front downforce. Peugeot, as well as fellow competitors Aston Martin Racing and Oreca, initially questioned these aerodynamic elements at the 2009 12 Hours of Sebring in March, but were assured that the ACO would evaluate them prior to Le Mans.[24] [25]

Later that night, Peugeot received a response from the ACO stating that it would not uphold the protest. The ACO stated that they have the ability through their own regulations to determine if an aerodynamic element's sole purpose is to create downforce. Peugeot responded within an hour by appealing this decision.[26] [27] A decision on this appeal however would not be made until after the race had taken place, thus allowing Audi to continue to compete.[28] Audi stated that they believed the matter was between Peugeot and the ACO, and that their car was legal.

Following the race, Peugeot announced that they were withdrawing their appeal of the scrutineer's decision. Peugeot cited a planned increase in communication between manufacturers and the ACO as their reasoning for the withdrawal.[29]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 24 Heures du Mans 2009: Test Day Cancelled . Automobile Club de l'Ouest . 2008-12-01 . 2008-12-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081204070223/http://www.lemans.org/sport/sport/actu/2008-12-01_GD_3616_gb.html . December 4, 2008 . dead .
  2. Web site: 234 800 at the 77th Le Mans 24 Hours . . 2009-06-14 . 2009-06-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090612191204/http://www.lemans.org/24heuresdumans/pages/articles_gb.html . 12 June 2009 . dead . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: Peugeot win Le Mans 24-hour race . 2009-06-14. BBC Sport. 2009-06-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20090615012816/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/motorsport/8099543.stm. 15 June 2009 . live.
  4. Web site: 24 Heures du Mans 2009: 29 Entrants Automatically Selected . Automobile Club de l'Ouest . 2008-11-24 . 2008-12-01 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090210102007/http://www.lemans.org/sport/sport/actu/2008-11-24_GD_3612_gb.html . February 10, 2009 .
  5. Web site: Michelin Energy Endurance Challenge . Le Mans Series . 2008-08-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080724114151/http://www.lemans-series.com/en/s02_corporate/s02p04_michelin.php . 24 July 2008 . dead . dmy-all .
  6. Web site: 15 teams confirm their Le Mans 24 entry . Marcel ten Caat . Planet Le Mans . 2009-01-20 . 2009-01-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20090129194605/http://www.planetlemans.com/2009/01/20/15-teams-confirm-their-le-mans-24-hours-entry/. 29 January 2009 . live.
  7. Web site: 2009-01-29 . 24 Heures du Mans : 82 Entries for 55 Places! . 2009-01-29 . Automobile Club de l'Ouest.
  8. Web site: The 55 entrants invited, like a dream... . . 2009-02-26 . 2009-02-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090228122851/http://www.lemans.org/sport/sport/actu/2009-02-26_GD_3640_gb.html . February 28, 2009 . dead .
  9. Web site: Withdrawal of Gigawave Aston Martin. Team Seattle invited... . Endurance-Info.com . 2009-03-31 . 2009-03-31 . 2011-07-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110710193604/http://www.endurance-info.com/version2/news-focus-689.html . dead .
  10. Web site: Withdrawal of the Epsilon Euskadi Team's Epsilon Euskadi-Judd (LMP1) . . 2009-04-03 . 2009-04-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090406094745/http://www.lemans.org/sport/sport/actu/2009-04-03_GD_3690_gb.html . April 6, 2009 . dead .
  11. Web site: 24 Heures du Mans 2009, Withdrawal of the Vitaphone Racing Team (LM P2) and of the Racing Box SRL (LM P2: reserve) . . 2009-04-29 . 2009-04-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090521100403/http://www.lemans.org/sport/sport/actu/2009-04-29__3881_fr.html . May 21, 2009 . dead .
  12. Web site: IPB Spartak Racing withdraws LM24 entry, Barazi invited . Marcel ten Caat . 2009-05-15 . 2009-05-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090518023242/http://www.planetlemans.com/2009/05/15/ipb-spartak-racing-withdraws-lm24-entry-barazi-invited/ . 2009-05-18 . live .
  13. Web site: Free Practice – After 6 Hours . . 2009-06-11 . 2009-06-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090711020024/http://www.lemans.org/24heuresdumans/chronos/2009_24_Heures_du_Mans_24H_Free_Practiceh6.pdf . July 11, 2009 .
  14. Web site: 24 Hours of Le Mans 2009 – Free Practice Report . PlanetLeMans.com . Marcel ten Caat . 2009-06-11 . 2009-06-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20090614044439/http://www.planetlemans.com/2009/06/11/24-hours-of-le-mans-2009-free-practice-report/. 14 June 2009 . live.
  15. Web site: 2009-06-12 . Outstanding performance by Stéphane Sarrazin putting Peugeot on third pole in a row. . 2009-06-12 . Automobile Club de l'Ouest.
  16. Web site: 2009-06-11 . Allan McNish on provisional pole on the last lap of the session . 2009-06-12 . Automobile Club de l'Ouest.
  17. Web site: 2009-06-11 . Two Peugeots lead after the first hour . 2009-06-12 . Automobile Club de l'Ouest.
  18. Web site: Sarrazine takes Le Mans pole for Peugeot . Motorsport.com . Tom Haapanen . 2009-06-11 . 2009-06-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110607213956/http://www.motorsport.com/news/article.asp?ID=331941 . 2011-06-07 . dead .
  19. Web site: 2009-06-11 . J.C.Boullion comes back "naked" to his pit . 2009-06-12 . Automobile Club de l'Ouest.
  20. Web site: Charouz: Low downforce caused crash . Autosport.com . Stuart Codling . 2009-06-12 . 2009-06-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20090615042022/http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/76079. 15 June 2009 . live.
  21. Web site: Qualifying Practice 1 – After 4 Hours . . 2009-06-12 . 2009-06-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090711000609/http://www.lemans.org/24heuresdumans/chronos/2009_24_Heures_du_Mans_24H_Qualifying_Practice_1h4.pdf . July 11, 2009 .
  22. Web site: Luca di Montezemolo, Honour Starter of the 24 Heures du Mans 2009 . . 2009-04-29 . 2009-06-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090612191204/http://www.lemans.org/24heuresdumans/pages/articles_gb.html . 12 June 2009 . dead . dmy-all .
  23. Web site: Race – After 24 Hours . . 2009-06-14 . 2009-06-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090711000959/http://www.lemans.org/24heuresdumans/chronos/24h.pdf . July 11, 2009 .
  24. Web site: 2009-06-10 . Press Release: Team Peugeot Total . 2009-06-12 . Automobile Club de l'Ouest.
  25. Web site: Audi says R15 aero confirmed as legal . Motorsport.com . Tom Haapenen . 2009-06-10 . 2009-06-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110607213752/http://www.motorsport.com/news/article.asp?ID=331772&FS=ALMS-LEMANS . 2011-06-07 . dead .
  26. Web site: ACO rejects Peugeot protest, Peugeot appeals . PlanetLeMans.com . Marcel ten Caat . 2009-06-11 . 2009-06-11. https://web.archive.org/web/20090614044529/http://www.planetlemans.com/2009/06/11/aco-rejects-peugeot-protest-peugeot-appeals/. 14 June 2009 . live.
  27. Web site: Team Peugeot-Total appeals decision... . Endurance-Info.com . 2009-06-11 . 2009-06-12 . 2011-07-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110710193619/http://www.endurance-info.com/version2/news-focus-1507.html . dead .
  28. Web site: ACO denies protest, Peugeot appeals . Motorsport.com . Tom Haapanen . 2009-06-11 . 2009-06-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110607213859/http://www.motorsport.com/news/article.asp?ID=331868&FS=ALMS-LEMANS . 2011-06-07 . dead .
  29. Web site: Peugeot Sport retire son appel auprès de la FIA . Endurance-Info.com . fr . 2009-07-02 . 2009-07-02 . 2009-07-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090706075531/http://www.endurance-info.com/version2/actualite-endurance-1698.html . dead .