The 2009 Budapest City Challenge was the fifth round of the 2009 FIA GT Championship season and was organised by City Challenge GmbH. It took place at the Hungaroring, Hungary on 30 August 2009. Michael Bartels and Andrea Bertolini won for the Vitaphone Racing Team Maserati after the disqualification of the K plus K Motorsport Saleen. Richard Westbrook and Emmanuel Collard of Prospeed Competition won in the GT2 category by passing the AF Corse Ferrari on the final lap of the event.
Report
Qualifying
Qualifying was led by the No. 2 Vitaphone Maserati of driver Alex Müller who recorded a lap time over a tenth of a second faster than Karl Wendlinger in the K plus K Saleen. Enrique Bernoldi, in only his second FIA GT event, qualified the Sangari Corvette on the second row alongside the third Vitaphone Maserati.
The GT2 category was led by the No. 60 Prospeed Porsche of Richard Westbrook at the end of the qualifying session but Westbrook later had his lap times excluded after the Porsche failed a stall test during technical inspection. This promoted Álvaro Barba of No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari to his first pole position, followed by Tim Mullen's CRS Racing Ferrari. Westbrook's exclusion demoted the Prospeed Porsche to 24th and last on the grid.[1]
Qualifying results
Class winners are highlighted in bold.[2]
Pos | Class | Team | Driver | Lap Time | Grid |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | GT1 | No. 2 Vitaphone Racing Team | Alex Müller | 1:41.815 | 1 |
2 | GT1 | No. 14 K plus K Motorsport | Karl Wendlinger | 1:41.929 | 2 |
3 | GT1 | No. 8 Sangari Team Brazil | Enrique Bernoldi | 1:42.166 | 3 |
4 | GT1 | No. 33 Vitaphone Racing Team DHL | Alessandro Pier Guidi | 1:42.375 | 4 |
5 | GT1 | No. 19 Luc Alphand Aventures | Xavier Maassen | 1:42.563 | 5 |
6 | GT1 | No. 1 Vitaphone Racing Team | Andrea Bertolini | 1:42.870 | 6 |
7 | GT1 | No. 4 PK Carsport | Mike Hezemans | 1:43.255 | 7 |
8 | GT1 | No. 3 Selleslagh Racing Team | Bert Longin | 1:43.520 | 8 |
9 | GT1 | No. 18 K plus K Motorsport | Adam Lacko | 1:44.092 | 9 |
10 | GT1 | No. 11 Full Speed Racing Team | Stéphane Lémeret | 1:44.551 | 10 |
11 | G2 | No. 112 Autoracing Club Bratislava | Andrej Studenic | 1:45.399 | 11 |
12 | GT1 | No. 44 Matech GT Racing | Thomas Mutsch | 1:45.580 | 12 |
13 | GT1 | No. 40 Marc VDS Racing Team | Renaud Kuppens | 1:46.545 | 13 |
14 | GT2 | No. 60 Prospeed Competition | Richard Westbrook | 1:47.043 | 24† |
15 | GT2 | No. 51 AF Corse | Álvaro Barba | 1:47.262 | 14 |
16 | GT2 | No. 55 CRS Racing | Tim Mullen | 1:47.347 | 15 |
17 | GT2 | No. 50 AF Corse | Gianmaria Bruni | 1:47.405 | 16 |
18 | GT2 | No. 97 Brixia Motorsport | Martin Ragginger | 1:47.683 | 17 |
19 | GT2 | No. 77 BMS Scuderia Italia | Paolo Ruberti | 1:47.797 | 18 |
20 | GT2 | No. 95 PeCom Racing Team | Matías Russo | 1:47.866 | 19 |
21 | GT2 | No. 59 Trackspeed Racing | Tim Sugden | 1:47.884 | 20 |
22 | GT2 | No. 56 CRS Racing | Andrew Kirkaldy | 1:47.890 | 21 |
23 | GT2 | No. 61 Prospeed Competition | Darryl O'Young | 1:48.067 | 22 |
24 | GT2 | No. 78 BMS Scuderia Italia | Diego Romanini | 1:50.599 | 23 |
- † – The No. 60 Prospeed Competition Porsche had its qualifying times disallowed after the car failed post-qualifying technical inspection. The No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari took over GT2 pole position.
Race
The race was led into the first turn by Enrique Bernoldi's Sangari Corvette which managed to jump from the third place grid position to first, followed by Karl Wendlinger's No. 14 K plus K Saleen and the No. 2 and No. 33 Vitaphone Maseratis. The four held this position in the early laps but Alex Müller in the No. 2 car braked too late for the first turn at the start of the fourth lap and jumped the inside kerbs before impacting the leading Corvette and spinning in front of the second place Saleen. This allowed the No. 33 Vitaphone car into second but Bernoldi continued to lead despite the damaged car.[3]
This damage would however hamper the Corvette as the first pit stops took place and the Sangari Team Brazil crew had difficulties refueling the car.[4] The No. 1 Maserati inherited the lead following its pit stop but had to relinquish it after the team was penalized for speeding in the pit lane.[3] This allowed the No. 14 Saleen, now driven by Ryan Sharp, to take the lead which it held until the second round of pit stops where the No. 33 Maserati took over at the front of the field. Karl Wendlinger returned to the cockpit and was able to overcome the deficit and retake the lead from the Maserati in the last ten minutes of the race. On the final lap the No. 33 was passed by the No. 1 team car to complete the podium.[3]
In the GT2 category the No. 97 Brixia Racing Porsche of Martin Ragginger led the field at the end of the first lap after passing the three Ferraris which had qualified ahead of it. The Porsche however made its first pit stop earlier than the rest of the GT2 competitors and allowed the No. 50 AF Corse Ferrari to lead the class. The No. 60 Prospeed Porsche of Richard Westbrook and Emmanuel Collard, which had started from last on the grid, was able to climb through the GT2 field and eventually challenge AF Corse's Gianmaria Bruni in the latter half of the race. Westbrook was able to outbrake Bruni's Ferrari entering the first turn of the final lap and hold the lead for the rest of the lap. The No. 77 BMS Scuderia Italia Ferrari completed the GT2 podium.[4]
Following the race the No. 14 K Plus K Motorsports Saleen was excluded from the race after the car failed post-race technical inspection. The car's engine did not stall as required when its air restrictors were blocked. This promoted Bartels and Bertolini to the race win as well as Enrique Bernoldi and Roberto Streit to their first GT1 podium.[5] Müller was also penalized after the race for avoidable contact when he collided with the No. 8 Corvette and No. 14 Saleen, earning a five grid spot penalty for the No. 2 Vitaphone Maserati at the next FIA GT event.[4]
Race result
Class winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 75% of winner's distance are marked as Not Classified (NC).[6]
Pos | Class | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Tyre | Laps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Engine | |||||||
1 | GT1 | 1 | Vitaphone Racing Team | Michael Bartels Andrea Bertolini |
Maserati MC12 GT1 | M | 67 |
Maserati 6.0 L V12 | |||||||
2 | GT1 | 33 | Vitaphone Racing Team DHL | Alessandro Pier Guidi Matteo Bobbi |
Maserati MC12 GT1 | M | 67 |
Maserati 6.0 L V12 | |||||||
3 | GT1 | 8 | Sangari Team Brazil | Enrique Bernoldi Roberto Streit |
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R | M | 67 |
Chevrolet LS7.R 7.0 L V8 | |||||||
4 | GT1 | 19 | Luc Alphand Aventures | Xavier Maassen Thomas Biagi |
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R | M | 67 |
Chevrolet LS7.R 7.0 L V8 | |||||||
5 | GT1 | 4 | PK Carsport | Anthony Kumpen Mike Hezemans |
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R | M | 67 |
Chevrolet LS7.R 7.0 L V8 | |||||||
6 | GT1 | 3 | Selleslagh Racing Team | Bert Longin James Ruffier |
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R | M | 66 |
Chevrolet LS7.R 7.0 L V8 | |||||||
7 | GT2 | 60 | Prospeed Competition | Emmanuel Collard Richard Westbrook |
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR | M | 65 |
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6 | |||||||
8 | GT2 | 50 | AF Corse | Gianmaria Bruni Toni Vilander |
Ferrari F430 GT2 | M | 65 |
Ferrari 4.0 L V8 | |||||||
9 | GT2 | 77 | BMS Scuderia Italia | Paolo Ruberti Matteo Malucelli |
Ferrari F430 GT2 | P | 65 |
Ferrari 4.0 L V8 | |||||||
10 | GT1 | 40 | Marc VDS Racing Team | Renaud Kuppens Bas Leinders |
Ford GT1 | M | 65 |
Ford 5.0 L V8 | |||||||
11 | GT2 | 61 | Prospeed Competition | Marco Holzer Darryl O'Young |
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR | M | 65 |
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6 | |||||||
12 | GT2 | 51 | AF Corse | Álvaro Barba Niki Cadei |
Ferrari F430 GT2 | M | 64 |
Ferrari 4.0 L V8 | |||||||
13 | GT2 | 56 | CRS Racing | Rob Bell Andrew Kirkaldy |
Ferrari F430 GT2 | M | 64 |
Ferrari 4.0 L V8 | |||||||
14 | GT2 | 95 | PeCom Racing Team | Matías Russo Luís Pérez Companc |
Ferrari F430 GT2 | M | 64 |
Ferrari 4.0 L V8 | |||||||
15 | GT2 | 55 | CRS Racing | Chris Niarchos Tim Mullen |
Ferrari F430 GT2 | M | 64 |
Ferrari 4.0 L V8 | |||||||
16 | GT2 | 97 | Brixia Racing | Luigi Lucchini Martin Ragginger |
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR | M | 64 |
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6 | |||||||
17 | GT2 | 78 | BMS Scuderia Italia | Diego Romanini Kenneth Heyer |
Ferrari F430 GT2 | P | 64 |
Ferrari 4.0 L V8 | |||||||
18 | GT2 | 59 | Trackspeed Racing | Tim Sugden David Ashburn |
Porsche 997 GT3-RSR | M | 63 |
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6 | |||||||
19 DNF |
GT1 | 18 | K plus K Motorsport | Adam Lacko Max Nilsson |
Saleen S7-R | M | 59 |
Ford 7.0 L V8 | |||||||
20 | GT1 | 44 | Matech GT Racing | Thomas Mutsch Jonathan Hirschi |
Ford GT1 | M | 59 |
Ford 5.0 L V8 | |||||||
21 NC |
G2 | 112 | Autoracing Club Bratislava | Miro Konopka Andrej Studenic |
Saleen S7-R | M | 48 |
Ford 7.0 L V8 | |||||||
22 DNF |
GT1 | 11 | Full Speed Racing Team | Stéphane Lémeret Luke Hines |
Saleen S7-R | P | 23 |
Ford 7.0 L V8 | |||||||
23 DNF |
GT1 | 2 | Vitaphone Racing Team | Miguel Ramos Alex Müller |
Maserati MC12 GT1 | M | 5 |
Maserati 6.0 L V12 | |||||||
DSQ | GT1 | 14 | K plus K Motorsport | Karl Wendlinger Ryan Sharp |
Saleen S7-R | M | 67 |
Ford 7.0 L V8 | |||||||
References
- ↑ "Barba Lopez inherits GT2 pole". FIA GT Championship. 2009-08-30. Retrieved 2009-08-31.
- ↑ Steve Groom (2009-08-29). "Qualifying". FIA GT Championship. Archived from the original on 2011-07-10. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
- 1 2 3 "K plus K takes Hungaroring win". Autosport. 2009-08-30. Retrieved 2009-08-31.
- 1 2 3 "Vitaphone and Prospeed win the Budapest City Challenge". Planet Le Mans. 2009-08-30. Retrieved 2009-08-31.
- ↑ Steve Groom (2009-08-30). "Bartels and Bertolini inherit GT1 win". FIA GT Championship. Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2009-08-30.
- ↑ "Race Result". FIA GT Championship. 2009-08-30. Archived from the original on 2004-01-31. Retrieved 2009-08-30.