Tafel Racing Expecting Tough Battle from Tight GT2 Field at Sebring 12 Hour
No. 71 Tafel/Bell Micro Ferrari and No. 73 Tafel Ferrari Eager for Action at ALMS Opener
SEBRING, Fla., * March 14, 2008 –* As the two Tafel Racing Ferrari F430 GTCs start the 56th Annual Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring presented by Fresh from Florida tomorrow, they will do so in one of the tightest GT2 fields in event history. The American Le Mans Series season-opener, which takes the green flag at 10 am (ET) on Saturday, March 15, marks the second time the Jim Tafel (Alpharetta, Ga.) owned team has entered the legendary endurance racing event. In 2007, the effort finished third and fifth in their Series debut but the 2008 GT2 class grid is even more competitive. The Cumming, Ga.-based organization is expecting intense competition and is eager to put the new No. 71 Tafel/Bell Micro Racing Ferrari F430 GTC- starting second in class- and the No. 73 Tafel Racing Ferrari F430 GTC- starting fourth- up against all comers for the full 12 hours.
Owner/Driver Jim Tafel and Technical Director Tony Dowe (Cumming, Ga.) have assembled a top-level, professional group to support their pursuit of a GT2 win here at Sebring as well as season-long driver and team titles. In a field full of top professionals, few teams can claim the kind of championship caliber driving talent behind the wheel of the two Michelin tire-shod Ferraris. The No. 71 Bell Micro Ferrari has sophomore driving sensation Dominik Farnbacher (Ansbach, Germany) who turned the lap to place the car second in Saturday’s GT2 lineup. He will be joined by 2000 American Le Mans Series GT, now GT2 class, Champion and Sebring winner Dirk Müller (a native of Germany now living in Monaco). Making a formidable trio, 2007 Le Mans Series GT2 Champion Rob Bell (Northants, England) has been brought in to team with the two full season drivers in the 71.
The No. 73 Tafel Racing Ferrari F430 GTC is equally impressive. Jim Tafel, starting his second 12 Hour, will share driving chores with 2005 24 At Daytona GT class winner Pierre Ehret (who lives in Santa Rosa, Calif. but was born in Germany). Allan Simonsen (Danish-born but living in Melbourne, Australia), who will join Farnbacher and Müller at the team’s 24 Hours of Le Mans debut in June, fills out the driving lineup in the 73. Simonsen, the ’07 Australian GT Series Champion piloted the quick lap of the weekend for the car giving it fourth on the starting grid.
The incredibly tight competition that is expected to play out in Saturday’s 12 Hour grind around the 3.7-mile, 17-turn circuit was epitomized by Thursday’s negated qualifying session. In qualifying, the top six cars were separated by an unbelievable 0.939 seconds. The gap from the second position to the sixth was an even tighter 0.643 seconds. The equality of the class, made up of Ferraris, Porsches, Aston Martins, Panoz and a Ford GT, promises to provide one of the best battles in the impressive history of the classic event.
The team was given its last significant chance to study the performance of the two white, blue and silver Ferraris in practice this morning. In the 55-minute session Müller drove the No. 71 to a class leading time of two minutes, 1.72 seconds. Ehret gave the No. 73 its fastest lap of the day with a time of 2:05.090; good for sixth.
Final event preparations are now underway for the two Ferraris. Each crew will perform extensive work to ready both cars for 12 hours on the grueling and bumpy circuit. Each Ferrari will have its brakes (both rotors and pads), gearbox, driveshafts, clutch and other components changed to new, race-ready pieces as part of the standard pre-race checklist. A final, 20 minute warm-up will be held on race morning at 7 am (ET).