Tag: Circuit of the Americas

  • Allgaier to reach 350 Xfinity career starts at COTA

    Allgaier to reach 350 Xfinity career starts at COTA

    Competing in his 11th full-time season in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, Justin Allgaier is within reach of a milestone start. By competing in this weekend’s inaugural Xfinity event at the Circuit of the Americas, Allgaier will achieve 350 career starts in the Xfinity circuit.

    A native of Riverton, Illinois, Allgaier made his Xfinity Series debut at Charlotte’s Lowe’s Motor Speedway in October 2008. By then, he was also a full-time ARCA Re/Max Series competitor competing for his family owned team led by his father Mike. Driving the No. 12 Dodge for team owner Roger Penske, Allgaier started 14th before finishing 34th in his series debut after being involved in a wreck in the second half of the event. He returned for the final three races of the season, where he earned an 11th-place result at Phoenix Raceway in November.

    Following his brief appearance in the Xfinity circuit and after winning the 2008 ARCA championship, Allgaier was named a full-time Xfinity competitor in Penske’s No. 12 Dodge for the 2009 season. While he did not record a single victory throughout his rookie Xfinity campaign, he achieved the 2009 Rookie-of-the-Year title in a season where he claimed a pole, three top-five results, 12 top-10 results, an average result of 16.5 and a sixth-place result in the final standings.

    Remaining with the Penske organization in 2010, Allgaier commenced the season on a strong note by finishing in fourth place in the season-opening event at Daytona. Three races later, he achieved his first Xfinity career win at Bristol Motor Speedway in March after leading the final 27 laps while holding off teammate Brad Keselowski. Overall, Allgaier went on to earn two poles, eight top-five results, 20 top-10 results and an average result of 11.5. When the season concluded at Homestead-Miami Speedway in November, he finished in fourth place in the final standings and as the highest-finishing Xfinity regular competitor.

    Following the 2010 season, the No. 12 Penske team ceased operations due to sponsorship issues and Allgaier joined Turner Motorsports to drive the No. 31 Chevrolet Impala for the 2011 season. Finishing as high as second place through the first 13 events of the season, Allgaier claimed his first victory of the season at Chicagoland Speedway in June and in thrilling fashion after overtaking Carl Edwards, who had run out of fuel, on the final lap before he too ran out of fuel and had enough to coast ahead to the finish line ahead of Edwards. Overall, Allgaier earned a victory, six top-five results, 17 top-10 results and an average result of 11.8 before settling in third place in the final standings. Following the 2011 season, Allgaier surpassed 100 career starts in the Xfinity circuit.

    In 2012, Allgaier’s lone victory of the season occurred at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal, Quebec, in August after he overtook Jacques Villeneuve on the final lap. He went on to earn a total of six top-five results, 19 top-10 results and a sixth-place result in the final standings.

    The 2013 Xfinity season saw Allgaier experience his first winless season since his rookie campaign, but he managed to finish in fifth place in the final standings and in a season where he earned a pole, six top-five results, 16 top-10 results and an 11.2 average result.

    Following the 2013 season, Allgaier moved up to the NASCAR Cup Series to drive for HScott Motorsports. After spending the next two seasons in the Cup Series, Allgaier returned to the Xfinity Series as a full-time competitor in 2016, where he joined forces with JR Motorsports to drive the No. 7 Chevrolet Camaro. Though he did not win during the entire season, Allgaier utilized consistency to make the inaugural Xfinity Playoffs and all the way to the Championship Round at Homestead-Miami Speedway before settling in third place in the final standings. He also earned 13 top-five results, a career-high 27 top-10 results and a 9.1 average result. By then, he surpassed 200 Xfinity career starts.

    In 2017, Allgaier returned to Victory Lane following a five-year dry spell after winning at Phoenix Raceway in March. He went on to earn his second victory of the season at Chicagoland in September. Returning to the Playoffs and to the Championship Round for a second consecutive season, Allgaier went on to finish in third place in the final standings and in a season where he also earned a pole, 10 top-five results and 17 top-10 results.

    The 2018 season was a career year for Allgaier, who won a career-high five races (Dover International Speedway in May, Iowa Speedway in June, Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course and Road America in August and Indianapolis Motor Speedway in September) and the 2018 Xfinity Series regular season championship. He also earned a career-high 17 top-five results and 24 top-10 results. Despite the momentum throughout the season and the Playoffs, finishes of 38th, fifth and 24th during the Playoff’s Round of 8 were enough to prevent him from reaching the Championship Round as the driver went on to finish in seventh place in the final standings.

    The momentum from the previous season carried forth in the 2019 Xfinity opener at Daytona for Allgaier, who earned a strong runner-up result behind teammate Michael Annett. It was not until the penultimate event of the season at Phoenix in November, though, where he won for the first time during the season. Nonetheless, the victory was enough for the veteran driver and his No. 7 JRM Chevrolet team to secure a spot in the Championship Round at Homestead. During the finale, however, Allgaier cut a tire late in the event and settled in fourth place in the final standings. He capped off the season with 16 top-five results, 24 top-10 results and a career-best average result of 9.0. By then, he surpassed 300 Xfinity starts.

    In 2020, Allgaier earned a victory in one of Dover International Speedway’s doubleheader events in August and he won both Richmond Raceway events in a doubleheader weekend in September. Despite returning to the Championship Round at Phoenix, he settled in a career-best runner-up result in the final standings behind the champion, Austin Cindric. He concluded the season with 11 top-five results, 19 top-10 results and a career-high 1,008 laps led.

    Through the first 10 races of this season, Allgaier has achieved two victories (Atlanta Motor Speedway in March and Darlington Raceway in May), three top-five results and five top-10 results. He is ranked in sixth place in the regular-season standings.

    Through 349 previous Xfinity starts, Allgaier has achieved 16 career victories, six poles, 99 top-five results, 200 top-10 results and a 12.1 average result.

    Allgaier is set to make his 350th Xfinity Series career start at the Circuit of the Americas for the Pit Boss 250 on Saturday, May 22, at 4 p.m. ET on FS1.

  • Marquez Completes Perfect Weekend in Austin

    Marquez Completes Perfect Weekend in Austin

    Repsol Honda’s Marc Marquez dominated Sunday’s Grand Prix of the Americas, building a big gap between himself and the field early and winning the race by six seconds.

    The 23-year-old Spaniard has won all four MotoGP races at Circuit of the Americas since it’s inaugural season (and his rookie season) in 2013.

    COTA is the only North American track on the schedule after Indianapolis Motor Speedway was removed following last season. At Indy, Marquez claimed wins in three of his four premier class visits.

    Leading up to Sunday’s race, Marquez topped the charts in all four free practice sessions and qualifying. All of his wins at COTA come from pole position starts.

    In the three races this season, Marquez has claimed victories in the last two and placed third in the season opener at Qatar, launching him to a 21 point lead in the championship over Movistar Yamaha’s Jorge Lorenzo. His comfortable lead is due in part to being the only factory Honda, Yamaha or Ducati rider not to have crashed out of any of the three races thus far this season.

    His easy win may have been partly influenced by an early Valentino Rossi low side, followed by a hard wreck between Repsol Honda teammate Dani Pedrosa and Ducati’s Andrea Dovizioso.

    Lorenzo appeared to be the only rider with anything for Marquez, but even his clean race couldn’t put him in contention for the win. The Movistar Yamaha rider may have elected to accept the second position and avoid pushing his bike too hard after crashing out of last weekend’s grand prix in Argentina.

    Ducati’s Andrea Iannone finished third, eleven seconds behind Marquez, with a comfortable seven-second gap to fourth place finisher Maverick Vinales. Iannone also improved heavily on crashes in the first two races, particularly last week’s final turn slide that took himself and Ducati teammate Dovizioso out of the race. Worth noting is that Dovizioso’s crash this week was due to competitor error as well.

    Fifth went to Suzuki Ecstar’s Aleix Espargaro, who engaged in close action with teammate Vinales from Lap 6 to the checkered flag.

    The series heads to Jerez, Spain in a few weeks, yet it goes without saying that Marquez would like an extended Western Hemisphere swing in the schedule.

  • Elias and Yoshimura Best the Americans at COTA

    Elias and Yoshimura Best the Americans at COTA

    Spaniard Toni Elias captured the win in Superbike Race One at Circuit of the Americas on Saturday. The former Moto2 World Champion and MotoGP race winner filled in for Yoshimura Suzuki’s injured rider Jake Lewis, and the win was in his first ever MotoAmerica race.

    Yoshimura teammate Roger Hayden dominated the early laps of Race One after grabbing the lead from the pole. Hayden only temporarily lost the lead to Monser Energy/Graves Yamaha’s Cameron Beaubier before the defending champion crashed out on the second lap.

    Hayden proceeded to take the lead and steadily increase it, building a gap of over two seconds to second place.

    Trouble struck for Hayden when Kyle Wyman blew his engine and spread oil across the track, bringing out the red flag as his bike erupted in flames. Oil cleanup caused a lengthy stoppage, and race officials decided to restart the race with five laps remaining.

    The second part of the race saw Hayden’s dominance put to the test, as his tire grip problems created a heated three-way battle for the lead with Elias and Monster Energy/Graves Yamaha’s Josh Hayes.

    Elias took the lead and Hayden pushed, but was faced with pressure from Hayes for second. Elias gained some breathing room and eased through the final portion of the last lap, while Hayden faced one final charge from Hayes in the last turn, but denied him the spot, completing a one-two sweep for Yoshimura Suzuki.

    Broaster Chicken/Roadrace Factory’s Jake Gagne took fourth, and Latus Motors Racing’s Bobby Fong finished fifth overall, winning the Superstock 1000 class on his Kawasaki ZX-10R.

    Texas native Garrett Gerloff won the Supersport race after he and Y.E.S./Graves Yamaha teammate J.D. Beach pulled away from the field early in the race.

  • Marquez Continues Dominant Ways at COTA

    Marquez Continues Dominant Ways at COTA

    Marc Marquez, winner of all three MotoGP races at Circuit of the Americas since it’s inaugural season in 2013, opened the track’s 2016 weekend with a sweep of Friday’s free practices.

    The two-time champion bested reigning champ Jorge Lorenzo by a quarter second in Free Practice #1, then shaved almost a second off his time in Free Practice #2.

    The competition was unable to keep up, with second overall Andrea Iannone trailing Repsol Honda’s Marquez by .7 seconds, despite improving his own FP1 time by three quarters of a second. The Ducati Corse rider undoubtedly aims to improve performance and ease tensions after losing control of his bike and taking out teammate Andrea Dovizioso in the final turn of last weekend’s grand Prix in Argentina. He was penalized for the incident.

    Despite taking the top spot in both of Friday’s free practice segments, Marquez’s time of 2’04.034 is still nearly two seconds off the track record he set last year.

    FP2 saw second-year GP rider Maverick Vinales pilot his Suzuki to the third spot overall, with a time of 2’04.895.

    Octo Pramac’s Scott Redding overcame gastrointestinal illness and was the top satellite rider overall, placing 6th and 4th in the free practices, respectively. Redding also experienced serious flight delays from Argentina, arriving two days late after multiple flights and “a few bus rides of seven or eight hours.”

    Possibly the biggest surprise of the day was Avintia Racing’s Hector Barbera placing fourth in FP1, and his teammate Loris Baz capturing the seventh spot overall.

     

     

  • Formula 1 United States Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas Preview

    Formula 1 United States Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas Preview

    A champion could be crowned this week in America.

    This week, Formula 1 returns to Circuit of the Americas in Elroy, Texas – on the outskirts of Austin – for the United States Grand Prix. This’ll be the 45th edition of the race, 38th as a round of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship and fourth at COTA.


    About COTA

    Let’s talk about Circuit of the Americas. The track is roughly three and a half miles (3.427 to be exact) and is modeled after several famous tracks. Turns three through six modeled after Maggots, Becketts and Chapel at Silverstone, while turn seven is loosely based on the Senna S curve at Interlagos. Not sure if the long backstretch at COTA was modeled after Istanbul Park, but both are roughly similar. Turns 13 through 15 are modeled after the Arena Bends at the Hockenheimring, while turns 17 and 18 are modeled after the high speed turn eight at Istanbul Park.

    But don’t take my word for it, let Sky Sports’s Martin Brundle take you for a lap around COTA.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-Jee_AuH_Y

    The track will have two DRS zones. The first will be on the pit straight from the exit of turn 20 to the entrance of turn one while the second will be on the backstretch between turns 11 and 12. Pirelli will bring the yellow banded soft tires as the option compound and the white banded medium tires as the primary compound. Unless the race is affected by weather, teams will be required to use both dry compounds at least once in the race. The forecast this weekend is wet with a chance of more wet. So expect large usage of the intermediate and full wet tires.


    History of the United States Grand Prix

    Indianapolis 500

    F1 has raced in the United States since 1950 when the Indianapolis 500 was a round of the world championship from 1950 to 1960. However, the cars in the 500 ran different rules than were used by the FIA. As a result, only one regular F1 driver, Alberto Ascari, entered the race during that time.

    Sebring

    So while the Indy 500 was part of the world championship, the first real F1 race on American soil took place on Dec. 12, 1959 at Sebring International Raceway. It was the ninth and final round of the 1959 season and was won by Bruce McLaren. At 22 years, three months and 12 days old, McLaren was the second youngest winner in the history of F1. It was widely misreported that he was the youngest when that distinction belongs to Tony Ruttman – Joe Ruttman’s older brother – who was 22 years and 80 days old when he won the 1952 Indianapolis 500. Either way, both records stood for 44 years until it was broken by Fernando Alonso in 2003.

    Riverside

    In 1960, F1 returned to the U.S. to race at Riverside International Raceway. The race was won by Sir Stirling Moss.

    Watkins Glen

    Despite being in the worlds largest consumer market, race promoter Alec Ullman was unable to drum up the crowds and support needed to secure a place at Sebring or Riverside. He attempted to work out a deal with Bill France to run the race at Daytona International Speedway (which I admit would be cool if that had actually happened), but was unable to reach an agreement. Finally, he reached an agreement with race promoter Cameron Argetsinger and the United States Grand Prix found a new home in the Finger Lakes region of New York at Watkins Glen International.

    When I say a new home, I really mean a new home. For the next 20 years, fans gathered every Autumn to watch Formula 1. It’s isolated, peaceful and quiet location gave the track a “vacation atmosphere.” With The Glen either bookending or towards the end of the F1 calendar, the festivities with fans and teams some years celebrating winning the title in America. All this lended to The Glen becoming the “Mecca” of American road racing and one of the greatest race tracks in the world.

    Unfortunately, Watkins Glen was not keeping up with the times. By the time 1980 came around, the track had lost a lot of its early splendor as the track surface was getting more bumpy, the facilities were growing cramped and the crowds went from civilized party goers to rowdy drunks. These drunks gained an infamous reputation for going to the “Bog” inside the Boot section to set cars, trees and even a Greyhound Bus on fire. Eventually, the crowds and lack of significant improvements led to the demise of the United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen.

    Various locations

    During the period between 1981 and 1989, Formula 1 ran at different locations in the U.S. such as on the streets of Long Beach, Calif. (this race still runs as the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach on the IndyCar schedule), in the parking lot of Caesars Palace in Las Vegas – I’m not making that up as that actually happened (it actually worked surprisingly well for a parking lot race) -, and the streets of Detroit (the rate of attrition in these races made Martinsville look like nothing) and even at Fair Park in Dallas.

    Phoenix and demise of Formula 1 in America

    The plan for 1989 was for Formula 1 to continue in Detroit at Belle Isle Park, but that didn’t materialize. Laguna Seca was seriously considered, but was passed up due to it’s isolated location and local noise ordinances. Finally, they came to the streets of Phoenix, Ariz. and it just never clicked. The street circuit never offered any challenge to the drivers, the local population largely ignored the race and the temperatures could reach up to 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius). After the 1991 race, the race was cancelled and the United States was left without an F1 race for the first time ever. Over a period of 11 years and four failed American Grand Prix’s, Formula 1 tarnished its image in the U.S.

    Indianapolis

    On Sept. 24, 2000, in front of a crowd of over 225,000 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Formula 1 made its triumphant return to the United States. Michael Schumacher scored the victory and retook the points lead from Mika Häkkinen and went on to win his third career title.

    The 2001 race on Sept. 30 was the first international sporting event to be held in the U.S. following the events of September 11th. Almost every team ran decals showing their support for the nation still reeling from the attacks. Schumacher once again finished ahead of everyone else, except for the guy who finished ahead of him, Häkkinen, who scored his 20th and final Formula 1 win. That’s a play-on of a famous phrase referring to the legend himself Murray Walker who announced his final race that day.

    What seemed like a perfect marriage of a famous track and Formula 1 went downhill from there. In 2002, Schumacher, who had dominated the race, gifted the race win to Rubens Barrichello on the final lap. It was most likely the former returning the favor after the latter did the same a few races earlier in Austria (although Austria was ordered by Ferrari). Needless to say, a lot of the fans weren’t thrilled with the contrived finish. However, that was nothing compared to 2005.

    I once asked longtime motorsports commentator Bob Varsha why the 2005 United States Grand Prix was so badly botched and he said plainly that “it was an ensemble effort.” So many pieces came together to make one giant fustercluck. Two in particular were the resurfacing of The Brickyard and changes to the sporting regulations that required tires to last an entire race.

    Prior to the race, the oval surface at Indianapolis underwent a diamond grinding to smooth out the surface. As we saw with the 2005 Coca-Cola 600, this can lead to a high rate of tire failures. With subsidiary Firestone being the sole tire supplier to the Verizon IndyCar Series since 1999, Bridgestone was able to bring a tire that could last an entire race and not wear out on the turn 13 of the track (a.k.a. turn 1 on the oval). Michelin, who ironically had been superior all season with tire durability and the vast number of top teams running with their tires vs. Bridgestone’s, did not have a proper tire for the final turn. Ralf Schumacher suffered a left-rear tire blowout and slammed the wall in turn 13. He was unable to continue racing.

    This led Michelin to meet with Track President Tony George, Formula One Administration and Formula One Management CEO Bernie Ecclestone, and all the team principal’s sans Jean Todt of Scuderia Ferrari to discuss the installation of a chicane that would bypass the banked turn 13. FIA President Max Mosley rejected the proposal saying it was “out of the question” and that any modification to the circuit would force the FIA to strip the race of its sanction.

    Michelin was left with no choice but to request that the 14 cars using Michelin tires not take part in the race because the durability of the tires couldn’t be guaranteed beyond 10 laps. Michael Schumacher, who qualified fifth for the race, took the lead with ease and won the race. He would go on to win the race the next season and became the all-time winningest driver in the history of The Brickyard.

    Lewis Hamilton won the eighth and final USGP at Indy. Sebastian Vettel, who made his first start in this race, became the youngest driver to ever score points in an F1 race. A record that stood for eight years before being broken this season by Max Verstappen.

    Circuit of the Americas

    In 2012, Formula 1 came back to the United States to race at the newly built Circuit of the Americas. Hamilton battled with Vettel to score the victory. The next season, Vettel won his eighth consecutive race at COTA. Despite starting on the pole, Nico Rosberg finished a distant second to Hamilton.


    Points situation

    Lewis Hamilton enters the race with a 66-point lead over Sebastian Vettel. If Hamilton leaves with a point lead greater than 75-points, he will clinch the championship. In other words, Vettel has to win or finish second to keep his title hopes alive. His chances have already been hit after he was hit with a 10-place grid penalty for Ferrari exceeding the five engine change limit.

    You can catch the race this Sunday at 2:00 on NBC.