Aston Martin Racing has won the GTE Am class of the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) Six Hours of Bahrain and, in doing so, has scooped the Endurance Trophy for GTE Am Teams and the Endurance Trophy for GTE Am Drivers at the penultimate round of the 2014 championship.
The #95 Young Driver AMR Vantage GTE has clinched the GTE Am championship-title with one round of the eight-race series still remaining and Aston Martin Racing works drivers David Heinemeier Hansson (DN) and Kristian Poulsen (DN) will take the drivers trophy in the GTE Am class.
The Danish car has had a consistently strong season, finishing on the podium in every race and taking the class win in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the centrepiece of the WEC calendar.
In the Six Hours of Bahrain earlier today (15 November) it was no different. Heinemeier Hansson and Poulsen were joined by fellow Dane Nicki Thiim and started the six-hour race from the front of the grid, a position the team held until the chequered flag.
It was almost victory for the #97 Vantage GTE in a battle that went to the chequered flag. Starting from the front of the grid, thanks to a great qualifying performance, Darren Turner (GB) was immediately caught up in a duel with the championship-leading #51 Ferrari that lasted for most of the race.
Together, Turner and team-mate Stefan Mücke (DE) put in lap-after-lap of heroic driving, which resulted in the #97 reeling in the class-leading Ferrari in a nail-biting final 30 minutes and they crossed the line just 1.8 seconds apart with the Aston Martin in second place.
In the GTE Am class, the #98 Vantage GTE of Christoffer Nygaard (DN), Pedro Lamy (PT) and Paul Dalla Lana (CA) crossed the line in third place, the team’s sixth podium of the season so far.
The #99 Vantage GTE finished in sixth place in the GTE class with regular drivers Alex MacDowall (GB) and Fernando Rees (BR) and new driver to the team Abdulaziz Al Faisal (SA), who put in a solid performance all weekend.
“In the GTE Pro class, we had a different strategy with the #97 than our competitors to optimise the tyres and fuel-load. We had to take an extra pit stop, so to finish just 1.8 seconds off the class-winner is impressive. Another lap and we could have been challenging for the win but instead they’ll have to take their battle to the final round in Brazil.”