GTP:
Podiums – 25 drivers. Most – Blomqvist/Braun/CDP/Yelloly 5
Wins – 3 MSR Acura, 3 Penske Porsche, 2 Cadillac, 1 BMW
Champions – Pipo Derani (2nd) & Alexander Sims
MEC Champions – Pipo Derani (2nd), Jack Aitken,
and Alexander Sims
6955.74 miles, almost 95 miles less than 2022.
11 cars entered, 8 full season. Only non podium car 24 BMW.
Qualifying - Poles – 2 Blomqvist/Derani/Campbell/WTR
Cadillac
01 - Bourdais did all. Avg. Q 3.5
6 – Tandy 4 (Avg 6.75) Jaminet 4 (Avg. 4.25) Car avg 5.5
7 – Nasr 4 (Avg. 5.5)
Campbell 4 (Avg. 2.75) Car avg. 4.125
10 – Taylor 5 (Avg. 3.6) Albuquerque 2 (Avg. 2.5) Car avg. 3
24 – Eng 4 (Avg. 7.25) Farfus (Avg. 5) Car avg. 6.125
25 – Yelloly 4 (Avg. 6.5) CDP 4 (6.5) Car avg. 6.5
31 – Derani 7 (Avg. 4.429) Car avg. 4.75
60 – Blomqvist 6 (Avg. 2.67) Braun 2 (Avg. 4.5) Car avg.
3.125
Car |
Driver |
# of Qs |
Avg. Q |
10 |
Albuquerque |
2 |
2.5 |
60 |
Blomqvist |
6 |
2.67 |
7 |
Campbell |
4 |
2.75 |
0.1 |
Bourdais |
8 |
3.5 |
10 |
Taylor |
5 |
3.6 |
6 |
Jaminet |
4 |
4.25 |
31 |
Derani |
7 |
4.429 |
60 |
Braun |
2 |
4.5 |
24 |
Farfus |
4 |
5 |
7 |
Nasr |
4 |
5.5 |
25 |
Yelloly |
4 |
6.5 |
25 |
CDP |
4 |
6.5 |
6 |
Tandy |
4 |
6.75 |
24 |
Eng |
4 |
7.25 |
Car |
Average Q |
10 |
3 |
60 |
3.125 |
0.1 |
3.5 |
7 |
4.125 |
31 |
4.75 |
6 |
5.5 |
24 |
6.125 |
25 |
6.5 |
Most Positions Gained Q to F: +21 for 5 JDC Miller
Motorsports Porsche
Most Positions Lost Q to F: -15 WTRAndretti Acura
Most Points gained in qualifying: 10 WTRAndretti Acura +242
Fewest Points earned in qualifying: 25 BMW M Team RLL +197
If 25
had earned as many points in Q as the 10, they would’ve finished 2nd
in championship by 1 point to the 31.
Driver |
ToP |
Driver |
# |
||
Albuquerque |
0.417 |
Albuquerque |
4.78 |
||
Blomqvist |
0.483 |
Blomqvist |
6.44 |
||
Campbell |
0.51 |
RvdZ |
7.25 |
||
Derani |
0.554 |
Campbell |
7.33 |
||
RvdZ |
0.596 |
Taylor |
8.78 |
||
Bourdais |
0.632 |
Derani |
8.89 |
||
Braun |
0.655 |
Jaminet |
9.44 |
||
Taylor |
0.658 |
Bourdais |
9.63 |
||
Tincknell |
0.662 |
Braun |
9.67 |
||
Jaminet |
0.69 |
Tincknell |
10.00 |
||
Tandy |
0.781 |
Nasr |
11.22 |
||
CDP |
0.806 |
CDP |
11.63 |
||
Sims |
0.85 |
Tandy |
11.78 |
||
Nasr |
0.888 |
Sims |
12.11 |
||
Yelloly |
0.906 |
Yelloly |
13.13 |
||
Bruni |
1.092 |
Eng |
15.75 |
||
Rocky |
1.132 |
Rocky |
15.83 |
||
Eng |
1.187 |
Farfus |
17.13 |
||
Farfus |
1.267 |
TvdH |
17.33 |
||
TvdH |
1.323 |
Bruni |
18.00 |
Driver of the Year – Filipe Albuquerque
When people think about the 2023 season in years to come,
they’ll remember all the could’ve been moments for WTRAndretti. The
entanglement at the end of Sebring with the Porsches. The DNF in the Turn 1
barriers towards the end of Long Beach. The DNF at Watkins Glen. And of course,
the pass attempt into Turn 1 at Petit. What they should remember is the
battling at Daytona with the MSR Acura (where if they would’ve been awarded the
1st place points for that race after the disqualification of the 60,
they would’ve won the season long championship by 9). They should remember the
sheer pace of the car with both drivers at CTMP, where a race could’ve been won
if not for a late yellow. They should be stunned that at Road America, the site
of their previous victory a year before, both Albuquerque and Taylor were the
fastest two drivers and due to strategy ended up third. If a few little things
had gone differently, Filipe and Ricky would’ve been co-champions. But it’s
racing. And every lap, every corner, every breath counts. Over the course of
the season, Albuquerque was on average 0.417 off the fastest lap. His ranking
amongst his peers based on this pace was nearly HALF of Derani’s. THAT is
impressive.
Honorable mention: Blomqvist (2 poles, 3 wins, 1FL),
Campbell (2 poles, 1 win, 1 FL, fastest Porsche driver 5/9 races), Bourdais
(qualified every race, 1 FL).
What to make of the first year of GTP. Well, reliability was
not an issue, after so many people thought that would be the story of the year.
Instead, variety was the real story. Of the 10 cars that ran more than one race,
8 of them got to the podium, and 7 of those got trophies at least 3 times. That
level of diversity hasn’t been seen for a long time!
This class sets the bar for what could-have-been. If the 60
hadn’t been penalized for Daytona, they would’ve taken the full season
championship by a serious mark, with their three victories. If the 7 Porsche of
Nick Tandy and Mathieu Jaminet hadn’t been disqualified from plank wear at
Watkins and been allowed to retain their victory, they would’ve been 2nd
if not champions. BMW with their number 25 car of Connor De Phillippi and Nick
Yelloly earned more podium spots than any others with 5, yet the sister car
didn’t get a single one. A lot of their trophies, you could argue, came from
being smart and staying out of danger rather than flat out pace. They were only
the fastest car at Long Beach, and only had 3 occasions all year where their
drivers were among the top 3 fastest of the race. What would’ve happened if WTR
hadn’t failed to finish Sebring, Long Beach, Petit Le Mans, Watkins Glen. And
then there’s Cadillac. Championship winners, yes. Fastest cars in 5 of the 9
races. Yet only 2 wins and 6 podiums.
What did we learn? Every team is capable of so much more
than they demonstrated this year. No one put together a perfect season. The
first year of any new formula is a growing and learning experience. To win the
GTP championship for drivers, teams, and manufacturers in 2024 onwards will
demand much more than what we saw this season. We saw great racing this year,
but I’m expecting 2024 to be on another level.
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