- Frank Kechele and Dominik Schwager win penultimate race of season in Ford GT
- Mercedes-Benz duo Buhk and Götz reduce deficit on championship leaders Alessi and Keilwitz
- Christina Nielsen wraps up Gentlemen classification ahead of time
The final weekend of the 2013 ADAC GT Masters at Hockenheim is turning into a real thriller: a second-place finish in the last-but-one race of the season for the Polarweiss Racing duo of Maximilian Buhk (20) and Maximilian Götz (27) has closed the gap on championship leaders Diego Alessi (41) and Daniel Keilwitz (24) of Callaway Competition to a mere six points. Victory on the day went to Frank Kechele (27) and Dominik Schwager (37) of Lambda Performance, although the Ford pairing are already out of contention for the title. Robert Renauer (28), who still has aspirations of picking up the championship trophy on Sunday, came third together with co-driver Martin Ragginger (25) in their Tonino powered by Herberth Motorsport Porsche 911. Kechele: “That may have looked straightforward, but it’s not always easy maintaining your concentration when you’ve built up such a solid lead.”
Kechele and Schwager cruise to victory
The penultimate race of the 2013 ADAC GT Masters got off to a shaky start. After separate accidents involving Gerd Beisel (55) in an RWT Racing Corvette on the start-finish straight and Swiss driver Rahel Frey (27) in her Prosperia C Abt Racing Audi R8 on the Parabolika turn, the race was red-flagged after Lap 1. Frey escaped unhurt, Beisel was admitted to hospital for medical examination. After a 32-minute interruption, the race was re-started behind the safety car for a 40-minute distance. Kechele successfully defended pole position from reigning champion Götz in his Mercedes-Benz at the re-start. The Ford man steadily built up a lead, handing over to Schwager with five seconds to spare. The co-driver from Munich was the winner of last year’s penultimate race in Hockenheim; this year, he crossed the finish line with a 7.3-second margin, securing a second victory in 2013 for the Ford GT, and even more satisfyingly, a home win for Wiesbaden-based Lambda Performance.
“I pushed hard on the first few laps to open up a gap and to make the race as stress-free as possible,” said Kechele. Schwager was the beneficiary in the second stint: “Frank handed over with a comfortable lead, which made this race considerably easier than some of my previous ones. Still, it wasn’t easy to maintain that gap, and anything can happen as the finish line approaches. But the main thing is not the race win: instead, we should be relieved that the two accidents on the first lap didn’t have worse consequences.”
Saturday’s result means that the top of the table is now bunched together even more tightly. The seven remaining contenders driving either a Corvette, a Mercedes-Benz, a Porsche or a BMW all finished in the Top Five. Mercedez-Benz duo Götz and Buhk were pleased to make it onto the podium in second place, a result that cuts their deficit on current leaders Alessi and Keilwitz to eight points. The Corvette pairing finished in fifth place. Defending champion Maximilian Götz: “Tomorrow’s final race will decide the outcome of the championship. It won’t be easy, but my hopes are high.”
Robert Renauer is currently third in line for the title, with nine points to make up in his Porsche 911. Claudia Hürtgen (42) and Dominik Baumann (20) in a PIXUM Team Schubert BMW Z4 are fourth up for the trophy; they are currently 23 points adrift, and a win on Sunday is worth 25 points. Jeroen den Boer (26) and Simon Knapp (24) of the Dutch DB Motorsport team are now out of the running, having finished sixth in front of the Farnbacher Racing Porsche 911 driven by local favourite David Jahn (22) and Jürg Aeberhard (27). Christopher Mies (24) and René Rast (26) were also knocked out of the championship reckoning after having to retire their Prosperia C Abt Racing Audi R8 with electronics-related issues.
Tense situation in the team stakes
Going into the final day, the competition for the team title is even closer than that for the drivers’ championship. Callaway Competition (Corvette) and PIXUM Team Schubert (BMW) are on level pegging at the head of the standings on identical points. Prosperia C Abt Racing (Audi) are hot on their heels, just a single point behind, with Polarweiss Racing (Mercedes-Benz) four points adrift.
Danish driver Christina Nielsen takes Gentlemen title
Christina Nielsen in a Farnbacher Racing Porsche 911 has wrapped up the Gentlemen championship ahead of time. The 21-year-old, supported by Polish co-driver Kuba Giermaziak (23), won in her class in Saturday’s race, and this fourth victory of the season proved to be the championship decider. Her main rival for the trophy, René Bourdeaux (38 , Tonino powered by Herberth Motorsport), had to retire on Lap 4 after his own Porsche 911 developed gearbox problems. With Bourdeaux’s failure to score any points, Nielsen now goes into the final race of the season with an unassailable lead in the Gentlemen stakes. Callaway Competition Corvette drivers Toni Seiler (55) and Remo Lips (31), both from Switzerland, finished second and third in their class.
Title decision on hold, Buhk and Götz are best placed
Going into the deciding race of the 2013 ADAC GT Masters season on Sunday, Buhk and Götz clearly have the strongest hand. The Mercedes duo start on the front row alongside pole-setter Jeroen Bleekemolen (31, NL) in a Callaway Competition Corvette. Behind them on Row 2 are Dominik Schwager in the Ford GT and championship leader Daniel Keilwitz, also in a Corvette. Dominik Baumann (BMW) starts from P7 while Martin Ragginger, team-mate of Porsche driver Robert Renauer, lines up in eleventh.