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Rolex 24 hour at Daytona International Speedway "Live"
Jan 30th
Live: 2011 Rolex 24 Hours At Daytona
29 January, 2011 at 19:47 (GMT)By Pat W
At last, winter is almost over! The racing season continues its awakening from slumber, following the Dakar Rally and the Rallye Monte-Carlo it is time for the first major circuit racing event of the 2011 season. Whilst the Dubai 24 Hours a couple of weeks ago was probably the first racing event on a closed course this year it isn’t yet considered a major event, Daytona is the venue the motorsport world looks to to officially kick off the racing year.
The Rolex 24 at Daytona falls outside the schedules of every other series so it always attracts a star-studded cast of guest drivers joining the Grand-Am Rolex Series regulars not least at Ganassi which features Juan Pablo Montoya, Dario Franchitti and Scott Dixon.
The Race
Starting Saturday at 3.30pm ET / 8.30pm GMT, the field races for a full 24 hours around the Daytona International Speedway’s road course, which is actually a combination of the famed oval and a narrow infield. Daytona’s oval banking is the steepest anywhere used in professional racing and the entire circuit, oval and infield, was completely resurfaced in time for this year’s event. This has meant laptimes have fallen, the pole time was the fastest both classes had run before!
The race is the first round of the Grand-Am Rolex Series, which is owned by the same people that own NASCAR. Daytona itself is owned by a related company. You can see an onboard view of the track here from 2007, and take a look at the difference today when these road cars ran around it. (not embedding either in case of live feed embedding later)
As always with sportscar racing there are car classes, at Daytona there are only the two: Daytona Prototypes and GT. The laptime differential between the two is about 10 seconds per lap.
DP is the top class and there are 18 entered with some fantastic drivers among them.
GT makes up the bulk of the field and features an array of Porsches, Ferraris, Chevy Camaros, BMWs, Mustangs and Mazda RX-8s. Driver quality varies hugely in GT, from professional drivers who might otherwise be found in the top class, all the way through the range to the humble amateurs. As Martin Brundle said the other day, the problem is the pro’s often share with the amateurs so a lapped car acting professionally earlier may suddenly wander over the road and jump in front of you with an amateur on board.
Ones To Watch
As always for endurance races the teams bring in drivers to bolster the line-ups, two aren’t enough to run a car for an entire day, at least not in the current era when even endurance races are sprints. The choices are often famous names from other series.
Here are some cars and drivers to watch out for, from a Formula 1 or IndyCar perspective. I’m not going to provide a full form guide as I’m not competent enough with this series to do so – you can find one here.
Cars 01 and 02 – Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates (BMW/Riley)
Even if you know nothing of Daytona or Grand-Am, you’ll be familiar with Ganassi from IndyCar. Dario Franchitti and Scott Dixon have been brought in from the IndyCar team, with Juan Pablo Montoya and Jamie McMurray from his NASCAR Cup team. This quartet shares car 02.
Car 01 features sportscar stalwarts Scott Pruett, Joey Hand and Memo Rojas and they’ve brought aboard Ganassi’s new IndyCar signing Graham Rahal. Both cars are strong contenders, expect a minimum of a podium if not two. Favourite for the win.
Cars 55 and 95 – Level 5 Motorsports (BMW/Riley)
Up until Thursday I was placing this team as the main challenger to Ganassi (perhaps alongside the SunTrust #10), but then they withdrew from qualifying “for strategic reasons”, taking advantage of the DP and GT fields starting a few seconds apart rather than combined as in other series. So they’ll start at the back of the DP field. It means extra work, with this line-up it would be hard to bet against them but they’ve made it unnecessarily harder for themselves in my view. Cars feature Christophe Bouchut, Ryan Hunter-Reay, Raphael Matos and Richard Westbrook.
Car 9 – Action Express Racing (Porsche/Riley)
Won the race last year amd was sort of considered a fluke, but you never know what may happen.
Car 10 – SunTrust Racing (Chevrolet/Dallara)
This should be a strong car, with Ryan Briscoe, Max Angelelli and Ricky and Wayne Taylor.
Car 76 – Krohn Racing (Ford/Lola)
You can’t argue with a line-up including Nic Minassian and Ricardo Zonta, even if the others are weaker.
Car 23 – United Autosports with Michael Shank Racing (Ford/Riley)
Martin Brundle and Mark Blundell have come out of retirement to enter this car along with driver/boss Zak Brown (he of Just Marketing International) and Mark Patterson. I am not expecting these guys to set the world alight, after all their ‘name’ drivers have been out of racing professionally for years, but Brundle impressed by qualifying 9th. Could be the tortoise to others’ hares, if it keeps running… if.
Car 45 – Flying Lizard Motorsport (Porsche/Riley)
Nothing to do with F1 or IndyCar, but the front-running stalwarts of the GT/GT2 classes in the ALMS and GrandAm step up to running a prototype for the first time, for this race, and have only gone and stuck it on pole! They may not have the reliability to win as the car is new to them, but they will be a thorn in the side of the others when they are running, as they have Bergmeister, Long and van Overbeek alongside team boss Neiman (the weak link).
In the GT field look for the TRG Porsches as favourites.
A full entry list can be found here.
Thayne Smika new computer pics of what Sid wells murderer looks like 27 years later
Jan 29th
Friday, Jan. 28, 2011
Contact:
Deputy Chief Dave Hayes, Police Department, 303-441-3317
www.boulder-police.com
Police release age progression photos of 1983 homicide suspect
Boulder police are releasing five photographs that show how 1983 homicide suspect Thayne Smika is believed to look today. The photographs were created by the Federal Bureau of Investigation laboratory using age progression technology and a 1983 arrest photo of Smika.
Investigators have been looking for Smika since December when a Boulder District Court judge issued an arrest warrant accusing him of first-degree murder in the Aug. 1, 1983, shooting death of his roommate, Sid Wells. Wells was shot in the head and found in his home in the 800 block of 29th Street.
Smika, who was born on Feb. 27, 1959, disappeared from the local area in 1986, and his current whereabouts remain unknown.
Boulder police are asking anyone who believes these photos look familiar or who has information about Smika’s whereabouts anytime since 1986 to contact detectives through a voicemail hotline at 303-441-1974.
Thayne Smika today
Seasonal raptor closures start Feb. 1
Jan 28th
Lefthand Canyon Palisades at the intersection of Lefthand Canyon Drive and Olde Stage Road (Buckingham picnic area remains open);
Mount Sanitas, First Buttress, accessible from the Mount Sanitas trailhead, .5 miles west of Fourth Street and Mapleton Avenue (There are no closures to the bouldering areas along the ridge);
Gregory Canyon Amphitheater, including the Amphitheater Express Trail and the 3rd Pinnacle (The Amphitheater Trail to Saddle Rock will remain open);
Third Flatiron, including the East and West Ironing Boards, Queen Anne’s Head and Jaws, and WC Pinnacle and all descent routes accessible from Chautauqua trailhead, 900 Baseline Road;
Skunk Canyon, including Ridge 2, 3 and 4, the Aechean Pronouncement, the Dreadnaught, the North Ridge and the entirety of Sacred Cliffs, accessible from NCAR trailhead at the west end of Table Mesa Road;
The rock formation known as the Front Porch;
Bear Creek Spire, accessible from the NCAR trailhead at the west end of Table Mesa Road;
Fern Canyon, including the Goose, the Goose Eggs, the East Ridge and Nebel Horn, accessible from the NCAR trailhead at the west end of Table Mesa Road (The designated Fern Canyon hiking trail will remain open);
Shadow Canyon and the Matron, 1.7 miles west of Highway 93 on Eldorado Springs Drive. (The designated Shadow Canyon hiking trail will remain open, and the Maiden remains open and accessible from the east);
The entire Mickey Mouse wall, accessible from OSMP Lindsay property (This closure will be spatially expanded because of recent activity of Golden Eagles, Prairie Falcons, and Peregrine Falcons in the area);
The north side of Flagstaff Summit accessible from Flagstaff Summit parking area, 3.4 miles up Flagstaff Road and .5 miles up Flagstaff Summit Road;
Diamond Head and SoBo Buttress, west of Shadow Canyon;
The rock formation known as The Sphinx.
Because of the high-quality cliff habitat and rich food resources on OSMP lands, as well as community cooperation to protect nesting sites, the closed areas are important to the region for nesting falcons and eagles.
The City of Boulder has been monitoring raptor nesting and roosting areas since 1984. Sites are monitored by OSMP volunteers and staff. Trespass violations can result in a summons with penalties of up to 90 days in jail and/or a $1,000 fine. In addition to enforcement, OSMP relies heavily on the public to respect the closures, and the cooperation of visitors to these areas is greatly appreciated.
As part of OSMP’s adaptive management framework, closures may be lifted prior to July 31 if no raptor activity is observed at any of these sites.
For more information on OSMP raptor closures, including maps of the affected areas, visit www.osmp.org or call 303-441-3440.