1998 Petit Le Mans
The 1998 Petit Le Mans was the seventh race for the 1998 IMSA GT Championship season, then known as the Professional SportsCar Racing series. It also served as a prelude to the first American Le Mans Series race held at Sebring in 1999. Don Panoz's American Le Mans Series was developed with the backing of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO), the ruling body of the 24 Hours of Le Mans. It took place on October 11, 1998.
Development
Following the demise of the World Sportscar Championship in 1992, sportscar racing was left without a major worldwide series in which to compete. The 24 Hours of Le Mans remained a remnant, still competed by a large number of sportscars, but mostly on a single race basis. Various sportscar leagues had sprung up since the WSC's demise, including the International Motor Sports Association's replacement for their Camel GTP series, the Prototype SportsCar Racing series. In Europe, two series were also developed, the FIA Sportscar Championship and the FIA GT Championship, although they were not combined like IMSA's series.
The Automobile Club de l'Ouest, wanting to create a new worldwide series, made an agreement with Don Panoz, owner of the Road Atlanta racing course. The ACO would agree to lend the Le Mans name out to Panoz for the creation of an event called the Petit Le Mans (French for little Le Mans). The race would be similar to the 12 Hours of Sebring, in that it did not run a full 24 hours like Le Mans. Instead, the race would be 10 hours or 1,000 miles (1,600 km), whichever came first. The series would become an experiment for the ACO, in which if enough teams showed interest in Petit Le Mans, the ACO would look into developing a series around the same formula. In order to help drive interest, the ACO promised that the winners of Petit Le Mans would earn automatic invitations to the 24 Hours of Le Mans without having to apply or earn favor with the ACO. This custom continues to be utilized in the Petit Le Mans, despite American Le Mans Series champions also receiving invites.
IMSA, which normally ran at Road Atlanta during their seasons, agreed to allow a joint race for their series and the 24 Hours of Le Mans competitors. However, each series ran slightly different formulas for their competitors, thus forcing the organizers to create seven different classes. LMP1, LMGT1, and LMGT2 for the ACO compliant cars, and WSC, GT1, GT2, and GT3 for IMSA's competitors. Even though both organizers used the GT1 and GT2 names the classes were not actually the same, which is why the ACO classes are preceded by LM.
Official results
Class winners in bold.
Pos | Class | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Tyre | Laps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Engine | |||||||
1 | LMP1 | 7 | ![]() |
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Ferrari 333 SP | P | 391 |
Ferrari F310E 4.0 L V12 | |||||||
2 | LMP1 | 77 | ![]() ![]() |
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Porsche LMP1-98 | M | 391 |
Porsche Type-935 3.2 L Turbo Flat-6 | |||||||
3 | LMGT1 | 38 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 GT1 Evo | M | 381 |
Porsche 3.2 L Turbo Flat-6 | |||||||
4 | WSC | 8 | ![]() |
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Riley & Scott Mk III | D | 378 |
Ford 5.0 L V8 | |||||||
5 | WSC | 88 | ![]() |
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Ferrari 333 SP | Y | 365 |
Ferrari F310E 4.0 L V12 | |||||||
6 | LMP1 | 63 | ![]() ![]() |
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AutoExe (Kudzu) AE99 | G | 349 |
Mazda 2.6 L 4-Rotor | |||||||
7 | LMGT2 | 81 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 GT2 | P | 337 |
Porsche 3.6 L Turbo Flat-6 | |||||||
8 | GT1 | 4 | ![]() |
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Panoz Esperante GTR-1 | M | 335 |
Ford (Roush) 6.0 L V8 | |||||||
9 | GT3 | 76 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 Carrera RSR | Y | 335 |
Porsche 3.8 L Flat-6 | |||||||
10 | GT3 | 6 | ![]() |
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BMW M3 | Y | 328 |
BMW 3.2 L I6 | |||||||
11 | LMGT2 | 72 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 GT2 | D | 322 |
Porsche 3.6 L Turbo Flat-6 | |||||||
12 | LMGT1 | 07 | ![]() |
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Panoz Esperante GTR-1 Q9 | M | 317 |
Ford (Roush) 6.0 L V8 Zytek Hybrid Electric | |||||||
13 | GT2 | 04 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 GT2 | P | 311 |
Porsche 3.6 L Turbo Flat-6 | |||||||
14 | LMGT2 | 00 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 GT2 | M | 311 |
Porsche 3.6 L Turbo Flat-6 | |||||||
15 | GT2 | 75 | ![]() |
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Mazda RX-7 | ? | 294 |
Mazda 2.0 L 3-Rotor | |||||||
16 | GT3 | 1 | ![]() |
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BMW M3 | Y | 289 |
BMW 3.2 L I6 | |||||||
17 DNF |
GT3 | 10 | ![]() |
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BMW M3 | Y | 281 |
BMW 3.2 L I6 | |||||||
18 DNF |
WSC | 39 | ![]() |
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Riley & Scott Mk III | P | 273 |
Ford 5.0 L V8 | |||||||
19 | GT3 | 86 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 Carrera RSR | ? | 271 |
Porsche 3.8 L Flat-6 | |||||||
20 DNF |
LMGT1 | 26 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 GT1-98 | M | 235 |
Porsche 3.2 L Turbo Flat-6 | |||||||
21 DNF |
WSC | 28 | ![]() |
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Riley & Scott Mk III | G | 229 |
Ford 5.0 L V8 | |||||||
22 DNF |
LMGT2 | 73 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 GT2 | D | 157 |
Porsche 3.6 L Turbo Flat-6 | |||||||
23 DNF |
GT3 | 12 | ![]() |
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BMW M3 | ? | 96 |
BMW 3.2 L I6 | |||||||
24 DNF |
GT3 | 96 | ![]() |
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Nissan 240SX | Y | 63 |
Nissan 2.4 L I4 | |||||||
25 DNF |
WSC | 27 | ![]() |
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Ferrari 333 SP | Y | 59 |
Ferrari F310E 4.0 L V12 | |||||||
26 DNF |
GT2 | 68 | ![]() |
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Porsche 968 Turbo RS | P | 50 |
Porsche 3.0 L Turbo I4 | |||||||
27 DNF |
LMGT2 | 59 | ![]() |
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Marcos Mantara LM600 | D | 49 |
Chevrolet 6.0 L V8 | |||||||
28 DNF |
WSC | 29 | ![]() |
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Riley & Scott Mk III | G | 31 |
Ford 5.0 L V8 | |||||||
29 DNF |
GT3 | 23 | ![]() |
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Porsche 911 Carrera RSR | P | 0 |
Porsche 3.8 L Flat-6 | |||||||
DNS | GT1 | 5 | ![]() |
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Panoz Esperante GTR-1 | M | - |
Ford (Roush) 6.0 L V8 | |||||||
DNS | LMP1 | 21 | ![]() |
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Riley & Scott Mk III | P | - |
Ford 5.0 L V8 |
Statistics
- Pole Position - #26 Porsche AG - 1:13.754
- Average Speed - 164.62 km/h
Post-Race
With a total of 31 entrants, including a large number of European teams, the ACO considered the race a success. The only downside was that BMW, who had initially entered their BMW V12 LMs, did not show up for the race. However, the ACO and Don Panoz pushed ahead with their plans and announced the American Le Mans Series for 1999. IMSA, whose own racing series was faltering, decided to take instead take over as sanctioning body for the new American Le Mans Series.
The ACO would repeat later this kind of one-off experimental race in preparation for new series, with the 1999 Le Mans Fuji 1000km, the 2000 Race of a Thousand Years, the 2003 1000km of Le Mans and the 2009 1000 km of Okayama.