BRASELTON, Ga. (September 25, 2009) – The 2010 American
Le Mans Series will feature both scheduling stability to go
alongside a dynamic class restructure, efforts that secure
the world’s leading sports car championship in the upper
echelon of global motorsport.
Next year’s calendar, which focuses on the Series’ cornerstone
endurance events while providing continuity at its established
venues, ranked among the highlights during the American Le
Mans Series’ annual State of the Series address Friday
at Road Atlanta, site of this weekend’s 12th annual Petit
Le Mans powered by MAZDA6. The famed Georgia road circuit will
be the closing venue for the 2010 season - and reward class
winners with invitations to the 2011 24 Hours of Le Mans -
with the 58th annual Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring presented
by Fresh from Florida once again serving as the season-opening
event.
The schedule again offers the world’s top teams and
manufacturers a mix of high-profile events on North America’s
premier natural terrain road and street circuits, proclaimed
American Le Mans Series President and CEO Scott Atherton.
“I cannot envision a better way to open and close our
season,” said Atherton, “than showcasing our two
crown jewel endurance races. Both events, as we have seen this
year, attract the premier teams from around the world and generate
the largest crowds for sports car racing in North America.
In between, we will race on some of the best and most historic
road courses and street circuits this side of the Atlantic
in business markets that are important to our teams and constituents.
This schedule will no doubt enable us to continue to grow our
ever-expanding fan base and television audience.”
Following the season opener at Sebring on March 20, the American
Le Mans Series rolls westward to Long Beach on April 17 where
it will be Saturday’s feature race in a doubleheader
weekend with the IndyCar Series at America’s oldest and
most prestigious street circuit. The next event is a historic
first – a six-hour endurance event at Monterey’s
Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca that will run into the darkness on
Saturday, May 22.
The traditional summer break will allow a selection of the
American Le Mans Series’ top drivers and teams to compete
at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the world’s greatest motor
race, from June 12-13. The season’s second half begins
with two dates in July - Miller Motorsports Park in Tooele,
Utah on July 10 and Connecticut’s Lime Rock Park on July
24. A trio of races fills the schedule in August –Mid-Ohio
Sports Car Course on August 7 as part of another doubleheader
weekend with IndyCar; Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wis., on
August 22; and another visit to Mosport International Raceway
in Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada on August 29.
The 13th annual Petit Le Mans, the 1,000-mile/10-hour cornerstone
event of the American Le Mans Series, will close the season
on October 2.
The schedule was not the only news Friday. Drayson Racing,
headed by Great Britain’s Lord Drayson and Lady Elspeth,
announced its return to full-season competition in the American
Le Mans Series for 2010. Drayson raced an entire year in the
American Le Mans Series in 2008 and at Sebring this year in
an Aston Martin GT2 entry but debuted its brand new Lola-Judd
coupe for LMP1 earlier this week. Drayson, Great Britain’s
Minister of Science and Innovation, is a major proponent of
the Series’ position on alternative energies and hopes
to compete once again on cellulosic ethanol.
Drayson stated that the American Le Mans Series was the ideal
platform for him as his racing program will focus on the development
of automotive innovations that directly impact environmental
and sustainability issues.
While much of the news had a familiar tone, Atherton also
revisited the recent announcement of class restructures for
2010. The Series and sanctioning body IMSA announced in August
that LMP1 and LMP2 cars will compete in a single LMP class
for 2010. At the same time the new LMP Challenge class will
feature the ORECA-Courage FLM09 and provide competitors with
a sophisticated Le Mans Prototype but at a cost that will make
it more accessible to many more teams. He emphasized that the
GT Challenge class, initiated earlier this year with support
of Porsche Motorsport North America and Yokohama, will continue
and expand to include other examples of the popular Porsche
911 GT3 Cup racer. Atherton also stated that GT2 - more diverse
and competitive than ever before - will remain unchanged except
for a new name: GT.
While very upbeat about many of the Series’ positive
developments, including new factory-backed teams and top-level
independent programs coming into the Series, Atherton did not
elude the challenges presented by the most difficult economic
time in decades.
“I don’t need to tell you what has transpired
over the past 12 months,” he said. “We have all
been deeply affected by it across all facets of our lives,
but those challenges have given us the opportunity to re-emphasize
what continues to set us apart as a motorsports marketing platform.”
Atherton called the American Le Mans Series green initiatives
its major differentiator.
With an unmatched position on alternative fuels and new technologies,
the Series continually receives increased attention from media
as well as auto manufacturers and corporate marketing partners.
Atherton saluted the U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency and SAE International for recognizing it
as the only motorsports entity that meets its protocols for
green racing. The exclusive collaboration with the governmental
agencies and the creation of the MICHELIN® GREEN X® Challenge,
an environmental competition that occurs within all Series
races, is one of the primary reasons the American Le Mans Series
will now incorporate its position as the Global Leader of Green
Racing into its official logo.
“There is no question that we have taken the leadership
position with automotive manufacturers, teams and marketing
partners in terms of the development of alternative fuels and
other innovative technologies that will help redefine the automobile
industry in the very near future,” he continued. “Our
racing is relevant. It has a purpose, and it is exciting to
see the innovations being transferred from our race cars that
make road cars more efficient and cleaner for the environment
- we are playing an important role in the solution,” Atherton
concluded.
While the economy played a role in reduced car counts for
nearly all forms of motorsport in 2009, Atherton praised Corvette
Racing for its rebirth in GT2 while emphasizing that the American
Le Mans Series defied logic and added two new teams for 2009
- a two-car effort from BMW Rahal Letterman Racing Team and
a Jaguar program in conjunction with Paul Gentilozzi’s
RSR. Coupled with a pair of new corporate marketing partners – Mikimoto
Pearls and Green Earth Technologies, both of which mesh perfectly
with the Series’ demographics and green initiatives -
and a lucrative licensing arrangement with Microsoft’s
new Forza Motorsport 3- Atherton proclaimed great satisfaction
for the Series’ ability deliver on its mission statement
message of “driving progress through innovative, relevant
and environmentally responsible motorsport competition worthy
of our rich heritage, our world-class competitors and the devotion
of our fans.”
Atherton concluded with an update on a focus introduced a
year ago - the Series’ innovative approach toward media.
While sports and motorsports media remain a staple, the Series
has moved very aggressively toward diversifying its media outreach.
The results have been noteworthy and feature a record number
of mediums that report on transportation, automotive, environment
and technology giving the Series significantly more attention.
Atherton also stated that the Series’ rejuvenated Web
site reported a 170 percent increase in page views with visitors
from 192 countries – a truly global reach that also features
social networking and activation. In addition, the American
Le Mans Series’ worldwide television audience grew to
more than 700 million households. U.S. viewership remained
virtually flat – a very positive result when compared
to industry trends that indicate significant reductions in
nearly all televised sports.
“In this era, flat is the new up,” Atherton concluded. “All
of these positive indicators verify and affirm that despite
the crisis throughout the auto industry and economic catastrophe
that has spared no one, the American Le Mans Series continues
to attract new, top-level content from both OEM and independent
teams at a time when no one else can make the same claims.
And our growing fan base has taken notice.”
The American Le Mans Series
The American Le Mans Series is the premium brand of motorsport
in North America, featuring high-tech, relevant sports cars
from the most prestigious automobile manufacturers in the
world. Its unique multiple classes of competition showcase
exotic, open-top prototypes and sophisticated production-based
GT cars, all competing on the track at the same time. The
American Le Mans Series competes at the premier road racing
tracks across North America and at selected temporary street
circuits in major urban markets.
The American Le Mans Series, based on the prestigious 24 Hours
of Le Mans, is the only motorsports body in the world that
features multiple street-legal alternative energy sources -
clean diesel, and E10 and E85 cellulosic ethanols as well new
hybrid technologies. Recognized as the Global Leader in Green
Racing, it has taken the leadership role in motorsports for
the furthering of alternative fuel technology and use. It also
illustrates deeper the Series’ relevance to its list
of prestigious manufacturers and affluent consumer base.
2010 Schedule (PDF)