IN HIS OWN WORDS: ALLAN McNISH

No
driver can appreciate the significance and drama of the 24
Hours of Le Mans more than Allan McNish. The ever-popular Scot
and Audi Sport star returned to the top step of the famed podium
last year after a decade of heartbreaks and near-misses. Only
days before he attempts a repeat in tandem with Tom Kristensen
and Dindo Capello in the new Audi R15 TDI, McNish talks about
the hype preceding this year’s race, going back a decade
with Toyota and his lasting images of the 24 Hours.
Question: How can this year’s race top the hype generated
from 2008 considering there are four Lola-Aston Martins, four Peugeots,
new ORECAs, Ginetta-Zyteks…oh my!
 |
| If you had beaten Peugeot at Le Mans, Petit
Le Mans and Sebring in the last 12 months, you would
be smiling, too. |
McNish: When you look at last year’s race,
most people think it was the best race in the last 20 years. On
paper when you add in the depth of competition then it will mean
this year’s should be a very hotly contested one all the
way through the category. You will have at the end of it battles
- not necessarily 10 cars fighting for the win in the final hour
- all the way through. That’s quite an interesting part of
it that it has real strength in depth.
Q: As part of the Toyota squad in 1999, you were part of
the last ‘Manufacturers Battle’ that also included
Mercedes, Nissan, Panoz, race-winner BMW and another German marque
that made its Le Mans debut…oh yes, Audi!
McNish: The level of professionalism now, even
though there aren’t as many factory teams, is higher than
in 1999. A privateer team like ORECA is at a much higher level
than the factory teams were then. And I say privateer in a very
loose context because they won with Mazda in 1991 and with Dodge
Viper so many times. It’s privateer in name more than reality.
Q: Have you ever been part of anything like last year’s
race?
McNish: Yes, in fact. Sebring 2009 and Petit
Le Mans 2007 and 2008, to name a couple. There have been so many
races the last few years that have had that sort of intensity.
The difference is that over 24 hours you expected someone to
trip up. That was never the case last year. It really ebbed and
flowed. When I look at Sebring this year, there were a lot of
areas that were not ideal from Peugeot’s point of view;
they’ve learned those lessons. At Sebring they were much
more consistently competitive. I would dearly hope that there
is not the five-second deficit in qualifying we had last year.
But I already can see the intensity and aggression in the way
you have to run the race. I think it will be exactly like 2008
in that sense.
(Peugeot is) a manufacturer with a lot of history and a worthy
competitor as are Porsche and Acura. The fights we had with those
guys were a lot of fun as well. We’re very pleased that
Acura made a very strong intention to come to P1 and suggestions
that they will come to Le Mans. With regard to Peugeot, they
have diesel as well and they were the benchmark in terms of performance.
When you have someone in the same category that is the benchmark
in terms of performance and have a slightly faster car than you,
that would normally suggest they are going to win. And we don’t
want them to win; we want to fight like mad so that we win. That
created some of the circumstances behind the races that we’ve
had.
 |
| Before winning at the 24 Hours last year,
it had been a decade since McNish stood on top of the
Le Mans podium with Porsche. |
Q: The last three events (or four if you count Silverstone
in 2008) between Audi/Peugeot have been classics. When your kids
are older and they ask you to talk about the best race in which
you participated, which one will you choose (or will it be another?)
McNish: It might be Le Mans 2009! Petit Le
Mans and Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca against the Porsches in 2007
was fantastic. We didn’t think it could get any more stressful
but than that. Then you jump into 2008 and you look at Petit
Le Mans, Le Mans and Silverstone, and what was at stake was a
little bit higher. That has followed on with 2009. If you take
a chart from 2006 through now, it’s gotten harder and more
intense. It’s nice to be part of all this. There are so
many fans who have come to sports car racing because of those
races and will talk about them for a long, long period time.
To be part of that is what it is all about. Certainly at Audi
Sport, we relish that type of fight. We are not frightened by
the challenge.
Q: Does the lack of a Le Mans Test Day, as in years
past, stand to hurt Audi Sport more this year, given some changes
in regulations (30 kilograms added since Sebring as well as
a smaller diameter of the refueling rig)?
McNish: In terms of the weight, we had to revise
our testing. It has an impact on not just the speed performance
of the lap but also on the components on the car. That was a
factor, no question. When you look at the Test Day itself, it
would have been nice for us more than anyone else because this
year we have a new car. We’ve been doing a lot of testing
between Sebring and now that has been specifically for Le Mans.
It would be very nice to verify all that on such a unique circuit
like Le Mans. Also we don’t know what the competition has
been like. The last time we saw part of the competition was at
Sebring, which is a very different circuit that promotes a very
different type of aerodynamic package. We know Peugeot has been
working on the aero side. Aston Martin was very quick at Barcelona
and Spa. We’ve only ever seen them on television. So it’s
been three months since we’ve seen one competitor and we’ve
never actually seen the other except from TV. It would have been
nice at the test day to get a feel for it.
 |
| McNish, Tom Kristensen and Dindo Capello
beat Peugeot and Acura at Sebring. Another battle against
the deepest collection of manufacturers in a decade
comes this week. |
Q: Was it strange seeing Timo Bernhard and Romain Dumas
donning Audi suits during the tests, given some of the past battles
between Audi and Porsche in the American Le Mans Series?
McNish: It wasn’t necessarily strange to
see them. They’ve added strength and depth to our driver
lineup more than we’ve had before. They’ve fitted in
very well into the program. Yes, they are still on our team but
they’re not in our car. We still have to beat them. I don’t
think it will be quite as aggressive as some of the races we’ve
had to date. It won’t be quite St. Petersburg 2007!
Q: When someone says Le Mans, what is the first thing you
think of?
McNish: First of all, I actually think of the
grandstands. You have the balance of the new and the old ones
that you’d remember from the Steve McQueen film. Then I think
of the trials and tribulations of Le Mans. When you’re successful
there, it’s one of the nicest places in the world. When you’re
not, it’s one of the cruelest mistresses you can ever have.
I can tell you, walking away from the circuit and driving out
of Le Mans after having a race that you thought you were going
to be successful at like we had in 2007 and not having anything
to show for it, it is one of the most flattening feelings I have
ever had in my life.
The 77th running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans is scheduled for
3 p.m. CET (9 a.m. EDT) on Saturday, June 13 to 3 p.m. CET (9
a.m. EDT) on Sunday, June 14. SPEED will provide live television
coverage. Flag-to-flag coverage of the race, qualifying and practice
will be available at radiolemans.com.
The next round of the American Le Mans Series is the American
Le Mans Northeast Grand Prix at Lime Rock Park in Lakeville,
Conn. The race is scheduled for 2:05 p.m. EDT on Saturday,
July 18. The race will air live on SPEED. American Le Mans
Radio presented by Porsche and Live Timing & Scoring will
be available at Racehub
on americanlemans.com. You also can follow the Series
on Twitter.
The race also will mark the fifth round of the MICHELIN® Green
X® Challenge. Tickets are available at americanlemans.com
and limerock.com.