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Pedrosa Takes the Honours at Sachsenring

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Repsol Honda's Dani Pedrosa reduced the gap to Jorge Lorenzo in the championship standings to less than 50 points with victory in today's restarted eni Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland at Sachsenring.

The original race was red flagged on lap nine when a crash for Randy de Puniet at turn four brought down both Álvaro Bautista and Aleix Espargaró, neither of whom could avoid the Frenchman’s bike as it burst into flames in the middle of the track. The top five order at that stage was Lorenzo, Pedrosa, Stoner, Andrea Dovizioso and Rossi, which is how they lined up on the grid for the restart after the race had been red flagged.


Espargaró and Bautista were not allowed to start the shortened 21-lap race as both failed to return to pit lane with their bikes within the allowed five-minute window after the showing of the red flag. De Puniet was physically unable to retake the grid, having sustained fractures in his left tibia and fibula in the incident.


Espargaró was later diagnosed with a cracked C6 vertebra.


After a 25-minute interval the new shortened race got underway, with Mika Kallio sliding out at turn one in an unfortunate end to his weekend. As he had done in the original race Pedrosa got his nose in front on the first lap, but Lorenzo quickly assumed the race lead – that would change again however.


The top order was much the same as it had been before the red flag, with Lorenzo holding off Pedrosa, Stoner in third, and Rossi and Dovizioso battling for fourth. The reigning World Champion was in front of his Italian compatriot before too long, and the Repsol Honda man was caught by the chasing pack shortly after.


The battle between Lorenzo and Pedrosa was developing into a thriller with the two Spaniards swapping the lead as they constantly looked for ways through on one another. Pedrosa was at his best as he set a new circuit lap record on lap 10 and then again on lap 12, assuming the race lead and breaking his own record from the previous year and consistently riding in the low 1’22”s bracket.


There was a good scrap going on for fifth between Marco Simoncelli, Dovizioso and Nicky Hayden, with the latter two going through on the rookie when he had a bit of an out of the saddle moment on the drop down to turn 12.


Rossi was defying his precarious physical condition to engage in a great contest with Stoner for third, the two side by side with only a few laps to go and taking their duel to the bitter end.


Pedrosa crossed the line in first position, 3.355s clear of championship leader Lorenzo thanks to a faultless ride.


"I'm very happy because we are back winning races and it's a great feeling," said Pedrosa. "Today's win was even better than Mugello, because I was battling with Lorenzo and finally beat him, so this is even more important. This weekend has ended perfectly."


"I don't think I rode as well in the second part of the race as I did in the first," explained Lorenzo. "Dani was very strong and I was on the limit trying to stay ahead. When he passed me I tried to stay with him, but he was much faster than me today."


Stoner managed to edge Rossi for third with a final corner move that handed the Italian fourth on his return from injury, a highly impressive result.


"Valentino was taking big chunks of time out of me and, once he went past, I didn't think I'd be able to follow," admitted Stoner. "I tried really hard to stay in there and had a good battle with a lot of nice passes. We touched at the bottom of the hill, but it was a good, clean fight and I'm pleased to come away with a podium."


"I thought it was maybe possible to make fourth or fifth place, but I thought it would be very difficult. I certainly didn't expect this," declared Rossi. "I felt some pain from my leg and my shoulder, but the battle with Casey was so much fun I didn't really think about it. Unfortunately though, he got the better of me on the last corner. This is a fantastic result though after missing four races."


Dovizioso finished fifth, with Simoncelli achieving his best premier class result to date in sixth. American duo Hayden and Ben Spies were seventh and eighth respectively, with Héctor Barberá and Marco Melandri completing the top ten.


The final two riders to complete the race in 11th and 12th were Loris Capirossi and stand-in rider Alex de Angelis. Colin Edwards had crashed out on lap seven of the original race.

Lorenzo now has 185 points at the top of the standings, with Pedrosa second on 138 and Dovizioso third on 102. Stoner moves into fourth, 19 points off Dovizioso.

Wilson Earns First Pole, Sets Track Record

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Justin Wilson earned his first IZOD IndyCar Series pole and set a series track record in the process. Now all the Dreyer & Reinbold Racing driver has to do is hold off 25 challengers over 85 laps in the Honda Indy Toronto.

“Easier said than done,” acknowledged Wilson, who posted a quick lap of 1 minute, 0.2710 seconds (104.827 mph) in the Firestone Fast Six on the 1.75-mile, 11-turn street circuit at Exhibition Place to win the PEAK Performance Pole Award.

It was the second pole earned for Dreyer & Reinbold Racing – the first by Sarah Fisher in 2002 at Kentucky Speedway.

Team Penske’s Will Power will join Wilson, who has a pair of runner-up finishes this season on street courses, on the front row. Power had a best lap of 1:00.4563 in the Firestone Fast Six, but his team’s streak of eight consecutive pole starts came to an end (Power had five in that span).

Helio Castroneves (1:00.8159) in the No. 3 Team Penske car and Ryan Hunter-Reay, driving the No. 37 IZOD car for Andretti Autosport (1:00.8397), will share Row 2. Target Chip Ganassi Racing’s Dario Franchitti (1:00.9477) and Scott Dixon (1:00.9541) will be on Row 3. Dixon extended his series record to 42 consecutive top-five starts.

All but Wilson are race winners this season. He obviously intends to become the eighth different winner.

“We’ve had a couple of tough races so to come back and get the pole here is just fantastic,” said Wilson, who saved a set of Firestone Firehawk alternate tires in setting the track record. “Everyone at Dreyer & Reinbold has worked so hard.  I’m very pleased for Z-Line Designs.  We’ll keep pushing for the race.  It’s easy in this stage to sit back and relax, but we have a lot of work to do.  It’s great that this is the team’s second career pole and I want to get their second career win.  That’s the big picture we’re looking at but this is a great moment.

“After the difficulties at Watkins Glen (lost four spots to finish 10th) and Iowa (dropped 13 positions to finish 24th), it’s been tough.  We’ve been working so hard, trying to stay focus and stay on track and not go off on a tangent.”

Power, a three-time race winner this season who has advanced to the Firestone Fast Six in each of the 10 races he’s competed for Team Penske, was less than two-tenths of a second off Wilson’s best lap.

“We definitely got the car better for qualifying today, but Justin was very quick and tough to beat,” he said. “I am not sure I could have beaten him this time. I know I made a mistake at the end of my lap, but that was a tough qualifying session and I am exhausted. I feel good about tomorrow; I am not sure what will happen with the weather. Rain always stirs things up, but we will take it as it comes.”

That’s just another potential factor team’s will face. The top 11 are separated by one second on the tricky, slippery and bumpy course that has concrete barriers on both sides of the drivers.

“It was exciting; we didn't know if the rain was coming or not,” Castroneves said. “So we decided to keep going as fast as we could. We certainly had the car to get up there, but we just wanted to play it safe and to be in the top six. But in the top three is certainly a good position to win a race from.”

His other teammate, Ryan Briscoe, will be on Row 4 with Tony Kanaan in the No. 11 Team 7-Eleven/Nestle Pure Life entry for Andretti Autosport.  Montreal’s Alex Tagliani in the No. 77 Bower & Wilkins/Hot Wheels car for FAZZT Race Team and Marco Andretti, driving the No. 26 Venom Energy car for Andretti Autosport will start on Row 5.

Raphael Matos in the No. 2 HP de Ferran Dragon Racing car, coming off a fourth place at Watkins Glen International, will start 11th and Danica Patrick posted her highest road/street course starting position (12th) since Infineon Raceway (11th) last August. Paul Tracy of Toronto will start 24th in the No. 15 Make-A-Wish KV Racing Technology car.

“I was pleased with our qualifying run today,” Patrick said. “It was great to advance out of our group, which had a lot of good cars in it. Today was a good step in the right direction. I’m happy with the GoDaddy car and hopefully we can have a decent day tomorrow.”

Ranger Claims Toronto Win

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Andrew Ranger continued his mastery of road courses, taking the Jumpstart 100 Saturday in the first visit for the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series presented by Mobil 1 to the Toronto street course.


It is the 10th career series win and seventh on a road course for Ranger. The two-time series champion, who is not running for the title this year, has also captured a pair road course wins in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series in the last month.


To get Saturday's victory, Ranger had to hold off the field on a green-white-checkered finish. A caution on the final lap for an accident ended the race under yellow.


Jason Bowles finished second, followed by points leader DJ Kennington, Don Thomson Jr. and Kerry Micks. Bowles is the 2009 NASCAR K&N Pro Series West champion and had finished third in his previous Canadian Tire Series start at Mosport International Raceway.


Ranger won the pole Friday and was out front all day Saturday, spending most of the time fending off the challenges of JR Fitzpatrick. Fitzpatrick, however, got loose following the final restart and lost several positions to finish eighth.


Trevor Seibert, Jeff Lapcevich, Fitzpatrick, Brad Graham and Peter Klutt rounded out the top 10 on the 1.765-mile temporary course at Toronto’s Exhibition Place.


The race was slowed due to caution just three times for six laps.


The NASCAR Canadian Tire Series will return to the track Sunday, July 25 for the Canadian Tire 100 when it races at Edmonton City Centre Airport, the 1.973-mile road course in Edmonton, Alberta.

Pobst Takes Toronto GT; Cunningham, Wittmer Win In World Challenge GTS, Touring Car

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For Randy Pobst, of Gainesville, Ga., and Peter Cunningham, of Milwaukee, Wis., the streets of Toronto only feel like home. For Montreal’s Nick Wittmer, it almost is. Each won on Saturday at the Acura Sports Car Challenge, capturing the World Challenge Championships GT, GTS and Touring Car classes, respectively, Round Seven of 12 on the season.

Pobst set a new qualifying record and led every lap of the 33-lap, 57.915-mile race, averaging 69.574 mph in a race slowed by one caution for five laps. It wasn’t without drama for Pobst, who appeared to be sailing away from the field after the standing start.

The No. 6 K-Pax Racing Volvo S60 raced out to more than a three second lead after four laps, but had started to slightly fall back to the field. When the yellow flags flew to collect Greg Shaffer’s No. 40 Go 4 It Racing/Hawk Volkswagen Jetta GLI Touring Car after contact with the wall on the front straight leaving the final corner, his mirrors were full of James Sofronas’ No. 14 GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3.

Sofronas hounded Pobst from the time the race went green again to start lap 14 until the checkered flag. Though the gap fluctuated as the two weaved through traffic, Pobst held off Sofronas for a 0.821-second margin of victory.

The win was the third of the season for Pobst and second win in two tries on the streets of Toronto in World Challenge, who also set a new race-lap record with a time of 1:15.513 (83.667 mph).

“It starts with a car that was extremely well set up by the K-Pax Racing team,” Pobst said. “Will Moody, the engineer, is pretty brilliant. The car handled and drove extremely well. The interesting situation in World Challenge right now is that our Volvo, because of the advantage of the all-wheel drive, we weigh a lot more. The way it seems to be working out is that we can turn a really good qualifying lap and we seem to go strongly the first two or three laps and then the weight takes its toll. The tires get hot, the brakes get hot and it starts turning into a race. But, it is a great advantage to be first, because it’s a lot easier to lead than to get around somebody.

“I owe Andy Pilgrim, my teammate, a great vote of thanks. He got a much better start than I did and was actually ahead of me going into (Turn) 1, and he let me through. After that, we seemed to have them covered so easily for about two laps. Then everything got hot and James started looking stronger and stronger and stronger and it turned into a race.”

Sofronas’ day started when the lights went out, moving from his fourth starting spot past Patrick Lindsey in the No. 57 Horton/Sloan Securities Porsche 911 GT3 before the field reached Turn 1. By the end of the first lap, he had also slipped past Andy Pilgrim in the No. 8 K-Pax Racing Volvo S60 for second place and had his sights set on reeling in Pobst. Sofronas’ two-position improvement on the first lap earned him the Optima Batteries’ Best Standing Start award.

The restart helped close the gap, but the Newport Beach, Calif.-racer couldn’t advance any further.

“The start went really well,” Sofronas said. “We played with the launch control before the race and we nailed it and got ahead of Patrick [Lindsey]. We knew that, in order to beat the Volvos, you’ve got to get ahead of them early because they’re so tough to pass when they launch out of the corners. But our GMG Porsche and the StopTech brakes really kept us in the hunt. I got a nice run on the back straight on the first lap and got around Andy. We both broke deep into Turn 1, and Andy being the professional that he is, I knew he’d give me room. I kind of squeezed on the outside and we just got through.

“I knew we had a good car to pace Randy, but here, as it was getting greasy and the cars were sliding around, you’ve really got to get off these corners to have any kind of chance to make a pass at the end of a straight. Where Randy would pull away out of the corners, our Porsche would actually brake really deep and catch up in the braking zone, and that’s where I knew we had a chance. It was an accordion effect and with the traffic, it was a give and take. At the end, I could see Randy’s car was pushing a little bit in some of the tight stuff. Our car was still running really strong. Without making a real dive-bomb move, it was going to be tough to get by Randy. He didn’t make any mistakes and I didn’t make any. It feels good to be in second. We’ve had an up-and-down year for my car, but the GMG guys do an amazing job. They’re overworked and they do a fantastic job every race. I’ve been trying to get a good podium for them.”

Pilgrim, of Boca Raton, Fla., started second and got a launch at the start that moved him alongside his teammate entering the first corner. After falling behind Sofronas later that lap, Pilgrim ran third until dropping behind Dino Crescentini in the No. 4 Centric Parts/Stoptech/GMG Porsche 911 GT3 on lap 13 after the restart. Two laps later, he also fell behind Lindsey and looked to be headed in the wrong direction.

Lindsey got past Crescentini for third on lap 18, and Pilgrim did the same on lap 24 to move into fourth. Pilgrim made a pass on Lindsey for third in Turn Five on lap 29 and hung on for the final spot on the podium. That pass earned Pilgrim the Invisible Glass Clean Pass of the Race award.

The result snapped a three-race streak of finishes outside the top-10 for Pilgrim, who had been plagued with a variety of mechanical issues.

“It’s really a team thing, now, because the guys are so great,” Pilgrim said. “The K-Pax guys work their butts off and to get, basically, three DNFs in a row, it was just breaking their hearts. I mean they were just absolutely on their knees. The Volvo ran well today. I had to work to get back from fifth, back to fourth, back to third. I had a fun race. I really wanted to finish. I didn’t care if I finished dead last, as long as I finished on the same laps as the leader, so I’m really happy with this.”

Lindsey finished fourth and earned the MTM/Special Ops Watch Move of the Race for overtaking Crescentini, who went on to finish fifth.

Rob Morgan’s No. 46 TruSpeed Motorsports/Querencia Porsche 911 GT3 was sandwiched between a pair of Woodhouse Performance Dodge Vipers in seventh, with Kuno Wittmer (No. 13 Dodge Motorsports Dodge Viper) in sixth and Jeff Courtney (No. 99 Kenda Tire Dodge Viper) in eighth.

Jason Daskalos (No. 5 Daskalos Developments Dodge Viper) finished ninth to become the third Dodge in the top 10, followed by the No. 29 Kleinschmidt/Blackdog Racing Chevrolet Corvette of Tony Gaples to complete the top 10.

Pobst extended both his Drivers’ Championship lead and the Manufacturers’ Championship lead for Volvo with the win. Pobst (788 points) now leads Wittmer (676), Crescentini (598), Sofronas (544) and Pilgrim (535) for individual title, with Volvo (51 points) leading Porsche (37) and Dodge (34) for the Manufacturers’ crown.

Cunningham began Saturday with a World Challenge record 37th career pole position, and ended the day extending his own all-time wins mark to 36 with his GTS victory.

The No. 43 Acura/RealTime Racing Acura TSX pulled away from the GTS field and the start, but was even again with Ernie Jakubowski’s No. 91 Fuchs/CDOC/Forgeline Porsche Cayman S and teammate Nick Esayian’s No. 34 Acura/RealTime Racing’s Acura TSX on the restart. Jakubowski’s restart put him just ahead of Cunningham at the line, but the veteran racer quickly pulled back to the point and began to get away.

Cunningham’s lead was safe when Esayian tried to get to the inside of Jakubowski on lap 16 and the two made contact, with Jakubowski facing the wrong way on the track and Esayian sitting nose-to-nose with the Canadian driver. Jakubowski, of nearby Oakville, Ontario, would go on to finish second in the GTS class, while Esayian finished third.

“Our Acura was running very well to get the pole this morning,” Cunningham said. “I’ve been kind of concerned about how my starts have been lately, but today I got a really good start, which was the only reason I was able to stay ahead of Ernie going into (Turn) 1. From there, I had things pretty well figured out, but then with the full-course yellow, you never know what’s going to happen on those restarts. Again, I was able to get just a little bit of breathing room after a lap or so. From there, it was just a matter of dealing with the GT cars coming to put us a lap down and dealing with some of the Touring Car traffic and trying to put a lap on them and from there, just make it to the end. It was a good day for Acura.”

Five-time World Challenge Champion Cunningham stretched his Drivers’ Championship margin over Esayian to 121 points with the win. Acura also holds a commanding lead in the GTS Manufacturers’ Championship.

RealTime Racing earned its second class win of the race with Nick Wittmer’s No. 93 HPD/HondaRacing/RealTime Honda Civic Si. Wittmer, the younger brother of GT driver Kuno, raced away to a 6.053-second win in an action-packed Touring Car race.

Wittmer pulled away at the start in just his second World Challenge race this season after campaigning the same car on the streets of Long Beach. At the previous race, Wittmer sat on pole but finished third to Robert Stout and Eric Meyer. In Toronto, he reversed the roles, avoided trouble and kept the checkered flag in his native country.

“It was a good day for the HPD Honda Civic in Touring Car,” said Cunningham, who in addition to his driving duties in GTS owns RealTime Racing. “For Nick to be able to get this win is exciting for him here in Toronto, especially when he also won the Canadian Touring Car race just after. We’re very happy for him and his performance this weekend. All in all, it was a good weekend for RealTime and a great weekend for Honda and Acura at the Acura Sports Car Challenge.”

The Touring Car action came deeper in the field, beginning on lap six when the Brett Sandberg’s No. 28 Whitehall Stable Acura TSX tried to move to the inside of Stout’s No. 18 DG-Spec/Scion/TRD/Lucas Oil Scion tC in Turn Three. Sandberg hit square into the Scion’s passenger side door and raised onto his two right-side tires, landing back on the pavement with a thud. While Sandberg made it back to pitlane, it ended his day and dropped Stout back to seventh in Touring Car with bodywork damage to the right side of his car.

Using the help of the full course caution two laps later, Stout closed to the rear of the Touring Car field and picked his way back through until he was again third, behind Meyer’s No. 32 XOWii Racing/Samaritan’s Feet/Delvira Mazda RX-8.

Pushing Meyer on lap 23 and looking for a way by, Stout ran off the track into the runoff area at Turn eight and back onto the track. Still in third but with a gap too large to catch Meyer, the two held their positions until the checkered flag.

Michael Pettiford earned the Sunoco Hard Charger award for advancing six positions in the race in his No. 41 Go 4 It Racing Schools/Hawk Volkswagen Jetta GLI to finish fourth in Touring Car.

Shea Holbrook completed the top five to earn her best career finish in the No. 67 Autohaus/MD&F Honda Civic Si.

Stout continues to hold the Touring Car Drivers’ Championship lead, 814-660 over Meyer. In the Manufacturers’ Championship, Scion (54 points) leads Volkswagen (38), with Honda (28) closing the gap with a win and Mazda (26) contending largely on the strength of Meyer’s finishes.

The World Challenge Championships return to action at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course for a doubleheader at the permanent road course, August 6-8.

For more information, please visit www.world-challenge.com

Follow World Challenge on Twitter @WCRacing.

Johnson, Roush Jr. Earn Dominating Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge Win at NJMP

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Billy Johnson and Jack Roush Jr. combined to lead all but four laps in Saturday's Garden State 250 victory at New Jersey Motorsports Park, the eighth round of the 2010 GRAND-AM Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge season.

Johnson took over from Roush at the halfway point of the 87-lap, two-and-a-half hour race on the 2.25-mile Thunderbolt Raceway course, and - after coming out of the pits second - moved around Joe Koenig on the inside of Turn 1 on Lap 49. He engaged in a spirited battle for several laps with second-place finisher Matt Plumb, but Johnson was never headed after he put the No. 61 ROUSH Performance Products Ford Mustang GT up front.

The winning margin of victory was 1.384 seconds, the seventh race this season with a margin of victory under two seconds.

"It was tough for my stint," Johnson said. "I had two fast cars - with fast teams and fast drivers - behind me. I managed that as best as I could. I had to work hard to keep the tires under us for the end."

Roush, who earlier Saturday garnered a track qualifying record of 1:30.109, led the opening 44 laps, which featured four of the race's five cautions. Johnson led the final 39 laps.

Plumb and new co-driver Nick Longhi finished second in the No. 13 RumBum.com BMW M3, which fell several positions early as the team opted for a two-pit stop strategy. They were joined on the podium by Joey Hand and Michael Marsal in the No. 97 Turner Motorsport BMW M3.

Fourth were Terry Borcheller and Joey Hand in the No. 45 Fall-Line/Stable One BMW M3, while Barry Waddell and second-place starter David Russell garnered fifth in the No. 99 H&S Tools BMW M3.

Despite falling to 23rd during an early race spin, Charles Espenlaub and Charlie Putman rebounded to finish eighth in the No. 48 Fall-Line/Sparco BMW M3. The pair maintained the championship lead in the standings, which now stands at 10 points (229-219) over Hand and Marsal. Johnson and Roush are 15 points behind the leaders.

In the Street Tuner class, Owen Trinkler and Randy Smalley took the No. 198 Cruise America/4 Winds RV Mini Cooper S to its first-ever victory in the series. Previously, the best finish for a Mini Cooper was third twice.

Trinkler and Smalley rebuilt a badly-burned car from an earlier race this season at their new RSR Motorsports shop in Florida, and the race was the first for the new Mini. Trinkler traded the lead twice with Ryan Eversley in the No. 75 JC Concrete/HPD Honda Civic Si before distancing himself from the field. The margin of victory in the ST race was 16.071 seconds over James Clay in the No. 80 RAYS Engineering/Performance Friction BMW 328i.

But the triumph didn't come without a little warning.

"We were a little short on fuel - we might have made it with that yellow - but we've had such bad luck that we just didn't want to risk it," Trinkler said. "And it was the right call."

The victory was the second in the series for Trinkler - and his first since 2003 - and Smalley's first ever.

Clay and David White finished second, while polesitter Martin Jensen and Paul Gerrard, who combined to lead 53 of 86 laps, were third in the No. 18 i2i Capital/RRT Racing BMW 328i. Eversley and Zach Lutz finished fourth, while points co-leaders Seth Thomas and Bill Heumann were fifth in the No. 81 RAYS Engineering/Performance Friction BMW 328i. The No. 81 started from the rear of the field after an engine change Saturday morning.

Additionally, Thomas and Heumann stretched their championship lead to 13 points (238-225) over Lawson Aschenbach and David Thilenius. Not long after Aschenbach took over from Thilenius, who ran second during his entire stint, the No. 74 Skunk2/HPD Honda Civic Si experienced transmission troubles. Aschenbach and Thilenius finished 17th, their worst finish of 2010.

The ninth of 10 rounds on the 2010 circuit comes Aug. 13-14 in the annual Grand Prix de Trois-Rivières in Trois-Rivières, Quebec.