The entry list comprised of 65 cars from 13 different manufacturers, running in 5 classes, the 5th one being
additional to the regular ones, and was for a Groupe National, although there were only four entries, of which
only two arrived, thus making a total of 63 race starters. In the other classes there were 30 cars in the Pro
Cup Class, 11 in the Pro-AM Class, 9 in the Silver Cup Class and 11 in the AM Class. In terms of
manufacturers the largest contingent was Mercedes-AMG with 14 cars, followed by Lamborghini with 11 and
then Audi with 9. Apart from the main 24 Hour Race, there were a number of support races on the Friday and
Saturday for the FIA Formula 3 European Championship, Formula Renault Eurocup, Lamborghini Super Trofeo
and Porsche GT3 Cup Challenge Benelux, providing a total of nine support races in all.
After the qualifying sessions and super pole shoot-out, it was the # 1 Audi Sport Team WRT entered Audi R8
LMS of Dries Vanthoor, Alex Riberas and Christopher Mies that claimed the overall pole position with a lap
time of 2mins 18.578secs, around 0.6sec quicker than the # 62 R-Motorsport entered Aston Martin V12
Vantage of Dominik Baumann, Marvin Kirchhöfer and Maxime Martin. However, at post qualifying
scrutineering the pole sitting Audi was found to have a technical infringement that the stewards deemed gave
it a performance advantage, and its super pole time was disallowed. It had to start the race behind all the
other nineteen super pole qualifiers, and added to this was an in-race 3mins stop-go penalty. This meant that
the # 62 Aston Martin started from pole position, with the # 2 Audi Sport Team WRT entered Audi R8 LMS
alongside it, followed by the # 72 SMP Racing entered Ferrari 488 GT3 and the # 29 Montplast by
Land-Motorsport entered Audi R8 LMS.
After all the preliminaries, the Total 24 Hours Race started at 16.30 on the Saturday afternoon, with the
Belgian national flag being used as part of the anniversary celebrations, rather than (what has become) the
traditional “lights out” start system. From “the flag” The # 2 Audi managed to get ahead of the # 72 Aston
Martin in the drag down to Eau Rouge, which it maintained through to the first round of pit stops. As the pits
stops cycled through in the early part of the race the lead changed between these two cars, the # 29 Audi
and the # 72 Ferrari popping to the front at the one hour mark. Unfortunately for the SMP Racing squad, the
Ferrari had a puncture during the third hour which dropped it over two laps down whilst it hobbled back to the
pits, a deficit from which it couldn’t recover. A lengthy pit stop for the # 72 Aston Martin as the early part of
the race progressed saw the # 8 Bentley come to the fore around quarter distance. Meanwhile there had been
the usual endurance race carnage and a flurry of full course yellows whilst either cars or debris were removed.
As daylight turned to darkness it was the # 29 Audi of Kelvin van der Linde/Sheldon van der Linde / Jeffrey
Schmidt headed the field into the night hours, followed by the # 98 BMW of Ricky Collard / Marco Wittmann /
Jesse Krohn and the # 8 Bentley of Vincent Abril / Andy Soucek / Maxime Soulet.
At around 3.00am a massive accident in Eau Rouge between the # 31 Team Parker Racing Bentley driven by
Andy Meyrick and the # 666 Attempto Racing Lamborghini driven by Jurgen Krebs, brought out the red flag,
and the race was neutralised for the best part of two hours whilst repairs were carried out to the barriers, thus
in effect making it the 22 Hours of Spa. Both drivers were reported as having suffered fractures, and were
taken to hospital, due to the high-speed nature of the accident, as a precaution, they were kept under
observation in intensive care, although neither had suffered life-threatening injuries.
As the sun lazily rose, it was the # 25 Audi of Markus Winkelhock / Frederic Vervisch / Christopher Haase
that headed the field, with the lead changing between it the # 99 BMW of Alexander Sims / Jens Klingmann /
Nicky Catsburg and the # 4 Mercedes of Yelmer Buurman / Luca Stolz / Maro Engel as they each made their
respective pit stops. During Sunday morning there was a big accident between the # 117 KUS Team75
Bernhard Porsche, the # 111 Aust Motorsport Audi and the # 8 Bentley Team M-Sport car. The subsequent
full-course yellow developed into a safety car period, cutting the then leading # 99 BMWs lead from around 10
to just 2secs. It was around this time that another strong overall contender earlier in the race came back into
play, this was the # 34 Walkenhorst Motorsport entered BMW driven by Tom Blomqvist / Christian Krognes /
Philipp Eng, which hit the front in the latter stages, and then went on to take the win from the similar # 99
Rowe Racing entry of Alexander Sims / Jens Klingmann / Nicky Catsburg by just 10.408secs after 24 (22)
hours of racing. This was quite an achievement for the Walkenhorst team, as this was their first Pro class
appearance in the Blancpain series and their drivers had never previously contested a 24 hour race together.
The final podium spot went to the # 29 Montaplast by Land-Motorsport, Audi R8 LMS, driven by the young
driver line-up of South African brothers Kelvin and Sheldon van der Linde with Jeffrey Schmidt.
Victory in the Pro-AM Class went to the # 333 Ferrari 488 GT3 entered by Rinaldi Racing and driven by Daniel
Keilwitz, Alexander Mattschull, Rinat Salikhov and David Perel, whilst Rinaldi also achieved a 3rd place
podium finish in the AM class with their # 488 example driven by Murad Sultanov, Rick Yoon, Nicholas Boulle
and Pierre Ehret. The top spot in the Silver Cup went to the # 12 Ombra Racing entered Lamborghini Huracan
GT3 driven by Kang Ling, Alex Frassineti, Romain Monti and Andrea Rizzoli, after a lengthy battle with the
similar # 78 Barwell Motorsport entry of Michele Beretta, Rik Breukers, Sandy Mitchell and Martin Kodric.
Barwell went one better in the AM Cup Class, as their # 77 example driven by Adrian Amstutz, Leo
Machitski, Richard Abra and Patrick Kujala took the class win. At the end of the day 47 of the original 63
starters were classified as finishers, an achievement in itself, after what had been a gruelling race on one of
the best and most challenging circuits in the world.
Overall & Pro Class Podium
1st # 34, Tom Blomqvist, Christian Krognes, Philipp Eng - Walkenhorst Motorsport, BMW M6 GT3
2nd # 99, Alexander Sims, Jens Klingmann, Nicky Catsburg - Rowe Racing, BMW M6 GT3
3rd # 29, Kelvin van der Linde, Sheldon van der Linde, Jeffrey Schmidt - Montaplast by Land-Motorsport, Audi
R8 LMS
Pro-AM Cup Class Podium
1st # 333, Daniel Keilwitz, Alexander Mattschull, Rinat Salikhov, David Perel - Rinaldi Racing, Ferrari 488 GT3
2nd # 42, Chris Buncombe, Nick Leventis, Lewis Williamson, David Fumanelli - Strakka Racing,
Mercedes-AMG GT3
3rd # 175, Kenny Habul, Bernd Schneider, Thomas Jäger, Martin Konrad - Sun Energy 1 Team HTP
Motorsport, Mercedes-AMG GT3
Silver Cup Podium
1st # 12, Kang Ling, Alex Frassineti, Romain Monti, Andrea Rizzoli - Ombra Racing, Lamborghini Huracan
GT3
2nd # 78, Michele Beretta, Rik Breukers, Sandy Mitchell, Martin Kodric - Barwell Motorsport, Lamborghini
Huracan GT3
3rd # 6, Abdulaziz Al Faisal, Hubert Haupt, Manuel Metzger, Gabriele Piana - BLACK FALCON,
Mercedes-AMG GT3
AM Cup Class Podium
1st # 77, Adrian Amstutz, Leo Machitski, Richard Abra, Patrick Kujala - Barwell Motorsport, Lamborghini
Huracan GT3
2nd # 9, Alberto di Folco, Stefano Costantini, Bernard Delhez, Sylvain Debs - Target Racing, Lamborghini
Huracan GT3
3rd # 488, Murad Sultanov, Rick Yoon, Nicholas Boulle, Pierre Ehret - Rinaldi Racing, Ferrari 488 GT3
Groupe National
1st # 70, Pierre Yves Paque, Gregory Paisse, Bob Wilwert, Gilles Petit - Speed Lover, Porsche 991 Cup
2nd # 67, Andrew Haryanto, Andres Josephsohn, Beniamino Caccia, Sarah Bovy - GDL Racing, Lamborghini
Super Trofeo
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