castrol edge australia enewsletter – vol 4, issue 17

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IT’S OUR BEST OIL YET... WWW.CASTROLEDGE.COM.AU 18th SEPTEMBER 2014 VOLUME 4 - ISSUE 17

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In this week's edition of the Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter we celebrate with VW as they win the WRC manufacturers crown! More championships for Castrol-oiled crews with Marco Wittmann taking the 2014 DTM crown and Magic Michael the WSBK Supersport title! Race, rally, karts and bikes, it's all here and a bunch more!

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Page 1: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

IT’S OUR BEST OIL YET... WWW.CASTROLEDGE.COM.AU 18th SEPTEMBER 2014VOLUME 4 - ISSUE 17

Page 2: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

MIXED RESULTS FOR CASTROL CREWS AT SANDOWN 500It was a mixed bag of results for Castrol-oiled V8 Supercars crews with Ford Pepsi Max Crew securing two cars in the top-10.

Chaz Mostert drove his most impressive endurance race stint yet to come from a lap down to seventh. Co-driver Paul Morris put in an error-free first stint only to lose time in his first stop due to an issue with the right-front wheel. Despite the delay he maintained a solid pace before handing over to Mostert around one-third distance.

From there the rising star used raw pace and smart strategy around safety cars to finish well inside the top 10. Mark Winterbottom and Steve Owen endured a tougher day as they battled an ill-handling car to finish 10th. An innocent spin for Owen lost some ground during his stint but Winterbottom believed his ultimate finishing position would be little different.

The four-car Castrol-oiled Nissan Motorsport V8 Supercars team endured a day of ups and down during the Sandown 500. The Jack Daniel’s Nissan Altima of Rick Kelly and David Russell finished the best of the four-car team, crossing the line in 13th place.

The #36 Norton Nissan entry of Michael Caruso and Dean Fiore finished in 18th place, a lap off the leaders, after the car was handed a drive through penalty for spinning its wheels during the pit stop. Todd Kelly and international driver Alex Buncombe drove a controlled race, but

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 3: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

Championship Points

POS DRIVER POINTS

1 Jamie Whincup 2325

2 Craig Lowndes 2052

3 Mark Winterbottom 2046

4 Shane Van Gisbergen 1982

5 James Courtney 1964

6 Fabian Coulthard 1856

7 Chaz Mostert 1694

8 Scott McLaughlin 1677

9 Garth Tander 1662

10 David Reynolds 1402

11 Jason Bright 1329

12 Michael Caruso 1328

13 Scott Pye 1323

14 Will Davison 1302

15 Rick Kelly 1268

16 Nick Percat 1236

17 Russell Ingall 1188

18 James Moffat 1187

19 Lee Holdsworth 1117

20 David Wall 1094

21 Tim Slade 1074

22 Dale Wood 936

23 Jack Perkins 905

24 Todd Kelly 839

25 Robert Dahlgren 663

factors out of their hands left them to finish a disappointing 20th.

The James Moffat/Taz Douglas entry was out of the race after just 10 laps when a dry break fuel filler malfunctioned. After a large fuel spill in pit lane, the team decided to retire the car. Supercheap Auto Racing’s Tim Slade and Tony D’Alberto brought home 138 valuable points with 12th place the safety car affected race, despite Slade’s cool suit failing during his stint.

The next event of the V8 Supercars Championship heads to Mount Panorama for the world-famous Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000 on October 9-12.

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 4: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

Castrol-backed VW driver Sebastien Ogier boosted his World Rally Championship title defence as he fended off a charging Jari-Matti Latvala on the final day to win Coates Hire Rally Australia at Coffs Harbour.

The result sees the Castrol EDGE-oiled Volkswagen Motorsport squad secure the 2014 WRC Manufacturers crown after what has been another dominant year for the German marque in rallying.

The Volkswagen driver was unable to relax on the final six stages of the rally with team-mate Latvala applying pressure on the Frenchman, but Ogier kept his cool to win the event for the second year in succession. Latvala trailed his stablemate by just 6.8 seconds after 309km of challenging stages, while Andreas Mikkelsen completed a Volkswagen podium lockout in third.

CASTROL-BACKED VW WIN WRC MANUFACTURERS CROWN

Citroen’s Kris Meeke ended the rally in fourth although he had been running in the podium places for the majority of the event. However, a one minute penalty issued on Saturday night for corner cutting in Stage 10 dashed his rostrum

hopes. Ogier claimed 10 stage wins but he was far from dominant with Meeke and team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala all enjoying spells in the lead over the three days.

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 5: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

Coates Hire Rally Australia Results

Pos Driver Team Time Gap

1 Sebastien Ogier Volkswagen 2:53:18.0s

2 Jari-Matti Latvala Volkswagen 2:53:24.8s +6.8s

3 Andreas Mikkelsen Volkswagen 2:54:36.0s +1:18.0s

4 Kris Meeke Citroen 2:55:02.0s +1:44.0s

5 Mikko Hirvonen M-Sport Ford 2:55:11.6s +1:53.6s

6 Hayden Paddon Hyundai 2:56:14.2s +2:56.2s

7 Thierry Neuville Hyundai 2:57:46.2s +4:28.2s

8 Elfyn Evans M-Sport Ford 2:58:28.0s +5:10.0s

9 Robert Kubica M-Sport Ford 2:59:57.8s +6:39.8s

10 Chris Atkinson Hyundai 3:02:47.4s +9:29.4s

An inspired tyre choice for the second run of stages on Saturday provided the platform for victory as Ogier reclaimed the lead for a second time during SS11, before an impressive measured drive in the final stages. Mikko Hirvonen finished fifth for M-Sport Ford while Kiwi Hayden Paddon battled hard to come home in sixth for Hyundai, his career best finish in the WRC.

Australia’s Chris Atkinson brought his Hyundai i20 WRC home in 10th in what has been challenging home rally for the former Subaru works driver. Ogier has extended his championship lead over Latvala to 50 points.

Ott Tanak escaped injury after a huge side impact in his WRC2 car on the 10.86km Bucca SS19. WRC2 was taken out by Nasser Al-Attiyah and co-driver Giovanni Bernacchini, beating Jari Ketomaa.

2014 WRC drivers’ standings

POS DRIVER POINTS

1 Sebastien Ogier 214

2 Jari-Matti Latvala 164

3 Andreas Mikkelsen 125

4 Mikko Hirvonen 83

5 Thierry Nueville 80

6 Mads Ostberg 74

7 Kris Meeke 67

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 6: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

One aim of the Castrol-backed Bloodhound SSC project (aside from breaking the land speed record) is to excite and inspire, and it looks like that’s happening already.

A life-size replica of the rocket and jet-powered car has scooped a Guinness World Record for being the World’s Largest K’NEX Structure.

Assembled by Bloodhound fans and a team from Royal British Legion Industries (RBLI), the 13-metre-long replica took two months and nearly 140,000 K’NEX pieces to build, beating the previous record held by a T-Rex located in the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

ONE RECORD ALREADY IN THE BAG FOR BLOODHOUND TEAM!

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 7: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 8: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

Castrol-oiled BMW driver Marco Wittmann claimed his maiden DTM title with two races to spare at the Lausitzring in a meeting which also saw Pascal Wehrlein record a maiden victory in the series.

Wittmann, who has undoubtedly been the star driver of the season with four victories, was able to produce a measured drive safe in the knowledge a solid points finish would earn him the title.

“I am still completely overwhelmed, and it is difficult to put the feelings going through my head into words. I am simply overjoyed,” said Wittmann. “I obviously knew that I could wrap things up here at the Lausitzring, but when I crossed the

finish line and my dream became reality, my emotions were all over the place.

“I am very grateful to BMW Motorsport and BMW Team RMG. Everyone did everything in their power to ensure that we were successful. My goal at the start of the season was to get my first race win in the DTM. Now I am DTM champion – that is absolutely awesome.”

In the end, the BMW driver came home in sixth place which was enough to secure the 2014 title with visits to Zandvoort and Hockenheim remaining. While Wittmann celebrated his deserved championship success, Wehrlein dominated the race at Lausitzring as he converted his pole

CASTROL-BACKED BMW DRIVER WITTMANN SECURES DTM CROWN

position into an healthy lead early on in wet conditions.

There proved to be no stopping the 19-year-old Mercedes driver as he went on to record his maiden victory from fellow Mercedes runner Christian Vietoris. Timo Scheider claimed the final place on the podium for Phoenix Audi.

“Now that we have won the Drivers’ Championship, our goal is to win the Team and Manufacturers’ titles with BMW Team RMG and BMW. That would be the icing on the cake. Other than that, I just want to enjoy the races in Zandvoort and Hockenheim – and, if possible, celebrate a bit more success.” Wittman added.

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 9: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

2014 DTM Standings

Pos Driver Pts

1 Marco Wittmann 128

2 Christian Vietoris 59

3 Mattias Ekström 56

4 Edoardo Mortara 56

5 Mike Rockenfeller 54

6 Bruno Spengler 42

7 Pascal Wehrlein 40

8 Maxime Martin 39

9 Augusto Farfus Jr. 39

10 Robert Wickens 37

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 10: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

Castrol-backed Pata Honda rider Jonathan Rea took his Honda CBR1000RR Fireblade SP to fourth and fifth place finishes in today’s two 10th-round World Superbike championship races at Jerez in Spain, retaining his third place in the series with just two rounds to go.

The two races were won by Italian Marco Melandri, with French rider Sylvain Guintoli taking two second places and series leader Tom Sykes scoring a third in race two but seeing his championship lead reduced.

I’m really happy with today because it was hard to have high expectations last night, knowing we had to make a big change,” said Rea.

CASTROL-BACKED PATA HONDA DELIVERS STRONG SUPERBIKE RESULTS IN SPAIN

sessions at the 4.423km Jerez circuit.

In race one I had a terrible start and struggled a bit. When we got to half race distance I think I went the wrong way with the buttons and made hard work for myself in the second half of the race,” said Haslam.

“We knew this round would be tough but we’ve come away with two top eights and, even though I would prefer to fight with the next group, I enjoyed a battle so, all-in-all not too bad.”

Following the cancellation of the Moscow round, the World Superbike championship will reconvene in one month’s time for round 11 at the French circuit of Magny-Cours.

“But when we reverted to the previous spec engine and made some changes to the front of the bike I was able to ride the way I like without having to change my style too much.

“Starting from tenth on the grid really didn’t help me to use the tyre to its full potential and gain lap times at the beginning; but in the end my pace was really, really strong in both races. We can take a lot of positives but, to be honest, we were chasing our tails a little earlier in the weekend.”

Rea’s Pata Honda team-mate Leon Haslam finished seventh and eighth in the two 20-lap outings which were run in cooler, more overcast conditions than the earlier practice and qualifying

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 11: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

2014 WSBK standings

1 Tom Sykes 352 pts KAWASAKI

2 Sylvain Guintoli 321 pts APRILIA

3 Jonathan Rea 285 pts HONDA

4 Marco Melandri 267 pts APRILIA

5 Loris Baz 262 pts KAWASAKI

6 Chaz Davies 188 pts DUCATI

7 Eugene Laverty 154 pts SUZUKI

8 Davide Guigliano 153 pts DUCATI

9 Toni Elias 151 pts APRILIA

10 Leon Haslam 150 pts HONDA

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 12: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

Michael van der Mark clinched the World Supersport title in Jerez, Spain, last weekend on his Castrol Power1-lubricated Pata Honda.

The 21-year-old cruised home in first position after taking the lead with just two laps remaining. There are still rounds to go in the championship, but the young Dutchman’s 76-point lead means he cannot be caught and the title is his.

“The team has done an amazing job,” the Dutchman said. “This year they gave me an incredible CBR to ride with an amazing set-up.”

TITLE GLORY FOR CASTROL-BACKED MAGIC MICHAEL

Since crashing out of round one in Australia back in February, the 21-year-old Dutch rider has finished no lower than second in the subsequent eight races, taking five victories along the way. Shortly after his triumph last Sunday, Michael talked on camera about his world championship season, about his Pata Honda CBR600RR and about how it feels to be Holland’s first solo motorcycling world champion for 40 years. Of course, two rounds remain in the 2014 World Supersport championship (5 October at Magny-Cours in France and

2 November at Losail, Qatar) so further victories for Michael are still possible. However, with the cancellation of two rounds this season, Michael will not be able to match the record eight World Supersport victories or points-haul of 276 recorded in the 2007 season by Hannspree Ten Kate Hondarider Kenan Sofuoglu.

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE

Page 13: Castrol EDGE Australia eNewsletter – Vol 4, Issue 17

Championship Standings

1 Michael van der Mark 185 pts Pata Honda World Supersport Team

2 Florian Marino 109 pts Kawasaki Intermoto Ponyexpres

3 Jules Cluzel 107 pts MV Agusta RC

4 Lorenzo Zanetti 90 pts Pata Honda World Supersport Team

5 Kev Coghlan 88 pts DMC Panavto-Yamaha

6 Patrick Jacobson 87 pts Kawasaki Intermoto Ponyexpres

7 Kenan Sofuoglu 86 pts MAHI Racing Team India

8 Roberto Rolfo 71 pts Team GO Eleven

9 Raffaele De Rosa 67 pts Core PTR Honda

10 Jack Kennedy 56 pts CIA Insurance Honda

STRENGTH FOR MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE