Recapping Webber's first Endurance podium at Silverstone

By Andrew Kitchener / Roar Guru

Imagine how Australia’s Mark Webber must be feeling right about now, a week removed from his debut effort for the Porsche factory team in the 6 Hours of Silverstone?

He made his first podium in the opening round of the 2014 FIA World Endurance Championship thanks to – rather than, as in the past, in spite of – his teammates.

Long gone now is Sebastien Vettel, the German Formula One champion who isn’t exactly Australia’s most favourite international sportsman. Webber has two brilliant teammates in up-and-coming New Zealander Brendon Hartley and experienced German Timo Bernhard at Porsche, and they appear to complement him perfectly.

The Webber-Bernhard-Hartley trio is certainly a swift one, netting a third place in the first race for the new 919 prototype. With a six-hour event at Spa-Francorchamps to come before the legendary 24 Hours of Le Mans in June, the sky appears to be the limit. If the new Porsche can maintain its reliability at Circuit de la Sarthe, watch out. They showed at Silverstone, a track just as fast as Le Mans, that the car has speed to burn.

Webber hailed the third-place finish (two laps down to the winner) as a “massive step” for the German manufacturer, which hasn’t had a car in world sports car racing since the Porsche RS Spyder that saw some success in the American Le Mans Series when it was run by the powerhouse Team Penske outfit. Ironically, two of Penske’s drivers then, the Frenchman Romain Dumas and Bernhard remain with the Porsche team. On loan to Audi in 2010, they won the 24 Hours of Le Mans with Mike Rockenfeller.

As good as Porsche was, the real story from the premiere prototype (LMP1) class was the stunning 1-2 finish for Toyota. Actually, that was only half the story, but a good one to tell: the #8 TS040 Hybrid of Sebastien Buemi, Anthony Davidson and Nicolas Lapierre won by a full lap over their sister car, the #7, driven by Alex Wurz, Kazuki Nakajima and Stephane Sarrazin.

The other half of the Silverstone narrative was the rugged outing for the powerhouse Audi squad. You never count out a team whose cars are driven by sports car legends like nine-time Le Mans overall winner Tom Kristensen, but it was a disaster of a day for the German team, whose cars both failed to finish a race that was red-flagged about half an hour short of its scheduled end due to a torrential downpour that left standing water on the circuit.

It was Toyota’s day, and a famous victory was almost handed to them when the two Audis crashed out. Certainly, the Japanese squad showed speed across the weekend, but they were helped by the weather conditions, which contributed to the slick track and dangerous conditions. Webber’s Porsche deserved it’s third placing. The WEC debutants weren’t quite able to run with the big dogs at Silverstone, but that should change.

You can only imagine that the twin failure in England will spur the Audi squad on, and, provided they win the uphill battle to repair their two cars in time for the six hour race at Spa-Francorchamps in early May, they figure to be tough to beat. Both cars sustained pretty serious chassis damage, and it’s not certain that they will be ready to race in Belgium. Audi might have to use chassis from it’s test cars.

At the same time as the two primary cars are being repaired, Dr Wolfgang Ulrich’s squad is preparing its third car, to be driven by Oliver Jarvis, Marco Bonanomi and Filipe Albuquerque for the race, as preparation for a stout three-car assault on Le Mans.

There is a lot going on in Audi land, that’s for sure, but this is a crack unit, and only a fool would write them off at this early stage. No team with the calibre of drivers that Audi boasts are ever going to be out of the fight.

Had the weather in Silverstone been better, we may well have been dissecting a dominant Audi 1-2 victory.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2014-04-30T01:29:41+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Given the encouragement of hybrid and diesel powered prototypes and the Green Power challenge they had at Le Mans a few years back, the WEC must be fast becoming one of the favourite motorsports playgrounds of manufacturers. A shame Peugeot aren't still about - imagine the four-way battle of Audi, Porsche, Toyota and Peugeot!! Plus, those prototypes look so sweet!

2014-04-30T01:15:12+00:00

nordster

Guest


True, its the premier class for engineers and designers youd think as well. More freedom that some other categories, the way f1 is going. Has appeal as a purists series, the WEC.

AUTHOR

2014-04-29T09:22:37+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


There was some comparison during the broadcast. The LMP1 cars are a little slower, but they can do this amazing thing that's known as wheel-to-wheel racing and it generally leads to a lot of passing. Somewhat foreign to F1, I know...

2014-04-29T00:57:56+00:00

nordster

Guest


Actually its A, B, C etc grade, plenty of classes. I think the prototypes would challenge the f1 circus times also? Fast to the point of absurd watching them cut through the GT cars back in the field :)

AUTHOR

2014-04-28T11:34:04+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Yeah, because racing six hours (or twenty-four) is so B-grade compared to a 90-minute grand prix. Come on, man!

2014-04-28T10:22:26+00:00

Simoc

Guest


The B grade show for those that can't cut it with the big boys of motor racing. It is where Webber has always belonged. So good to have a top liner like Ricciardo representing Australia now. Knowledgeable Ozzies prefer Vettel to the sooky boy Webber.

AUTHOR

2014-04-28T05:29:57+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Pleasure. Spa will be interesting in a few weeks, and then the countdown to Le Mans, where Porsche will need to be really good to battle Audi and Toyota for overall honours.

2014-04-28T04:36:56+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


Best coverage I've seen of Webber's endeavours! Thanks AK

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