Le Mans
Weekend Part Four - Hours 18 to 24
18
Hours
Having
resumed his stint, Robin Liddell proceeded to trudge around the circuit
at what was, for him, a modest pace, typically setting times of around
four-forty. It was with some relief that he was able to confirm over
the radio that the engine temperatures were now under control, but the
accomplished racer was finding the strain of driving so much within
himself almost as stressful as pushing along at the limit.

19
Hours
At
the conclusion of his double-stint at around 11:20 Robin handed over
to David Warnock. It was not long after this that he was intercepted
by the Radio Le Mans pitlane reporter, who announced that the popular
English-language station had chosen Robin as their "Man of the
Match" for his Herculean achievement in driving fifteen laps last
night without power steering. "He deserves a medal the size of
a town hall clock," declared John Hindhaugh. Robin then spoke about
the car's difficulties and the team's prospects for the months ahead.
"Now it's a damage limitation exercise," he said, explaining
that the car had suffered from a succession of 'little niggly things'.
"It's been an interesting experience," he admitted, "and
I've learned an awful lot. I think we've shown what we can do,"
he said, with thoughts towards the possibility the American Le Mans
Series. "If we can run with the works cars in race trim, "
as the PK Porsche has done this weekend, "and we can get a lift
up, then there's no reason why we can't compete directly with them."
When
eleven had shown on the clock and nineteen hours had been spent on track
the PK car was just a fraction over a lap ahead of the DBA 675 prototype.
Over the following forty minutes, however, and influenced by the two-and-a-half
minutes taken for Robin and David to change places, plus the crew to
refuel the car, that gap narrowed inexorably. Finally, at quarter to
twelve, the #26 prototype swept by. Although John Nielsen's car had
spent over four hours in the pits, it was also able to lap regularly
in the sub-four-minute mark, and was steadily recovering some of that
lost ground.
While
losing a place on track to the 675 made no difference to the class order,
which still showed the #78 Porsche 7th in GT, the arrival in the pitlane
of the T2M Porsche #84 with a clutch problem would. The Ickx / Bourdais
/ Berville entry would be static in the garage for almost three hours,
and an eighteen-lap advantage for the German squad would evaporate.
For the time being, however, PK was still shown 26th in the overall
standing. Three more retirements were confirmed: the Riley and Scott
on 214 laps, the #68 Viper on 229, and the #12 Panoz Elan LMP with 233
laps under its belt.
20
Hours
Midday
on Sunday and, despite the earlier concerns, the #78 car had, if anything,
restored some of its earlier pace. It was also looking a good deal cleaner
than most of its rivals, many of these others showing all the signs
and stains of twenty hours hard driving. During the earlier half-hour
stop, Mike Pickup had insisted that the car be cleaned, and with the
temperature problem apparently stabilised, David was posting some perfectly
respectable times. Following the lap-by lap progress of the PK Porsche
was not, however, as straightforward as it had been. For some reason
the timing transponder was proving erratic, with the car shown on the
timing screens simply as 'Porsche'. Normally a driver's name is also
displayed for every competitor on track. Initially the organisers had
wanted the team to bring the car back into the pits to have the faulty
unit replaced, but after some tactful persuasion they agreed to revert
to a manual system. This threw up some interesting times, with one lap
at 12.30 recorded at 14:17. It stood out as unusually quick alongside
the more typical, and team-advised, four-thirties and forties, but minutes
later times for every car in the race had extended to seven minutes
or more.
Thankfully
this was no cause for concern in the PK garage. For the third time in
the race the trio of Corvette safety cars had been deployed, on this
occasion so that a fire aboard the #99 XL Racing Ferrari could be safely
extinguished and the stricken car removed from the track. David headed
for the pitlane immediately and handed the car over to Piers Masarati.
It was quarter to one. As Piers sped off down the pitlane to rejoin
the race he effectively overtook the stationary T2M Porsche, thereby
moving PK into 6th place in GT.
21
Hours
For
the first twenty minutes of his new stint Piers was stuck behind the
safety car, and racing wouldn't resume before 13.10. On current form
Mike calculated that the car would have completed its 75% requirement
for classification as a finisher by about three o'clock, and outward
expressions of concern over the earlier overheating problems had eased
somewhat.
Although not during this period, when he was still under instruction
to look after the engine, Piers had been improving his personal best
throughout the race. Piers was now capable of consistent laps in the
four-eighteens, and unofficial timings reveal that his best lap of the
race was around 4:16. Some hours later he was still feeling justifiably
proud of his times but, for his final stint, he had to be content with
taking things easy. It proved to be an uneventful hour-and-ten-minutes,
with Piers completing his final sweep through the Porsche Curves just
as the race entered its twenty-second hour.
22
Hours
Two
o'clock on Sunday afternoon; two hours to go, and Robin Liddell was
back in the #78 Porsche for his final double-stint. With the car refuelled,
fresh rubber all round and a top-up on the engine oil, Robin powered
out of the pitlane at 14.08.

Now
with an eight-lap advantage over the T2M car, which had emerged from
its garage ten minutes earlier after completing the clutch change, there
was little on-track pressure for the Scot. Similarly, only dire problems
for the other cars in the class could narrow the gaps ahead, with the
nearest car, the fifth-placed Racers Group Porsche, eighteen laps to
the fore. Elsewhere, however, battles persisted, especially for overall
positions in the prototype category. Gunnar Jeanette (Panoz #11), Jean-Marc
Gounon (Courage #13) and Jan Lammers (Dome #15) were all on the same
lap and fighting for fifth, and their dispute would not be resolved
until the final seconds of the race.
On-going
duels, such as the one between these three prototypes, tend to be rare
in a twenty-four hour race and a strange atmosphere descends across
the circuit in these closing stages. The emphasis is no longer on racing,
per se, but more on simply keeping going. The spectators understand
this, and watch the cars fly past in almost reverential silence. In
many cases it no longer matters what position they hold, or how close
they are to the car in front; it's the fact that they are still pounding
around the eight-mile circuit more than twenty hours after they started
that matters. There's an honour and a pride in simply finishing, and
everyone's a winner. Under those kinds of circumstance one can only
feel the greatest sympathy for the likes of Graham Nash and his team
when the British-entered Saleen stopped out on track at ten to three
with a broken crankshaft. They were a little over an hour short of finishing
fifth in GTS.
23
Hours
Just
as the race entered its final hour Robin Liddell steered the #78 Porsche
back into the pitlane for the last time. He rolled up smoothly outside
the pit garage, coming to a swift halt at Mike Pickup's feet. Just as
Mike had calculated, the car had covered 271 laps and was well within
the 75% requirement. The engineers and mechanics moved with the speed
and efficiency of automata as they repeated the duties that had become
almost second nature to them by this time - either that or fatigue no
longer allowed them the luxury of hesitation. The car was refuelled,
the windscreen cleaned and the air intakes were checked for debris.
A quick inspection for anything else untoward and then Robin was off
again once more. The final stop had added just two minutes to the overall
time spent in the pits by the #78 car, making a total for the race of
2 hours 44 minutes and 29 seconds. The class-leading #93 car, by comparison,
had spent just 1:15.07, and thereby hung the price of victory.

The
grandstands opposite the pits were steadily filling as the crowds gathered
to witness the conclusion of the 71st Le Mans 24 Hours, eighty years
after the first race. Back in 1923 the winners were Legache and Leonard
driving a Chenard & Walcker, but the fastest lap fell to Frank Clement
in a Bentley at an average speed of 107.3 kph - about 67 mph. Although
present largely in name and little else, Bentley was fastest again in
2003. The best lap for the #8 Speed 8 was 3:35.529, achieved at an average
speed of 227.997 kph on lap 236. If there's a significant difference
between the years and these relative speeds, then two other facts bear
repeating. That first Bentley entry, in 1923, was a wholly privateer
effort that received only grudging support from the famous WO himself
- although he did attend the race and was subsequently persuaded of
its value. From that fact alone, perhaps, stems today's undiminished
national fascination with this uniquely British event held on foreign
soil, but I digress. Conversely, the 2003 assault has been a multi-million
pound factory effort with no expense spared.
The
second point relates to the cars themselves. The 1923 Bentley, carrying
the number 8, was a standard 3-litre sports, straight out of the London
showroom. It had brakes on only two wheels, ran through the night with
only one headlight, and had no windscreen wipers. The weather was appalling.
It lost two hours when a stone punctured the fuel tank and the car rattled
to a halt at Arnage. Clement ran back to the pits, collected a can of
fuel, borrowed a bicycle from a French soldier, rode back to the car,
repaired the hole, and returned with the bike perched across the back
seats - yes, it had room for passengers! Admittedly the windscreen wipers
oof the first Speed 8 didn't work either, but in every other respect
the two concepts of "motor car" could not be further apart.
With
fifteen minutes to go fate had one more cruel hand to play. Tristan
Gommendy in the #16 'Racing for Holland' Dome had a spin - and a huge
accident. Despite returning to the pitlane, the team could not get the
car back out on track again and it became the final official retirement.
No such misfortune for Robin Liddell. The PK Porsche continued to run
strongly and was sounding brisk as Robin worked through the gears, accelerating
hard out of the Ford Chicane and up the main straight. The rasp of the
Porsche's exhaust, amplified by the overhanging grandstands, reverberated
through the spectators. At five to four the teams were released from
their garages and rushed to throng the pit wall. The PK squad, distinguished
by their striking black and yellow kit, hung over the parapet, a large
Union Jack waving bravely overhead. Cheers greeted every car that passed,
some singly, others grouped, while flags and banners waved and claxons
blared around the stands. It is always a singularly moving atmosphere.
The
leading Bentley, #7 began its final lap. There would be no formation
finish this year, with the second car close behind on track and, reputedly,
the two squads no longer on the best of terms. It was a photo opportunity
forgone by the Bentley PR machine but made no difference to the winning
car's reception. With a final kick of the tail the dark green car drove
hard across the line, veering right towards the Bentley pits in acknowledgement
of the factory's efforts. The cheer was deafening. Other cars began
to sweep beneath the chequered flag, some received almost as enthusiastically,
others perhaps more so. Mike and the rest of the PK team craned their
necks to catch an early glimpse of the black-striped yellow nosed Porsche.

Time
seems to slow in moments of intensity, and never more so than when you've
been waiting twenty-four hours without a moment's rest. Then, greeted
by fists punched towards the sky and a spontaneous outbreak of hugs
and back-slapping, Robin swept across the line. He had completed ten
hours, three minutes and nine seconds in the car, the second greatest
total of any driver in the race. Piers had driven for just over six
hours, and David for five. Ignoring the frantic flag-waving marshals
trying vainly to direct the finishers straight towards Parc Fermé,
Robin pulled over and stopped, right beneath the team. Several leaped
down to congratulate him but the yellow flags were insistent. "Allez,
allez!!" came the call.
Reluctantly,
and to the obvious despair of the team, Robin was forced to drive on.
Memories of being able to accompany the car through to the very end
just two years ago added a taint of disappointment to the celebrations,
but there was still much to be proud of and emotions to share. At the
bottom of the pitlane the crowds were already gathering around the podium,
but the entire PK team, including partners and children, headed back
to the garage. A human pyramid was created, with Kieron Marchant at
its peak, to snip the wires holding the "Porsche 78" board
in place over the door. It came down in one piece and was hurried inside
before the surge of vultures outside could snatch another souvenir.
A German beside me sneered his disapproval before turning away. It was
with some relief that the shutter came down - this year for all the
right reasons.
The British National Anthem was echoing round the circuit as the PK
team emerged into the daylight of the paddock once again. A brief uncertainty
descended before the promise of a cold beer prompted a mass migration
back to the motorhome.
The
garage was locked - out of bounds now until the following day as far
as Mike was concerned - and with it the end of another year's test of
determination and endurance. "I'm not quite sure how I feel just
at the moment," admitted Mike Pickup when he'd had a chance to
sit down. "I think I need a glass of red wine to compose myself."
It was, indeed, a hard sensation to pinpoint. The euphoria of finishing
in 2001 had been especially moving, heightened by being the team's first
finish at Le Mans. The disappointment of retirement last year had been
equally powerful. By contrast, 2003 wasn't quite either of these. Expectations
had been higher, perhaps, and finishing no longer the unique accomplishment
it had been two years ago. What is impossible to forget, however, is
that being selected to race at Le Mans and then completing the course
is an extraordinary achievement that will forever demand respect and
admiration. When you've worked with a team like PK neither sentiment
is ever far away.
PK
Sport would like to thank Marcus Potts and DailySportsCar.net for the
reports on the site and the excellent coverage of the the Le Mans 24
Hour Race