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Topic: CORVETTE RACING AT BAHRAIN: Let’s Go Out with a Ban

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CORVETTE RACING AT BAHRAIN: Let’s Go Out with a Ban (1/1)
 11/8/22 4:21pm
cor123
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Joined: 11/1/2010
Posts: 871

PRESS RELEASE:

Final GTE Pro race in WEC sees Milner, Tandy going for second victory of 
season


CORVETTE RACING AT BAHRAIN: Let’s Go Out with a Bang!
Final GTE Pro race in WEC sees Milner, Tandy going for second victory of 
season

DETROIT (Nov. 8, 2022) – Corvette Racing will put a cap on its first full 
year in the FIA World Endurance Championship with its initial trip to the 
Middle East for the season-ending Eight Hours of Bahrain.

As they have all season, Tommy Milner and Nick Tandy will pilot the No. 64 
Mobil 1/SiriusXM Chevrolet Corvette C8.R in Corvette Racing’s first trip to 
the Middle East. A new venue doesn’t intimidate the team as it has a victory 
at Monza in its Italian debut. Bahrain will be the 33rd different track for 
the Corvette program.

Another victory not only would close out the WEC season in the best way 
possible, but it also would put Corvette Racing in the history books as the 
winner of the final GTE PRO race in the championship.

The category has been part of the WEC since the 2011 season, and the 
technical regulations matched the GT Le Mans (GTLM) class in the IMSA 
WeatherTech SportsCar Championship from 2014-2021. In the GTE/GTLM era, 
Corvette Racing has recorded 33 victories across WEC and IMSA competition.

The 3.363-mile, 15-turn Bahrain International Circuit is unique in multiple 
ways. It features less than 17 meters of elevation change over the course of 
a lap, and the entire lap – all but the exit of Turn Four – is run below sea 
level.

As expected, it’s a very arid circuit with desert sands and rocks bordering 
the racing tarmac and runoff areas. In many ways, Bahrain is similar to 
WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca on the IMSA calendar. There, sand and dust 
constantly blow across the track surface which puts a premium on generating 
grip and maximizing tire life.

While the track surface at Bahrain is much smoother and less destructive to 
tires compared to Laguna Seca, the significantly warmer air and track 
temperatures at Bahrain compared to the Monterey Peninsula will make it a 
challenge to prevent sliding of the tires across the track surface. To that 
point, tire performance will play a significant role in the outcome of 
Saturday’s race.

The No. 64 Corvette opened the WEC season with a strong second-place showing 
at the rain-shortened 1,000 Miles of Sebring. Things were trending the right 
way for the Tandy/Milner pairing at the Six Hours of Spa before a red flag 
just past the one-hour mark wiped out the team’s first planned pit stop and 
effectively put the Corvette a lap down before finishing fourth.

The 24 Hours of Le Mans was a cruel blow with the No. 64 C8.R eliminated 
while leading just shy of the 18-hour mark. Spirits lifted within the team 
following a thrilling class victory at Monza where the team won a 
fuel-mileage race for its first WEC win outside of Le Mans. Milner and Tandy 
finished fifth on a challenging weekend at Fuji in September.

The Eight Hours of Bahrain for the FIA World Endurance Championship is 
scheduled for 2 p.m. Arabian Standard Time (AST) / 6 a.m. ET Saturday from 
the Bahrain International Circuit. Qualifying is set for 4:50 p.m. AST/8:50 
a.m. ET on Friday. The race will air live on MotorTrend with live streaming 
coverage of the race and qualifying on the MotorTrend Plus app. Radio Le 
Mans will broadcast qualifying and the race.


TOMMY MILNER, NO. 64 MOBIL 1/SiriusXM CHEVROLET CORVETTE C8.R: “The track 
surface at Bahrain is pretty unique in general. To simplify it, you have big 
stones and little stones, polished and unpolished. It’s totally different 
than anywhere else we go. From the sim work we’ve done, it feels like there 
is a lot of grip. From what other drivers and teams have said, it’s a track 
that is aggressive on tires. That correlates pretty well with what we’ve 
seen in the simulator. I’d imagine the first practice session will be quite 
difficult as we dust off the track a little bit. It’s a circuit that is a 
little bit like Fuji with some long-duration corners and medium- and 
high-speed stuff. There are lessons we took from Japan that can apply here. 
The track surface being unique and its characteristics will play a big role 
in the strategy for the race.”

“I’ve raced in the Middle East once before at Dubai, so I have a little bit 
of understanding of the culture. It sounds like Dubai and Bahrain are 
similar in some ways. The fans were awesome when I went and it was a cool 
place to go see, and I’m sure Bahrain is similar in many ways. I’m excited 
to get there.”


NICK TANDY, NO. 64 MOBIL 1/SiriusXM CHEVROLET CORVETTE C8.R: “I raced at 
Bahrain for the first time in 2010 and went there twice before in WEC. I’ve 
never driven a GTE car around there so this will be fun. The effect of the 
sand on the tire and how the tire interacts with the surface… how each car 
reacts to the sand blowing around – and it does quite a lot – can affect 
things quite a lot. It’s one of the challenges. It can be very gusty and 
windy, and the direction can change. This is another factor with the 
high-downforce cars that we have. When it’s windy, it does have an influence 
on the race and it can change lap by lap.”

“It’s an interesting circuit and good for racing and good to drive. Bahrain 
rewards consistency because you see the highest level of tire wear of any 
track we go to. You have to have consistent and clean driving, and the track 
punishes overdriving. This is good because you always want to influence a 
race as a driver.”

“One of the good things there is that you have linked corners… corners where 
what you do in the first corner influences what happens in the next. You 
have places like turns One and Two and then you have the Esses in the middle 
of the track, and the fastest section is in the middle. You have to figure 
out how to best get time out of them, whether you give up time in the first 
part to improve the second section or second corner. That’s always nice as 
opposed to have a straight, a hairpin and then another straight. Those races 
are kind of car-defined whereas with these types of corners, you can as a 
driver affect more of what’s happening and affect the laptime.”

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