Go to content Go to navigation Go to recent PR reports Go to search

Clay Ends BimmerWorld's Season On A High With Podium In Monterey

Monday October 19, 2009

 

After an amazing 1-2-3 finish at the penultimate round, matching that performance was going to be tough for the trio from BimmerWorld/GearWrench Racing at the season finale held at the famed Laguna Seca circuit in Monterey, California. Yet team owner/driver James Clay still managed to close the team's amazing year on a high note with yet another podium performance for the BMW specialists.

Clay took third at the checkered flag, followed by teammates Nick Esayian in fourth and Seth Thomas in seventh. Clay also earned the Debaufre Fastest Race Lap award, while Esayian and Thomas showed the competitiveness of their BMW E90s by passing three cars apiece during the race.

After the podium celebrations, Clay reflected on his drive and the conclusion of the championship.

"It was a good day and a great way to end the season. Through this year we have really fine-tuned our E90 cars, our team, and filtered out our pesky reliability issues that come with developing a car this customized without the full factory support our peers enjoy. I was content when the checkered dropped, which is a good feeling to start the off-season with."

Crew Chief Jason Marks led the efforts to make BimmerWorld's cars even more reliable in 2009, which manifested itself in the steady presence of the blue and yellow cars battling for top results at almost every round. With an impressive finishing record to boast, the team also improved the competitiveness of their BMWs.

With contributions from Engineer Wayne Yawn and technical partners like Performance Friction, Moton, Red Line Oils, and a long list of others, BimmerWorld transformed their E90s into racing machines that could excel at every type of track. A win by Thomas to open the season at Sebring, followed by another win in the middle of the year by Thomas at Watkins Glen, and the results at Road Atlanta and Laguna Seca confirmed the car's progress.

"We definitely had the pace, which exceeded my expectations coming into this weekend on what I would generally consider a front- or all-wheel drive track," said Clay. "We are really down to the small little tweaks on this chassis. It has been 4 years since we started development on the then-new 3 Series, and I feel like the ‘sweat equity' put forth has been overwhelming at times, but the knowledge we now have on this chassis will continue to serve us well in the future. We are now getting into the period where all our hard work pays off!"

Behind Clay, Nick Esayian put in what is becoming his familiar performance - a storming drive to deep within the top-10.

"I got knocked around a bit at the start but we knew there was going to be some aggressive driving as Mazda and Acura were going for the manufacturer's title. After that I put my head down and just clicked off quick laps. Being consistent and staying out of trouble put me in third and I ran there for a good portion of the race. Unfortunately the gap I had evaporated when we got a full course yellow and I found my mirror full of who else but James Clay! I was running fast laps, but he was on fire. One little bobble with all that gravel on the track at the corkscrew is all it took and James got by me, but I know what I'm now capable of in this series."

After running in the top-3 at the last two rounds, Esayian says he is ready to take the next step. "I'm up to speed in these cars and I think my first win is close. Our guys did a great job this year in developing these BMW's. I've never driven a better race car."

After three wins in 2009, a seventh-place finish for Seth Thomas could be seen as uncharacteristic but as he says, the margin between seventh and first is incredibly narrow.

"I've learned that this series is all about track position, and we tried a few things in qualifying that didn't pan out, so I knew that I'd have my work cut out for me starting in tenth. Touring Car is easily the toughest series to make passes in, but I did everything I could to get to the front."

This Week on the Frontstretch:
Mirror Driving: Rebuilding Denny Hamlin, Kurt Busch, Penske, And The NASCAR Banquet’s Future
The Only Thing Mutual? Penske, Kurt Busch Both Stand to Lose Big
Who Gets An Early Christmas Gift? Sorting Through Potential Busch Replacements
Burned At The YouTube Stake: How Technology Brought Busch Down
2011 NASCAR Driver Review: Justin Allgaier
2011 NASCAR Driver Review: A.J. Allmendinger
2011 NASCAR Driver Review: Aric Almirola
2011 NASCAR Driver Review: Marcos Ambrose
2011 NASCAR Driver Review: Michael Annett
2011 NASCAR Driver Review: Greg Biffle
2011 Driver Review Schedule
FREE WEEKLY NEWSLETTER! CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP

This report was provided by an outside PR source and posted by Beth Lunkenheimer.

 

©2000 - 2008 Beth Lunkenheimer and Frontstetch.com. Thanks for visiting the Frontstretch!