Bohemia Energy racing by Scuderia Praha continues its winning run Much like Brno, Bohemia Energy racing by Scuderia Praha’s went into the Hankook 24H PORTIMAO with an unbeaten record at the event, having won both the race in both 2017 and 2018. In decisive fashion – again, like Brno – the Czech-based team left the Autódromo Internacional do Algarve with its win record intact 24 hours later.
A6 (Pt.1) – Scuderia Praha vs. Herberth. Sort of. At first.
- Scuderia Praha wins fourth race of the year
- Herberth Motorsport seals 3rd A6-Am win on the trot in 2019…
- …but the lead #91 Porsche retires with a fire at half-distance
No longer plagued by the abrasive track conditions and high tyre wear the team had struggled with in the Czech Reublic, the #11 Ferrari 488 GT3 managed to keep the pole sitting Herberth Motorsport Porsche honest during the opening stages, Matteo Mallucelli’s bowl of pasta before the race start fuelling the Italian’s speed no end it seemed. One hour and one pit stop shuffle later, the prancing horse hit the front, briefly, for the first time, though the lead would continue to swap intermittently throughout the opening quarter of the race. Differing pit strategies, the Ferrari’s superior balance through the Autódromo’s undulating, fast but technical infield, and typically flawless teamwork between Mallucelli, Jiří Písařík and Josef Kral meant that, from lap 223 onwards, and despite two tense on-track battles for the lead with both of the contending Herberth Porsches, the Ferrari would not be headed again.
16 hours later, the #11 had pulled seven laps clear after a commanding run. A physically drained Písařík brought the car home to retain both the team’s winning run in Portugal and its clean sweep of the 24H GT SERIES Europe season so far.
“The top secret is that I bought the circuit three years ago!” Písařík beamed, post-race. “For me this is the most difficult race track after only Spa. I had serious problems with the brakes for the first 15 laps, so it was a big fight. But I’ve said before, this year, Scuderia Praha is like Mercedes in Formula 1. It’s amazing!”
Though the Herberth Motorsport / Scuderia Praha rivalry is nothing new in the 24H SERIES (their grandstand finish at the Hankook 12H SPA will go down as one of the highlights of the year), the #11 and #91 were unable to joust for very long in Portugal, the Bavarian Porsche having started from the rear of the grid owing to a pit lane infraction. Worse was to come though as the #91 burst into flames on-track mere moments after the halfway point, the conflagration later blamed on a cracked fuel line. Robert Renauer fortunately managed to escape uninjured, but the Porsche’s fight in 2nd place was done with just under 12 hours of running left to go. It’s a result that’s hurt the erstwhile championship contenders badly heading to Barcelona.
In contrast, across in A6-Am, Herberth’s fortunes couldn’t have been brighter. Pre-race clutch problems for the #94 aside (see ‘What’s Happened so far’), the former 24H GT SERIES Continents champion was on a role at the start, Klaus Bachler in the #93 991 GT3 R retaining his pole position against fellow front row starter, Matteo Mallucelli, and keeping the pasta-fuelled Italian at bay for the duration of his 90-minute stint.
Edward Lewis Brauner, Stefan Aust, Klaus Rader and Hans Wehrmann were no match for PRO driver Klaus Bachler, of course – the young Austrian sensation ended up setting six of the event’s seven outright fastest laps – their pace was consistent enough to keep the Porsche well in contention for A6-Am victory, even as the 991 GT3 began to fall back through the front-running pack as night fell. Only a mistakenly suspected puncture for Hans Wehrmann, which turned out to be unyielding amounts of pick-up, and a late charge from CP Racing (#85) cost the team time en-route to Herberth Motorsport’s third A6-Am race win of the season, and the first for the team’s second entry this year.
Herberth Motorsport’s issue-struck #94 would also recover from its earlier drivetrain problems to collect the final A6-Am podium spot. Admittedly, their run was assisted by a 35-minute pit stop for erstwhile class leader, Toksport WRT (#15), that dropped the Mercedes-AMG to the tail of the A6-Am field, brake wear the suspected culprit.
Overall and A6-Pro Top 3
1. Bohemia Energy racing by Scuderia Praha (#11, Ferrari) – 721 laps
2. GPX Racing (#24, Porsche) – 714 laps
3. Wochenspiegel Team Monschau (#22, Ferrari) – 712 laps
24H GT SERIES Europe Championship (after four rounds)
1. Bohemia Energy racing by Scuderia Praha (#11, Ferrari, A6) – 84 points
2. CP Racing (#85, Mercedes, A6) – 73 points
3. Porsche Lorient Racing (#911, Porsche, 991) – 65 points
24H GT SERIES Continents Championship (after two rounds)
1. Leipert Motorsport (#710, Lamborghini/Mercedes, SPX) – 57 points
2. Bohemia Energy racing by Scuderia Praha (#11, Ferrari, A6) – 54 points
3. Porsche Lorient Racing (#911, Porsche, 991) – 48 points
A6 (Pt.2) – Ferrari 1-3 on the podium split by GPX Porsche
- First podium finish of the season for GPX Racing and Wochenspiegel
- Fire scuppers Herberth Motorsport’s chances
- IDEC SPORT RACING eliminated by on-track clash with 991 entry
Like its scarlet contemporary, the Wochenspiegel Team Monschau Ferrari (#22) was also on a charge in the Algarve, collecting the team’s first class podium of an admittedly tough season so far. Fittingly, and despite struggling for pace for much of the weekend, the team’s outright 3rd place is the second time the former VLN competitors have finished on the overall podium at the Hankook 24H PORTIMAO (rewind to 2017 for their first).
The result came perilously close to slipping through their fingers too. Original plans were for David Perel to take the Ferrari 488 GT3 to the finish, though this ran the risk of the South African exceeding his maximum allowed driving time. In the end, and after a late pit stop, it was Leonard Weiss that impressively held off Herberth Motorsport’s hard-charging Klaus Bachler in the closing stages for the final GT podium spot.
Trouble ahead and Herberth’s high-profile DNF left the door open for a returning GPX Racing (#24) to collect the first outright 24H SERIES podium for the United Arab Emirates team since the 2017 Hankook 12H RED BULL RING. This, despite earlier contact with not only AC Motorsport but also, to Nicky Pastorelli anyway, a 991 entry during the night.
“There was a Porsche Cup car that braked a little too late, he didn’t see me, and he gave me a tap,” the Dutchman explained. “Apart from that, everything went really well. We had a few issues in the beginning, but we managed to [complete] the rest of the race without mistakes, everybody did a great job driving, and the whole team worked fantastically. It’s a great result.”
Another quiet race for CP Racing cemented the series’ American stalwart its fourth category podium of the year, ensuring reigning 24H GT SERIES Europe Drivers’ Champions Charles Espenlaub, ‘Charlie’ Putman and Joe Foster remain in title contention heading into Barcelona.
Despite winning this year’s Hankook 24H DUBAI, and despite the sister #34 Audi R8 LMS starting the year with two A6-Am class podiums in Dubai and Mugello, Car Collection Motorsport no doubt hoped its season would kick-start in Portimão after three luckless races. Sadly, even though the German squad led outright during the opening pit stop scramble, poor luck with the first Code 60 cost the team two laps, dropping the Audi out of the fight for an A6-Am podium it had been well in the middle of.
Later on, Max Edelhoff, having only just avoided Jimmy de Breucker’s spin into the turn one gravel (see ‘SPX’), crawled to halt on-track with electrical problems at turn 13, the necessary repairs dropping last year’s 24H GT SERIES Europe Championship runner’s up 15 laps further back. The result – 8th overall and 4th in-class – was all the more underwhelming, given that Elmar Grimm had scheduled replacement knee surgery around the event. And yes, 24-hours of endurance racing in 50+ degree temperatures apparently counts as recuperation!
Trouble continued to befall the hard-grafting IDEC SPORT RACING (#17) too. Having fallen to brake issues at Spa, the Mercedes-AMG GT3 was once again in A6-Pro podium contention from the early going, and had pulled to within 90 seconds of an outright top three finish as hour 17 ticked by. A thwack from the MRS GT-Racing Porsche (see ‘991’) shortly afterwards dealt the final blow to the French team’s chances, the Mercedes-AMG GT3 proving too badly damaged to repair in time.
A6-Am Top 3
1. Herberth Motorsport (#93, Porsche) – 711 laps
2. CP Racing (#85, Mercedes) – 709 laps
3. Herberth Motorsport (#94, Porsche) – 700 laps




















