HOFOR Racing enjoyed an excellent first 30 laps on Saturday, Alexander Prinz making the most of the team’s maiden outright pole to open a 14 second advantage in the No.11 Mercedes-AMG. Red Ant Racing’s Mercedes-AMG, which had run second early on in the hands of Ayrton Redant, had slipped to fourth but a tyre blow-out on lap 26 cost huge time.
Froggatt was one of those to make good early progress, rising from fifth to second for Ziggo Sport, and so too Kyle Marcelli in the No.29 Pellin Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 who rocketed from row 10 to climb into the top three.
Following the first stops Hui took over behind the wheel of the Ziggo Sport Porsche to lead, then Heinrich moved to the front in the SP4 class in-development Porsche 911. For the remainder of the first five hours both Porsches were right there and Ziggo Sport took the flag over 30 seconds ahead.
HOFOR Racing ended Saturday’s action third overall and leading GT3 AM, three laps off the overall leaders, ahead of Scuderia Praha’s Ferrari in the lead of PRO-AM. There were, though, major dramas for a large number of other GT3 runners over the course of the first five hours.
Proton Huber Competition’s Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) had a series of troubles, but showed terrific speed with Klaus Bachler, while HAAS RT’s No.21 Audi R8 LMS GT3 EVO II had to stop from the race lead at the midway point due to an engine fire. Era Motorsport, another with great pace, was at the front with just over two hours to go but a change of gearbox was needed in the No.81 Ferrari 296.
Part two of the race on Sunday started similarly to Saturday, a very early Code 60 period called due to the Red Ant Racing Mercedes sliding into the gravel on a damp patch on the formation lap. Before the cautionary period kicked-in, though, Alexander Prinz starred to pass Heinrich for second and then take the on-the-road lead from Hartog at Les Combes.
Following a second Code 60 in quick order, almost the entire entry took the chance to make early stops but at the front it remained a Porsche lock-out. Then, around half an hour in, Hui spun at the chicane and lost a lot of time to Heinrich, but the Ziggo Sport Porsche did retake the lead.
Prinz was incredibly impressive once again, fourth overall but closing rapidly on Scuderia Praha’s Kral as the first hour ended. By the conclusion of the second hour it was the two Porsches clear at the front, Hartog from Bohn, and the battle for third continued to rage between HOFOR and Praha.
Ziggo Sport Tempesta Racing’s challenge was impacted by a 115 second penalty in the pits, linked to a mistake with the Code 60 refueling regulations, but from there things ran smoothly for the Herberth Motorsport-run Porsches – Hartog setting a lap record of 2m16.808 seconds in the No.193.