Connor De Phillippi and Bruno Spengler drove the No. 25 BMW Team RLL BMW M8 GTE to victory in the GT Le Mans class Saturday at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. (IMSA Photo)
Connor De Phillippi and Bruno Spengler drove the No. 25 BMW Team RLL BMW M8 GTE to victory in the GT Le Mans class Saturday at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. (IMSA Photo)

BMW & Acura Claim Atlanta GT Triumphs

BRASELTON, Ga. – When it was go time, the No. 25 BMW went. And it wasn’t derailed on the way to the GT Le Mans class victory in the TireRack.com Grand Prix at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.

Connor De Phillippi, who shared the No. 25 BMW Team RLL BMW M8 GTE with Bruno Spengler, didn’t take the class lead until past halfway in Saturday’s six-hour race, the second of four races in the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup.

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De Phillippi grabbed first place for good with decisive passes of the No. 911 Porsche and No. 4 Corvette after the final round of pit stops with 52 minutes left. The 27-year-old American held steady from there, including a two-lap trophy dash following a final restart, to put the No. 25 in victory lane for the first time since the 2019 Rolex 24 At Daytona.

It gave De Phillippi his fourth IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship win and the first for Spengler.

“It really came down to perfect execution,” De Phillippi said. “We had a fast car; the car was hooked up, the setup was really good. I think we didn’t have the fastest car early on but as the track rubbered in, we were able to have more pace throughout the stint. … At VIR (two weeks ago), we got P2 and I told (Spengler), ‘Man, we’re on the brink of a win,’ and we pulled it off today.”

Starting fifth in class, De Phillippi and Spengler were content running in the shadows of early race leaders Nick Tandy and Fred Makowiecki in the No. 911 Porsche GT Team Porsche 911 RSR-19. The No. 25, in fact, didn’t lead on the 2.54-mile, 12-turn road circuit until the No. 911 made a pit stop three hours into the event. Even then, the BMW was out front a mere six minutes until making its own stop.

From there, Spengler kept the No. 911 in his sights until turning the No. 25 over to De Phillippi on the final stop with 55 minutes to go. When the Porsche and Corvette completed their stops soon after, De Phillippi muscled his way into first place.

“When they came out ahead of me, I knew I had to attack and I knew I had an advantage (of warm tires) at that point,” De Phillippi said. “So, I just went for it. I went for the kill and got by the Porsche. I was shocked to see the Corvette come out so far ahead of us … but once I managed to get around him on the outside of Turn 4 when he was on cold tires on his out lap, I tried to put the hammer down for those couple laps.”

De Phillippi stretched the lead to as much as four seconds over Tommy Milner in the No. 4 Corvette Racing C8.R before a collision involving the No. 5 Cadillac, No. 6 Acura and No. 63 Ferrari brought out a full-course caution with 12 minutes left on the clock.

When the green flag waved for a two-lap finish, De Phillippi wasted no time putting slower GT Daytona cars between himself and the Corvette as a buffer and pulled away to win by 4.383 seconds. Jesse Krohn and John Edwards gave BMW Team RLL a pair of podium finishers by driving to third place in the No. 24 BMW.

Spengler, who won the IMSA iRacing Pro Series championship while the WeatherTech Championship season was put on hold by the pandemic, was elated to collect his maiden IMSA victory.

“It’s huge,” he said. “For me, all tracks are new here except for Daytona and Sebring, so there’s always a lot of learning to do. I’m super happy that I have a mega teammate as Connor that I can always rely on. His speed and his experience is awesome. We get along super well together and that’s very important in a close series like GTLM. It’s an awesome result. I’m super happy. My first victory in IMSA with Connor.”

Following a pair of second-place finishes where the opportunity for victory was tantalizingly close but unachieved, the drivers of the No. 86 Meyer Shank Racing with Curb-Agajanian Acura NSX GT3 were determined to make it happen in Saturday’s GT Daytona portion of the TireRack.com Grand Prix. And they left it to Mario Farnbacher to bring it home.

Farnbacher drove the final two hours of the six-hour race at Michelin Raceway, pulling away to win by 2.451 seconds after co-drivers Shinya Michimi and Matt McMurry put the No. 86 in position to win. It’s the first victory of the 2020 WeatherTech Championship season and moved Farnbacher and McMurry into sole possession of the GTD points lead.

The No. 86 finished second in the two most recent races – at Road America and Virginia Int’l Raceway – with chances eluding Farnbacher to secure the wins. A lightning-fast pit stop when Farnbacher took the wheel with just under two hours remaining Saturday pushed him ahead of the No. 48 Paul Miller Racing Lamborghini Huracán GT3 and, this time, Farnbacher wasn’t to be denied. He built a comfortable lead and wasn’t even deterred by the late full-course caution that bunched the field.

“It feels really awesome,” said McMurry, who collected career win No. 7. “All the other races were great results and we came in here leading the championship. But that first place really gave us a good gap to second place in the points, so I think we’re in a really good position now to keep doing what we’ve been doing … and go for another championship.”

The No. 48, driven by Madison Snow, Corey Lewis and Bryan Sellers, finished second. Ryan Hardwick, Patrick Long and Jan Heylen placed third in the No. 16 Wright Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3R.