Monday, September 14, 2020

Challenges Presented At Bugatti Circuit

  The FRL takes on Le Mans in the month of September as the first of two events take place in the normally sleepy municipality in the Northwest of France. The first event held lastnight was on the Bugatti circuit in night time conditions. The action was sharp from the drop of the green flag in the first heat all the way to the concluding lap of the third. 

 In Heat 1, the grid order was reversed based on the series points standings, which afforded Preston Liberatore a choice position out front early that he looked poised to capitalize on. Into the first chicane, Ethan Maestri lost control of his 911 on the outside curbing, sending him nearly into a spin and causing quite a few cars to stack up and ping-pong through Dunlop. Andrew Steppat danced cleanly through the fray and gave Chase to the #054. In lap two, Ghabe Stouffer and Travis Billingsley were already engaged in an epic struggle for P3. Ethan Maestri was able to take advantage of the two battling Ferrari's and shot the gap between them after a brilliant exit from Garage Vert and down the straight into Chemin aux Boeufs. Paul Maestri would also close the gap and weas there to advance two positions as Travis made contact trying to move alongside Ethan in Turn 9. As Travis fought to maintain control, Ghabe moved wide to avoid and Paul was able to make the pass around both. Seconds later, Ghabe would have an unfortunate drop from the server, ending his race, something that would plague his entire evening.

                                                  Preston Liberatore in the Ferrari F50 goes "over the top" in Heat 1

 In lap 4, Preston would have visibility issues and cut too far into Chemin aux Boeufs, bouncing his F50 into the air, Andrew so close behind, drove his McLaren directly under the flying Ferrari and inherited the lead. Preston, undamaged, resumed his race in P2 but being hounded by Ethan Maestri in the #3 911. Ethan would bump him the next lap in Chemin but quickly gave him back the position. On the next lap, Ethan would get another solid run out of Garage Vert and would secure P2. Travis and Paul would fight nose to tail in the final laps, with Paul swinging wide in several corners and nearly relinquishing P4 to the #18. 

Heat 2 began with Andrew and Ethan running side-by-side in Turn 1, then nose-to-tail for the rest of the heat. Andrew would maintain position, but Ethan challenged hard on several laps. In the end, they crossed the line separated by only 0.160 seconds. For the #06 McLaren driven by Seth Jensen, the start of Heat 2 was nothing short of miraculous. Starting from P7, he would jump 4 positions off the line and assumed P3 into the Dunlop Chicane. Paul Maestri would tap his rear bumper and send him wide into Le Musee. Travis and Ghabe had immediately rejoined their fight from the first heat and Seth was an unwitting opponent for the remainder of lap 1 until a wide line through Raccordement ended his run for a Top 5 position. Another wide line through Turn 11 would cause him to give up P7 to Tony Tyree. Preston and Paul would have a knock-down dragout match for P3 that Paul eventually claimed, with Travis Billingsley nearly catching Preston to make it a three-way battle for the podium at the end. 

  Heat 3 was an impressive start for the entire field as the Dunlop Curve would clog with 6 cars, three abreast and two rows deep jockeyed for position to begin the final heat. Ethan Maestri would start P8, but got a monster start off the line and shot up to P2 before the Dunlop Chicane. Seth Jensen got another fantastic start and skampered off into the night in the opening lap. Into lap 2, Ethan caught the #06 McLaren in the Dunlop Chicane and tried to move alongside in La Chapelle. Seth shut the door, but fenders rubbed and Seth got kicked wide. Ethan was tapped from behind and turned sideways as well. Losing positions to Travis, Andrew and Preston. He would once again catch Preston as the F50 drifted off the ideal line through Chemin aux Boeufs, bouncing off his driver door and into P3. The fight for Preston would continue as Paul Maestri was there to try and pass. For several subsequent corners, sheet metal on very expensive vehicles was caved in, until Preston asserted control and secured P4. From there, the field strung out and Travis made up for two less than stellar heats by nabbing the win.

 On the night, there was close racing to be had all over the track. Passing was tight here compared with most tracks, the scratches and dents were evidence of that fact. But the closeness in performance among all the drivers made for a most exciting evening of racing. Andrew Steppat take the event with a 1.33 overall average over the three events. Ethan Maestri scored a 2.33 average finishing position for second place on the podium. Travis Billingsley and Preston Liberatore tied with an average place of 3.66 with the tiebreaker going to Travis with the fastest clean lap posted between the two drivers, a 1:41.325. The points battle is shaken again as the battle for a Top 5 place continues to remain narrow. The FRL waits in the French countryside for September 27th and a long enduro event at the famed Le Mans Old Mulsanne circuit. 



Monday, August 24, 2020

Spa Results & Championship Points Standings

 Race Result:                                                    Points Totals

Andrew Steppat (50)                                         Andrew Steppat - 150

Travis Billingsley (40)                                      Travis Billingsley - 108

Preston Liberatore (35)                                     Ethan Maestri - 96

Ethan Maestri (32)                                            Ghabe Stouffer - 90

Paul Maestri (30)                                              Tony Tyree - 86

Tony Tyree (28)                                                Paul Maestri - 86

Brandon Adkins (26)                                        Bryan Dean - 84

Seth Jensen (24)                                               Seth Jensen - 68

Riley Liberatore (22)                                        Blake Wilde - 48

Ghabe Stouffer (20)                                          Preston Liberatore - 35

Drew Dilbeck (19)                                            Brandon Adkins - 26

Bryan Dean (18)                                               Riley Liberatore - 22

                                                                          Drew Dilbeck - 19



Steppat Bests Near-Record Field At Spa

  Round 3 of the FRL's tenth season of e-racing took place at Circuit de Spa Francorchamps Sunday night. With the beautiful Belgian hillside serving as a backdrop to an exciting race, and near record participation taking part, let's look at the highlights of the event. 

 With a 22 lap event scheduled and no qualifying for the grid the order was set at 8:45 with the green flag waving just before 9 pm. Two new drivers joined the FRL ranks for this race and started at the front of the reverse-ordered field of 12 drivers. Preston and Riley Liberatore, both running Ferrari F50's, led the group into Turn 1. Everyone patiently picked their way through the hairpin turn with only Tony Tyree getting bumped sideways a bit through the middle of the turn. Several drivers had to swing wide to the left, but the entire mob of cars came charging together for Eau Rouge. 

 Seth Jensen, in his #06 McLaren, was first to charge the hill but over-drove into the Raidillon and tagged the outside tire barrier, ending his run at the front and netting some left-front suspension and brake damage to boot. He would have to limp around to the pits for one of three stops in his race. Seth's misfortune led to Preston's good fortune as he inherited a wide open track from Seth and set to work widening the margin of his lead early on as the rest of the field gingerly picked their way through the Radillon and onto the Kemmel Straight. 

 Ghabe Stouffer had an excellent start to his race and quickly picked off the front runners to set himself up solidly in P2. This was a position he did not look likely to give up anytime soon, except that the server god's smited him by kicking him from the lobby. A fate he shared with two other drivers, Bryan Dean in the #808 Jaguar and Drew Dilbeck. Bryan was the first to drop, in the second lap of the 22 lap race, and Drew just moments later. The tenth place finish for Ghabe certainly puts a dent in what has been a stellar run for the young driver this season. 

 For the remaining 9 drivers the race would settle into an uneasy rhythm. Brandon Adkins, making his return in a Ferrari, would fall from a front row start back to P7, but would hold that spot through to the checkered flag. Paul Maestri came up through the field to net a P5 finish, but complained afterward that he just "couldn't find the rhythm" of the track to make an advance on the Top 4. Tony Tyree lagged toward the rear of the field at the start, but methodically made his way forward as the race developed, gaining P6 on the night. 

 Amongst the Top 4 it would end up being a nail-biter until the very last. Preston Liberatore in the #054 Ferrari would lead for most of the event. However, the trio of Andrew Steppat, Ethan Maestri and Travis Billingsley had been running in lock-step for most the race and, as Preston suffered several spins, caught the freshly minted rookie driver in the closing laps. At the end of lap 19, Andrew set up wide at the start/finish line to make an inside pass around Preston. But Ethan had a brilliant run through the final chicane, finding both momentum & space enough to shoot the gap between the two drivers as lap 20 began. Andrew would carry too much momentum into Turn 1 and slid up the track, Ethan out-braked the #001 and cut low to the inside, setting the car nicely for a pass to the lead. But a bump from behind would swing the tail heavy Porsche into the wall, causing suspension damage to the left rear and forcing Ethan to take yet another P4 finish. Travis benefited from the altercation, passing Preston and securing P2. He would try hard to challenge Andrew for the lead but the end of lap 22 came with the #001 McLaren taking its third straight victory. 

 The FRL moves south to France and the famed Le Mans circuit for a month long celebration of one of the greatest spectacles in racing history. First up is the 3-heat night race on the Bugatti circuit on September 13th! 


 

Saturday, August 8, 2020

The Maestro Abides At Monza

  Few race tracks in the world have as rich and varied a history as Monza. Here, the drivers of the FRL locked horns in a battle that unfolded over three heats. At the end of the night the standings would be shaken for most, save one. 

 Heat 1 would prove most interesting as most of the drivers anticipated trouble in the first chicane. However, cooler heads prevailed and the perceived threat was largely mitigated. It would be a few hundred meters further down the track where mayhem ensued. The reverse grid ensured that some antics would be played out early on, and this heat did not disappoint. Seth Jensen, in his #10 McLaren got loose exiting Lesmo, he tried to save it but ended up in the wall and bounced back out into traffic, nearly collecting Ghabe Stouffer's Ferrari and slamming Bryan Dean's Jaguar. Travis Billingsley would be collected in the fray as well.  This would set up a cat and mouse chase for Andrew Steppat and the two MBR drivers, Ethan and Paul Maestri. Ethan in his #3 Porsche 911 would catch and pass Paul early on. Paul for his part quickly fell into defending P2 from the #001 McLaren of the reigning champion. After 3 laps, Andrew had made the inexorable pass on Paul and set his sights on P1. On lap 7, he caught and passed Ethan for the lead and victory.


 

 Heat 2 would be as exciting, if not more so than the first one. Andrew Steppat started from the front of the field and briefly lost his lead to rookie driver Seth Jensen. Seth, in his #6 McLaren got a screaming start off the line and quickly passed everyone on a late brake into the first chicane. But, his late maneuver also caught him outside the proper race line on exit and he quickly fell back down the grid. Another late brake into Variante' would prove to be his undoing, and also affected Ethan Maestri, as his McLaren touched the grass and side-swiped Ethan's Porsche, dropping them both further back. Both of the representative Ferrari's started out quite well, chasing the #7 Porsche driven by Paul Maestri. That was until a late braking issue by Bryan Dean nearly took out the #18 of Travis Billingsley and did in fact take out the #2 Ferrari driven by Ghabe Stouffer, dropping both he and Bryan to the back of the field. Heat 2 ended with another win by Andrew, followed by positions 2 through 5 separated by less than 3 seconds!


 Heat 3 was another reverse grid start. Andrew Steppat got a fantastic start off the line and quickly advanced from P9 to P2 inside the first lap. At the start of lap 3 he was able to pass Bryan Dean's #808 Jaguar and never looked back. Further afield, Ethan Maestri and Paul Maestri both had trouble with their Porsche's and fell to the bottom of the order. Paul was the first out, followed quickly by Ethan. Tony Tyree's #47 Porsche would fair much better in Heat's 2 & 3, finishing P5 in both. Ghabe Stouffer had a great finish to the evening with a P2 placement and a solid drive throughout the event, netting him another podium position on the night.

 With such a varied results for everyone on the night, the series points standings continue to be unclear as to who will put together a good season. Andrew Steppat now has a commanding points lead out front. However, one could throw a blanket over positions 2-7 as all are only separated by 14 points. It will be exciting to see how this championship points battle plays out. The next event is at Spa-Francorchamp on August 23rd.

Event Result: (Average position based on heat results)

Andrew Steppat - 1.0      

Travis Billingsley - 3.33

Ghabe Stouffer - 4.33

Ethan Maestri - 4.66

Paul Maestri - 5.00

Tony Tyree - 5.33

Bryan Dean - 5.66

Blake Wild - 7.66

Seth Jensen - 8.00

Championship Points:

Andrew Steppat - 100

Ghabe Stouffer - 70

Travis Billingsley - 68

Bryan Dean - 66

Ethan Maestri - 64

Tony Tyree - 58

Paul Maestri - 56

Blake Wild - 48

Seth Jensen - 44


Monday, July 20, 2020

Steppat Starts Season Strong - Hockenheim

 It was a long hiatus for FRL points series racing. But with Covid-19 disrupting everything else in the world, it felt like a good time to shake up the FRL's formula for approaching a new season of racing as well. Particularly, when you take into consideration that it has been almost 10 years since the start of the league, and this season of racing marks the tenth regular Fall series the league has operated. All this has led to the most ambitious racing schedule undertaken to date. The excitement for the series was palpable and drivers were eager to get started with Round 1 at Hockenheim.

A quiet and orderly start to lap 1, it would not last

 One of the unique features adopted for this series meant that there was to be only one qualifying session to set the grid for the first race. Going forward, each event's grid will be determined by the previous race finishing order. Qualifying got off to a shaky beginning, as the start had to be waved-off a couple of times due to timing and scoring issues. Once resolved, the field of 9 GTES sports cars took to the meandering curves and angles of Hockenheim. Andrew Steppat set the bar early with a low 1:43.100 qualifying time that was nearly matched by Ethan Maestri turning a lap at 1:43.400. The field did not seem too far off of the #001 McLaren's pace, but could they keep things close in the race to come?

 As the green flag moment approached, one of the things on everyone's mind was Revenol Kurve. Traditionally, the first corner of any FRL race has had potential to make or ruin many a drivers night as the field bottles in the first corner. Things went shockingly smooth through the first turn here. It wasn't until the second turn that things would get harried. Ethan Maestri had started in P2 and was holding that position despite a strong challenge from Travis Billingsley. Ethan was set to take the inside line through Turn 2 when Bryan Dean "deaned" Ethan's rear bumper, shunting him well beyond the Turn 2 apex. Ethan's #3 Porsche would have to rejoin the track shuffled back into 7th position. Bryan would take over P2, never to look back.

The #3 driven by Ethan Maestri gets "deaned" by the #808 Jaguar driven by Bryan Dean

 Problem's for the #3 911 would continue to mount, having passed team mate Paul Maestri out of the Turn 4 hairpin, he set up well inside of Travis Billingsley's Ferrari but didn't call out his presence alongside. As the two cars skirted through the gradual arc of Turn 5, Ethan and Travis got together, Ethan once again getting the worst of the exchange and was pushed well off the track once again. As the largest group of cars reached Turn 6, Ghabe Stouffer got punted wide through this turn as well, temporarily setting him back a couple of positions.

 The rest of the field began to settle into a groove as the first lap came to a close. Two new drivers join the FRL ranks this season, Blake Wild in the #10 McLaren F1 and Seth Jensen in the #6 Porsche 911. Both drivers would perform well for their first outings. They contented themselves to see how the race unfolded in front of them, with the #10 driver taking advantage of a couple of off's by other drivers to advance a position.

Positions 2-9 as the field works its way out of the hairpin in the first lap

 Once Ethan had composed himself from several off's, he began working back toward the front of the field. He would pass the rookies by lap 6 and was closing on a tight battle for positions 4, 5 & 6. Travis Billingsley, Paul Maestri and Tony Tyree could almost have had a blanket thrown over them as they jockeyed for position. Ethan worked his way past Travis and Paul, leaving them to settle P6 amongst themselves. Travis Billingsley's #18 F50 would develop brake trouble as the race progressed. Despite the trouble, Travis would cross the line in P6. Paul's MBR #7 Porsche was able to secure P7.

Ghabe Stouffer in the #2 Ferrari gets shunted out of Turn 6

 Ethan and Tony would duel for several laps until Ethan was able to clear Tony as the #47 Porsche swung wide into the gravel at the Mobil 1 corner. Ghabe Stouffer took car of his car early, gingerly and deftly taking positions as they came to him, ultimately garnering a podium position for himself at P3, his first in series racing with the FRL. Bryan Dean took advantage of an ugly pass in Turn 2 and put his #808 Jaguar on the podium in P2. Andrew Steppat sets the bar once again however, taking the #001 McLaren home in P1.

 Our next event takes place August 2nd at Monza for three fast heats of FRL racing!

Finishing Order:
1. Andrew Steppat
2. Bryan Dean
3. Ghabe Stouffer
4. Ethan Maestri
5. Tony Tyree
6. Paul Maestri
7. Travis Billingsley
8. Blake Wild
9. Seth Jensen

Series Points:   
Andrew Steppat - 50
Bryan Dean - 40
Ghabe Stouffer - 35
Ethan Maestri - 32
Tony Tyree - 30
Travis Billingsley - 28
Paul Maestri - 26
Blake Wild - 24
Seth Jensen - 22

Thursday, July 16, 2020

FRL Season 10 Spotters Guide (Part 1)

 As Season 10 gets closer to its start, teams are putting final touches on their race cars for this exciting season of racing. Here are just a few of the cars we can expect to see on the track Sunday, July 19th at Hockenheim.

 The #02 Ferrari entry by Ghabe "Zero" Stouffer was slated to be present for the first race of the season. However, it was announced this week that the #2 driver was unavailable for the race on Sunday and would miss the season opening. Could it be corona virus related? We'll keep you posted as details develop. 
Maestri Brothers Racing returns to the FRL paddock for Season 10. The #3 Porsche driven by Ethan Maestri has quietly made his way through preseason testing at or near the top of the leaderboards. Will the MBR team have enough to truly challenge the top drivers in the series? Time will tell. 
Always at the top of the list in preseason testing, Travis Billingsley in the #18 Ferrari F50 has not sounded as confident in his Dead Pedal team effort to start this season. Recently Travis was quoted saying:"I'm looking to race whoever is around me and not looking to chase after Steppat Racing as hard as I have in the past." However, the #18 tends to find itself near the top of most leaderboards as a season progresses, will the fire be reignited in one of the league's top drivers?
A man of few words but a long standing veteran of the FRL, Tony Tyree and 4 of 7 Racing is one of the longest running teams in the league. This year the team has picked the Porsche 911 to fly the 47 in this 10th season of FRL racing. Could this be the season they break into the Top 3 in points? 
After a long hiatus Bryan Dean returns to the FRL to fly the 808 number board, complete with the "take no guff" attitude the man is loved for. Everyone on the grid will head into Turn 1 keenly aware of the presence of the #808 Jaguar. Don't get "Deaned". 

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Car Build Update for Upcoming Season

As an update to the car build requirements, please note.... For ALL cars in the lineup: PI not to exceed R805, HP not to exceed 600, and all cars must have “race” tires, aero, suspension and ARB, and transmission. The only changes are on the Bugatti. The limits on it are R825, and “sport” weight reduction. (The idea here is, get the car to R805 with the same restrictions as the other cars, before doing the weight reduction. Then add the sport weight reduction and have a few PI left over for more tires or rims or something.