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Team Bentley dreams of repeating
famous Le Mans victory in 2003
Le Mans 12th June 2003...It has taken three
years, but the time has finally come for Team
Bentley to face the ultimate test. At Le Mans
this weekend outright victory is the only goal
that will enable Bentley to realise its dream
of winning - for the first time since 1930. Its
two Speed 8 prototypes will aim to race twice
around the clock, with the team's sole focus being
to deliver the drivers of one of the Bentleys
to the top step of the podium on the 80th anniversary
of Bentley's first appearance at the inaugural
Le Mans 24-hours.
However nothing is certain at Le Mans and history
shows that merely having the best car, drivers
and team is no guarantee of winning. Defeat has
been snatched from the jaws of victory too many
times at this race for anything to be certain.
And Team Bentley knows that it takes just one
errant back-marker, some maverick weather or the
failure of just one of the many thousands of components
that makes up the Speed 8 for the dream to turn
to dust.
So all that Team Bentley can be sure of is that
it has done all it can to bring victory at Le
Mans back to Bentley for the first time in 73
years. With talents like Johnny Herbert, Mark
Blundell, David Brabham, Tom Kristensen, Dindo
Capello and Guy Smith, it has undoubtedly the
strongest line-up of drivers at Le Mans this year.
In the Bentley Speed 8 prototype that lapped the
circuit at the official test weekend an astonishing
3.5 seconds quicker than any other car, the team
clearly has a car with all the pace to do the
job. And its ability to appear at the Sebring
12-hours, claim pole position (a time eventually
disallowed over a minor technical infringement),
fastest lap, fastest stint and then complete a
further 12-hours the next day without significant
problems, suggests it has not just the speed but
the durability, too.
But the team also knows the competition will be
extremely strong, not least among the three Audi
R8s, cars that have hitherto proven unbeatable
at Le Mans and almost everywhere else they have
raced in Europe and America.
Team Manager John Wickham said: "We have
completed another long distance run since the
test weekend, which means the car has now the
equivalent of three 24-hour plus tests under its
belt, all of which were successfully completed
with no problems that would have stopped the car
under race conditions. We've all been here too
many times and know Le Mans too well to predict
how things will go in the race, but it is fair
to say that, given all of this, the team is feeling
very positive and extremely keen to go out there
and get the job done."
The new Continental GT will also be at Le Mans
and, for the first time, it will be seen in action.
Five times Le Mans winner and Bentley Motors consultant
Derek Bell will be doing demonstration laps in
the new 560PS, 198mph coupe which goes on sale
this autumn. Indeed it is fair to say that the
Continental GT, the most important new car in
Bentley's history since the very first 3-litre
in 1919, is the reason Bentley decided to return
to Le Mans. By proving itself on this most hallowed
and historic of race-tracks, the aim was to prove
also to a new generation of Bentley enthusiasts
that the company has become once more what it
once always was: a marque equally at home on road
or track.
The Bentley enthusiasts, who have avidly supported
Team Bentley since 2001, also deserve a win at
Le Mans as a reward for all of the encouragement
they have given to Team Bentley over the last
three years.
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