ALL-FEMALE DRIVING TEAM ENTERS BRITISH TVR IN
SEBRING 12 HOURS
BRASELTON, Ga. -
The
history of the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring
has highlighted many interesting and different
racing teams and the 52nd running of America's
oldest sports car race will see the American
debut of an All-Female driving team that has
gained popularity in Europe in a very short
amount of time.
The team known as "Les Femmes Pour Le Mans"
has entered the season-opening event for the
American Le Mans Series, featuring
racer/broadcaster Amanda Stretton of England and
American Liz Halliday. A third female driver
will be named to complete the team.
Chamberlain-Synergy Motorsport, which will
field the car for Stretton and Halliday, has
entered two British-built TVR Tuscan 400R
machines that will compete in the GT class in
the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring. The other
car will be shared by Bob Berridge and Lee
Caroline, both of England, with a third driver
to be named.
Stretton is familiar to fans of the American
Le Mans Series for her work as a pit reporter
for telecasts by the Speed Channel in 2002 and
American Le Mans Series Radio Web broadcasts in
2001. She was already a racing driver prior to
her broadcasting career, which also includes TV
presenting in England and Europe, but her
driving career has stepped up in the past two
years. Last August, she and Halliday became the
first women to win a round of the British GT
Championship, driving a Porsche to victory in
the Spa 1 000
in Belgium.
In November, they raced together again in the
inaugural race of the Le Mans Endurance Series,
driving a TVR to ninth in class in the Le Mans
1000K at the Bugatti circuit in France. Stretton
will be racing in America for the first time
when she competes at Sebring.
"I have done two Sebrings now (as a
broadcaster), so I know how tough it is," said
Stretton, who worked alone as a pit reporter for
the ALMS Radio Web during the entire 2001 race.
"I think the thing that kept me going while I
was reporting there was a real enthusiasm for
the race and a curiosity as to how it would turn
out. With these long races, anything can happen.
"This year, as a competitor, I feel far more
vulnerable to the events on track and how
fragile our track position will be," she said.
"But saying that, I am so excited at the
prospect of racing at Sebring, and even when I
have the opportunity to stand down from the car,
knowing me I still think I'll be pacing the pits
seeing what everyone else is up to.
"I certainly remember Sebring and the fans
with very fond memories, and I hope they haven't
forgotten me," she said. "Coming back to
actually race there is a dream come true for me.
Sebring, like the Le Mans 24 Hours, is an
incredibly important race within motor sport. I
have butterflies in my stomach every time I
think about it."
Halliday, a California native who relocated
to England in 2000, started racing in 1996 in
SCCA and Vintage racing events. She maintains a
duel career as she is also an accomplished
equestrian. Her move to England was to work for
world-class event rider William-Fox Pitt, but
she has also raced in various series as she
worked her way up to Le Mans-style sports car
racing. Her first drive with Stretton was in the
event at Spa, and she later drove for another t eam
to seventh overall in the Bathurst 24 Hours in
Australia.
"I was really impressed with how steady and
consistent Liz was and thought she would be a
great teammate," said Stretton.
Stretton doesn't consider herself a pioneer,
but is proud of what she and Halliday have
accomplished by earning the privilege to race at
Sebring.
"It has been a long fight, and although no
one has been dismissive to our face about girls
doing this kind of racing, we have had to fight
really hard to be taken seriously," she said.
"The U.S., on the other hand, is far more
accepting than parts of Europe, so I think there
is no better place to start this campaign than
in America."
The 52nd annual Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of
Sebring will get the green flag at 10:30 a.m. on
Saturday, March 20, and will be televised live
from flag-to-flag by the Speed Channel. The
American Le Mans Series Radio Web will have live
coverage online at
www.americanlemans.com.
Ticket information is available online at
www.sebringraceway.com or by calling (863)
655-1442 (toll-free 800-626-RACE).
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