Another Indian is shining on the global arena and this time it is
Narain Karthikeyan who drove his car to 6th position in the
prestigious Le Mans 24Hrs Race. Oye, at least he got some points.
That too driving a diesel car in recession. Khushiya manaao!

Here is some copy-paste luhv from Yohan Sethna, the A1GP Team India
Principal
“The Fastest Indian in The World” Narain Karthikeyan opened a new
chapter in his distinguished International Motorsports career last
weekend, by finishing 6th in his first Le Mans Series race for the
Kolles Audi Team, driving the Audi R10 TDi LMP1 Sportscar. The 5.5
liter V12, turbo-diesel powered car is one of the most successful
sportscars in the history of the championship, winning the Le Mans
24-hour classic for the past three years.
Narain added another couple of ‘firsts’ to the innumerable ‘firsts’
in his career CV, becoming the first Indian driver to enter the Le
Mans Series, and the first to score championship points, that too
in his debut race.
The 1,000 km Endurance race held at the Spa-Francorchamps Circuit
in Belgium was the venue of the second round of the 2009 Le Mans
Series (LMS), where Narain started his summer season of racing in
2009. With its mixture of long straights, fast corners and varying
gradients, the circuit ranks as one of the most technically
challenging circuits in the world, and is a firm favourite with
teams and drivers alike. Narain has good memories of this track, as
it was the venue of a great battle between himself & Jacques
Villeneuve during his 2005 Formula 1 campaign.
Due to the 1,000 km long endurance nature of the races (a Formula 1
race is only 305 km long), Narain shared driving duties with two
other drivers, Briton Andrew Meyrick & Dutchman Charles
Zwolsman. Narain undertook the driving duties during qualifying on
Saturday and qualified the car 9th on the grid, ahead of the teams’
second car driven by Christian Albers.
As per championship regulations, the qualifying driver can either
start the race, or finish the race, and Narain chose the latter,
thus doing the 3rd & final stint during Sunday’s race. He took
over the car at 5:15 pm local time, approximately 4 hours 25
minutes after the race had started, and drove the last 1 hour 25
minutes of the race. He crossed the finish line in 6th position, 2
laps ahead of the teams sister car which finished in 7th
position.
After the race Narain said, “It was a phenomenal experience for me
to race in the LMS. The car is extremely technical, very
challenging to drive, and race strategies are of crucial
importance. There are 50 cars racing on the track at the same time,
in 4 different classes of cars. The speed differentials between the
various classes makes it very difficult to race, as you’re lapping
cars all the time, which doesn’t allow you to get into a rhythm at
all. I had a big scare towards the end of the race when Bruno Senna
(nephew of 3-times F1 champion, Ayrton) had a huge shunt just in
front of me at the super-fast Blanchimont corner. Fortunately he
was unhurt, but his car was a total write-off. The list of world
class manufacturers represented in this form of racing is
staggering: Audi, Peugeot, Aston Martin, Porsche, Ferrari,
Lamborghini, Chevrolet, and Mazda.
Unfortunately this season, last minute rule changes like a 30 kg
weight increase & fuel usage restrictions, have slightly
disadvantaged the diesel powered cars, allowing some of the petrol
powered cars like the Aston Martins to have a slight advantage over
us in race pace. The Peugeot is still super-competitive as it’s a
full factory funded team and a much newer design than our Audi
R10s, which started racing over 3 years ago, but our car is very
reliable and should give us an advantage during the next race,
which is the 24 hour race at Le Mans.”
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