The 52nd Rolex 24 will take place at Daytona International Speedway on Jan. 25-26

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Three days of "Roar Before the Rolex 24" test sessions wrapped up Sunday at Daytona International Speedway with a somewhat odd result. The fastest lap came from the very first session, withstanding seven subsequent sessions and a total track time of 12 hours, 45 minutes over a three-day period,

A disclaimer: This was a test — and only a test. Nonetheless, Christian Fittipaldi and his Action Express Racing teammates left the speedway feeling good about their chances of winning the 52nd Rolex 24 At Daytona, set for Jan. 25-26, the season-opening race for the new TUDOR United SportsCar Championship.

Fittipaldi put down the quick time — both overall and in the headlining Prototype class — Friday morning in the No. 5 Corvette DP: 1 minute, 38.630 seconds/129.940 mph on the Daytona 3.56-mile road course. 

The weekend’s other top times by class:

·      Prototype Challenge — 1:42.010/125.635 by Sam Bird (No. 8 ORECA FLM09), in the Roar’s third session on Saturday;

·      GT Le Mans — 1:45.564/121.405 by Nick Tandy (No. 911 Porsche 911), in the second session on Friday;

·      GT Daytona — 1:47.981/118.688 by Spencer Pumpelly (No. 45 Audi R8), also in the second session on Friday.

IMSA Vice President of Competition and Technical Regulations Scot Elkins called the "Roar" a success, saying, "we still have a little bit of work to do [on competition] before the Rolex 24 but we made the gains we expected to make [since a test in November]. We also got the new rule book out to the teams during the test. 

"We feel like we’re in a good position. There’s a feeling of optimism in the garage." 

Testing, of course, is about more than posting fast laps. It sometimes is about revealing potential problems that could derail the actual race effort. The Ford/Riley Prototype teams fielded by Chip Ganassi Racing and Michael Shank Racing were dealing with that sort of situation; after posting some impressive times Friday and Saturday, potential exhaust system issues resulted in both teams waving off Sunday’s final practice sessions to head back to their shops and go to work. 

After all, time does grow short. 

Only three weeks to go, until the Rolex 24.

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Former Daytona 500 champion Jamie McMurray had the day’s best lap overall 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — It’s a new day for sports car racing in North America and for 90 minutes Saturday at Daytona International Speedway, it was a new night as well.

The "Roar Before the Rolex 24" test sessions, held in advance of the Rolex 24 At Daytona, annually feature a night practice that is typically interesting and sometimes precarious, offering a glimpse of what’s to come when the Rolex 24 is run on Daytona’s 3.56-mile road course.

Saturday night’s glimpse served as an under-the-lights highlight of this weekend for the new IMSA TUDOR United SportsCar Championship, which opens its inaugural season with the Rolex 24 on Jan. 25-26. The TUDOR Championship is the result of the merger of the American Le Mans Series and the GRAND-AM Rolex Series. 

In three weeks, approximately half of the Rolex 24 will be run between sundown and sunrise, which obviously makes night practice vital. That’s especially true on Daytona’s layout, which utilizes all four 31-degree banked turns in addition to the infield’s twists and turns. On the upside, at least it’s not as imposing as it was before the speedway installed lights in 1998. 

Still, it’s no easy task. 

"Some of the drivers who are struggling during the day really freak out at night," said Sebastien Bourdais, co-driver of the No. 5 Action Express Corvette DP. "It’s important to work with the traffic at night, because the [skill] level of driving is very different. It makes it hard because we’re trying to race at the front. … We have to stay on our toes and try to stay out of trouble." 

Bourdais was fastest in the night session, held under clear skies with temperature in the 50s, with a lap of 1 minute, 39.223 seconds/129.164 mph. 

Jamie McMurray, the former Daytona 500 champion who is part of an imposing all-star driver lineup fielded by car owner Chip Ganassi, had the day’s best lap overall on Saturday afternoon – 1:38.980/129.481 in the No. 01 Ford/Riley DP. 

After two days of testing and six sessions, the best lap from Friday morning’s first session still stands at the top – 1:38.630/129.940 by Bourdais’ teammate, Christian Fittipaldi.

The Roar wraps up Sunday with a 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. schedule.

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Patrón will also serve as the official spirits partner of IMSA and the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Jan. 4, 2014) – Officials from Patrón Spirits International and the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA) today announced a multi-year agreement making Tequila Patrón the entitlement partner of the four-race North American Endurance Cup and Official Spirits Partner of IMSA and the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship.

This agreement extends one of the most active and visible partnerships in North American sports car racing over the past decade. In addition, Tequila Patrón will continue its primary sponsorship of the two-car Extreme Speed Motorsports team in the Prototype (P) class, as well as its title sponsorship of the TUDOR Championship event on the streets of Long Beach, Calif., on April 11.

“After a proud history with the American Le Mans Series, we’re very excited and honored to continue our support of the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship and sponsorship of the Tequila Patrón North American Endurance Cup,” said Stephanie Rivera, motorsports manager at Patrón Spirits. “This enormously competitive, energetic world-class racing truly captures what our high quality, ultra-premium luxury spirits are all about.”

The 2014 Tequila Patrón North American Endurance Cup encompasses the four iconic endurance races in the TUDOR Championship:  the Rolex 24 At Daytona at Daytona International Speedway on Jan. 25-26; the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring Fueled by Fresh from Florida at Sebring International Raceway on March 15; the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen at Watkins Glen International on June 29; and the 1,000-mile or 10-hour Petit Le Mans Powered by Mazda at Road Atlanta on Oct. 4. 

The Tequila Patrόn North American Endurance Cup rewards the top-performing teams, drivers and manufacturers over 52 hours of endurance racing. This prestigious endurance competition will feature an additional purse of $300,000, with $100,000 going to the Prototype (P) and GT Le Mans (GTLM) championship-winning teams and $50,000 for the Prototype Challenge (PC) and GT Daytona (GTD) team champions.

“At the outset of the process to merge the American Le Mans Series presented by Tequila Patrón and the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series, we established a goal of providing substantial opportunities for our existing marketing partners, and especially so with our title partners,” said IMSA President and Chief Operating Officer, Scott Atherton. “Today we are thrilled to announce we’ve accomplished our goal with the confirmation of this title partnership for the Tequila Patrón North American Endurance Cup. 

“Tequila Patrón played a significant role in the success of the American Le Mans Series over the past decade, and (Patrón Spirits International CEO) Ed Brown was instrumental in bringing together (GRAND-AM Founder) Jim France and (American Le Mans Series Founder) Don Panoz to create what we now know as the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship. With that in mind, we could not be more pleased to confirm Tequila Patrón continuing its involvement in a very significant and multi-faceted role.  Tequila Patrόn will continue to have its name on some of our most valuable assets.”

The 2014 TUDOR Championship opens at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Fla. with the 52nd Rolex 24 At Daytona on Jan. 25-26, 2014. 

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Larson, McMurray, others excel in opening practice for classic race

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The Rolex 24 at Daytona, a long-running good thing, is destined to become even better.

That fact was underscored Friday both on and off the track during the first day of the annual "Roar Before the Rolex 24" test sessions at Daytona International Speedway.

Friday showcased star power in terms of machinery and men, providing ample preseason boost to already burgeoning anticipation about the 52nd running of the Rolex 24, which will open the inaugural IMSA TUDOR United SportsCar Championship season on Jan. 25-26. The TUDOR Championship is the product of the merger of the American Le Mans Series and the GRAND-AM Rolex Series.

The long-awaited combination of prototypes from the two former series, resulting in the new headlining Prototype class, was on display in the form of 15 exotic pieces. At day’s end, the fast lap around the 3.56-mile DIS road course belonged to the No. 5 Action Express Racing Corvette DP of Christian Fittipaldi, Joao Barbosa and Sebastien Bourdais — 1 minute, 38.630 seconds (129.940 mph).

Complementing the on-track action was the announcement of another all-star, two-car Prototype lineup from Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, combining drivers from sports cars, stock cars and open-wheel. Ganassi’s organization has dominated the Rolex 24 in recent years, winning the endurance classic five times: 2006-08, 2011 and 2013.

In the team’s No. 01 Ford EcoBoost/Riley, five-time Rolex 24 winner Scott Pruett and three-time winner Memo Rojas will be joined by former Daytona 500 champion Jamie McMurray and reigning Indy Lights champion Sage Karam. In Ganassi’s No. 02 entry, former Indianapolis 500 champion Scott Dixon and reigning Indy 500 champion Tony Kanaan will be joined by sports car prototype ace Marino Franchitti and young NASCAR star Kyle Larson, last year’s Sunoco Rookie of the Year in the NASCAR Nationwide Series who is moving up to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series this year with Ganassi.

"When you make it to Victory Lane in [the Rolex 24], you know you have accomplished something really special," Ganassi said. "In addition, it isn’t often when we can bring such a diverse group of drivers from NASCAR, IndyCar and IMSA together to compete in one race. It is a great kick-off to our racing season."

The TUDOR Championship consists of four classes: Prototype, Prototype Challenge, GT Le Mans and GT Daytona. In addition to the Prototype class, Friday’s other three class-leading times:

— In Prototype Challenge, the No. 54 CORE Autosport ORECA FLM09 of Colin Braun, Jon Bennett and Mark Wilkins led the way at 1:42.468 (125.073);

— In GT Le Mans, the No. 911 Porsche North America 911 RSR driven by Nick Tandy, Richard Lietz and Patrick Pilet was clocked at 1:45.564 (121.405);

— In GT Daytona, the No. 45 Flying Lizard Motorsports Audi R8, driven by Nelson Canache Jr., Tim Pappas and Spencer Pumpelly ran a fast lap of 1:47.981 (118.688).

Testing continues Saturday with a 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. ET session followed by the traditional Roar night practice set for 6:30-8 p.m. under the lights. The Roar wraps up Sunday with a 9 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. schedule.

 

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Sprint Cup Series rookie honored to be named to Ganassi entry for Rolex 24

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Kyle Larson humbly took a seat, flanked by reigning Indy 500 winner Tony Kanaan and sports car ace Marino Franchitti as his Target Chip Ganassi team unveiled its latest all-star Rolex 24 at Daytona driver lineup Friday.

Just in front of Larson on the Daytona International Speedway Media Center stage sat five-time Rolex 24 champion Scott Pruett and 2010 Daytona 500 winner Jamie McMurray — all participating in this weekend’s Roar Before the Rolex 24 test session.

When Larson, a 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate returns to Daytona’s famous high banks for the Jan. 25-26 twice around-the-clock classic, he’ll make his sports car and endurance racing debut co-driving with Kanaan, reigning IndyCar Series champion Scott Dixon and Franchitti in the second team car, the No. 02 Target Chip Ganassi Ford prototype.

“It feels like I’m in a dream of some sort,’’ the 21-year old Larson said with a big grin.

“It’s going to be a big year for me with the Sprint Cup Series and adding this to the list of races I get to run.”

Larson and his Sprint Cup Series Ganassi teammate McMurray are hoping to add their names to a list of NASCAR full-timers with Rolex victory watches — an elite group that also includes the other NASCAR driver entered in the inaugural TUDOR United SportsCar Championship race, A.J. Allmendinger (who will drive for Michael Shank Racing).

As the diverse and decorated Ganassi group traded inside jokes with another on stage and kidded about all the different languages spoken at the lunch table, Larson beamed.

A sprint car prodigy, the 2013 Nationwide Series Rookie of the Year and the first of NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity graduates to earn a full-time Cup ride, Larson brings respectable credentials of his own. Yet it was obvious he couldn’t help but appreciate the company he’s keeping in Daytona’s sports car paddock.

“You grow up watching the NASCAR guys then you’re like, ‘wow’ when you meet them," said Larson, who will replace Juan Pablo Montoya in the No. 42 Target Chevrolet in 2014. “And then watching the guys in different series there’s a ‘wow’ factor to meeting them and working with them.

“It’s cool to get to know their personalities because you don’t get to see them except in a race car on TV. I’m glad to be a part of a team full of great guys and great drivers.’’

Then, glancing over at the others, Larson joked, “I’ve got the least amount of personality on this team.’’

Although Larson drove the Ganassi Ford in a test here last month, he didn’t get a lot of time in the car Friday, which featured brisk winds and temperatures in the 40s — one of the coldest days in a year.

However, that’s not to say Larson wasn’t getting plenty of advice from his veteran teammates.

Despite the laughs and smiles at the press conference, the team’s full-time TUDOR United SportsCar Championship driver Pruett was quick to remind everyone that this race is “serious business.” For him and his co-driver in the No. 01 Ganassi Ford, Memo Rojas, it isn’t only a prestigious world-renowned event, it’s the first race toward a season title.

The Ganassi two-car effort has five Rolex 24 wins and two runner-up finishes in the last eight years.

“The biggest thing coming into this race is to understand it’s a 24-hour race and that’s (important) for anyone coming in,’’ Pruett said. “We’ve had rookies the last few years and so we absolutely spend a lot of time, all the drivers, reminding that when you come here you can’t take a chance getting tangled with a guy.

“It’s a lot of spending time just helping them get in their head it’s a whole different view of how you race guys. Here, you give them a lot of room and remember 24 hours is a lot of time.’’

Larson is well aware of the unique challenges this race will present. And that’s part of the reason he was so eager to compete in it.

“Being with Chip Ganassi … I know a lot of his NASCAR drivers have come over and done this race so I had my fingers crossed that I’d get the chance to run it,’’ Larson said. “But I didn’t know it would be this year. I thought maybe next year after he could see how I did in a stock car first.

 “I asked Juan (Montoya) how he liked the race and the cars and he said the cars are extremely fun to drive and this year’s cars will be even better with the new rules. And Jamie (McMurray) says this is his favorite race of the year. So that makes it even more exciting for me and brings the intensity level up.

“I can’t wait to get back here in two weeks to race. I’d like to win a watch.”

 

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Expansion project won’t hinder facility from being Rolex ready

Fans, drivers and teams will notice plenty of changes afoot when they converge on Daytona International Speedway this winter.

Progress continues on the massive $400 million Daytona Rising expansion project, set for a January 2016 completion date. This month, the focus shifts to making the facility race-ready for the Tudor United SportsCar Championship’s Rolex 24 at Daytona on Jan. 25-26 and the kickoff of Budweiser Speedweeks, culminating in the 56th annual Daytona 500 on Feb. 23.

The hope is to have minimal need for a "pardon our dust" sign on the grounds of the 2.5-mile superspeedway. Daytona International Speedway president Joie Chitwood III said that track officials have worked extensively with design/builder partners Barton Malow and Rossetti to help the facility accommodate race fans even as construction continues.

"We are proud of the progress thus far on the Daytona Rising project and equally excited to welcome fans for the start of the 2014 racing season," Chitwood said Friday in a release provided by the track. "They will get an up close and personal look at all the progress we’ve made to date and hopefully, they will share in the excitement that we’ve felt since the groundbreaking in July."

Changes already underway to make the track race-ready include relocating the merchandise store building pad outside the frontstretch, building a temporary suite tower lobby and temporary ticketing trailers and the relocation of admission gates and pavement to improve fan access.

Even with the holiday season in full swing, construction crews made major strides in December, installing steel near the middle bowl section of the frontstretch grandstand, making the first elevated concrete pour to construct the first slab on the metal deck and completing pile cap installation.

Once complete, the revamped speedway will have five redesigned entrances, social neighborhoods along the frontstretch, 101,000 wider and more comfortable seats and expanded restroom and concession facilities.

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Top 10 list as voted on by NASCAR.com editorial staff

There was heartbreak and history, scandal and suspense.

There was dirt racing and a brand-new vehicle that ushered in some of the best racing in years. There was a historic champion and a race outcome that brought forth some of NASCAR’s harshest sanctions.

It was 2013, a year perhaps unlike any other in the sport’s storied history.

On the one-year anniversary of the new-look NASCAR.com launch, we present the most memorable moments from a remarkable season as voted on by the editorial staff. That list is below.

Agree or disagree? Share your thoughts in the comments.

10. Jason Leffler killed in sprint car accident

Jason Leffler wasn’t the type of NASCAR driver that would get a starring role. But the 37-year-old simply loved to race. He had 423 career starts in a NASCAR national series, including 73 in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series — the last one came this year at Pocono.

Away from the NASCAR spotlight, you could find Leffler at a short track or in a sprint car or a late model, scratching the racing itch. He died in a sprint car race accident on June 12 in New Jersey.

Although Leffler loved racing, his greatest love was reserved for his son, Charlie Dean. Friends said Leffler’s life was transformed when Charlie was born. The Charlie Dean Discretionary Trust Fund was established after Leffler’s death, with drivers and friends such as Kasey Kahne ensuring the driver’s legacy would last.

9. A new generation

Welcome, Generation 6. The vehicle that took more than two years to develop took center stage in 2013. The results? Well, the numbers speak for themselves.

There were 19 track qualifying records set by 11 different drivers. The average margin of victory (1.267 seconds) for the season was the lowest in eight years. Twenty times, a race was decided by less than one second.

The on-track racing appeared markedly better in 2013, and the careful design of the vehicle allowed for more brand identifiable machines.

Considering this was just the first year in the Gen-6 cars, expect the product to get even better in the future.

8. Hello, history

It happened at Martinsville Speedway, perhaps the most historic track on the NASCAR circuit. In the rolling foothills of Virginia, 30 miles east from Danville where pioneer Wendell Scott was born, Darrell Wallace Jr. won his first NASCAR national series race with Scott’s family watching.

Scott was the first African-American driver to win in a national NASCAR series. Wallace joined him 50 years later with his Oct. 26 victory in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at a tiny track that Scott himself raced on 23 times at NASCAR’s premier level.

When the gravity of the moment hit Wallace, he began to sob in his truck. In an interview the next day with members of the Scott family, Franklin Scott said of his father: "Well, when the checkered flag dropped, I heard a big boom from heaven, and my daddy said, ‘Hell, yeah!’ "

7. Return to its roots

The sun shone, the grandstands swelled and, yes, the trucks kicked up plumes of dirt as they maneuvered around Eldora Speedway in late July. If you closed your eyes, it was almost like you were in the 1970s.

In fact, prior to the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series competing at the Tony Stewart-owned Eldora Speedway, the last time a national series raced on dirt was more than 40 years ago when Richard Petty won a premier series event in 1970 at North Carolina State Fairgrounds.

The return to dirt lived up to its billing. The racing was fantastic in front of a sold-out crowd. Norm Benning delivered one of the quotes of the year ("I never lifted") and offered a one-fingered salute for good measure after qualifying for the main event, and then young stars Austin Dillon and Kyle Larson stole the show with legendary performances that belied their ages.

"This is special," Dillon uttered after winning the race.

We’d have to agree.

6. What’s your number?

In an announcement that mixed the concepts of history and change, the No. 3 is returning to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series next year.

Richard Childress Racing made the announcement in December, promoting NASCAR Nationwide Series champion Austin Dillon to the Sprint Cup Series to carry the number. The 3 hasn’t been seen on the track since the 2001 Daytona 500 in which Dale Earnhardt, who drove the car to 67 of his 76 career victories, died following a late-race wreck.

Legions of Earnhardt fans responded — both in support and in anger. Dale Earnhardt Jr. signed off on the move and said it’s good for the sport to move forward with a new generation. At the very least, you get the sense Dillon realizes his place in history with a new-look No. 3.

"It’s a huge responsibility," he said.

5. Sign of progress

Danica Patrick‘s rookie season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series didn’t produce the results the driver wanted. No one can take away Daytona, though.

After a blistering practice in which Patrick turned heads in her green No. 10 GoDaddy Chevrolet, Patrick won the Coors Light Pole for the season-opening Daytona 500. She was the first woman in history to win the pole for the prestigious race, and backed that up with an eighth-place finish.

It would be her only top-10 of the season.

4. Stewart sidelined

The garage was a little less noisy through the final third of the season, and certainly was missing some of its character.

We all missed veteran Tony Stewart. Stewart was sidelined for the final 15 races after shattering his leg in a sprint car race accident. The incident came mere days after he chastised reporters who inquired about a previous — less severe — sprint car wreck.

That’s just ‘Smoke,’ though. He loves to race and doesn’t always need the Sprint Cup spotlight to do so. His first press conference following multiple surgeries was equal parts beautiful and psychological, as he extolled on both racing and the meaning of life. He showed up to the regular-season finale at Richmond on a motorized scooter, his injured right leg bearing scars that looked like a shark took a hunk out of it.

The veteran is expected to be cleared in time for the Daytona 500. We hope that’s the case.

3. Call him ‘Six-Time’

Jimmie Johnson claimed his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship in two years — or in JST (Johnson Standard Time), an eternity. The Hendrick Motorsports driver had previously won five in a row before falling short in both 2011 and 2012.

His return to the top was highlighted by a dominant Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, in which he won twice and finished in the top five seven times in 10 races. At the end, Johnson’s title was graceful, dominant and marvelous.

With six career titles, Johnson is one behind the record held by both Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt. Seven can wait, but maybe not for long.

2. A late addition

Thirteen turned out to be a lucky number for Jeff Gordon. The veteran was on the verge of missing the Chase for just the second time in his career following a regular-season finale at Richmond that was steeped in controversy.

As NASCAR opened an investigation in the late-race proceedings, Gordon turned into the Rainbow Worrier as he awaited his fate. In the end, days before the Chase was to begin, NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France announced the unprecedented action of adding Gordon to the postseason field as the 13th driver.

The Richmond findings, along with alleged collusion between the No. 22 Penske Racing team and No. 38 Front Row Motorsports team, led to a totality of events outside of Gordon’s control, France said.

The announcement also served as a signature moment, of sorts, for France, who felt the sport’s integrity was at stake.

"I have the authority to do that," France declared in adding Gordon to the postseason. "We are going to do that."

1. Richmond impact

It started with a spin. Clint Bowyer‘s No. 15 Toyota lost control in the waning moments of the regular-season finale at Richmond, forcing teams to pit road and altering the initial playoff field for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

The end of the race was just the beginning, however. Bowyer was accused of spinning out intentionally, and his Michael Waltrip Racing teammate Brian Vickers pitted after the ensuing green flag dropped following some questionable radio dialogue.

By the end of the night, Ryan Newman — who was leading the race at the time of the spin — was out of the Chase, while MWR driver Martin Truex Jr. was in.

That changed days later after a NASCAR investigation. All MWR drivers were docked 50 points, which ousted Truex from the Chase and added Newman. The organization was also fined $300,000 for attempting to "manipulate the outcome of the race," as NASCAR Vice President for Competition Robin Pemberton said.

The oft-gregarious Bowyer went into a funk for the majority of the postseason, and a major sponsor withdrew its support from MWR, leading to Truex losing his full-time ride there (he eventually signed with Furniture Row Racing).

NASCAR also implemented new rules before the Chase opener at Chicagoland, including "giving 100 percent effort" at all times.

Bowyer never regained his regular-season momentum, Truex ended up on a new team for 2014 and a reinvigorated Jeff Gordon made a legitimate run for his fifth Sprint Cup championship before falling short.

Note: This order was determined by a poll that included staff members Zack Albert, Kristen Boghosian, Pat DeCola, RJ Kraft, Brad Norman, Taylor Starer and George Winkler.

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Test sessions for ‘Roar Before the Rolex 24’ run from Friday to Sunday

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — A new era of sports car racing in North America will be unveiled this weekend, with 66 cars set to begin testing for the Jan. 25-26 Rolex 24 At Daytona, the inaugural race for the IMSA-sanctioned TUDOR United SportsCar Championship.
 
The annual "Roar Before the Rolex 24" test sessions run through Sunday on the 3.56-mile DIS road course, showcasing cars in four classes — Prototype, Prototype Challenge, GT Le Mans and GT Daytona. The first-year TUDOR Championship is the result of the merger of the American Le Mans Series and the GRAND-AM Rolex Series.
 
This year marks the 52nd running of the Rolex 24, which for years opened the IMSA season. That ended with a split of the North American sports car pie between the ALMS and GRAND-AM that lasted 14 years, with IMSA sanctioning aligning with the ALMS. With the merger, IMSA and Daytona are together again.

As are many of the world’s premier sports car competitors; the Rolex 24 typically is the ultimate all-star race, with drivers from a variety of racing disciplines gathered for very special "one-off" appearances. This year should again attract a number of major names from other series; announcements to that effect are expected to begin later this week.
 
An immediate area of interest is the headlining Prototype class, featuring the respective all-time victory record holders from the ALMS and Rolex Series, Lucas Luhr and Scott Pruett. Luhr will co-drive an ORECA prototype for Pickett Racing with Klaus Graf. Pruett and Memo Rojas will team in the No. 01 Ford/Riley DP for Chip Ganassi Racing. Luhr won 49 races in the ALMS while Pruett won 41 in the Rolex Series.
 
"I absolutely consider the Rolex 24 to be an incredible event," said Pruett, who scored his fifth overall Daytona victory in 2013, which tied Hurley Haywood’s all-time mark. "It’s got international flair, and it kicks off all racing for the year. It’s a big event for us at Ganassi and for me personally; this test is very important to ensure we’re good to go when we return in three weeks for the race."
 
In addition to the TUDOR Championship, 41 teams are entered for the "Roar" weekend in the production-based IMSA Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge, IMSA’s top developmental series.
 
Testing runs 9 a.m.-5:15 p.m. Friday; 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Saturday (6:30-8); and 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. on Sunday.

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Paint scheme test-DO NOT PUBLISH

SPRINT CUP SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Austin Dillon will drive the No. 3 Dow Chevrolet. (This one is 922 x 400. We used 922 x 300 last year but these images won’t fit the whole car with that dimension.)

SHOP: Austin Dillon die-casts

Austin Dillon will drive the No. 3 Dow Chevrolet. (This one is the full size image in the Eutechnyx folder, the full size is 1920 x 1080. We would definitely need to scale down the file size but I wanted to offer a different look from what we’ve done.)

SHOP: Austin Dillon die-casts

Kevin Harvick will drive the No. 4 Jimmy John’s Chevrolet.

SHOP: Kevin Harvick die-casts

Danica Patrick will drive the No. 10 GoDaddy Chevrolet.

SHOP: Danica Patrick die-casts

Kyle Larson will drive the No. 42 Target Chevrolet.

SHOP: Kyle Larson die-casts

Dale Earnhardt Jr. will drive the No. 88 National Guard Chevrolet.

SHOP: Dale Earnhardt Jr. die-casts

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READ: Top 10 on-track
moves of 2013

WATCH: Handing out the
2013 Loopie Awards