Weekend Herald

Bamber gunning for Porsche Cup glory

Will hoping big result in first full season can open doors as it did for big brother Earl

- Motor racing Eric Thompson

Two- time Le Mans 24 Hour winner Earl Bamber is in Mexico this weekend for round five of the World Endurance Championsh­ip. Bamber, along with his co- drivers Brendon Hartley and Timo Bernhard, lead the championsh­ip and are looking to solidify their position at the top of the table.

The New Zealander’s rise to becoming a Porsche factory driver began when he moved to Asia sensing that was the place to get a foothold as an internatio­nal race car driver. The 27- year- old was a trend- setter in going to Asia when he first raced and won the Formula BMW Asia in 2006.

After travelling the world racing, he joined the Porsche Carrera Cup Asia ( PCCA) one- make championsh­ip in 2013 and promptly won it, which opened the door to a Porsche scholarshi­p and a gig in the SuperCup that he also won. The rest, as they say, is history.

Since Bamber’s first foray into Asia a number of Kiwis have followed in his footsteps including his brother William ( Will) Bamber. The younger brother is racing in his first full PCCA season and is handily placed in third with Martin Ragginger second and fellow Kiwi Chris van der Drift leading.

“This [ PCCA] is my first full season since I raced in the Suzuki Swift Cup [ winner 2010],” said Will Bamber. “I moved up here [ China] after Earl did and for a while just had the odd drive before getting a fulltime drive.

“It was hard at first as I would get last- minute calls to race in different championsh­ips. I’d turn up at the track to just fill in for a driver so I didn’t have much time to get used to the car or track and not many tyres.

“It was fantastic to be able to sign up for a full season, do pre- season testing. It’s paying dividends now.

“I’m also racing in the China GT, the Asia Le Mans series in both sprint and endurance, the Blancpain series, and I also coach in the Thailand Porsche series. So it’s getting pretty busy, which is really cool.

“Pretty much for the next four months I’ll be racing every weekend in a different country.”

Asia has a healthy number of new and growing race championsh­ips and categories and a lot of opportunit­ies for drivers looking to get a foot in the door to build an internatio­nal profile. And while Bamber is keen to race as much as possible, his primary goal is focusing on the PCCA.

One- make championsh­ips are one of the hardest to stand out in, as the skill level is pretty much the same and the drivers are all in the same car, so it’s more about talent rather than machinery.

“Earl has shown what winning this championsh­ip can do for you and how much Porsche will support you. This year the field is high quality and valued all round the world.

“Most of the time if you do well in Carrera Cup people notice, and while the phone doesn’t ring off the hook, you’ve put yourself in the frame and people notice,” he said.

Bamber’s hope i s to follow his brother and get selected for a Porsche scholarshi­p that in turn will open 1. Chris van der Drift 161 2. Martin Ragginger 154 3. Will Bamber 147 4. Andrew Tang 117 5. Zhang Dasheng 107 6. Phillip Hamprecht 102 7. Tanart Sathienthi­rakul 86 8. Akash Neil Nandy 78 more doors. It’s open to drivers under 26 years of age ( Bamber i s 23) and selection is not just based on race results.

“You don’t actually have to win it [ PCCA] to be selected for a scholarshi­p. Basically Porsche China have a driver pool where we go away on boot camps.

“It’s about fitness, media training and you get rated on every single thing about our driving and a whole heap of other stuff. There are six of us in the pool and we find out next week who’s going to get picked to go to Europe in three weeks’ time,” said Bamber.

It’s been a struggle for Bamber to get where he i s and he’s singlemind­ed in grabbing every single opportunit­y that comes his way. The scholarshi­p is top of mind for him as a way to continue climbing up the profession­al racing mountain. Nine Kiwi karters are in Australia preparing for the final round of this year’s Australian Kart Championsh­ip at the Todd Rd kart complex, Melbourne, this weekend. Auckland driver Dylan Drysdale is the best placed ( fifth in the X30 Senior class) with a real chance of a spot on the series’ podium if things go his way. New Zealander Faine Kahia is off to Italy next week to test drive a Lamborghin­i Super Trofeo Huracan with Vincenzo Sospiri Racing ( VSR). This year five VSR drivers were selected into the 2017 Lamborghin­i Young Driver Programme and this will be Kahia’s chance to potentiall­y gain further opportunit­ies within the Lamborghin­i programmes. MotoGP star Valentino Rossi really should stay away from motocross bikes. The Italian thinks he’s broken his right leg after a crash in an endurance event near his home town of Tavullia. He lies fourth in the MotoGP series with the next round at San Marino, September 10. There have been a few changes to the Formula E team roster for the 2017/ 2018 season. Dragon Racing is now Faraday Future Dragon Racing and will field only one car. NextEV is renamed NIO due to its Chinese owner and the rest are Andretti, Audi Sport- backed Abt, DS Virgin, Mahindra, Jaguar, Renault e. dams, Techeetah and Venturi. As is the norm in Formula One for the past decade, all the fun happens off the track. Force India are the latest to provide a bit of off- track entertainm­ent, which however, did start on track. Due to the increasing­ly fractious nature of the relationsh­ip between their drivers Esteban Ocon and Sergio Perez, the team has said if it carries on one of them will have to go. I do think, however, Ocon may have a point after Perez tried to put him into the wall twice at the Belgium Grand Prix. It’s the third time this season that the pair have clashed on track.

 ?? Picture / Supplied ?? Will Bamber says going from being a fill- in driver at other events to his first full season in the PCCA is already paying dividends. Nine Kiwis chasing kart glory Kahia to test for Lamborghin­i Tough break for Rossi Formula E roster changes
Picture / Supplied Will Bamber says going from being a fill- in driver at other events to his first full season in the PCCA is already paying dividends. Nine Kiwis chasing kart glory Kahia to test for Lamborghin­i Tough break for Rossi Formula E roster changes
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