Westbrook sweeps Porsche races

AMID SUNDAY CONTROVERSY

Richard Westbrook won the Porsche Michelin Supercup series race July 2 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, completing a sweep of the two Porsche events during the United States Grand Prix weekend.

Series point leader Westbrook led all 32 laps of Porsche competition during the weekend on the 2.605-mile road course.

Westbrook, from London, beat Indianapolis 500 veteran Alessandro Zampedri to the finish line by .9 of a second July 2, averaging 86.297 mph in the No. 17 Racing Team Morellato Porsche 911 GT3 Cup car. Patrick Huisman finished third.

A feud that began in earnest Saturday between Uwe Alzen and David Saelens heated up considerably on Lap 1 of Sunday’s race. Saelens was one position ahead of Alzen entering Turn 4 when a bump from Alzen sent Saelens spinning, causing a five-car pile-up and Safety Car deployment until Lap 6.

“I can’t really speak for anyone else, all I can really do is my own race and the other guys are losing their heads,” Westbrook said Sunday. “But I had to keep my cool because I had Alex Zampedri coming, who is very, very quick around this track. To get two wins at this fantastic arena is a dream come true. I couldn’t leave this country happier.”

Following Saturday’s race, Saelens had choice words for what he felt was bad driving by Alzen. The Porsche Michelin Supercup stewards agreed, handing Alzen a 15-second penalty that dropped him from third to ninth place. The penalty handed third place to Ian Baas, from Indianapolis.

The results for Saelens were disappointing because, like Westbrook, he swept both rounds of Supercup competition at the USGP in 2005. The only other weekend sweep in Supercup racing at the USGP occurred in 2004, when Wolf Henzler won both races.

“Well, always the same madman, you know,” Saelens said of Alzen’s weekend actions. “I think he should go racing in some stock car, or maybe even better, in ultimate fighting. If he has so much aggression in himself, he should get rid of it somewhere else. I work for this the whole year. I train hard for this. Then there is some madman who takes every chance away in just 48 hours, and it’s difficult for me to live with this.”


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