GRAND-AM Road Racing, American Le Mans Series Announce Historic Merger
Combined Sports Car Organization Will Debut With 2014 Rolex 24 At Daytona;
New Board To Feature GRAND-AM, ALMS, NASCAR Executives
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Sept. 5, 2012) – The
most significant development in the history of sports car racing in
North America was announced today, with plans for a landmark merger of
GRAND-AM Road Racing and the American Le Mans Series (ALMS) unveiled at
Daytona International Speedway.
Under terms of
the merger, the following entities will combine with GRAND-AM: the
American Le Mans Series; the International Motor Sports Association,
which sanctions ALMS events; the Road Atlanta race track facility in
Braselton, Ga.; the Chateau Elan Hotel and Conference Center in Sebring,
Fla.; and Sebring International Raceway, via a reassignment of the
lease agreement with the Sebring Airport Authority to operate the
raceway.
Both sanctioning bodies will continue
to operate separate schedules in 2013 before racing under one banner in
2014 beginning with North America’s premier sports car race, the 52nd
annual Rolex 24 At Daytona. A board of directors has been formed to
operate the new combined organization with GRAND-AM founder Jim France
as chairman and ALMS founder Don Panoz as vice chairman. Other members:
NASCAR Vice Chair/Executive Vice President Lesa France Kennedy, GRAND-AM
President/CEO Ed Bennett, ALMS President/CEO Scott Atherton and NASCAR
Vice President/Deputy General Counsel Karen Leetzow.
“Today’s
announcement will transform sports car racing on this continent, along
with having world-wide industry implications,” said Bennett. “Aside from
the organizations involved, everybody wins: drivers, teams,
manufacturers, sponsors, tracks – and most all, the fans.
“This
new approach is going to be revolutionary, as we take the best
components from two premium brands, combine them and then benefit
mutually from the considerable resources both sides will bring to our
efforts. This is a bold move – and the right one – for the long-term,
optimum growth of sports car racing.”
Added
Atherton: “This merger will blend the best assets and attributes of each
organization in terms of technical rules, officiating, marketing,
communications, personnel, scheduling and broadcasting. The result will
be one of the strongest, most competitive and powerful motorsports
marketing platforms in the world.”
Post-merger
branding still is being determined for the new organization and its
principal series, as are specifics regarding the 2014 schedule. Also,
the competitive class structure and technical rules beginning in 2014
have yet to be finalized.
The ALMS began
operations in 1999, with GRAND-AM debuting in 2000. Both organizations
were created in the aftermath of the late-’90s departure of the highly
popular IMSA Camel GT circuit in North America. IMSA was founded in 1969
by John Bishop and then-NASCAR President Bill France Sr.
“This
merger will strengthen professional sports car racing beyond what
either of our organizations could have achieved separately,” said Panoz.
“The American Le Mans Series was founded for the fans and I’m
personally gratified that they will benefit greatly as we now work
together with GRAND-AM to take this sport to the level at which it
belongs in the North American and international motorsports landscapes.”
France
said the merger was exciting both “on a professional and a personal
level, with me being a long-time sports car fan. This merger was
achieved through a true spirit of cooperation. Moving forward, that same
spirit will drive our day-to-day efforts.”
Collectively, this
merger involves a total of eight sports car series racing throughout
North America. GRAND-AM sanctions and operates the Rolex Sports Car
Series, the Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge and the TOTAL
Performance Showcase. GRAND-AM also sanctions the Ferrari Challenge that
is operated by Ferrari North America. IMSA is the sanctioning body for
the ALMS, the IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge by Yokohama Series, the Cooper
Tires Prototype Lites Powered by Mazda Series and the Porsche GT3 Cup
Challenge Canada by Michelin.
“This looks good from a business
standpoint but it also ‘feels good’ from a historical standpoint,”
Bennett said. “Both GRAND-AM and the ALMS have lineages tied to Daytona
Beach, Daytona International Speedway and the France Family. This
announcement is a proud moment for all involved, as we now look forward
to a bright future for sports car racing.”
ABOUT GRAND-AM ROAD RACING:
GRAND-AM
Road Racing operates and sanctions the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car
Series, Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge and the TOTAL Performance
Showcase. GRAND-AM also sanctions the Ferrari Challenge in North
America. Owned by NASCAR Holdings Inc., GRAND-AM is located in Daytona
Beach, Florida. With a racing schedule led by the prestigious
season-opening Rolex 24 At Daytona, GRAND-AM delivers professional
sports car racing to key markets throughout North America in addition to
being televised in the United States and Canada on SPEED and
distributed globally through ESPN International. For additional
information, please visit www.grand-ammedia.com.
ABOUT AMERICAN LE MANS SERIES:
The
American Le Mans Series presented by Tequila PatrĂ³n is based on the
prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans. It features multiple classes of
purpose-built prototypes and production-based GT cars that race on the
same track at the same time. The ALMS holds events annually throughout
North America on premier urban street circuits and top permanent natural
terrain road courses. The American Le Mans Series has a leadership role
in motorsports for the furthering of alternative fuel technology and
use. The ALMS was the first motorsports body in the world to embrace an
entire suite of alternative energy sources – E10 and E85 cellulosic
ethanols, isobutanol, clean diesel and hybrid technologies. For
additional information, please visit www.alms.com.
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