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Racing for the
Long Haul
Liz Halliday of Telesis Intersport Racing
By
Kate Shaw
Photos © Craig Elliott
TORONTO
(January 5, 2006) – Liz Halliday began racing at 16 years old, after working
with her father who was involved with the SCCA, and like David Brabham, once she
began, she wished she had started sooner. “I was inspired by my dad,” she said
in a recent interview, “and now that he can’t drive anymore, I’ve become a part
of his racing career!” But don’t think that ‘late start’ means a thing; Liz
takes on every challenge she’s offered and competes her heart out every time.
And she doesn’t shirk the big challenges either. She proved that in 2003 when
she took on the Bathurst 24.
“I had some experience in endurance racing prior to my entry in the Bathurst,”
she explained. “I had done an LMES six hour race and a 6 hour race at Spa, which
is a very tough track. Ian Donaldson, who had driven the Bathurst before and has
always been helpful to me in my racing career, got me the drive with himself and
his son, and we came seventh at the end of the day, which I didn’t realize was
so significant until after I’d done it!” Although Liz had driven a Porsche Cup
car previous to her Bathurst adventure, that race was her first time in a
GT3-RSR which is quite a different animal. “I went from a lower horsepower car
with ABS to a much more powerful car with no ABS,” she said, “which was quite a
learning curve! We had some problems with the car and the weather was awful, but
we finished well and it was the most incredible circuit I’ve ever driven. I
loved it after one go!”
Having showed to herself and the racing community her prowess over 24 hours, Liz
went on to
complete two other significant 24 hours races: the FIA GT Spa 24 Hours (with the
Lister Storm GT1 car as part of the FIA GT Championship with the Factory
Lister Storm team) and the
24 Hours of Le Mans (with Telesis Intersport Racing). (She has driven a GT car in the Grand Am series but has yet
to do the 24 Hours of Daytona, and hopes to add that race to her C.V. one day.)
Of Spa and Le Mans, she considers Spa the more difficult although both races
were “awesome.” “Spa is much harder on you physically than Le Mans,” she
explained. “You are full out all the time and you don’t get much of a chance to
rest. The track is also much more crowded and much darker at night than Le Mans!
At Le Mans there’s less panic to get the corners, and much less traffic. A lap
at Spa in a ‘big car’ will average 2.16; at Le Mans a similar lap will take you
3.55. So although Le Mans does have plenty of challenges, I would call Spa the
“Big Boy Race” of the 24 hour genre.”
That’s not to say anything was lacking at Le Mans, which Liz ran for the first
time in 2005 with her current team, Telesis Intersport Racing. “I never attended
Le Mans as a spectator,” she said, “so 2005 was my first visit to the circuit –
although of course I had watched it on television. And I loved it, both on and
off the track! The crowds were enormous and very attentive – in fact, sometimes
they were too attentive and it was difficult to get from the car to dinner, with
the hordes of people who stopped me wanting autographs and photos! But I very
much enjoyed the attention and the press, and especially the fact that my entire
family came to watch me race, even my 87 year old Grandfather flew all the way
from California for the event. When I went through slow corners at night I had a
chance to notice the camera flashes and the campfires, and I always wondered if
my family was at that corner as I went around.” Liz loves to drive at night,
although she said at Spa it was much more difficult than it was at Le Mans.
Intersport retired, as it happened, from a four-lap lead in LMP-2 at 1:30 a.m.
Sunday morning at Le Mans, due to valve train problems, but the car was a dream
to drive until that point and there was not a single problem with the car until
that point. The team is looking forward to another shot at the LMP2 podium in
2006, when Liz will again be joining them.
During
her very busy 2005 season, Liz completed five ALMS races with the team, and the
most exciting of these was arguably the Road America round when the car caught
fire, an event guaranteed to make the highlight reels for the season. “I had no
idea the car was on fire,” she said. “I had noticed the smoke and thought it was
an electrical fire, but the next thing I knew the crew were shouting at me, ‘the
car is on fire, you have to get out now!’” She brought the car into the pits and
jumped out to find the fire fully engaged (later investigation revealed the fire
was caused when the fuel filter split) – but then because the pit lane was
uphill, the burning car began to roll back onto the track! “It was pure instinct
that drove me to jump back and stop the car,” she admitted. “I never even
thought that the car might explode – that never occurred to me at all – I only
thought I had to get it stopped before it caused anybody trouble on the track.”
That is sports car talk for ‘a NASCAR style pile-up” which surely would have
occurred had her instincts not been so well honed! As it was, she got the car
off the track and stopped as the fire marshals rushed up to extinguish the
flames – and the next race she and Clint drove that same car to a win at
Mosport. And to Liz that is not a heroic action – that is just what had to be
done.
Because she’s driven in both GT and LMP cars now, I asked her if she had any
thoughts on the issue of four classes of cars on the track at once with such
differences in their speed, each intent on running his own race. In her own case
she didn’t find it difficult in either aspect. “The closing speed is so fast in
an LMP car,” she explained, “that the GT cars really don’t present much of an
obstacle. It’s the GT1 cars, with so much more speed, that cause the
difficulties.” There was the matter of a Maserati Corsa at Petit Le Mans, for
example.
“I came over the hill,” she recounted, “and there was the Maserati, spinning
right in front of me! I was fortunate that I didn’t hit him any harder and we
had little damage – I went right into the pits and the crew yelled at me ‘why
are you coming in?’ I pointed out to them that for one thing I had just totally
clobbered this Maserati!” But from her there was not the usual complaint about
the actions of other drivers; she shrugged, laughed, and concluded, “Live and
learn!”
Telesis Intersport, whose driver Clint Field became the youngest ALMS champion
ever in 2005, has
rewarded Liz Halliday’s hard work in 2005 with a full time racing seat for 2006,
which will be the first time she has focused solely on one racing series. Liz
will maintain her residence in the UK during the season, but will be present for
all testing and racing during the year. “The commute will still be a little
difficult,” she agreed, “but concentrating on only one series will make it
easier on me as I will not have to change cars and therefore my mindset as I go
from one series to another.” The team has already had one testing session at
Sebring before Christmas, and four others are scheduled during the year, the
next another Sebring outing at the end of January.
“Intersport is a great team,” Liz said unequivocally, “and both Clint and John
have been enormously helpful to me as I learned the tracks and got comfortable
in the car. It was an exciting experience in 2005 and I am very much looking
forward to more of the same in 2006.” One of the advantages of doing a full
season in the ALMS, she recounted, is that her family will be able to, and
intents to, attend each and every race in which she runs!
In case you were wondering, Intersport in general and her team-mate in
particular have made nothing of ‘the girl thing.’ “I am not far off Clint’s
pace,” she said with a laugh, “and it has not come up at all. I suppose if I
were much slower than he, perhaps something might have been said!” That’s the
way it works in racing – prove you can do the job, and get on with it. Who
knows, one day perhaps Liz and Clint will team up to run the Bathurst 24
together!
Meanwhile we can all look forward to an exciting 2006 as Telesis Intersport
Racing and Liz Halliday take to an ALMS track in search of another championship.
Look for her when they visit an ALMS track near you.
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