Continuing a long Porsche tradition of recognizing and rewarding young driving talent around the world, Porsche Motorsport North America (PMNA) and Porsche Cars North America (PCNA) teamed together to bring that same development strategy to North America through the Porsche Young Driver Academy with excellent results. For the second year, Porsche returned to Barber Motorsports Park on September 15th-16th with a new set of promising drivers to put through its encompassing Young Driver Academy.
The “class” of 2013 includes three drivers from the two North American one-make IMSA Porsche GT3 Cup Challenge series and “at large” participant nominated by the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA). The Porsche specialists include David Ostella of Toronto who recently captured the Ultra 94 IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge Canada by Michelin, Lehi, Utah’s Madison Snow who is the current point leader of the IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge by Yokohama and Angel Benitez, Jr. of Venezuela who is third in points behind Snow in the U.S.-based series. Michael Lewis, from Laguna Beach, Calif., is the only driver without extensive Porsche GT3 Cup racing experience. He is in his second season of racing in the Formula 3 Euro Series.
Adapting techniques based on Porsche’s European Junior selection process, the Young Driver Academy provides up and coming talent on the North American continent an opportunity to reap many of the same benefits as their counterparts in Europe. The primary task assigned to the Academy by PMNA president and CEO Jens Walther, is discovering talent in the United States and Canada that can maximize their potential in the Porsche system.
“We have created the Young Driver Academy to take full advantage of the deep pool of talent in North America,” said Walther. “As we did last year, we brought in four drivers to Barber Motorsports Park for intense media training, driving skill evaluation with various 911 models including the 911 GT3 Cup racecar and on and off track evaluation. Last year’s class resulted in recommendations that included Porsche Carrera Cup Germany and Porsche Mobil1 Supercup tests in Europe that provided them opportunities to test the waters there.”
What Porsche’s Young Driver Academy Teaches
The four drivers invited to participate this year all have significant experience and impressive résumés. The intention of the Young Driver Academy is not to teach them to drive or race, but instead to provide them with insight and instruction to further develop their careers. Then, to take those lessons and, based on the recommendations of Porsche, to continue that development in the best fitting environment.
In the two-day academy at Birmingham, Alabama’s Barber Motorsports Park, drivers benefit from on-track assessment by Porsche racing legend and lead driving instructor at the Porsche Sport Driving School (PSSD), Hurley Haywood (St. Augustine, Fla.), Porsche factory driver Patrick Long (Playa del Rey, Calif.) and 2011 Rolex GT Champion Andrew Davis (Athens, Ga.).
“I believe we have adopted the very best of what I learned with the Porsche Junior program early in my career and focused it into a couple of very intense days at the Academy,” said Long, who won a spot on the Porsche Junior Team in 2002 before becoming the only current American Porsche factory driver in 2004. “We throw everything we can at these drivers in a very short period of time, from the classroom to the track. We monitor everything they do, how they do it and how they react doing it. It’s a whole picture approach. No matter what happens in the future with their career, they will benefit from the time here if they choose to.”
Success of the Young Driver Academy
The inaugural Young Driver Academy class of 2012 has had its opportunities to follow Porsche’s recommendations and excel this season. The results have proven Porsche’s founding concept that the Young Driver Academy is to help nurture and develop driving talent in a wide range of series.
After attending the academy in 2012, Cooper MacNeil (Boulder, Col.) is in the process of defending his American Le Mans Series GT Challenge (GTC) championship in the WeatherTech Alex Job Racing Porsche 911 GT3 Cup car. He currently leads the 2013 championship by nine points with three events remaining. This success comes despite MacNeil being a full-time student at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Kyle Marcelli (Canada) split his time in 2013 between ALMS Prototype Challenge, where he scored a second place finish at Sebring, and Porsche Carrera Cup Germany, where his Academy recommendation gave him the opportunity to run select races with the German team Molitor Racing and to participate in the Porsche Supercup tryouts. The experience gave Marcelli a taste of world-class GT racing in a series in which most of the current Porsche factory drivers cut their teeth.
Sean Johnston won the 2012 IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge by Yokohama prior to attending the Academy. He is currently running selected Porsche Carrera Cup Germany and Porsche Mobil 1 Supercup races with Team Project 1. He has used his partnership with Tom Driscoll, owner of Driscoll’s berries – the largest berry farm in the U.S. – along with his Academy recommendation, to gain invaluable experience. The Porsche Mobil 1 Supercup races in conjunction with Formula 1 all over the world.
2013 Porsche Young Driver Academy Participant Profiles
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View Comments (1)
Nothing against this talented group of young drivers, but Sloan Urry should be invited too. He's raw, but the talent is evident every time out.