| |
Cadillac
Returns
To
Racing
With
CTS-V
Coupe
Two
teams
set to
compete
in SCCA
World
Challenge
GT
Series
DETROIT
–
Cadillac
announced
today it
will
return
to
racing
in 2011
with a
race-prepared
version
of its
CTS-V
Coupe
competing
in the
Sports
Car Club
of
America
World
Challenge,
North
America’s
top
production-based
racecar
series.
The move
returns
Cadillac
to a
series
where it
competed
from
2004 to
2007.
Competing
in the
GT Class
with the
CTS-V
Sport
Sedan,
Cadillac
captured
the
Manufacturer’s
Championship
in 2005
and 2007
and the
Driver’s
Championship
in 2005.
Cadillac
will
field
two
teams in
the
upcoming
SCCA
World
Challenge
GT Class
with a
racecar
based on
the
CTS-V
Coupe.
The
CTS-V
line,
which
also
includes
the
CTS-V
Sedan
and
CTS-V
Wagon,
was
recently
named to
Car and
Driver
magazine’s
10 Best
list for
2011.
“Returning
to
racing
in the
SCCA
World
Challenge
is a
great
way to
demonstrate
the
performance
and
capability
of the
CTS-V
Coupe,”
said Don
Butler,
vice
president
for
Cadillac
marketing.
“The
racecars
in this
series
are
production
based,
which
allows
us to
validate
our
performance
against
the best
of our
competitors
on the
track,
and not
just the
showroom.”
Cadillac
is
working
with
Pratt &
Miller,
a New
Hudson,
Mich.,
engineering
firm
which
specializes
in
motorsports,
to
develop
the
CTS-V
Coupe
racecar.
While
some of
the
production
CTS-V
components
will be
modified
due to
the
unique
demands
of
racing
or to
meet the
SCCA
series’
technical
rules,
every
effort
is taken
to
maintain
as much
production
content
as
possible.
“The
SCCA
World
Challenge
lends
itself
well to
a
natural
transfer
of
knowledge,”
said Jim
Campbell,
GM vice
president
for
Performance
Vehicles
and
Motorsports.
“The
series
will
become a
key
test-bed
for
Cadillac.
We
anticipate
using
what we
learn on
the
racetrack
to
ensure
the
V-Series
stays on
the
cutting-edge
of
performance.”
The
first
event in
the SCCA
World
Challenge
is March
25-27 in
St.
Petersburg,
Fla.
Johnny
O’Connell,
a
three-time
GT1
champion
in the
America
Le Mans
Series,
and Andy
Pilgrim,
who won
the 2005
SCCA
World
Challenge
GT class
in a
Cadillac,
will be
behind
the
wheel of
the
CTS-V
racecars.
Introduced
for the
2003
model
year,
the
CTS-V
has
quickly
earned a
reputation
among
luxury
sports
car
buyers.
For the
2011
model
year,
Cadillac
added
the
CTS-V
Coupe
and the
CTS-V
Sport
Wagon to
the
CTS-V
Sport
Sedan,
creating
an
impressive
family
of
performance
vehicles.
The
CTS-Vs
feature
Brembo
brakes,
a
supercharged
6.2L V8
delivering
556
horsepower
and a
Magnetic
Ride
Control
suspension
system
that can
read and
react to
the road
1,000
times a
second.
Started
in 1944,
the SCCA
organizes
and
supports
racing
at all
levels
from
amateur
to
professional.
The
World
Challenge
series
is
designed
to
provide
teams,
manufacturers
and
aftermarket
suppliers
a
competitive
production-based
race
series
in which
to prove
their
products.
The
races
follow a
50-minute
maximum
time
limit,
with the
number
of laps
and
total
distance
determined
by track
configuration,
lap
times
and race
conditions.
|