Pacific Coast Motorsports’ Corvette Full ALMS
Season In 2005 Tyler Tadevic is a very happy man –
writes Paul Collins (from Sebring).
"First day with
the new car, drivers who are open wheel guys just getting acquainted
with a heavy fendered car with less downforce, and we're only two
seconds off factory pace!" he grinned. "It's chassis 06, which ran
in early 2003, but fully updated to '04 spec. Aside from the
chassis, the only original part is the front aero. We have new
drivetrain, motor, shocks, uprights... Pratt & Miller couldn't
fit the Xtrac gearbox into this chassis, so we've got the Hewland
sequential. And the tires - I can't say enough about the
tires..."
Tyler Tadevic
is, of course, referring to Yokohama's foray into American GT
racing. The company has a strong presence in the JGTC, where they
won the GT500 championship last year against Bridgestone, and a
history of being able to go head to head with the best - remember
PTG versus Schnitzer with the M3GTRs? But they've been absent since
2001 on a GT(S) car on this continent, and were only in the series
last year with Miracle Motorsports (then joining PK Sport late in
the year).
Pacific Coast
Motorsports is a young team. Tyler Tadevic founded the team for the
2003 season, after having managed World Speed Motorsport, while Alex
Figge drove for them (Tyler was earning his stripes as a mechanic
for WSM when Jeff Bucknum was driving for them). After a mediocre
season, Tom Figge approached Tadevic about managing Alex's career;
and Tyler Tadevic was quick to grasp the opportunity. Figge and
Tadevic felt that the best way to ensure they could control the
outcome was to control all aspects of the team. Tadevic decided to
start PCM, and Figge ensured that any failure of the team would not
be for lack of resources.
Their first year
as a one-car team was decent - Figge (right) finished as high as
fifth, and ninth overall for season standings – so Tadevic decided
they needed to expand to two cars, and bring in some proven talent
to give Alex some incentive. Jon Fogarty, engineers Burke Harrison
and Tim Lewis joined the team, and the performances came. Alex Figge
won his first Toyota Atlantic race at Fundidora Park, and Jon
Fogarty won the championship, over such highly touted talent as Ryan
Dalziel, Danica Patrick and Andrew Ranger. Seventh overall for Figge
was not satisfying, but it was not unexplained. "Alex probably would
have been in the first few places overall had he had better luck,
and if a few decisions had've panned out differently," Tadevic
explained.
Fogarty has now
joined Flying Lizards in the GT2 Class of the ALMS this year -
leaving the bulk of the 2004 team to move on to other
things.
At the end of
the season, Tom Figge and Tyler Tadevic decided it was time to move
up to a higher level, and they started looking around. "We were very
happy in Toyota Atlantic, but it was purely a business decision. The
series was great to us; it was simply time for us to move
on."
They seriously
entertained joining the DP ranks within Grand Am, as well as
Champcar, but after attending the closing round of the ALMS at
Laguna Seca, they were sold on the series. "The cars were very open
technically, they would give our engineers a challenge. The on-track
driving was technical and precise, which appealed to our
open-wheeled background, and the racing was good. And the fans -
they were so knowledgeable, and enthusiastic, and plentiful! The
track was very well attended."
They met the
ALMS officials at the track, and Tadevic was impressed with the
level of support offered by Scott Atherton and company, in helping
him put together his program. Enter the Yager family.
Mike Yager owns
Mid-America Motorworks, the premiere Corvette aftermarket store in
the world. His sons Michael and Brock are aspiring Barber Dodge
racers, and were looking for a way to leverage their Corvette
background into a C5-R. Since Barber Dodge and Toyota Atlantic
series both supported Champcar, they had met Tyler Tadevic in the
paddock - and together the Yagers and Tom Figge and Tyler Tadevic
decided it would be a two-car Corvette team, run under the Pacific
Coast Motorsports banner. Unfortunately, circumstances intervened
that set the Yagers back a year in their plans, but the team's
original contacts with GM and Pratt & Miller had already been
forged, and PCM decided to continue as a single car team.
"Not only was
the program interesting, but the price was not prohibitive. We got
our initial setup for considerably less than the Daytona Prototype
program we had looked at. That lets us put our budget toward team
development."
The three-year
plan includes looking at a Le Mans entry in 2006, hopefully running
the C6.R.
Their Toyota
Atlantic connections were further utilized in signing Alex Figge's
Atlantic rival, Ryan Dalziel (left). David Empringham will join the
two for the Sebring 12 Hours. So Alex Figge has gone from having the
2004 series champion as team-mate to having the 2004 runner-up as
teammate.
"The drivers are
all well-matched; they were within 0.5s of each other this week,"
Tadevic said.
Alex Figge is
still learning how to drive with fenders. "My Champcar test this
weekend (with Mi-Jack/Conquest) felt great, the high power seemed to
suit me more than the Atlantic car. I'm still getting used to the
Corvette - it has the power, but moves around a lot more, it's
heavier, has less aero downforce. But I'm really looking forward to
the races."
The team had
approached both Michelin and Pirelli, as well as Yokohama, when
exploring tire options; Yokohama's proposition "made the most
business sense," Tyler Tadevic said. "They were interested in
expanding their North American presence, and what better way to
Americanize the brand than to run on Corvettes? And their trackside
engineer, Cheech, is a wizard: he's working like crazy to get us up
to speed. We're happy where we're at, considering how new this
program is."
Once the Yager
portion of the team was put on hold, Tyler Tadevic wanted to look
for some other support for the team. "It all came together quickly
over the Christmas break, but we'll be running Menard's colours," he
said. "It's a targeted marketing program, much like a Ganassi /
Target or Andretti-Green / Seven-11 program." Menards has been
sponsoring Busch, Craftsman Truck, and IRL racing, but this is their
first full-time sponsorship foray into sportscars.
"So we've got a
competitive car, at a competitive price, with primary sponsorship
from Menards, and the driving services of some of the best young
talent available in North America,” summed up Tadevic. “We're
already fast, thanks to the support of Pratt & Miller; it would
be our dream scenario to think that, by mid-season, Pratt &
Miller had to start keeping secrets from us!"
If past
performance is any indication, Pacific Coast will be a force to be
reckoned with by then...



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