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Mexico Qualifying
Golf Carts and Electrical Glitches

2007.03.02: AIM Autosport will start from the back of the Daytona Prototype grid for the Saturday Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series race at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City, after an electrical failure foiled the Canadian team's qualifying effort.

Mark Wilkins of Toronto was set to qualify the No. 61 Lexus-powered Riley Mk XI. He had a clear track and a strong car, but lost all power at the beginning of his first lap. He switched the car's battery and attempted to restart to no avail, so was forced to the sidelines.

Wilkins will drive the first race stint in the gold car, backed by Exchange Traded Gold, Barrick Gold Corporation, RBC Financial Group and Telus' Mike Network. Brian Frisselle of Lynchburg, Va., will finish the race.

"It's pretty disappointing," Wilkins said. "We were coming up to speed – Brian was very fast this morning and I think we could have qualified quite well today. We had a great car. Unfortunately, we had what seems like an electrical failure. We'll be starting from the back tomorrow and I promise a lot of passing and a good race."

Fore!
Greg Wilkins of Toronto made it a father-son qualifying round on Friday, but fared better than his son Mark. He slotted the No. 17 MineStar / Tim Hortons Porsche 911 GT3 Cup car 10th in the GT class with a lap of one minute, 30.233 seconds on the 2.5-mile road course. Dave Lacey of Toronto will share driving duty in the car, with preparation by Doncaster Racing.

Wilkins snapped off a quick fifth-place time on his first lap, but the field was then slowed for an odd caution period, called because of a golf cart parked on the track. When the session resumed, Wilkins settled into 10th place. He was happy with the team's progress.

"It was bit weird to go around the first lap and find a golf cart and a guy still in the Stadium turn, under green. I don't know what the heck was going on with that," he said.

"It's a real rhythm track and very line-dependant. We've been quicker every session by a few tenths [of a second] and we were seven-tenths faster in qualifying than we'd been over the weekend, so I'm really pleased with the qualifying run. One thing about our team is that we really run consistently. We're not the best qualifiers in the world, so if this is the best these other guys can do in qualifying, I'm optimistic for the race."

 

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Established in 1995 with a mandate to identify, train and manage emerging motorsport talent AIM operates multi-car teams competing in the Formula BMW USA Championship and the Star Mazda Series North American Championship. Among those drivers who have graduated from AIM Autosport are former series and rookie champions james hinchcliffe, Andrew Ranger, Andrew Bordin, J.F.Veilleux, Jonathan Macri, L.P. Dumoulin, Anthony Simone and Dan Burchill. Other notable AIM graduates include, Sam Hornish Jr., Billy Asaro, mark wilkins, Ashley Taws, Paul Dana, Tom Dyer, Josh Schreiber, Dan McMullen and Antoine Bessette.


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