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<\/a><\/p>\n Malcolm Cracknell was one of the pioneers of endurance racing coverage on the then new-fangled internet. What set him apart from the throng of wanabees and fans with passes who invaded Media Centres at that time was the fact that he actually had a clue. Crackers understood both racing and people, especially the gang of scoundrels who chose endurance sportscars as their platform. Even after years of enforced retirement he observes the distant paddocks with more acuity than many who actually attend the races. Time spent chewing the fat with him over the phone is never wasted and is generally punctuated by laughter and seasoned with salacious gossip, ancient and modern.<\/em><\/p>\n When this SRO book was published last year I asked him to write a review from his own perspective, he was witness to much of the narrative. He did so promptly, which is more than can be said for my performance in posting the piece. So with humble apologies from the Editor for the delay here is the weekend treat.<\/em><\/p>\n 25 YEARS OF GT RACING<\/p>\n STEPHANE RATEL AND SRO MOTORSPORTS<\/p>\n This is an extraordinary book, in so many ways.In terms of value for money, it has to be a bargain: \u00a375 for a glossy, 406 page volume, packed with superb photographs, suggests to me that it has to be subsidised to some degree.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n I\u2019ll add a \u2018but\u2019 here though: this needs to be described as a hagiography (a biography that treats its subject with undue reverence).\u00a0 St\u00e9phane Ratel is largely portrayed as a God-like figure, his SRO the salvation of GT racing \u2013 which is certainly true in many ways.<\/p>\n Andrew Cotton tells more than the story of 25 years of GT racing: he begins with Ratel\u2019s tragic childhood and describes the young man\u2019s \u2018playboy years\u2019, importing supercars from California to re-sell in Europe at a healthy profit, then organising a \u2018Cannonball Run\u2019 in France (Paris to San Tropez) for his wealthy mates, which developed into the Venturi Trophy (1992-4, which saved the company) \u2013 and finally, with J\u00fcrgen Barth and Patrick Peter, he created the BPR Series.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Was that the high point of GT racing in the modern era?\u00a0 In many ways it probably was \u2013 at least in terms of the way it captured the imagination of the public. \u00a0But as we know so well, Porsche and then Mercedes initiated a very rapid boom and bust \u2013 and Andrew Cotton reveals one (of many) fascinating tales that perhaps had more of an impact on Ratel the businessman than any other.\u00a0 I won\u2019t spoil it for those of you considering buying the book, but the man who wrote the foreword, one B. C. Ecclestone, was involved \u2013 and taught Ratel a very important lesson.<\/p>\n When the FIA GT Championship \u2018expired\u2019 at the end of a disappointing 1998 season, only one man was prepared to try and salvage the thing, and the last 19 years have seen St\u00e9phane Ratel and SRO carry it on with varying degrees of success.<\/p>\n 1999 was probably the low point, but if you\u2019re determined enough, you can follow all the ups and downs to the present day.\u00a0 It\u2019s a convoluted tale, but to his credit, Ratel has stuck at it and is to be admired for that.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n It\u2019s been a battleground along the way, with GT2s becoming GT1s, three hour races becoming two, N-GTs briefly becoming the headline class \u2013 and then (I think this is missing from the book), in August 2007, there was an extraordinary Ratel proposal for the future of GT racing which was so convoluted that I\u2019d need a 1,000 words to explain it.<\/p>\n That didn\u2019t happen, but Ratel does admit that his plan for a GT1 Championship, of one hour races, was a mistake.\u00a0 Ironically, he\u2019d already discovered what the future should be with his GT3 idea.\u00a0 Who, among those present at the launch of the FIA GT3 Championship, at a wet Silverstone in April 2006, could have guessed where this was going?<\/p>\n