GT Academy 2012: starter's orders
Another chance to realise your virtual to reality ambitions as GT Academy kicks off a new season
Now in its fourth year, the established GT Academy format starts with an online time attack challenge on a special Gran Turismo 5 stage open to anyone with a PS3 and the competitive urge to spend hours honing lap times down in the hope of getting a place at the national final. The top six from each of these will fight for a place at the GT Academy Race Camp at Silverstone, graduating from games console to real cars and, for the first time, each getting at least one race. The overall winner will then be groomed for an international racing debut at the Dubai 24 Hour in January 2013.
All four previous winners have successfully proven themselves as genuinely quick race drivers in the real world too, original winner Lucas Ordonez now driving an LMP2 car in the Euro Le Mans series and at the 24-hour race with others - including Brit Jann Mardenborough (centre, above flanked by Ordonez and Jordan Tresson) who won last year's GT Academy - now racing Nissans in various GT championships.
The online challenge - incorporating an eight-stage qualification process - goes live on May 1 and runs until June 24. Expect fierce competition, if not from PistonHeads following our previous attempt to pit virtual racing skills against the real thing.
Having spent the last week having a bash at the current seasonal TT round Deep Forest, there really are some seriously quick guys out there! I managed to get to about 100th place overall (6th or 7th from UK/IRL rankings) but nowhere close to the outright leaders.
Always next year!
And i believe you can't register in it if you don't come 1,2,3 in GT5 first,no?
Some of the times people get on those TT's are insane. Way too much time on their hands. By the time I'm that good I could've got that good at the real thing....
Some of the times people get on those TT's are insane. Way too much time on their hands. By the time I'm that good I could've got that good at the real thing....
I do believe that there will be people half a second or more off the top time who would make better all-round drivers in the end and a large part of it must be to do with the coaching and experience they get afterwards, but it is such a great initiative and I look forward to seeing who the next generation are that come through and to see what is next for Messrs Tresson and Mardenborough who still need to break the big time (but are doing pretty well. Have I missed a past winner too?
Some of the times people get on those TT's are insane. Way too much time on their hands. By the time I'm that good I could've got that good at the real thing....
I think the point about all round drivers is a good one, and one which looks like it is being addressed this time out with the academy. More trials, rather than on circuit on which to set your best time. You won't be able to just sit and do lap after lap, so you'll have less time to "learn" each challenge. Replicates real life a bit better I think; balancing racing with other things.
Some of the times people get on those TT's are insane. Way too much time on their hands. By the time I'm that good I could've got that good at the real thing....
I got to the UK finals in 2010, but to get there cost me almost all my free time for the 6 weeks the competition ran for... if I missed a day I dropped out of the top 20 and had to work double hard to get back in. In the end I had to go away for the final weekend and slipped back to 22nd, but I still made it through as a couple above me were either too young, didn't have licenses or already had a competition license.
The fianls was a great day out.
Sony put us up the the hotel next to Brands the night before. Then it was a day of racing (on GT5) along with passenger laps round Brands in the Nissan 370Z GT4. The 1st Academy winner, Lucas Ordonez, drove me round. A really nice guy, and proof that the Academy does work as he's done Le Mans in an LMP2, and is also running in the ALMS, IIRC.
One of my GT friends won the UK event (John, AKA 'Prudentbear') and went to Silverstone for the global final. However, unless you're young and super fit, you're never going to get the race seat.
Good luck to anyone who gives it a go this year.
Offensive driving - going for overtaking manouvers. The opposite of defensive driving where you try not to let others past
If Jardine International and Sony Playstation Europe are running it again don't bother, take it from me. Its quite easy for me to say because the shambles that they created luckily never affected me in terms of fairness only that the format of 1 lap or 3 laps is a lottery, you barely know your own hands before its finished. I did well one year more through lucking into having a clean run and no-one ramming me out like what happened to some of the other very strong competitors but everyone was seconds a lap slower than normal just about getting warmed up before a round finished.
There's a few potential racing drivers faster than the ones we've ended up with though that unfairly lost out due to the amateur PR event style. They even let the journalists race the Nissans around the track but not the actual competitors, that being the one realistic element opportunity wasted!
Wait for someone else to do something is my advice. Just do the TT for fun though since Sony are allergic to doing non-tuning events.
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