NASA WERC

Matt’s October Update: First Championship Clinched with Late Winning Pass

Matt’s October Update: First Championship Clinched with Late Winning Pass

BUTTONWILLOW, CA - Well, this was it. The final race with GOneppo Racing and teammate Peter Oneppo in the 2021 NASA WERC season. Bittersweet to conclude such a fun, rewarding season that pushed me to seek new heights and connected me with fantastic people.

Million, GOneppo Racing take 1st place in the E2 class in Round 5 of NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship with a pass in the final five minutes. With an overtake on our championship rival in the final half hour, Matt Million and Peter Oneppo also clinched the E2 championship title.

Million qualified and took pole position in the E2 class with a time of 1:59:74. This set the them 1st in the class of 8 entries and 11th of 33 overall. In the race, they also took a remarkable 7th overall through strong pace, consistency, and strategy.

This month’s update covers the story of this weekend. Also included is a reflection from my World Racing League debut at VIRginia International Raceway’s 8 + 8 Hour event in September. Driving for RKMotorsports in a GP2 class BMW Spec E46, Matt and teammates incredibly won the back-to-back races against all odds. An engine failure early in testing nearly left the team without options. Matt’s first visit to the famed VIR is a story you won’t want to miss!


MY STORY

A quick catch-up; my name is Matt Million, I’m a 21-year-old aspiring professional racing driver and full-time university student from San Marcos, California. I’ve been racing since the age of five spending the next eight years karting across the southwest. In 2014, I transitioned to sports cars in Spec Miata developing in the Mazda Motorsports ladder through Teen Mazda Challenge up to successes in Spec MX-5 Challenge in 2018. In 2019, I became a 25 Hours of Thunderhill class winner and in 2020 a long-held aspiration of racing touring cars in Germany was first realized. For 2021, my season is NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship where I drive for GOneppo Racing in a BMW Spec E46. We’ve now clinched the E2 championship title with two wins and five podiums. I’m in my final year of studying global business at CSU San Marcos with a goal to enter professional motorsport given the right sponsorship funding and opportunity.

I love sharing these experiences with hopes that those who read them can find value in following my journey. Thank you for the support!


EVENT BACKGROUND

To learn more about how the season has gone thus far, I encourage a visit to mattmillionracing.com and scroll through the ‘News’ or ‘Photos’ sections.

We came into Buttonwillow completely equal on points with our title rival; Bitteracing. Sitting at an even 365 points occurred from both of us having one win, two second places, and one third place each. Championships don’t get much closer! And there’s reason for it. The #88 Bitteracing Spec E46 is nearly identical to our #45 since the team owners race against one another in the NASA SoCal Spec E46 series. Their drivers Ryan Bittner and Ryan Keeley are quick and ran a great program this season.

While there is one more round of NASA WERC in November, both of our teams chose to forfeit the event due to a clash with the Spec E46 sprint finale at Chuckwalla Raceway. With nobody else in contention to take the title, we agreed to make this the ‘winner take all’ showdown. Game on!

Life, in the form of college and work, got in the way of Peter and I after our first win together in the Utah 6 Hour in July. We’ve remained active however; In September, I joined Ryan Keeley’s RKMotorsports team to make our World Racing League debut in Virginia (which we incredibly won, story below) and Peter got to lap Washington’s finest road racing circuits since he moved to Seattle.

But this race was a chance to clinch a first ever championship for us both. Our #45 was maintained by BIMMERSPEED, we enlisted the help of Palomar Racing to conduct our pit stop with the support of crew chief Blair, and had the advice of HQ Autosport on our side. The pieces in place to knock this out of the park, but racing can be an unpredictable mistress!

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15TH - RACE DAY

The weather was a tad chilly. Perfect conditions. Testing commenced in the morning and ran until evening. Then, it was time for the qualifying at 5:00pm and the race from 6:00pm to 9:00pm. The first hour as the sun set below the horizon and the final two in darkness.

I woke up energized and motivated. Lovely to again pilot the #45 for the first time in two months. The blue-and-orange livery with our names on the quarter window with tidy EnduroBright illuminated number panels made our small operation feel professional.

This season has been driven by my desire to get closer to ‘professional’. Being included in an incredible driver search opportunity this February shaped this approach greatly. Since then, I’ve been coming to races better prepared, equipped, and with a clear mission. Always be ready for the step into professional ranks because you never know when it shows up. Much appreciation to Peter Oneppo for allowing me to shape this program in this manner.

Testing was drama-free. The car felt as flexible and manageable as it always had, even on worn out tires. The #45 setup runs softer than other Spec E46’s I’ve driven which helped it’s ability to deal with Buttonwillow’s many fierce kerbs and quick elevation changes. Love these touring cars.

The fuel strategy for three hours is tricky. We’re allowed to start with a full tank of about 15 gallons which takes about 1 hour 30 minutes to run dry pushing at a normal pace. Per regulation, we can only refuel two 5-6 gallon jugs meaning 12 gallons to complete the final half at most. It’s possible to one-stop but it requires fuel saving (short-shifting, lift and coast, etc.) which makes it hard to maintain front running pace and no guarantee you’ll make it. With one or two full-course-yellow periods, we could save enough to avoid a second stop. Without any yellow, our plan was to run hard and accept the late splash at the benefit of running a quick pace. With some yellow laps, we’d be avoiding the second stop at any means necessary.

Qualifying went fine. Definitely hit our target although I felt there was more to extract. I got to grid early and worked to build the buffer zone around me. Coming into the first flyer, I was passed by an ESR class entry who sent it off into the dirt ahead. I kept my head and tires cool to reset for another. It took three additional laps but I finally hit a mid-1:59 target time I knew wasn’t being beaten. The conditions were sub-optimal with a hot surface and my tire pressures far exceeding where I preferred them. Mission accomplished, setting Peter Oneppo to start from E2 class pole of 8 entries and 11th overall of 33.

RACE START

Oneppo maintained the lead easily for the opening 20 minutes… because we ran under full course yellow due to a car beached in the dirt from start incident. This worked to our benefit; we began saving plenty of fuel and the E2 pack remained tight. Peter knew his objective. Stay within touching distance (20-30 seconds) of the class leaders and hand the car over clean. If he did that, I’d be in position to close the gap. Having raced here with Peter in the April event getting within 10 seconds of the leader, I knew my own objective as well.

Peter fought amongst the top three but nightfall saw Bitteracing’s plan come to fruition. Ryan Keeley was on full attack to put as much time between us as possible. And it was working. By the time of our fuel window, Keeley was over 40 seconds ahead in the distance in 2nd place while the class leading #46 Lucas Racing Spec E46 another 10 seconds up the road.

Oneppo out, Million in with an hour and a half remaining

Pulling the helmet straps on as our pit stop neared, I channeled the energy required of me. The task of closing such a large gap was immense, but our title couldn’t end like this. This was the most confidence I felt all season. The refueling and driver swap was clean and undramatic. I held a long gaze as the fuel door shut and received signal to launch.

Radio silence in the opening laps. I didn’t want time interval updates for a while. I needed to find my flow and the limits quickly. If I could tap into my potential early enough and sustain it, just maybe it could be enough.

The most unconsciously-aware stint of the season. Within three laps, I set my tempo to a 95% pace I knew was possible to hold strong for an hour. Not yet the time for high risk. But time for clinical laps maximizing the finer details of track limits with a hint of conservation in my shifts. Knowing the times Keeley was setting in the daylight on new tires, seeing my pace was better gave me the confidence I could gain at a consistent rate.

After 40 minutes, I began getting curious. Still not seeing Bitteracing on my horizon was slightly concerning. That’s when the radio call came in. “You’re closing on 2nd. 15 second gap now, at this pace you’ll get to him in 3 or 4 laps”. Two laps later, I became the tail of a 4-car E2 battle. No wasted energy. I passed one entering Grapevine and another exiting Cotton Corners with strategic positioning. Bittneracing was next. Before I could make a decisive move of my own, he pressured himself off Sunset corner and I was through. The championship was in our hands after over two hours on the back foot. But work remained to be done.

I increased pace and found extra tenths through renewed confidence we’d easily make it on fuel now. The radio message came. “30 minutes remaining, you are 26 seconds behind 1st and you’re averaging a second or two faster per lap”. 95% pace became 98%. Time now to push hard for any chance in succeeding.

Kerbs taken with a precise aggression, corner entries squeezed for more speed, cutting down transition time between the pedals. Do all of this while maintain the same level of consistency. Scything through traffic became an artistic dance.

With 10 minutes remaining, it was target acquired. I ran up on the E2 leading #46 Spec E46 with urgency in Phil Hill. Navigating traffic through Riverside helped the gap close to nothing. Through Bus Stop now preparing an optimal entry into Grapevine to match alongside and shuffle into the lead. From there, no looking back.

White flag as I crossed the line. No longer was there headlights in the mirror. The #46 had ran out of fuel a couple corners later. The tactics by Oneppo and I worked. My pace was calculated to make the move and make it across the finish.

Checkered flag. What a stint. I could hardly believe it. Never give up! Sometimes these days end up how you dream them to be. But wow, it seriously took the best version of myself to do it. The most consistent drive of my life.

The grueling humidity in my three hour stints at VIR last month played a massive factor in the belief I could pull this off with relentless consistency. Was there laps I could’ve maximized better? Definitely. But as a complete performance, this might’ve been my best yet. Motivated confidence in myself, my toolset, and the situation.

In summary, I couldn’t justify bringing Peter Oneppo the championship without the race win. So Peter, there you go. Thank you for allowing me into this effort in 2021 and I’m immensely glad it paid off. Enjoy the title and two race wins!

Watch my qualifying lap and full night onboard by clicking here.


September Update Recap: Back-to-Back WRL Wins in Virginia

The following is taken from my September Update. Click the link here to read the full article on mattmillionracing.com!

Saturday Grid: Gomolka, Keeley, Million, Musser

ALTON, Virginia - It’s fair to say the result we achieved at Virginia International Raceway (VIR) wasn’t one we expected, but a monumental story none of us will forget!

RKMotorsports swept the weekend with back-to-back class wins in the 2021 World Racing League 8 + 8 Hour event at VIR with drivers Matt Million, Ryan Keeley, Greg Gomolka, and Jordon Musser.

They took 1st in GP2 from 11 entrants both days in the #87 BMW Spec E46 and finished 15th and 16th in overall standings of over 70 entries. This comes after an engine failure early in Friday testing left the team scrambling for options. This month’s update covers the highlights of this experience.

In July, I was approached by friend Ryan Keeley to drive for his team RKMotorsports in their WRL debut at Virginia. Our car is the #87 BMW Spec E46 prepared and crewed by San Diego-based BIMMERSPEED led by veteran owner Ryan Lindsley. Keeley and I would be accompanied in driver duties by Greg Gomolka, local racer from San Diego, and Texas-based driver Jordon Musser.

Our #87 ahead of a GP3 and two GTO entries

World Racing League (WRL) is quickly becoming a primary U.S. championship for club-style endurance racing with a professional atmosphere. It consists of four classes; GTO is the fastest and most numerous (populated with Cayman GT4’s, M4 GT4’s, Audi RS3 TCR’s, etc.) followed by GP1, GP2, and GP3. One special aspect which makes the series so competitive is how closely matched each class is.

Arriving late on Thursday evening, I was struck by the dense, rainforest-like environment alive with energy and humidity. Stunning atmosphere and welcomed first visit to this storied racing circuit.

I had the privilege of piloting the first warm-up. This marked the first laps of VIR for myself, the team, and the car. My simulator homework hadn’t been far off but some differences shocked me. Despite the grandiose magnitude given off by the scenery, the circuit itself felt narrow and condensed. The rhythm was absolutely thrilling. Unfortunately, the day was short lived. The engine expired around 10am and the team sprung to action locating a new unit and beginning the process of replacing it. The job was finished by dinnertime with our BIMMERSPEED crew ensuring confidence we’d be racing tomorrow!

Ryan completed his stint and Greg was next to go. With an approximate fuel range of 1-hour-30-minutes, I was thrust into the race at the three hour mark.

Quickly I understood what made WRL such a viciously competitive and enjoyable series. A copious amount of cars vying for the same real estate with a surprisingly good driver quality. At one point I became the tail of a multiple car train winding up the world famous esses at full speed thinking to myself “this is incredible”! Sometime in the stint, I set my best lap of the day and the second best of the GP2 class of a 2:10:851. I’d gained lots of confidence through areas like T16 and T17 along with the braking zone of T1 and the patience required for T3.

Crew Chief Ryan Lindsley watches on

The second stint was rather straightforward. Fewer Code 35’s, less traffic, more honed in on a consistent flow. I’d check in with the pit wall every so often to relay fuel numbers and gain affirmation my pace was sufficiently moving us ahead. This was confirmed a few times per hour as I’d gain back a lap from the GP2 leader or those in podium contention. I developed more efficient methods of passing slower cars and managing faster traffic as I became familiar with VIR’s subtleties. It was a long hour-and-a-half stint with the heat, humidity, and lack of airflow but the promise I made to myself was one of persistence through difficulty. It eventually became the most grueling stint of my career. I exited the car and laid flat on the ground for an hour completely drained. We regained over four minutes and now sat on the lead lap. The effort was well worth the pain!

Exhausted-yet-jubilant winning crew!

One hour later and one hour to go, Jordon worked himself to 2nd within a minute to the leader and closing. We paced around our pit glued to the timing screen. Jordon made a decisive move into T1 with 15 minutes remaining and sealed our fate as we all watched in awe. Four laps of disbelief later and we hung over the wall cheering and hugging. The emotions hit harder than we expected. It was proof every lap mattered. If I opted to let my times slip one second per lap over the course of an hour, no way this occurs. Same goes for the efforts of the other three drivers and our crew. From no engine to 1st in class and 38 positions gained overall. Tomorrow was another 8-hour race day. Could we pull off a miracle twice?

Ready deliver the opening stints early on Sunday.

The race got underway and I chased down the pole-sitting #525. We sliced through the GP1 field and checked out from the rest of GP2. It was a high pace to match but I needed to stay within range. I worked on more effective traffic management.

it is remarkable what one night of quality sleep can do for comprehension and muscle memory. Each spot of weakness seemed to become my best areas of the circuit. Taking the inside kerb of T10 quicker and more decisive, charging Oak Tree Bend with a softer brake release to make up heaps of time scything through traffic, rotate and commit the car earlier in T3 to match traffic under braking into T4 for a getaway up the esses. Crew Chief Ryan Lindsley decided on a fortuitous time for my splash-and-go.

My second stint was a blur. Lots more open track compared to my first stint. Now having escaped from the slower GP1 traffic, I was unleashed to extract what was available to me in the #87 RKMotorsports Spec E46. There exists a 10-to-15 lap segment in this second part of my 62 opening laps which had just a half-second spread. It’s bizarre how much time there is to cut out being effective in traffic. Not like these laps had no traffic; they had a fair amount. But through hours of studying and unconscious competence from the weekend, the path of least resistance seem to open up and the confidence of car placement and abilities rises. Rising to the point where it doesn’t matter if you run up on two cars or seven cars in a lap; the variables enter the mental computer and spits out a better formula each time.

With 15 minutes remaining, Jordon caught the GP2-leading #525 BMW E46 and made his move on the outside of T5. Cheers erupted and we were pinching ourselves. The competitor made a mistake working to retake the lead and we crossed the line with a sizeable gap. Again? What are the chances we lead no laps outside the final half-hour and win against the odds… two days straight!

What a special event. Without BIMMERSPEED’s expertise and excellent strategy, no way we would’ve made this happen twice. My gratitude for their work is immense.

It was an unexpected showcase of adaptability having never been to VIR, never been in a WRL event, and never driven this Spec E46. To complete a total of 132 laps between the two races at a consistency and window which pushed my own limits higher was motivating.

The decision to accept more mental and physical adversity in the scorching cockpit to perform a higher level uplifting our chances of success meant the world to see it actually mattered. Clichés sometimes ring true. ‘Never give up’. If I did, or anyone else this weekend, the result would definitely not happen. Live by the mantra, ‘how you do anything is how you do everything’. Aim high and surround yourself with others of similar tempo. An honor to contribute in RKMotorsport’s first endurance win - twice!

I highly encourage you to read about the rest of this incredible weekend. Click here to visit the article on mattmillionracing.com!


REFLECTIONS

Race win, E2 champions for GOneppo Racing at Buttonwillow in October

It’s been a remarkable few months. A culmination of potential, determination, and execution. Above all though; people. Without the people who believed I was the right fit for their racing program and gave me a chance this year, these results wouldn’t exist.

Back-to-back 8-hour wins for RKMotorsports and BIMMERSPEED at VIR in September

I thought winning the Utah 6 Hour would be this year’s highlight. Never been so satisfied to be wrong! To debut in WRL in Virginia and deliver on our potential gave me a massive confidence boost. Rolling that energy into our NASA WERC finale made a difficult task feel possible.

Grateful for any opportunities I’ve been fortunate to create or land on where I get to better myself as an aspiring professional driver and become a more ‘complete’ motorsport athlete. I hope the effort is recognized and cannot wait to see what the future holds.


IN CLOSING

Thank you for reading and supporting my motorsport journey. Whether it be through these updates, social channels, or in-person, the small interactions truly make a difference. Using my motorsport path as a means to create value for others is very important for me. If you enjoy these reports or are interested in supporting steps toward professional racing, please get in touch! Stay up-to-date on mattmillionracing.com and my social media. And until next time…

Matt Million

San Marcos, CA - 11/03/2021

Million, GOneppo Win Dramatic NASA WERC Rd.5, Clinch E2 Championship

Million, GOneppo Racing Take Dramatic Class Win in NASA WERC Round 5 at Buttonwillow and Become E2 Class Champions

Into the darkness (Photo by Herb Lopez)

BUTTONWILLOW, CA - Matt Million and teammate Peter Oneppo take a dramatic class win for GOneppo Racing in Round 5 of NASA WERC at Buttonwillow Raceway.

The three-hour night race also clinched the E2 class championship for GOneppo Racing with a mutual agreement to forfeit the final round at Thunderhill next month.

Peter started the race from class pole out of eight in-class and 11th overall in a field of 30 entries. Pitting from 3rd in-class and handing the car off to Million with one hour and 20 minutes remaining, Million left the pits with over a minute gap behind 1st.

Matt would make a pass for 2nd on the #88 Bitteracing Spec E46 entry with 30 minutes remaining, which put the championship in favor of GOneppo as the two teams went into this race tied in points.

Matt made the pass for 1st with only two laps remaining on the #46 Lucas Racing Spec E46 entry.

Matt wishes to thank GOneppo Racing, BIMMERSPEED, Serenity EHS, and his family/friends for their continued support.

More to follow… ‘Matt’s October Update’ coming soon.

Matt's August Update: Preparation Key in Utah 6 Hour Victory

Matt's August Update: Preparation Key in Utah 6 Hour Victory

L-R: Drivers Matt Million, Sean Neel, and Peter Oneppo share 1st place in the E2 class!

TOOELE, Utah - Headed into this event, I knew we had a chance. What I didn’t expect was the perseverance it would take for chance to become reality! Preparation, resilience, and jubilation are the words to describe GOneppo Racing’s effort to perform a top Utah 6 Hour result. But result aside, it was simply a fun and rewarding experience!

Matt with co-drivers Peter Oneppo and Sean Neel win the 2021 NASA Utah 6 Hour for GOneppo Racing in the 7-car E2 class and finish 16th of 38 overall at the Utah Motorsports Campus. Continue reading to follow the weekend’s storylines from Matt’s perspective!


MY STORY

A quick catch-up; my name is Matt Million, I’m a 21-year-old aspiring professional racing driver and college student from San Marcos, California. I’ve been racing since the age of five, spending the next eight years karting across the state. In 2014, I transitioned to sports cars in Spec Miata finding success in the Mazda Motorsports ladder through Teen Mazda Challenge up to wins in the semi-pro Spec MX-5 Challenge in 2018. In 2019, I became a 25 Hours of Thunderhill class winner and in 2020 my long-held aspiration of racing touring cars in Germany was first realized. For 2021, my season commitment has become NASA’s Western Endurance Racing Championship (WERC). I drive for GOneppo Racing in a BMW Spec E46 and after 4 of 6 rounds we are tied for 1st in the competitive E2 class standings. I am also entering my final year of university studies with hopes to progress into professional motorsport within the coming years.

I love sharing these experiences with hopes that those who read them can find value in following my journey. Thank you for the support!


Setting The Stage

After the latest round at Willow Springs in May culminated in a third straight podium without a win, there was no question I wanted the top step in the next event, the Utah 6 Hour, more than anything to keep our championship hopes alive.

This is an important event for me, the team, and our paddock at-large. While it helps that Utah Motorsports Campus makes for a beautiful destination, it’s also the most important pro-am enduro in the West behind only the 25 Hours of Thunderhill. Coming from SoCal, a long trip and long race duration require planning months in advance. Both Peter Oneppo (team owner and driver) and I agreed we undoubtedly had to run a high-quality effort to go there with a chance at success.

A well-prepared car, well-defined objectives, and an experienced and motivated volunteer team. The first of those was taken care of at the Bimmerspeed shop in San Diego, the second accomplished in due course, and the third was as follows:

Each person knew one another and worked in prior events alongside us. Andrew (reliable and strong fueler), Spencer (all-around mechanical genius of the BMW E46), Owen (aspiring engineer and ‘runner’), Steve (crew chief and detail-orientated), Diane (wonderful helper of many things), and my parents (lifelong supporters of course!) Our crew would rock. I’d be racing alongside teammate Peter with the ‘rad’ and very experienced Sean Neel as our 3rd driver.

FRIDAY & SATURDAY MORNING

Before race weekends, I will spend time on my home simulator preferably driving the circuit I will be competing at. It wasn’t until the first session in Friday testing when I noticed how much it helped this time! Setting out to apply what worked on the simulator, I was immediately finding pace in areas I wouldn’t have tried otherwise. With long straights and varying smooth radius corners, this circuit can be tricky to get up-to-speed. Friday was a resounding confidence boost on pace!

It was satisfying to know we had speed to contend for an E2 win. But with six hours of racing, three to four pit stops, and my two teammates needing to also learn quickly meant we still had plenty of unknowns. Overall, Friday went smooth and the crew relished it. We returned to our AirBnB greeted by my parents who won ‘most valuable crew members’. A hearty dinner of pasta, salad, and meats for our 10 member team was excellent! I was happy knowing our crew would be well and ready for tomorrow.

With no warm-up, the first on-track session was qualifying in late afternoon. After our group photo and a long discussion, we decided to qualify on Friday’s used Cooper Tires set to save our new set for the race start. Sean Neel had the opening stint and we to give him the most confidence possible, taking into account it was his first time at UMC and in our #45 GOneppo entry. Plus, we chose to run Cooper’s for their longevity as well as being a grooved compound; crucial in rain!

As the qualifying driver, I gave it my best but the circumstances weren’t ideal. Traffic was hectic as faster class entries struggled to get up to speed while a full course yellow ended the session after two laps to retrieve a stricken vehicle. I was a bit disappointed with how my laps turned out knowing a better time existed. However, to start 2nd in class and put Sean ahead of multiple E1 and E0 class entries was objective complete. P2 of 7 in class, P29 of 38 overall.

THE RACE

Dark skies looming and pace lap underway at 6:00pm. There would be a light shower during Sean’s opening stint with a thunderstorm lurking. We had confidence in his ability to manage this stint. If he stayed within reasonable range of the leaders and applied his masterful fuel saving ability, we’d be in good shape.

I took to the grandstands to be spotter for the next hour. Exciting, and slightly unnerving, to watch the lead four in E2 dice back-and-forth. I reconvened with the team and before long, Sean maintained within 15 seconds of the leader and was preparing to pit after a wonderful fuel stretching two hour stint. As he was about to stop, our pit setup (amongst other teams) was nearly blown into the track as stormfront winds hit like a brick wall. Undeterred, my eyes fixated on pit entry. Three, two, one, box box. A well-rehearsed driver change got me strapped in 20 seconds before fueling finished. Perfect stop.

Photo by Chance Hales Photography

It was 8:00pm, one hour to sunset. My introduction to the race was rather tame. A full course yellow came that lap for wind-scattered cones on the 900-foot main straight. I immediately began fuel conservation. Every ounce saved would help us avoid a late race splash. The 15-second deficit to the leader was now nullified. Steve, our crew chief, radioed in with “make moves as soon as possible. Once lightning rolls in, they could stop this at any point”. Time to turn the next few laps into a sprint! Think big picture, but move forward with intent and urgency. Locked into this mindset I found my way from 4th to 1st in three laps through a combination of focused aggression and conscious traffic management.

From here is when my job truly began. I had three tasks in mind; the first to build a gap large enough to relieve pressure off Peter Oneppo’s late stint. The second was to put fuel mileage in a three stop window rather than four. Finally, I wanted to show what I was capable of and make a statement through quick, consistent laps.

Photo by Chance Hales Photography

The fastest laps came just past twilight as distant lightning strikes lit up a purple sky. This circuit can be difficult to find a rhythm, almost like Le Mans in the sense of medium-and-long straights funneling into sharp, smooth bends. I found my rhythm and entered a ‘flow’ for those 30 minutes ahead of darkness clicking away laps and edging seconds out on our competitors.

But the rain quickly began to trickle in and I was searching for every bit of dry track. Over an hour in and the car reached fuel starve. Spotting another class leader off in the gravel of T11, it was a sprint to the lane to beat a potential full course yellow. The crew was drenched but performed flawlessly and I was away with a full tank! While the track surface wasn’t full wet conditions yet, visibility diminished heavily in the spray of traffic. A sign the surface was worsening came when the E1 class leader passed by to promptly then hydroplane off two corners later!

Now fully dark and fully wet with a fantastic rhythm. But 30 minutes following the pit stop… BOOM. Lightning strike three miles away made it daylight for a split second. Red flag. The crew put a tarp over me and I meditated in the quiet cockpit for 20 minutes until we returned to yellow flag conditions.

Green flag and I contended with the spray of 20 cars ahead. Visibility was extremely low but all the rain experience I’ve gathered in recent years gave me confidence to make the most of it. By the lap charts, I continued to stretch our lead. However it felt like time was slowing down. The intermediate-style Cooper Tires were overheating, the standing water worsened, and the remaining 40 minutes was an exhausted exhibition of car control and mental strength! After three hours in the cockpit, I pitted for our final scheduled stop to hand over to Peter with one hour remaining. My job was done and he was away with a one lap lead over 2nd place.

Photo by Chance Hales Photography

I had to relinquish my feeling of control and disconnect from being a driver to put on the ‘teammate hat’. How can I help? Grab a headset and go be the best coach/spotter possible! Peter had to get up-to-speed fast in terrible conditions and I wanted to relieve some pressure. On a mission for the top spot, the 2nd place Bitteracing Spec E46 was charging hard and finding tons of time as rain lightened and surface dried. Peter did fantastic to remain calm, pick up his pace gradually, and bring it home without a single mistake. Our advantage was too much to overcome. GOneppo Racing crossed the line at midnight to finish 1st in E2 and 16th overall! Honestly, it’s hard to internalize these things when they happen… our season’s effort was to be finally rewarded in champagne. Winning as a driver is special, but watching what it meant to the team was the real smile. Surreal.

REFLECTIONS

Preparation paid off.

The most striking takeaway was a better understanding of ‘team’. Motorsport cannot function without a group of specialized skillsets. Be it engineering, operations, training, pitting, etc. I put more responsibility weight on my shoulders to organize our weekend and find the right crew to become GOneppo Racing. Though it was this extra effort which allowed the metaphorical weight to feel lighter in the cockpit; knowing the car is meticulously checked over, the pit stops would be spotless, the crew chief knows exactly the calls I prefer to hear, etc. It adds up to make your lap times quicker!

I learned of weaknesses I had in understanding specific team aspects earlier this year. I strive to continue improving these aspects, my performance, my brand, and hope the progress is noticed.

Screenshot (159).png

Photo by Chance Hales Photography

My fourth race of the season, I’ve noticed sustaining pace and an ability to manage objectives over long stints has become better. Endurance racing is an artform of optimizing laps to the conditions, minimizing time loss, being smart, outmatching competitors deep in a stint, and so on. In the rain of this race in particular, it was easy to feel ‘on edge’ for a long time which was a detriment to my energy levels at times. While rain experience helped, I want to improve balancing conscious rain racing fundamentals with a natural reliance on feeling out grip levels.

At the end of it all, it was Peter Oneppo who left us with the lasting smile. The champagne bottle he opened in preparation for my podium sip accidentally sprayed in the middle of everyone. Forgetting about the pressure build-up at altitude, we laughed as overall winner Andy Lally chimed in with “it happens to the best of us”. Well Andy, I hope to one day have as many accidental champagne celebrations as you!

VIDEO

If you have a few minutes or hours to spare, I’d be elated if you checked out my full stint onboard video. It will be a challenge to capture another one this beautiful. The mountains, fading daylight, frequent lightning strikes, and a mixture of GT and touring cars. Click here to visit the video on YouTube.

Included in the video description is a list of timestamps to skip to the highlights. Unless you want to enjoy all three hours, then be my guest!

The #87 RKMotorsports Spec E46 I will compete in next month.

WHAT’S NEXT

August will be a month without racing. Hard to believe it’s the first month of 2021 I don’t find myself at a circuit! It puts into perspective how special the year has been so far. I plan to spend time with friends and family, enjoy the 24 Hours of Le Mans, and plan ahead for my senior year at CSU San Marcos starting in September.

My next race will be a number of ‘firsts’. I will partner with Ryan Keeley, driver in SoCal Spec E46 and our main competitor in Utah, in World Racing League’s 8+8 Hour at VIRginia International Raceway on the weekend of September 17-19th for RK Motorsports. It will be our debut in the championship as well as an exciting first visit to the storied Virginia circuit! Look for a race preview to be posted and sent ahead of race week.

Round 5 of 6 for NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship will take place in October from Buttonwillow Raceway where I will compete with GOneppo. More to come on that later.

In Closing

Thank you to everyone who follows and supports my journey. Whether it be through these reports, social channels, or in-person. Using my motorsport path as a means to create value for others is very important for me. If you enjoy these reports or are interested in supporting steps toward professional racing, please get in touch! Stay up-to-date on mattmillionracing.com and my social media. And until next time…

Matt Million

San Marcos, CA - 8/18/21

Million Wins 2021 Utah 6 Hour with GOneppo Racing

Million Wins 2021 Utah 6 Hour with GOneppo Racing

Final Stop with 40 Minutes Left, Million Swaps with Oneppo - July 31st, 2021 - Utah Motorsports Campus

TOOELE, Ut - After a race marred with rain storms and lightning strikes, GOneppo Racing with drivers Matt Million, Peter Oneppo, and Sean Neel take victory in the E2 class.

Thumbnail by Chance Hales Photography. More to come…

Matt's July Update: NASA Utah 6 Hour Preview

Matt's July Update: NASA Utah 6 Hour Preview

Halfway through the 2021 NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship, Matt heads next to the calendar’s ‘crown jewel’ Utah 6 Hour. A special event for mixing one-off professional entries alongside regular series competitors with 40 teams entered, the 9th annual NASA Utah 6 Hour will begin on Saturday, July 31st at 6:00pm local time from Utah Motorsports Campus.

Matt will race once again for GOneppo Racing in their BMW Spec E46 competing in the competitive E2 class. Matt’s codrivers for the event include team leader Peter Oneppo and experienced racer Sean Neel in what will be their biggest effort of the season.

I encourage you to continue reading to find livestream and live timing information to follow the weekend!


MY STORY

A quick catch-up; my name is Matt Million, I’m a 21-year-old aspiring professional racing driver and college student from San Marcos, California. I’ve been racing since the age of five, spending the next eight years karting across the state. In 2014, I transitioned to sports cars in Spec Miata finding success in the Mazda Motorsports ladder through Teen Mazda Challenge up to wins in the semi-pro Spec MX-5 Challenge in 2018. In 2019, I became a 25 Hours of Thunderhill class winner and in 2020 my long-held aspiration of racing touring cars in Germany was first realized. For 2021, my racing season has become NASA’s Western Endurance Racing Championship (WERC) as I continue full-time university studies hoping to progress into professional motorsport in the near future.

I love sharing these experiences as a young aspiring professional with hopes that those who read them can find value in following along. Thank you for the support!


THE SEASON SO FAR

What began as a faint possibility to partner with GOneppo Racing and contend for the E2 class championship has not only become a very real possibility, but continues to grow into a formidable endurance racing team in the West!

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Round 1: Sonoma

With team leader Peter Oneppo unable to contest the season-opening Sonoma 2.5 Hour, Matt competed in a similar E2 class Spec E46 with a different codriver under the GOneppo Racing banner. Finishing 2nd out of 11 was a sign of potential.

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Round 2: Buttonwillow

The second round was the Buttonwillow 3 Hour night race in April, our first event as an official pairing. I qualified on class pole from 13 cars and Peter maintained a great first stint. We swapped during our one scheduled pit stop near half-distance. Closing in on the leader, a red flag would end the event 30 minutes short and we settled for 2nd. Encouraging to see the top step within grasp.

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Round 3: Willow Springs

The third round, Willow Springs 4 Hour in May, nearly saw our potential realized. For a second time, I narrowly qualified the #45 Spec E46 on class pole over a competitive field. Peter took the opening stint and I raced the final 2 hours. We fought amongst the top three for the duration although a miscalculated tire strategy meant 3rd was our finishing position out of 9.

And there is a quick recap of our season so far. For in-depth reports, visit mattmillionracing.com/news. What comes next will be our biggest challenge. The longest and most unique event of the series; The Utah 6 Hour!


race preview: the UTAH 6 HOUR

The Utah 6 Hour is the fourth round of six in NASA WERC for 2021. It takes place at scenic Utah Motorsports Campus (formerly Miller Motorsports Park) outside of Tooele, Utah during the last weekend of July. The event uses the ‘outer loop’ layout which is just over three miles in length. The race is split in half between fading daylight and darkness, making the task of success even more tricky. 40 cars are entered with 8-10 competing against us in E2.

The race is special for a number of reasons. Since it isn’t apart of the NASA SoCal or NorCal regions, it definitely feels like a ‘fly-away’ round of the series. The logistics are more complex to the other rounds with a 700+ mile trip coupled with a 6-hour race distance calling for more crew members, more consumables like tires and fuels, and so on.

OUR PREPARATION

Our #45 GOneppo Racing BMW Spec E46 will have an all-new look upon arrival in Utah. Apart from traditional pre-race maintenance at the BimmerSpeed shop in San Diego, the car now wears a bright blue and orange livery accompanied by team partners Serenity EHS, BimmerWorld, BimmerSpeed, and others. Reach out and learn how you can support our team as a partner!

Throughout this season, I’ve derived my learning value not just the racing experiences, but as a ‘team manager’ as well. To help organize budget, understand shipping logistics for the car and equipment, and grow our team of two into a small army of ten has been worthwhile and likely relevant to my future career in the sport. This year’s Utah 6 Hour would be especially rewarding take a class win to give back to our group and effort behind-the-scenes.

However, I’m quite excited to zip up the race suit be back doing what I know best; competition! UMC is a fantastic high-quality, smooth circuit and being at 4000ft above sea level makes the daily training routine worth the effort. The dynamic of multi-class racing here is unique with professional teams entering GT4 and GT3 machinery. My goals include putting in another top qualifying performance, establishing high consistency and traffic management efficiency during my double stint, and working closely with our crew chief and my two teammates in extracting our ultimate potential.

Matt & Sean winning 2020 NASA WERC Rd.2

THIRD DRIVER

In searching for our third driver, one driver fit the mission statement of our program; Sean Neel.

We first met in June 2019 when I joined the Technik Competition team. Together, we won that year’s 25 Hours of Thunderhill in a similar BMW E46. Outside of endurance, Sean is the current points leader in PCA Golden Gate Region’s Spec 911 category. He brings a wealth of knowledge, excitement, and understanding of our team and endurance racing. Welcome Sean!


HOW TO FOLLOW


Every time that GOneppo Racing enters the circuit, there will be a livestream broadcasting from the car to YouTube. Find the link (and more) below.

UTAH 6 HOUR - TIMETABLE

(Local Time: MDT) (PDT +1)

FRIDAY, july 30th

Practice: Multiple sessions

SATURDAY, JULY 31st

Qualifying: Est. 3:30pm (20m)

Race: 6:00pm - 12:00am (6h)

FOLLOW MATT for live updates

Instagram: @mattmillionracing

Facebook: Matt Million Racing

Twitter: @MillionRacing

YouTube: Matt Million Racing

LinkedIn: Matt Million

Website: mattmillionracing.com

Contact: matt@mattmillionracing.com

LInks

Onboard Livestream: GOneppo Racing on YouTube

Live Timing: Search for NASA Utah on racehero.io/events or download the app

NASA Utah Website: nasautah.com

NASA WERC Website: facebook.com/DRIVENASA.WERC


In Closing

Thank you to everyone who follows and supports my journey. Whether it be through these reports, social channels, or in person. Using this motorsport path as a means to create value for others is of crucial importance for me. If these reports provide value or you are interested in supporting my step into professional racing, please get in touch. Stay up-to-date on mattmillionracing.com and my social media channels. Until next month… all the best!

Matt Million

San Marcos, CA - 7/28/21

Matt's May Update: Pole, Podium in Willow Springs 4-Hour

MATT MILLION’S MAY UPDATE: POLE, PODIUM IN WILLOW SPRINGS 4-HOUR & FUN COACHING EXPERIENCES

May 21st, 2021 - Willow Springs, CA | Photos by Herb Lopez

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Hello! This month’s update focuses on a productive, tire-cording podium finish at NASA WERC Round 3 at Willow Springs, where myself and Peter Oneppo took the GOneppo Racing Spec E46 to a third straight class podium amidst a long 4-hour into the night. Also reflected on is unexpectedly coaching a friend and sampling his fantastic Spec Boxster along with some updates on what’s up next.

A quick catch-up; my name is Matt Million, I’m a 21-year-old aspiring professional racing driver and college student from San Marcos, California. I’ve been racing since the age of five spending eight consecutive years competing in karts. In 2014, I transitioned to sports cars in Spec Miata at age 14 finding success in the Mazda Motorsports ladder through Teen Mazda Challenge up to wins in the semi-pro Spec MX-5 Challenge in 2018. In 2019, I became a 25 Hours of Thunderhill class winner and in 2020 I achieved a long-held aspiration of racing touring cars in Germany. For 2021, my racing season has become NASA’s Western Endurance Racing Championship (WERC) as I continue full-time university studies hoping to eventually move into professional sports car racing or similar in the future.

I thoroughly enjoy sharing my experiences as a young racer through these reports with hopes you guys can take away some value from following along. Thank you for the support and recommend these to a friend (if they’d be interested!)

Setting the Stage

After coming within seconds of an E2 class win alongside Peter Oneppo for GOneppo Racing in Round 2 at the Buttonwillow 3h, we knew the possibility existed to go after the series’ most competitive title if we had a strong next round. That next round came five weeks later at Willow Springs with a twist. Still starting in daylight and ending late at night, this time we’d be racing a 4-hour which called for two pit stops and the potential for tire changes. Another reason why this series is appealing; with 4 of the 6 rounds running into darkness combining race lengths from three to six hours, the variety allows for different approaches (not to mention hours of unique night racing).

To restate a few points from last month’s update, being the endurance driver for GOneppo this season has become my main 2021 focus for a couple reasons. First and foremost, it keeps me in the cockpit and competing competitively on a semi-regular basis. While I’d absolutely love to be proving myself in SRO/IMSA or European championships, the budget to do so is out of reach currently so to keep racing and learning is better than sitting home! The E2 category in NASA WERC is becoming more competitive than it ever has been. Any small setback or be lapping off the pace and expect not to be winning or on the podium!

Second, the Spec E46 platform is a great all-rounder in terms of performance, chassis dynamics, and challenge. The class we compete in is full of these cars which makes it feel like endurance spec racing. Last, being with GOneppo has provided me a cool experience of autonomy in formulating race plans, crew roles, setup, and essentially helping figure out how to keep improving and win this championship!

I’ve made it clear to myself, and hopefully others can see it as well, that any smaller series or team I’m fortunate enough to race with in grassroots motorsport is treated with the same commitment and dedication as if it were professional. The way I view it, if I’m not using the chances I have now to prepare myself for when pro racing become a reality then I won’t be ready when those days come. Luck is when preparation meets opportunity, right?

Welcome to Willow Springs, Round 3 of 6

Iconic Willow Springs. A circuit many from Southern California have turned laps on for multiple decades. Arrived Friday morning for this one-day event greeted by high winds. We didn’t plan on a big testing program, simply just get both myself and Peter a good warm-up and collect baseline data. In my years around Willow Springs, I’ve never felt winds this strong.The entry of T8 was so vicious I nearly understeered straight off the circuit in the outlap to then receive snap oversteer in the middle of T9. Fortunately it died down before qualifying because that wasn’t very pleasant!

Our competition for this round was strong as well. Notably, three other Spec E46’s came with winning potential; the #11 Racewerkz entry which succeeded at Buttonwillow, #189 Bealeocity Motorsports entry with friend and pro driver John Capestro-DuBets in the lineup, and the points leading #88 Bitteracing entry that has become our championship rival. In total, 9 cars made up our class for this round.

Qualifying

Also for the second time, I had the pleasure of qualifying the car. The task was slightly different here; 5:00pm marked the start of a combined 30-minute practice/qualifying where teams could freely work pit stops. This didn’t sway us from our strategy for pole position! Be on grid early, build the right gap, and set one flying lap at optimal tire conditions before reaching traffic. Timing and scoring difficulties delayed the session and our persistence to be ready early paid off; everyone came off the pit lane in a line.

The calculations ran through my mind; installed was new Toyo Tires rubber, a 30lbs ballast for post-race weight security and a full fuel load (to be prepared for the 20-minute turnaround after the session). The GOneppo machine was as heavy and grippy as possible. Knowing I’d have just one try after a slow outlap to build heat into the tires, my commitment had to be 100% while understanding the handling would be totally foreign than in practice. Cresting T7 on the outlap, Peter informed me the last car had left pit lane. I held off until T8 to begin attacking. We timed it right!

The lap was good. Certainly there was more pace to extract as I compensated for the weight, but it felt good given the variables. Crossed the line as faster traffic passed from behind and slower traffic was ahead. 1:32:54. 1.7s better than I managed in the windy practice session. I thought it could be enough for pole but regardless that was the only flyer I was attempting! These tires had to go 4 hours around the most abrasive track we race on. Unstrapping at the trailer, timing showed our competition got within three tenths and couldn’t improve. GOneppo Racing on pole again! Absolutely love these situations. One lap to lock in and make it count!

You can watch my driver’s eye from qualifying by clicking here. It was a stable and precise lap, not the most wild to watch but quick enough to put us on pole!

The Race

Peter would again take the opening stint as he did last month for strategic reasons. He’d pit at or after the 1-hour-30-minute mark using up all 16 gallons of fuel then driver change during the first stop at sunset and set me up for a one-stop plan during my 2-hour-30-minute run.

The dynamic between us has developed its fun, productive moments. Putting him on class pole for the second time has encouraged growth on his opening stint management. It’s a little added incentive to stay up and fighting from the top! He started P8 of 33 overall.

He got a brilliant jump and pulled out a gap on second place. For a while, he was making this look easy. Though we surely weren’t under the illusion. Before long the #11 Racewerkz Spec E46 had climbed the field to pass us after 15 minutes as they started with their quickest driver. Not a big worry. As long as we maintained on the same lap and matched their pit calls, no doubt I could contend in the night.

Our crew consisted of fellow racers Eirik as crew chief and Kartik as the first fueler alongside our experienced fuel man Andrew. For a group assembled on short notice, they each did a fantastic job working efficient and clean leaving the ultimate outcome on myself and Peter.

Exceeding our fuel window, Peter came in on target and on the lead lap. Driver change was clean and not rushed as the fuel would take a little over one minute. I knew this would be a long double stint but eager to adapt with the car’s condition and play our hand toward the finish.

Didn’t take but a single lap to understand this wasn’t the car I drove in qualifying! The tires had far more wear than expected as we approached half distance and I’m told to conserve them as much as possible. Thus my first goal is established; extract the most pace while keeping away from excessive tire slip (sliding the rear, pushing the front). Willow Springs has become the ‘cheese grater’ of circuits on the West Coast with the long corners compounded with an increasingly rough surface. With a high average speed, saving tires and maintaining quick laps isn’t a simple puzzle.

The Spec E46 benefits from a decent degree of rear slip, a driving style I couldn’t utilize right now. Averaging 1:35’s was slightly better than our competitors also starting to conserve. Small gains now could lead to a big payoff in 2 hours.

Within 20 minutes, the sky tinted orange faded to black and I was settled. With no truly slow corners, managing traffic here is high risk and high reward. Slingshot around a Miata in T9 and gain big time on a competitor forced to wait, but fail to spot the race-leading prototype in the same corner and it very well could be a short evening. This first multi-class experience here reminded me a bit of Le Mans with all the speed and ‘straightaway chess’ passing cars.

For the majority of my race I was devoid of a proper in-class podium battle. Occasionally I’d come across an E2 car down the order, but between the our various strategies I didn’t run across our main three rivals often unfortunately! That’s when it gets crucial to refocus on minimal time loss through traffic and make the most of solitary laps. This became exponentially more difficult as suddenly all left-side grip vanished and had to manage a very tricky car. 10 laps of fighting traction and I called the first feeling of fuel starvation to the crew.

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Pitting that lap for my only scheduled fuel stop, the damage was clear. Both left-side tires were shredding themselves to bits. Originally we thought one tire was all we might have to change in this race, not two! Per E2 rules, only one tire can be changed in the hot pits per stop. I’d have to make an unscheduled stop to replace the other which cost us easily two minutes (a little over one lap). Other teams faced similar struggles but made decisions to replace them earlier during the first fuel stop would put us on catch-up!

Initially a bummer to fall behind, once the second tire was fitted it felt like an entirely new race. Honestly, I couldn’t believe the difference! The performance in replacing them along with a bit of electrolytes and an urgency to gain back time lost resurged my confidence. With a bit more ‘belief’ to add to my challenge, I entered my sharpest flow of the evening in the final 45 minutes.

The pace I could set earlier was good but now everything clicked on a different intensity. I found a way to gain 1-2 seconds per lap consistently into the 1:33’s and 1:34’s, a good amount up on our rivals. T2 far more entry speed, entry of T3 deeper with more precision, exit of T4 crisper, T9 became wider and later, eyes further, air cooler. A mission to finish strong. Those final laps raised the spirit and enthusiasm of my own performance. Imperative to end off on a strong personal satisfaction of giving it your best!

The potential we had was obvious in the final three laps; spotting the tail of #88 Bitteracing and catching rapidly. Crossing the checkered directly behind but realizing our extra stop meant it would’ve only have been to unlap ourselves. We finished P3 of 9 in the E2 class, P9 overall. Still, satisfying it was to see that the car’s pace never faltered in 4 hours of racing. It came down to tire life and strategy, along with long-duration confidence to hold the pace. Endurance racing is a game of costs and benefits, conservation and flat-out, risks and rewards. Not the win we were capable of, but fantastic to share the podium with Peter once again and a reminder you’ve got to love the great and less-than-great days in this sport. The momentum in our small program is growing!

Do check out the complete onboard video of my 2+ hour night stint by clicking here. It’ll give you a better sense of everything discussed! Also posted on the Matt Million Racing channel on YouTube is a 10-minute driver’s eye highlight which you can view by clicking here. Not enough? Here’s a link to our race from onboard the livestreaming camera which features a cockpit and rearview camera angle along with a speedometer (quite cool!)

Weekend Reflections

Overall, we executed a clean race and pushing a pace easily matching or exceeding the leaders. Proud of it! The decision to pull me in for the unplanned rear tire change was a tough one for Peter with hindsight telling us we could’ve replaced it during our driver change stop. But that’s endurance racing. So many variables in play that to miss one should be expected in a developing team. Taking it as a learning experience and ensuring that fate will not follow us next month in the Utah 6 Hour, I can assure you!

Rather interestingly, lap 134 of the 136 laps we completed was only two tenths off my personal best in the race of a 1:33:8 set on lap 125. I believe it speaks nicely to continual improvement both during the races and behind-the-scenes; I was standing on the podium reminiscing over little gains to be better next time! Being this was the first time I’d driven Willow Springs in the dark I kept working on myself to look further, balance weight better, pass traffic sooner, carry in more speed to a particular corner, etc. Great experience nonetheless and I know Utah will be epic!

From Willow Springs to Buttonwillow

With the NASA WERC race occurring on Friday evening this time, a weekend clash with my commitment to help coach friend Sean in PCA Golden Gate Region Spec 911 was able to mostly be avoided. While my role with him and Aether Motorsports relies on Friday testing to set laps and work data, I’d have to rely on my many years around Buttonwillow to jump into the team Saturday morning without the extra day!

With only a few hours sleep from the prior night’s race and plenty of caffeine, I was driven through the day knowing a nice bed awaited me that evening. However it was just before that comfortable night’s sleep while having dinner with our small group at Catrina’s Mexican in Wasco when my ears perked up. On Sunday morning, I’d be tasking with something I wasn’t planning to do; drive and teach!

Matt, friend and former teammate of mine in winning 25 Hours of Thunderhill who competed against me in the prior night’s race, was there to race his Spec Boxster. It was his first time in this car since March 2020 and he made a clear desire of wanting to get back up to speed and get the mind back into a sprint racing rhythm. After a discussion, I was offered to run the car in Sunday warm-up to offer a second opinion on the setup and use my data to find trends we could learn from to make him faster. It’s incredible how a small opportunity can refocus your entire outlook on a weekend! I wanted to give Matt a professional job, work hand-and-hand on improvements, and help his confidence rise for his Sunday races.

I arrived to the BR Racing garage early the next morning. Having an actual race engineer to help with seat fitment and be on radio with was an awesome extra which made the situation feel a bit more special. My sole objective was to be professional, deliver a quality session and assessment, and make sure he had tangible points to improve upon for his races through theoretic talks and data. Quite fun!

You can click the link here or view the video posted in this article to watch a few laps from my session, I recommend it! I didn’t fit well in the seat, ran on old scrub tires, and had never driven an actual Spec Boxster before. But once I saw the MoTeC dash light up and popped the steering wheel on, I was quietly giddy with excitement. Great little session it was. The Boxster’s mid-engine weight transfer is something to constantly keep in mind especially not being accustomed to it. Easy to trail-brake too far into the corner and loose the rear. The throttle is your friend to settle it and straighten up, so throttle aggression (while being smooth onto the pedals, obviously) is needed to extract a bit more from the lap. It was useful also to have fellow Boxster racer Mark out playing with me and allow for a quicker get-up-to-speed! My times were a couple seconds up on Matt’s best and a few tenths shy of the pole time set in Spec Boxster that day. The feeling took me back to my Spec Miata days… only with an awesome data dash system, a smooth gearbox and steering rack feel, and more horsepower! Awesome fun to wield around my favorite Southern California circuit Buttonwillow.

Thank you so much for the offer to help, Matt! Glad we were able to extract quality data, have good chats, and see you improve in the races with an epic battle in the end. Made my job as a last-minute coach feel very proud and privileged.

Because I’m running out of space in this report, I’ll just leave one last video link; setting data laps at Willow Springs in an exhilarating 1986 Porsche 911 3.8L racing car built to POC GT3 regulations. Had the chance to coach my friend in his fantastic 911 once again and it’s an absolute joy to drive. Check it out by clicking here, it might make you remanence on the ‘old days’ of racing!

What’s Next

The next stop in NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship is Round 4 of 6; the championship’s annual trip east for NASA Utah 6 Hour in the evening of Saturday, July 31st taking place at Utah Motorsports Campus. I will again compete with GOneppo Racing alongside Peter Oneppo and an undetermined third driver. The race will again be livestreamed onboard our #45 BMW Spec E46 at GOneppo Racing on YouTube. Click this link to visit the page and subscribe so you don’t miss it. If you can’t tune in live, subscribe to Matt Million Racing by clicking here and you’ll be notified once highlights are posted from the event. Be sure to download the Racehero.io app for your device to follow live timing during the race.

With no race currently on my calendar for June, I might have my ‘June Update‘ as a 2021 review-so-far and preview the next six months of my racing. While each trip to the track this year has varied between racing, coaching, or supporting friends, I’ve been fortunate enough to somehow drive 12 different race cars across 7 circuits in California in between my full load of college classes! It’s rather surreal how five months ago I didn’t have much, if any, firm racing plans. Now with a short summer break, I’m able to breathe and realize how far I’ve grown as a driver and as a person. I’m in this journey for the long game, I enjoy it too much not to be!

In Closing

A few quick thank-you’s; to Peter Oneppo, who I’ve now spent my last two races with and am excited to continue toward the front next month in the ‘Utah 6 Hour’! To my parents of course, who’s undivided support of this often tricky motorsport career path is always so appreciated and special to have supporting me. And to Matt and Sean who have graciously allowed me into their racing programs and given me the freedom to help find ways to do it better. Thanks also to Herb Lopez for the awesome photography!

Finally, thank you to everyone who follows my journey. Whether it be through these reports, my social channels, or saying hello. Providing value is of crucial importance for me. If these reports provide value of enjoyment or potentially if you interested in helping me step into professional racing, please get in touch! Stay up-to-date on mattmillionracing.com and the social media links below and until next month… cheers!

“The race is long - to finish first, first you must finish” - Garth Stein, The Art of Racing in the Rain

Matt Million

San Marcos, CA - 6/02/21

Matt’s April Update: Pole, 2nd Place Through Darkness At Buttonwillow 3-Hour

Matt’s April Update: Pole, 2nd Place Through Dust and Darkness At Buttonwillow 3-Hour

April 17th, 2021 - Buttonwillow, CA

Hello! This month’s update reflects on a wild and dusty 2nd place finish in Round 2 of NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship at Buttonwillow Raceway, where GOneppo Racing with Matt Million and Peter Oneppo took the second podium spot in a competitive 13-car field in E2.

A quick catch-up; my name is Matt Million, I’m a 21-year-old aspiring professional racing driver and college student from San Marcos, California. I’ve been competing since the age of five where I spent eight years racing in karts. In 2014, I transitioned to cars in Spec Miata at age 14 finding success in the Mazda Motorsports ladder through Teen Mazda Challenge up to semi-pro Spec MX-5 Challenge in 2018. In 2019, I became a 25 Hours of Thunderhill class winner and in 2020 I achieved a long-held goal of racing touring cars in Germany. For 2021, my racing plans primarily involve the NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship (WERC) as I continue full-time university studies hoping to move into professional sports car racing events in the future.

I love sharing my experiences as a young racer through these reports with hopes that those who read it can take away value or enjoyment from following. Thank you for the support!

SETTING THE STAGE

Interestingly enough, my preparation for this second round of NASA WERC started before realizing I’d compete in the first round at Sonoma Raceway! Now after two rounds, I'm in contention for a championship in E2 which is both awesome and rather unexpected!

I’ve decided to focus on this championship in 2021 for a few reasons; it has a great schedule on the West Coast offering good opportunity to compete at a high level, spend hours in the seat, and has a competitive-yet-friendly paddock. While the budget to move into professional racing isn’t available right now, this is a fantastic ‘stepping stone’ for my situation. Two 3-hour events at Buttonwillow, two 6-hour races at Utah Motorsports Campus and Thunderhill Raceway, and the upcoming 4-hour at Willow Springs this month to complement the season opening 2.5h at Sonoma Raceway.

I reached out to my former 25h Thunderhill-winning crew chief and SoCal Spec E46 race director Peter Oneppo to put together a program for the April and May events at Buttonwillow and Willow Springs, respectively. We had the right alignment of objectives and here we are competing together!

I’ve also developed a fondness for the Spec E46 platform; a balance between sports car and touring car where aggression must be controlled in a way that manages its weight and preserves tires. Though, the steep torque and overall ‘playfulness’ makes it a fantastic car to do battle with over long runs. Would love to keep learning these cars and possibly other touring car platforms someday!

FRIDAY TESTING

Friday testing was rather uneventful in a good way, so I’ll spare the word count here. Busy weekend it was as I got the feeling racers couldn’t wait to be back competing. Each sprint class was 15+ cars and our 3-hour would have 38!

Compared to the Technik Competition BMW E46 I raced here last June, there are a few subtle differences. The GOneppo machine runs Toyo RR’s which are mandatory to compete in Spec E46 sprint racing whereas the former Technik car used a slightly grippier Hankook rubber designed for endurance. The Toyo’s are consistent and long-lasting but lack an initially grippier edge you’ll feel on the Hankook’s. Also different was dampers; GOneppo running Spec E46 mandated 1-Way single adjustable while the Technik car ran 2-Way again designed better for endurance racing. Still, the similarities outweighed the differences.

The GOneppo car feels more lively on limit and reaches the limit sooner. I would’ve liked a bit more initial ‘bite’ for cornering however the Toyo’s can handle a good amount of tire slippage and stay within competitive range. So all in all, minor adjustments but the same philosophy.

SATURDAY QUALIFYING

Qualifying had to be sharp; the session immediately after was the ST5 race group that Peter was racing in which meant I needed to get my lap done to get him on grid!

Typically, it’s best to complete your fastest lap in as few laps possible anyway. After the third or fourth, tire pressures have risen to the point where improvement is difficult. But this is motorsport and plans can get thrown out of windows.

I got to grid early ready to rock with a clear mission of putting Peter on the front row for the race (since he would be the starting driver). I knew the task was achievable given my experience and results in similar situations here at Buttonwillow.

The intensity of qualifying is a challenge I love; it comes down to a calm focus, raising your confidence, and forgetting about the world. Many drivers can set fast laps, but doing it when the pressure is on consistently time after time is a skill I’ve worked to develop. While variables of a race might fall outside your control at times, the variables in one qualifying lap is much more controllable. It’s often a game of your mind!

I had built a sizeable gap around me as I entered onto the first flyer. All is well for ten seconds until a pack of slower cars leaves the pit lane late directly ahead. Abort!

Trying my best to pass them before the next lap, it wasn’t going to happen. Keeping the tires cool and fuel burn low, I dove into hot pits in an attempt rejoin in clear track. Crew chief Sean Neel timed me out to perfection but I’d only have the chance to set one lap. While tire pressures had risen, one lap was all that mattered. It wasn’t perfect but a 1:59:79 was enough to put GOneppo Racing on E2 class pole by a few tenths. Peter would start ahead of the ravaging E2 field and that made me the happiest teammate!

THE RACE

The two-or-so hours preceding an endurance race is when a small, spirited crew shines. Setting up the pit box and moving equipment, changing to our enduro tire set, refueling the car and jugs, cooking (and finding the time for) dinner, last minute strategizing of the plan. It’s all occurring simultaneously and literally it can’t happen without teamwork!

Peter felt confident and our encouragement worked to keep him in the mindset. The time was 6:15pm. Green flag for the 38-car field across five classes. Our grid spot paid dividends as us and the second place car separated from the rest which locked into a massive battle. Being the second driver in rotation is nearly as difficult as starting. It takes experience in accepting that whatever happens on track before the driver change is out of your control. All you can do is control your performance! While I had the usual pre-stint jitters, the genuine confidence I had in Peter and our operation outweighed that feeling.

A notable highlight was having crew chief Sean Neel at my side. He’s great communicator who understands the anticipation. Calm, methodical, reassuring. A demeanor that reverberates through a team. Because even though we’d have to refuel, change drivers, and repair part of the car in an unknown state, our focus was higher than our the heart rates.

His stint lasts until the sun dips behind the mountains, spending approximately 1-hour-40-minutes in the car. Peter kept up a fantastic consistency to pit from the top five and on the same lap as the leader. Our original plan had him boxing about 20 minutes earlier, but a full-course yellow to retrieve a stricken car late in the first hour pushed out our fuel window far enough to give confidence we could make it on a single stop. But ‘could’ was the magic word as I’d have to keep a close eye on our fuel and attack only when necessary to catch and pass in-class cars. A three hour race starting with approximately 16 gallons and only being allowed to refuel 10 gallons (if you do the math, it’s a close call).

Peter stops on cue. The driver change is complete in less than a minute and we wait on the fuel. No spills, no mistakes. I’m sent on my way ready to apply my first performance goal in the quickly fading daylight.

The first goal was to acclimate quicker on the out-lap. Jumping onto a dark circuit with an unknown surface condition in the middle of traffic takes practice to execute! Ready yourself as much as possible to reach that high level mentality then slow down the mind and rely on natural inputs. The human brain can process far more sensory information when it reaches the flow state, so practice reaching it quickly!

Settling into the flow with a great feeling; tires felt right, radio communication was precise, and I honed in on the top few cars from 5th. However it was soon realized this wasn’t to be an ordinary night stint. For whatever reason, the Buttonwillow silky dust was in full effect. If a car dropped a wheel onto it, an impossibly thick cloud hung over that section for multiple laps. It took bravery (and a faint glimpse of taillights ahead) to drive through them at speed!

Though, myself and most others managed them well. 15 minutes into my stint and I’d slipped past two in-class cars to put us 3rd chasing the leaders. It was an incredibly fun and rewarding stint. Judging the best route through traffic, managing conditions, then settling into a lonely set of laps of you versus lap time targets.

The second performance goal I set was quicker passes against in-class cars. I wanted to catch and make a decisive move before they’ve realized what’s happening. Wait too long to make a move and it’s easier for them to adapt for counteracting! My favorite of these moments was the pass for 2nd. Team Bittneracing was about three corners up when I began closing. One lap later it became two corners and the opportunity began to unfold. After ‘Bus Stop' corner, a small dust cloud slowed him up as I used the taillights to guide me through at a higher speed. Carrying extra momentum through ‘Riverside’ corner, I tapered my closing rate enough to dive underneath and match him under braking into ‘Phil Hill’. We went side-by-side through to the exit as another dust cloud helped me solidify the position (skip to 20:55 in my ‘Driver’s Eye’ video to watch the move). Afterwards, it’s about leaving no doubt and setting off down the road!

Passing in endurance racing are not passive, like a track day, however they cannot be purely aggressive either like a sprint race. They must be studied, calculated, and executed to be as clean and as “time efficient” as possible. The artform requires plenty practice and application!

I encourage anyone interested to view my ‘driver’s eye’ video of the complete stint. Easily one of the most action-filled 40 minutes I’ve spent in a race car. If you’re even remotely a fan of endurance racing, you’ll appreciate watching it! Click here to watch or at the thumbnail above.

With a half-hour left to run, the race met an unfortunate early end. A collision at Bus Stop due to poor dust visibility left three cars damaged and unable to return to the pits. I happened to be exiting Grapevine when I received a radio message to enter with caution and came through the accident scene not long after. Thankfully the drivers came away fine, but it was immediately clear the race would end under yellow. A number of pace laps and the checkered was thrown.

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We finished 2nd with only two cars separating us from the class leader. I understood the severity of the situation, but it’s frustrating as a racer to see the win right in front of you slip away under slow, monotonous pace lap! Allow the final 30 minutes to run and it would’ve been tough to deny us. But that’s the magic, and despair, of endurance racing. It’s why we’re drawn to it!

WEEKEND REFLECTIONS

Overall, it’s hard not to be satisfied with our day. The variables in our control were accomplished with planning, intent, and purpose. We didn’t suffer any obvious mistakes or setback and the race came down to both fortunate and unfortunate timing. On a day where our car ran in 7 separate sessions between us, the constant motion of driving allowed us to do just that; flow!

On a slightly different note, jumping into these events as the ‘endurance’ driver has taught me more than on-track performance recently. Establishing great relationships has provided an opportunity to help manage and guide these endurance programs with growing autonomy. Graduating from university next year with a degree in global business management, these weekends have increasingly relevant toward the skillset I want to build. It’s also fantastic way to keep active in my racing career of course! While I’d love to move into professional motorsport or continue racing in Germany given the budget, I’m having more fun with my racing than ever right now.

But if you walk away from a race weekend thinking you did everything right, you’re missing out! Learning comes through reflection and there’s been a couple points of improvement we’ll make as a team for the next event. Some aspects to organize in team structuring, some in elevating my own performance potential, some in general car setup. Applying what you’ve learned can be the most rewarding parts of a race weekend, regardless of result.

WHAT’S NEXT

It’s a nice feeling to plan on competing for a full championship again! Next up is Round 3 of 6 for NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship which will take place at “the fastest road in the West” for 4 Hours of Willow Springs in the evening of Friday, May 21st. Consistency will be beneficial as I’ll team up once more with GOneppo Racing in search of the top podium step this time. This event will also begin in daylight and finish under the stars which adds to the endurance challenge and atmosphere I love about this series and type of motorsport. I’ll be nighttime proven before tackling 24h Daytona or Nurburgring… one day! I will also have a small update from a fun ‘Lucky Dog Racing League’ weekend next month.

Like Buttonwillow, our race will be livestreamed onboard the #45 BMW Spec E46 at GOneppo Racing on YouTube. Click this link to visit the page and subscribe so you don’t miss it. If you can’t tune in live, subscribe to Matt Million Racing by clicking here and you’ll get notified once I post the race. Be sure to download the Racehero.io app for your device to follow live timing during the race.

IN CLOSING

A few specific ‘thank you’s’ this month. First and foremost, thanks to Peter Oneppo for the chance to team up as your endurance driver while allowing me to help manage the endurance component of a busy weekend. Second thank you is for Sean Neel, a righteous friend and driver stepping up as our crew chief and delivering! Truly makes me appreciate the importance of the role when its performed well. Thank you Andrew and Zack for fueling an efficient pit stop, and a special thanks to my family for cooking a wonderful dinner for our crew.

Finally, thank you to everyone who follows my journey. Whether it be through reports, my social channels, or reaching out to say hello! Every interaction means so much, truly. Stay up-to-date on mattmillionracing.com and the social media links below, and until next month… cheers!

“Talent wins games, but teamwork and intelligence wins championships.” - Michael Jordan

Matt Million

San Marcos, CA - 5/04/21

Matt's March Update: Podium at Sonoma and Unexpected Chances

Matt Million’s March Update: Podium at Sonoma and Unexpected Chances

March 28th, 2021 - Sonoma, CA

Hello! This month’s update reflects on a late call-up to race the NASA WERC season opener at Sonoma Raceway and finish 2nd in class, as well as touching on what’s happened in my racing since February. I then expand on my racing outlook for the year.

A quick catch-up; my name is Matt Million, I’m a 20-year-old aspiring professional racing driver and college student from San Marcos, California. I’ve been competing since the age of five spending eight years racing in karts. In 2014, I transitioned to cars in Spec Miata at age 14 finding success in the Mazda Motorsports ladder through Teen Mazda Challenge up to semi-pro Spec MX-5 Challenge in 2018. In 2019, I became a 25 Hours of Thunderhill class winner and I achieved a long-held goal of racing touring cars in Germany during 2020. For 2021, my racing plans remain fluid as I continue full-time university but aim to compete in more pro-am sports car events throughout the year.

I love sharing my experiences as a young racer through these reports with hopes that those who read it can take away value or enjoyment from following along. Thank you for the support!

ARRIVING AT SONOMA

Arriving at Sonoma Raceway on the Thursday evening ahead of the NASA NorCal weekend, I wasn’t planning to race. My main role was data and coaching support for endurance team Technik Competition and their Porsche Boxster competing in the 2-hour-30-minute first round of NASA’s Western Endurance Racing Championship (WERC). Of course I wanted to be racing! But as no clear opportunities with teams presented themselves and an effort to save finances for bigger races this year, I decided being in the paddock to serve a role was better than sitting home!

On the Wednesday before, I reached out to a fellow San Diego racer Mike Beale who I noticed signed up for the Spec E46 sprint races and the WERC event as a solo driver. I offered to give coaching help for the test day if wanted. He mentioned he wasn’t able to attend Friday, but his E46 would be there and I was free to do laps for collecting data on setup and driving tips for when he arrived. Not a typical coaching day, but a unique chance to help build his notebook (and take my first laps around Sonoma since 2017!)

Thus, I now became driver support for two entries! With the helping hands of fellow Spec E46 friends, I was able to run his car for three sessions and effectively be my own engineering and pit crew for Friday. Thankfully, the Technik team’s Boxster was running great and the driver’s were pleased with the day which allowed me more time to extract and dial in this Spec E46.

AN INCREDIBLE OPPORTUNITY

This weekend would be special in another way; also entered in the WERC race was a mighty Mercedes-AMG GT4 from team JMF Motorsports by Conquest Racing West. Two months prior, I had been selected to take part in a 2-day driver search initiative with the group at Buttonwillow Raceway. It was perhaps the most incredible racing opportunity of my life. Being included among six of the country’s most deserving young drivers for a chance to join the team and race their AMG GT4 on route toward professional sports car racing.

I have so many humbling, encouraging, positive reflections from the experience. How a single ‘out of the blue’ phone call led to stepping into a powerful homologation racing machine with a professional team for the first team… in less than a one month span. Thinking ‘there’s no way I can prepare in time’ to then perform at a level higher than I ever thought possible, caught between reality and the realization of my wildest professional endurance racing aspirations.

If you are interested to read more, visit my article on mattmillionracing.com. I want to again thank everyone involved in providing me the opportunity. It was nice to quickly chat with all of you in the Sonoma paddock, hope your first event went well!

Now to continue with the report..

SATURDAY

Saturday morning at Sonoma was spent getting Mike up-to-speed for his sprint races, the afternoon spent conducting driver and fuel stop practice with Technik Competition, and at 5:00pm I found myself assisting in the 50-minute WERC qualifying session for both!

As I find myself not having the resources to race as much as I’d like, finding ways to contribute (with data, coaching, spotting, being a helping hand, etc.) has been a valuable way to keep active while understanding aspects of the sport better. Never know how one seemingly small skill you pick up in the paddock will impact your future career, or how a single smile and handshake can come around later on!

While Mike planned to drive the 2-hour-30-minute event solo, he was reminded of how physical the Sonoma circuit can be. The Spec E46 could last about 1-hour-25-minutes with its roughly 16 gallon fuel capacity, after which the pit stop could only refuel 10 gallons (which is the maximum per E2 class refueling regulations). If he felt too fatigued to continue at a competitive pace, I was asked to be ready as reserve driver to finish the final hour. ‘Man, I might have a chance to race’, I thought to myself. I’d be getting to bed early ready to perform if called upon!

I’ve had a mentality shift on my racing career since I began college, as racing became more difficult to pursue. Putting on a fireproof driving kit to compete in race cars is a privilege and not an expectation. If situation or opportunity arises, you must ‘flip the switch’ and compete at a high level to extract as much learning as possible from it. Because who knows the next time you get to apply it! Still unsure if I’d be in the race tomorrow, I was ready.

SUNDAY - RACE DAY

Beginning bright and early at 8:00am, this was to be a different endurance challenge for teams and drivers. Typically, each race is held in the evening with day fading to night. While track conditions might start slippery or ‘greasy’, the darkness brought cooler temperatures and a cooler racing surface to compromise low visibility. This race would see drivers manage the slickest conditions of the day on a cold, damp surface similar to the ambient weather in Wine Country.

I climbed up Sonoma’s massive grandstands to spot for Mike’s opening stint. Fully suited and booted, ready if needed! 30 cars took the green flag across five classes, 11 of which in the E2 class that both Mike and Technik Competition competed in. Success in this class wasn’t easy as teams were well prepared. Technik ran away in 2nd as Mike maintained about 7th through his stint.

I made my way to our pit box after half an hour to coordinate stops. Luckily we avoided ‘double stacking’ (both cars pitting at the same time) since the Boxster was scheduled in just past the first hour, earlier than Mike. Their stop and driver change was nearly perfect, but got hit with a 5-minute penalty for a small fuel spill. Soon I got the radio call from Mike that had my headset flying off and helmet on. Pitting in 10 minutes to have me finish off the race! With many teams ahead making mistakes or serving penalties, he was up to 5th.

With no pre-rehearsed stop for our car, I stressed it didn’t matter loosing a few seconds as long as we did it calm and tidy. Took slightly longer than needed, but no speeding, no fuel spill, and a clean swap. I engaged third gear cresting out of the pit lane up to T2 still yanking tight my shoulder belts. Thinking to myself, ‘One hour to apply the lessons learned in adaptability’. Go time!

A bit of early confidence to feel the Toyo Proxes RR tires remained surprisingly fresh after the first stint. Important to sustain pace in a Spec E46 is keeping the rear tires underneath you and not ‘overheating’ through slides at corner entry, which isn’t easy in a relatively large and lively BMW 3-series! Through discussing data with Mike, I also noticed how the torque is a valuable asset. Coming from Spec Miata’s, I was accustomed to revving the engine high and dropping gears when possible. In this car around Sonoma, holding 4th instead of 3rd in T6 and 3rd instead of 2nd at T11 turned out to be just as quick (and less shifts)!

And with that, set my best times of the weekend after two laps. Right on pace with the leader. Maybe we had a shot!

Around six laps in, a bright green E46 came out from pit lane. 3rd place was in sight, but not without a fight! A couple laps of battling and my move came inside of T7 capitalizing as he ran wide, utilizing the passing JMF Motorsports AMG. Grinning ear to ear at hopping into a door-to-door race, the best was still to come.

The class-leading Bittneracing E46 left the pits directly in front of me with rapid Shaun Webster behind the wheel. This was for lead, I thought! What followed next was easily the most fun, competitive, rewarding 20-minute battles I’ve had for a long while. Nose to tail, back and forth, late braking and defensive moves, timing slower and faster traffic to gain an edge. I nearly pulled the perfect T7 crossover but I couldn’t make it stick. Ultimately the move was made as I picked a better path through traffic on the front straightaway. I love endurance racing.

By this point, we both lost track of time and objective. He was informed by his crew that I was one lap behind and he pulled back to save fuel. Noticing this, I assessed my own fuel situation. Having driven the car to fuel starvation on test day, a quick realization occurred that there was no way I’d cross the finish without a ‘splash and dash’ at this pace!

Channeling my inner Scott Dixon, this was a great chance to apply efficient fuel saving. Focusing on short-shifting and releasing the throttle earlier to carry momentum in a bid for fuel economy. Saving fuel isn’t the challenge, doing it while maintaining a similarly rapid pace is! Downhill sections meant less throttle and more coasting, braking needed to be later as I wasn’t carrying the same speed, mid-corners had to be quicker and sustain more momentum, and so on.

30-minutes of performing this dance and I managed to stay within a second or two of my target pace. Toward the end I got a feeling I saved too much and leaped to set fast times with five minutes remaining. It wasn’t too much. It was spot-on! Rounding T11 coming to checkered, the thirsty E46 gasped and RPM’s dropped. On fumes, I had crossed the line to take 2nd place! An exciting balance of quick laps, tight racing, multiclass challenges, and being my own fuel engineer. Planning to have onboard posted on my YouTube page shortly!

Reflections

Ultimately, I learned it’s usually better to have one main focus for a racing weekend (as it can be tough to balance two roles for two teams). But when opportunity presents itself, it’s worth the additional effort (and running around the paddock) to make the most of it! Thoroughly enjoyed.

It’s taught me also not being afraid to reach out and offer to help mutual friends and acquaintances in the sport. The way to establish a good reputation among the paddock is to be there, talk to people, show your passion, and deliver high level efforts!

Thank you Mike Beale for the chance to help coach and end up on the podium together. Hope you enjoyed the weekend as much as I did. Thank you also to Peter, Matt, and the rest at Technik Competition for giving me the flexibility to pursue this. Special thanks to Andrew and Owen for conducting our pit stop, this isn’t possible without you boys!

WHIRLWIND OF TRACK SUPPORT

Without this race, my March update would’ve been on driver support days (which has been fun, but not as exciting to write about!)

Through the benefits of online college and an expanding network in the paddock, I found myself in four different cars at four different circuits during March, make that eight cars on seven circuits counting February! Truly humbling to help these drivers make improvements, knowing that I still have plenty to learn myself.

On the prior weekend, I went to the NASA SoCal event at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana to help some Spec E46 racers. Primarily working with GOneppo Racing, it was exciting to be a spotter as driver Peter moved from 6th to 3rd after discussing a little data. It was also a good chance to get comfortable in his car as we will be together in the second round of NASA WERC at Buttonwillow next month. I was able to run morning warm-up to set a data ‘reference lap’ around Auto Club Speedway roval, which you can watch the onboard video of by clicking here.

Three days before that, I had a unique day with a friend in his Porsche 911 GT3 RS around Chuckwalla Valley Raceway. After driving a handful of air-cooled 911’s recently, it was exhilarating to feel how far these rear-engine machines have come. A private track event with only a couple cars, we spent over two hours drilling the basics of pedal releases, steering inputs, and understanding the ‘limit’. Unbelievable performance for a car you can get groceries in. One cool experience to add in my notebook!

Earlier in the month, I was at Willow Springs assisting my friend Sean Neel set up his SP911 for this season in PCA Golden Gate Region. Definitely a ‘first’ for me to pull off track and watch snow fall from the sky!

While coaching and supporting isn’t the same as racing myself, it keeps me active and refining fundamentals along with building relationships. It’s made me more appreciative of the days I get to compete.

WHAT’S NEXT

On the immediate horizon is NASA’s Western Endurance Racing Championship Rd.2 at Buttonwillow Raceway. I’ll be partnered in the 3-hour race with Peter Oneppo in his BMW Spec E46 for GOneppo Racing. This series has become my racing home as of late with hours of competitive racing with the added challenges of endurance. I am hopeful to compete in all six rounds this season and look forward to them tremendously! The following event is 4 hour at Willow Springs in May, I hope to bring good news on that in my April update.

Beyond this, I’m working diligently on a potential return to Germany in 2021 but no guarantee it can happen this year. An ultimate endurance racing goal of mine is the 24 Hours of Nürburgring, a goal I hope to achieve sometime in the next few years. But in order to be eligible, I’ll need to complete multiple events around the circuit to gain experience and credentials. I might be finishing up college before heading toward that goal full time!

There are also some pro racing and scholarship opportunities in the U.S. that I am pursuing this year. I hope to have news on these soon. Stay updated by following my links below or visiting mattmillionracing.com/news.

Of course, if you’d like to know how you can be involved in my racing journey, please contact me directly at matt@mattmillionracing.com.

THANK YOU

Thank you to everyone who follows my journey. Whether it be reading these reports, following my social media, or visiting my website at mattmillionracing.com. Reach out! It would mean a lot to hear from some of you.

Cheers, Matt Million

San Marcos, CA - 4/06/21

Race Recap: Enduring the NASA Utah 6 Hour

MATT REVIEWS HIS WEEKEND AT THE 2020 UTAH 6 HOUR

August 5th, 2020

The NASA Utah 6 Hour is an annual event put on by NASA Utah and is a championship round of the NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship. This year, it was the third round following Willow Springs and Buttonwillow in February and June, respectively. As this championship has seemed to be my home in the recent year or so, the one race I was yet to drive or visit was this one. With my plans to compete in Germany’s BMW 318ti Cup on an indefinite hold due to travel restrictions, the opportunity was presented to race the Utah enduro for the first time. Always eager to test myself at unfamiliar places or environments, I had to compete in it this year. With two weeks to spare, I confirmed my entry. The story of that and our race is below!

I came into the weekend with goals of growth. Similar to other race weekends, but because it would be an all new circuit, car, and team this time, my expectations were tailored to match that. Get what new experiences, new information, and newly found areas of improvement that I could out of my 3 days in Utah! To quickly recap what I’ve written about in the preview, I would race this weekend with local San Diego based team Racing Ruined My Life / Oceanside Motorsports in their E2 class BMW E30. A team and car that I raced against in June I’d know be racing for! It was a shame the Technik Competition team couldn’t make it, but it gave me an opportunity to expand out to new people within the paddock. And the chance to race with team owner Neil Daly, who is arguably the most unconditionally nice and happy man in the paddock, sounded like a great time to me!

Friday was testing day, and it was uncomfortably warm. I was able to get a little over a half-hour behind the wheel, enough to familiarize with the controls of this new car and understand the basic characteristics of the long, fast Utah Motorsports Campus circuit. We discovered a bit of a fuel issue, where because of the 4,200ft altitude (and our car wasn’t adjusted for it), our car was spewing out a small trail of fuel and affecting fuel mileage. We fixed what we could, and the rest we simply had to keep an eye on.

Saturday. Race day! I was elected to be the qualifying and starting driver, tasked with putting us in a good position early! Qualifying looked to be promising as soon as I rolled out, being first to the first-come-first-serve grid positions. I was able to run 2-3 clean laps after allowing the faster class cars by, but I felt my lack of overall seat time in the car and track affected my lap time potential. Starting P4 of 7 in the class wasn’t optimal, but didn’t bother me much. Racing for 6 hours has many more variables in play than just your starting spot!

The race got underway at 6:00 PM local time and ran relatively clean and straightforward for awhile. I noticed my car cutting power about a half-hour in, feeling a lot like fuel starvation but was happening way earlier than expected. Within a couple laps, it subtly went away but my concerns of it did not. In the meantime, I was up one position in class and hitting lap-times that were many tenths up on my qualifying time. My comfort in the car/track combo was rising and I had more to gain!

Before the end of hour 1, the fuel issues returned and I decided to give the crew an extra lap of time to prepare the pit stop. It was nearly a fatal flaw, and the engine gave up as I entered the lane! Luckily I made it to the box, refueled without issue, and returned to the circuit. Data for the next time to not extend our fuel range that additional lap!

My second stint embedded my mind deeper into the race. I came out of the pits a few seconds ahead of the class leader, and gradually watched him fade out of my mirrors and pulled away in the following laps. Good encouragement for our pace! I began to feel the limits of our BMW E30 better, taking more entry speed and applying the throttle earlier and smoother. I was averaging a second faster than my qualifying time! You truly know you’ve entered the endurance flow state when you’re giving faster class cars behind a no-loss opportunity to pass you without losing any time yourself. The race giveth, and the race taketh away!

The car was soon struggling for fuel again, quicker this time. Better radio communications made this stop feel more planned, and I made it in losing less time than the previous stop. I was handed my drinks bottle this time, which funny enough, literally flipped my mental strength to full power again. It’s incredible how much water is lost by racing and focusing for upwards of two hours, and when I got back out on circuit it felt like a new race! This time I exited the lane directly behind our class leader, the BMW E46 of Wake Ballast SRC. By start-finish next lap, I made the pass and set sail once more. If we kept this up, we were in for a shot! My third and final stint was easily the most fluid, engaging, and rewarding. Our in-car data system had run out of battery, so I had no idea what times I was running. The RPM needle in the gauge cluster was broken, so I was running on nothing but direct tactile input and noise from our M52-powered machine! I’ve always prided myself on my lap consistency over anything else, and the data showed. By this point, I dropped two seconds below my qualifying time and was hitting that number regularly. I was comfortable, confident with the platform, and erking little by little more ability out of our tires through quicker mid-corner speeds and giving better precise inputs to smooth out the weight transfers. Not to mention aiding the aero load our wing was feeling entering T1!

Another 40 or so minutes gone by, fuel sputters, and I’m into the pit lane with nearly no time lost this stint. I wrongly assumed my time in the car wasn’t up yet and didn’t plan on jumping out. We should’ve cleared that on the radio communications, but I saw my co-driver hopping over the wall and I snapped into action to unbuckle, loosen, and set up the belts. It was actually a quite clean stop once again. I watched Andre set off from the pit wall. Apparently two and a half hours had gone by, felt more like a couple laps! Here is a 2-lap onboard from me during a couple of those magic laps!

After an hour and half of driving, Andre unfortunately caught a bit too much kerb and was sent off into a wall and our radiator was damaged. He made it into the pits, but a quick assessment determined it could go no further. Errors are a part of racing. Without them, there is no learning or improving. Sometimes they come at more opportune times, and others they come when you least expect. We still gathered plenty of good, usable data over the 4 hours run and had a good experience for all of it!

I am not returning home with any new ‘hardware’, but I do return with a healthy respect and a clear picture on the challenges that the NASA Utah 6 Hour gives, and better data on how to achieve top step for next time! The race attracts an impressive amount of quality teams and I was able to take in what worked for some of them. The Utah Motorsports Campus is a lovely facility, a differentiated circuit design, and a perfect place for a NASA WERC 6-hour. It was a great challenge and I feel grew my adaption skills. “You never know the next time you get to drive a race car”, and each time is a blessing that I’m grateful to have the opportunity to work at time and time again.

Thank you to Neil and team Oceanside Motorsports / Racing Ruined My Life for the opportunity to race this event for the first time. I hope to see you again soon!

My next weekend at a race track will come in three weeks at Sonoma Raceway. I won’t be racing, but I will be helping a good friend as I take on a driver development role to aid his weekend. Beyond that, there is a chance I will be competing in the Lucky Dog Racing League at Chuckwalla next month. Stay tuned! In October, I will be racing in the NASA WERC series finale at Buttonwillow. Looking for to being at a race track more again!

Cheers, Matt

Race Preview: NASA Utah 6 Hour

MATT MILLION PREVIEWS HIS NEXT RACE, THE UPCOMING ‘NASA Utah 6 Hour’

July 23rd, 2020

On August 1st, the NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship will race in Utah for the third of four rounds this season. The only round outside of California each year, the ‘Utah 6 Hour’ has become a staple race of the series and often attracts additional entries and attention. The race runs from 6:00 PM to midnight on Saturday, meaning a full day-night transition for competitors to endure. Although with sunset at 8:52 PM, the day and night are roughly equal.

This will be my first time at Utah Motorsport Campus, or visiting the state of Utah even! I’m always excited to drive and learn new circuits, especially one like Utah which I’ve wanted to visit for some time. Must be the old ALMS broadcasts!

As team Technik Competition decided to forgo this event for 2020, I’ll instead be joining local San Diego squad Racing Ruined My Life (Oceanside Motorsports) in their #69 BMW 325i E30 tuned for the E2-class that I’m familiar with. My partners in it are team owner Neil Daly and their WERC driver Andre Eisenbach. I’m looking forward to working with these familiar friends from across the paddock. Both by seeing how my background could offer insight to improving their racing program and by extracting the experience gained in a new environment and race car that I can translate back to myself and Technik. We are expecting to face regular E2 competitors HQ Autosport, Team Wake Ballast, and more in (what I believe is) the most exciting, close racing on the WERC grid.

The layout we run is UMC’s popular Outer Loop. The 3-mile (4.9km) circuit is characterized by fast speeds and swooping corners. The opening corners of the track are especially quick, with a lot of speed-carrying potential into T1 setting up the fast right-left flick into the back-straight. Two different radius hairpins follow soon after, balancing the challenge from high to lower speeds. Elevation doesn’t factor in too much around here, but the next run from ‘Witchcraft’ up to the chicanes sees a gradual rise-and-fall along with a transition in the grip which you need to be ready for. One must make sure to maximize corner exit from ‘Release’, the final corner leading onto the very long main straightaway. With the circuit 30 miles away from Salt Lake City means an elevation of 4,300ft above-sea-level means reduced power potential for most cars. The track is also counter-clockwise, which is fairly uncommon in racing circuits that aren’t based on ovals, and applies additional wear onto the right-side tires.

You can follow the race LIVE on the RaceHero app beginning Saturday, August 1st at 6:00 PM MDT. Make sure to follow @MattMillionRacing on Instagram or ‘Matt Million Racing’ on Facebook for live weekend updates, photos, and reports!

See you in Tooele, Utah

- Matt M.

Win for Million, Technik Competition at Buttonwillow 3-hour

BUTTONWILLOW, CA - JUNE 14, 2020

Matt Million and teammate Sean Neel take Technik Competition to an E2 class win in the NASA Western Endurance Racing Championship (WERC) 3-hour round at Buttonwillow Raceway.

NASA SoCal returned to racing for the first time since March, and one of the feature races was NASA’s 3-hour WERC race during Saturday evening. The beginning half would run in the fading daylight, and second half into the darkness. This was effectively the second race of the season, with race one occurring at Willow Springs in February. It was Matt’s first race with Technik Competition this year.

Technik Competition competed with their same BMW E46 that took E2-class honors at the 2019 25 Hours of Thunderhill. Supporting Matt and Sean this weekend was longtime Technik mechanic Spencer Wright (car chief), Jesse Rugge (fuel and crew), Owen Oliver (fuel and crew), and Peter Czajkowski (spotter).

Both drivers took turns getting re-acclimated to the car on Friday afternoon testing. With lower temperatures scheduled for race day, the data collected was ‘worst-case scenerio’ in terms of driveability and times, with both drivers happy with the balance and the car performing well despite minor engine compression loss sustained in prior races.

The first on-track running for Saturday was the NASA WERC qualifying session. With Sean scheduled to start the race and complete the first stint, Matt had a few objectives as the qualifying driver. “Obviously aiming for pole is priority. But feeling that I could leapfrog cars in E1 and E0 on the grid gave me an extra push. I wanted to give Sean the best starting spot possible as well as separate him from the rest of the E2 class”. Matt took class pole position in the session and P8 overall, with the nearest competitor in P12 overall.

The enduro began at 6:20 PM local time, with the sunset scheduled at around half-distance. Sean ran a clean opening hour and maintained the class lead with a couple second gap behind. Second in-class was able to close the gap and make a pass but Sean was able to take it back and retain the lead.

Sean entered the pits a little before half-distance for routine driver swap and fuel. The stop took about one minute and was nearly flawless. No penalties for fuel spill or pit speeding meant the race was still on. Matt ran behind class rivals HQ Autosport (with a BMW 128i) and Racing Ruined My Life (with a BMW E30) for the first half of the stint as they were on a different pit strategy. Matt overtook one until a pass on a lower class car put Matt on the outside of a dirty Riverside corner and had to take evasive action. “I didn’t think the grip would be that low around the outside of there! I had to do a bit of dirt driving but kept the car fully under control and rejoined to only loose a couple seconds. Frustrating but it happens sometimes when pushing, I learned from it and kept my head together!”

Matt closed the gap again within a few laps, but both cars were now within striking distancing of the leading HQ Autosport car. The Racing Ruined My Life car went for an unsuccessful move into Phil Hill, slowing both. Matt performed a three-wide pass for the lead into Sweeper and retained the lead for the final 40 minutes. Both competitors ran into issues with fuel; one with fuel mileage issues and the other serving a fuel-related penalty.

Matt eased to victory in the E2 class by one lap over HQ Autosport. This marks Technik Competition’s 3rd win in its past 4 consecutive starts.

“It’s very cool to return to racing with a win for Technik. As a team, we prioritized fun and organization this weekend. I knew we had the ability to find success if objectives were clear and met while we had a good time doing them. It worked, can’t ask for much more! It was a rad weekend!”

Thanks to the people at Technik Competition, as well as NASA SoCal, Hankook Motorsports, Aether Apparal, and Racetech USA.