“For the Cadillac, we had great Cadillac talent available. Obviously we have Dixon, and he’s driven that car some, but not developed that car like Renger has. So, with our compressed timeline… If we had six months to go test this car, work out the bugs and learn it and all of its nuances, maybe we would have taken a chance on a non-Cadillac driver. But with the compressed schedule of getting this thing in-house-built and on the track, we knew we needed a guy that can hop in the car and say, ‘Yep, you’re on the right track, or this isn’t right.’ And Renger’s name came up immediately. He was at the top of our list from day one, when we started talking to GM about the program. GM’s very high on him. They do a good job of watching drivers and rating drivers, and they were happy to share that data with us. But of guys that were available, Renger was right there at the top of their list and ours also. He spent this past week in the shop, and he’s such a professional.
“With Dallara, we’ve come up with a baseline setup, and that’s what we’re going to start with. We’ve obviously got a super compact schedule to get the things sorted out, and Dallara has been incredible so far in helping us get up to speed. Renger is going to hop in the car [on Tuesday] when we run it at Sebring, and he’s going to say, ‘Yes,’ or, ‘No.’ And we’ll work together on how to get it in the window for rolling off the truck at Daytona and being competitive. He just wants to learn and get better. And that’s what we’re all about. You know how we are. We’re all about developing our people, and drivers are included in that.”
The matter of integrating Magnussen into a new team, in an unfamiliar car, amid an F1 season that ran into December, and while he and his wife were awaiting the arrival of a baby, has made for fun times in O’Gara’s world.
“Soon after Chip and Mike started talking to Kevin, I got in touch with him and we started chatting. And he’s been really laid back, easygoing guy so far. He’s a beast in the car, but outside the car, he’s been so pleasant to work with. And normally when we hire a guy who’s never driven one of our cars, the first thing you do is send them a bunch of data to start looking at. Well, we don’t even have any data to send to him to look at it because we’ve never run the car.
“So Hennek took a picture of the steering wheel and drew arrows to the buttons and said, ‘We think this one is the pit speed limiter. And we’re pretty sure this one with the microphone on it is the radio button…’ We hadn’t even powered the car up at that point. We got the car and immediately blew the thing apart.
“We sent Kevin a picture of the steering wheel, sent him some YouTube links to in-car Cadillac DPi videos and said, ‘Watch this!’ And I said, ‘Do you do iRacing stuff?’ And he said, ‘Oh, not really. I mean, I can, but I’m not really into that sort of thing.’ So, we said, ‘Okay, fine. The week before this Sebring test, Dallara has their state-of-the-art simulator in Speedway, Indiana, so come on over, hang out with us for the week and you can at least drive with the simulator. We’ll do laps at Daytona and Sebring, and you can get your head around that.”
“[Last] Monday morning when I woke up, he was due to fly over, and I had a couple of panicked voicemails and emails from Kevin’s handler saying, ‘You need to get hold Kevin right away.’ Another flight got canceled, another something else happened, and lo and behold, baby Magnusson shows up early and throws a wrench into those plans. Luckily, Kevin’s wife and baby are both safe and everything’s good, but we’d still yet to meet face to face before Sebring, and he didn’t get the simulator time. He obviously hung out with his family to the week to make sure things were settled in there before he came over here. Didn’t make it to the shop, didn’t have the ability to make a proper seat, so we have good old two-part foam seat kits for his first outing.”
Refocusing ahead of Daytona
Official testing for the Rolex 24 At Daytona begins later this week, and then the series moves into race mode with Round 1 of the WeatherTech Championship ready to go over the weekend of Jan. 30-31. Dixon has plenty of seat time, and van der Zande doesn’t need many laps before CCGR drives north from Sebring to Daytona, so Magnussen has become the focus of the team’s final pre-season efforts.

As the only member of the team to already be familiar with the Cadillac DPi-V.R., van der Zande will be an important resource in CGR’s quest to roll off the truck in good shape at Daytona. Image via CGR
“The plan now is to have Renger hop in and make sure the Cadillac is in a drivable window, and then Sebring is going to be more about getting Kevin up to speed than tuning on the car,” O’Gara says. “We just need to make sure the car goes, and stops, and turns and shifts with Renger, and then let Kevin loose to find his way with it.
“Kevin’s new to sports cars and endurance racing, so he going to be the guy we’re going to work with to get into the sports car mentality of caring for the car, watching curbs, and then go race hard in hours 22 and 23 at Daytona. And he’s got to be ready to do qualifying pace for 20 hours. I have no concern whatsoever about getting him up to speed. It’s going to be more when to use that speed, and when to attack.”
Answers are coming
Few top-tier factory IMSA programs have been built in the brief period available to CCGR. O’Gara credits all the key partners and crew members who’ve fashioned something out of nothing in record time. They’ll know by the end of the month if all the effort translated into a competitive 24-hour debut.
“The support we’ve gotten from Dallara is insane; we’ve had their guys at our shop,” he said. “The ECR engine guys, they sent guys up to for our first startup, and all that has gone flawlessly. So we’ve got loads of support at the track. And the sooner we can get through the new-car stuff in testing, the sooner we can start pushing. And after Daytona, we’re going to look at some other test dates in the spring to get Kevin to some other tracks and stretch his legs a little bit on a natural terrain road course.
“A mountain of work has already been done, but plenty more still to do to get through. But one of our goals is to win the 24 Hours of Daytona. And I don’t see why we can’t. We’ve had plenty of success there. We’ve got the smartest engineers and the best mechanics. And I don’t see any reason why we can’t unload and be duking it out on Sunday afternoon at the end of the 24-hour race. So, that’s our plan, anyway.”
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