| 28-year-old Californian
Liz Halliday is a unique sportswoman. Now based in Surrey,
England, Liz has dedicated her life to the pursuit of
not one, but two international sporting careers. On
the one hand she is an international motor racing driver
who competes in Sportscar and GT endurance racing; whilst
on the other, she is an international equestrian in
Three-Day Eventing.
Liz has two mighty ambitions: to become the first female
driver to win the famous Le Mans 24-hour race and to
claim a place on the US Olympic equestrian team.
This extraordinary sportswoman has already taken the
first few steps towards one of these goals with her
rapid and impressive ascent up the motor racing ladder.
In just two full seasons of international racing, Liz
has become the most successful female driver ever in
the history of the American Le Mans Series (ALMS), America’s
most prestigious sportscar racing series.
From humble beginnings in historic racing with a vintage
Datsun 510, Liz graduated to the Kumho BMW Championship
for the start of the new millennium and was named ‘Driver
of the Year’ in 2002 before claiming her first
win, at Croft in England, in 2003, breaking the track
record in the process.
The same year she added to her growing reputation by
making her sportscar debut, becoming the first female
driver ever to win a round of the British GT Championship,
as well as competing in the famous Bathurst 24 Hours
in Australia and the Spa 1000kms in Belgium.
2004 saw Liz return to the USA to race in the Rolex
Grand-Am Sports Car Series, taking a podium at Homestead,
Miami, whilst she also made her ALMS debut, entering
the Petit Le Mans and Laguna Seca in a Porsche 911 GT3
and took part in her first round-the-clock event, the
Spa 24 Hours.
A full season racing for Lister in the FIA GT Chamionship
followed in 2005 and Liz’s success soon fuelled
her rapid ascent to the top level ‘protoype’
categories. Later that year she joined the Intersport
Racing squad to drive their Lola-AER in the ‘P2’
of the ALMS. It was to be a superb season, with Liz
taking three-class victories and being named ‘Rookie
of the Year’ by experts from leading website www.dailysportscar.com.
She also helped co-driver Clint Field take the ALMS
P2 driver’s title, whilst finishing fourth in
the final championship standings herself, despite only
completing half the season.
Perhaps even more exciting for Liz in 2005 was her debut
in the Le Mans 24 Hours. Despite leading the P2 class
for nearly half the race and edging closer to one of
her personal goals, the race ultimately ended in disappointment,
after engine problems forced an early retirement approximately
eleven hours in.
2006 saw Liz continue her run of success, taking three
more wins and seven further podiums in the American
Le Mans Series, to finish as runner-up in the P2 driver’s
championship. These results
made her the most successful female driver ever in ALMS
history, whilst she also finished her first Le Mans
24 Hours, although gearbox and engine problems meant
the car just missed a podium placing, finishing fourth
in class.
The 2007 season saw Liz become the first woman to race
the Aston Martin DBR9 on the international scene, securing
a class podium at the 12 Hours of Sebring and a fourth
place finish at Monza. For the Le Mans 24 Hours however
she returns to the LMP2 class at the wheel of Del Bello
Racing’s Courage LC75-AER.
On the equestrian front meanwhile, Liz’s drive
to mount the top step in the Olympics will also be helped
or hindered by ‘horsepower’.
Liz currently has three horses which she feels will
help her get closer to her ultimate Olympic goal with
the right training regime and the luck that every sporting
star needs. Despite the challenge of competing in both
sports simultaneously, Liz is equally determined to
succeed as a driver and equestrian, and is prepared
to work hard and make sacrifices to reach her ultimate
goals...
As Liz herself says: “Everyone tells me that
I am mad to have this twin sporting focus in my life,
but I find that one complements the other. The cars
demand focus, accuracy, and strength. In Eventing it’s
the same but the horses, as well as the rider, must
possess these attributes in order for the two to work
as a successful partnership.”
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