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PlayStation® announce GT Academy – the ultimate racing prize

PlayStation® announce GT Academy – the ultimate racing prize

  • Following successful “virtual-to-real” racer experience, GT Academy 2010 is bigger and better
  • Online time trial version of Gran Turismo®5 available from 17 December
  • Australia and New Zealand announce inaugural involvement 

SYDNEY, 4th December 2009 – Nissan Europe and Sony Computer Entertainment Europe (SCEE) have joined forces again to bring gaming and motor sport fans the ultimate racing competition. GT Academy 2010 will go live on 17 December, 2009 and will use the virtual world of the new PlayStation® Gran Turismo®5 game to find a real-world racing driver. The stakes are high, with an intensive race training programme and a season-long drive in a full race-spec Nissan 370Z in the European GT4 Cup as the ultimate prize.  Also announced today is the first time involvement of Australia and New Zealand. 

GT Academy 2010 is the second instalment of this incredible competition. In 2008/09, Lucas Ordoñez, a 23-year-old Spanish student, graduated from his PlayStation®3 (PS3TM) console to become a full-on racing driver via the GT Academy. Lucas is living proof that the answer to the question posed by PlayStation and Nissan – “can the world of virtual racing unearth a real racing talent?” – was a resounding “yes”. 

After a debut in the Dubai International 24 Hour race alongside former F1 driver Johnny Herbert, Lucas teamed-up with British driver Alex Buncombe to campaign a Nissan 350Z. Driving for the RJN Motorsport GT Academy team, the pair took part in the full European GT4 Cup season, mostly run alongside the prestigious FIA GT series. Their stunning performances included two race wins and two second-place finishes that left them an agonisingly close second in the drivers’ classification, but winners of the Teams’ Championship.