Метка: Le Mans

Kubica tops warm-up, Toyota’s De Vries crashes


As most teams elected to give drivers pitstop practice in live conditions, only 12 of the 23 Hypercar entries set a time during the short 15-minute session that precedes the World Endurance Championship’s blue-riband event, with Kubica heading a Ferrari 499P Le Mans Hypercar 1-2 in his customer #83 AF Corse example.

His 3m29.260s lap time proved 0.409s quicker than Antonio Giovinazzi, the defending Le Mans winner’s #51 factory entry losing time in the final sector after setting two purple sectors earlier in the lap.

De Vries had by this time returned to the pits with nose damage on his #7 Toyota GR010 HYBRID, which will start from the back of the Hypercar grid after Kamui Kobayashi’s spin in qualifying brought out red flags.

The Dutchman was caught out as he closed on van der Linde’s ASP-run Lexus RC F GT3 on the exit of the Porsche Curves, and was unable to avoid making contact with the DTM points leader before spinning.

The stewards deemed that van der Linde was predominantly at fault for the collision, as the South African’s car had slowed while still on the racing line. 

He was given a suspended stop-and-go penalty, while the team faces a race against time to repair the damage in time for the race. 

Another incident occurred at the first Mulsanne Chicane when Matt Rao’s Algarve Pro Racing ORECA-Gibson 07 LMP2 car clattered into the side of Sebastien Bourdais in the Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac V-Series. R LMDh, although both cars continued.

#83 AF Corse Ferrari 499P: Robert Kubica, Robert Shwartzman, Yifei Ye

#83 AF Corse Ferrari 499P: Robert Kubica, Robert Shwartzman, Yifei Ye

Photo by: Alexander Trienitz

Charles Milesi improved to clock the third-fastest time in the #35 Alpine A424 LMDh, 1.843s behind Kubica, while Laurens Vanthoor in the polesitting #6 Porsche Penske Motorsport 963 LMDh moved into fourth.

That demoted Will Stevens to fifth in the rebuilt #12 Jota Porsche 963 LMDh, getting its first laps on-track since Callum Ilott’s crash during night practice on Wednesday, following a successful shakedown on the Le Mans air strip last night.

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Frederic Makowiecki was sixth in the #5 PPM 963, slotting in ahead of Jack Aitken’s Action Express Cadillac and Nicolas Lapierre in the second Alpine. Sebastien Buemi (Toyota) and Felipe Nasr in the third PPM Porsche completed the top 10.

Ben Barnicoat headed the LMP2 times in his #183 AF Corse-entered ORECA. The Briton’s 3m36.884s lap put him 0.651s clear of Mathias Beche’s Panis Racing entry, with Job van Uitert third for IDEC Sport.

In LMGT3, factory driver Daniel Serra set the pace in the GR Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 which will start the race from the back of the grid after power delivery problems meant it was unable to set a time in qualifying.

The Brazilian lapped 0.204s quicker than Dennis Olsen’s #88 Proton Ford Mustang, while the polesitting Inception Racing McLaren 720S EVO of Frederik Schandorff was third.

Warm-up was held on a track that race control declared wet, although rain only truly hit as cars were trailing back to the pits at the session’s conclusion.

The 2024 Le Mans 24 Hours will begin at 4pm local time (3pm BST).

Le Mans 24 Hours 2024: Warm-up results



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Estre’s «exceptional» pole lap «not 100% representative» of Porsche Le Mans pace


The Porsche Penske factory team barely got one 963 into Hyperpole with an initial eighth time in the first qualifying session for Estre, before the #7 Toyota lost its laps due to causing a red flag, promoting Jota’s #12 Porsche into the top eight.

Driving the #6 car, Estre went on to snatch pole position for the legendary World Endurance Championship race with a last-gasp Hyperpole effort which was 0.148s clear of the closest Cadillac.

Asked by Motorsport.com if this qualifying result matched what he had been expecting or turned out somewhat better, Estre’s team-mate Andre Lotterer said it was «a bit better» and had a lot to do with his French team-mate’s remarkable lap at Circuit de la Sarthe.

«After the Test Day, we thought we were good, but after FP1, FP2 and qualifying, we saw it wasn’t so easy to be at the front,» Lotterer said. «Kevin really did an exceptional job, putting it in the top eight, in Hyperpole. We saw that not many Porsches were able to.

«Then, in Hyperpole, everything worked out well. An exceptional lap from him. It maybe is not 100% representative of the performance.»

#6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Kevin Estre, Andre Lotterer, Laurens Vanthoor

#6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Kevin Estre, Andre Lotterer, Laurens Vanthoor

Photo by: Nikolaz Godet

Just three hypercars failed to qualify within two seconds of the fastest car in Q1 – Dries Vanthoor’s #15 BMW – despite Le Mans being a particularly long track, with 13.626km covered in under three and a half minutes by the top-class machines.

«I feel like everyone is pretty level,» Lotterer reflected. «If you don’t optimise your whole package, you quickly end up left behind.»

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The three-time Le Mans winner with Audi is not too sure what to expect in the race, with the fastest Porsche reaching 338.1km/h in the speed trap – the ranking being topped by Mikkel Jensen’s #93 Peugeot with 343.4km/h. Isotta Fraschini, Alpine, Ferrari, Toyota and BMW also went faster than Porsche, with only Cadillac and Lamborghini less rapid.

«We don’t have crazy top speed,» Lotterer admits. «We’re a bit vulnerable on this. But then, overall pace is good. I don’t know how this will translate over several hours of racing; that will be interesting.»

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No «point to prove» for Aitken after 2023 race-defining Le Mans crash


Aitken is taking part in the World Endurance Championship classic for the third time, having contested it with the LMP2 Algarve Pro Racing squad in 2022 before joining the Action Express Racing (rebranded Whelen Engineering Racing at Le Mans) Cadillac squad in IMSA.

He was at the wheel for the race start at Circuit de la Sarthe last year. However, he was caught out by the damp track at the Daytona chicane on the very first lap and hit the wall.

Although the damage was not terminal, repair work was needed; Aitken and team-mates Pipo Derani and Alexander Sims then lost eleven laps and any hopes of a podium finish.

One year on, the British driver is keen to repay his team’s trust without any knee-jerk reaction.

«I’m not really going to come into this Le Mans looking to change anything,» he told Autosport.

«After last year, I went through everything a billion times – as you would.

«In the end, I’m just trying to do the best job I can, and I slightly overstepped. But I don’t think that I drove like an idiot.

Damage on the #311 in 2023.

Damage on the #311 in 2023.

Photo by: Nikolaz Godet

«I’m lucky that I have the support of the Cadillac crew. They’re all behind me, and they don’t believe I need to change anything major either.

«The worst thing would be to come into this year’s race – whether I start the race, or Pipo, or Felipe – to come in with a point to prove, because that’s when you make more mistakes.»

Aitken is particularly thankful that his team did not lose faith in him after his «really heartbreaking» error. «I wouldn’t have blamed them at all if they had, but they’re a fantastic group of people,» he praised. «And even if it hurts, they know that they make mistakes sometimes as well, and they didn’t hold it against me.

«If I do it a second time, they probably are free to kick me around a bit and call me all the names. That’s the difference: you learn from the mistake, you don’t do it again and you move on.»

A winner at the Sebring IMSA round last year, Aitken started the 2024 campaign in convincing fashion alongside Derani, with the duo taking three pole positions and as many second places in five events.

This gives him «confidence in [his] ability» and he certainly doesn’t lack ambition ahead of a Le Mans race he and team-mates Derani and Felipe Drugovich will start from 18th in the #311 Cadillac V-Series.R.

«I’m dreaming of a podium,» Aitken admitted. «A top step is not out of question.

«Anything can happen, and I don’t think until the first couple of stints happen in the race – that’s when we get the clear picture of the race. Even in qualifying, it’s never quite the same.

«I’ll be crossing my fingers that Saturday afternoon we show good pace, and then that will be game on.»

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Jota completes Le Mans airfield shakedown of rebuilt Porsche


The #12 Jota entry was put through its paces on the Le Mans-Arnage Airport adjacent to the track on Friday evening by Callum Ilott, who crashed the car in second free practice for the centrepiece World Endurance Championship round on Wednesday night.

It followed a record-breaking build of a 963 by the British Jota squad: team principal Sam Hignett revealed that it normally takes three weeks to complete the process.

Ilott, who shares the #12 Porsche with Will Stevens and Norman Nato, expressed satisfaction with the straightline runs for which Jota was given special dispensation by the race stewards.

“Everything looks good, feels good; I think we are ready to roll,” said Ilott of the 30-minute run.

“It was a little wet out there and obviously we had to build up slowly.

“Even though the shakedown was short, it was great to get a little mileage in the car and check the systems.”

#12 Hertz Team Jota Porsche 963: William Stevens, Norman Nato, Callum Ilott, shakedown at the Le Mans Airport

#12 Hertz Team Jota Porsche 963: William Stevens, Norman Nato, Callum Ilott, shakedown at the Le Mans Airport

Photo by: Andreas Beil

Ilott also paid tribute to the Jota crew that built up the car around a new monocoque in little more than 24 hours, describing their efforts as “heroic”.

“A huge thank you to Jota for its determination and team spirit,” he said.

“It’s humbling and makes me proud to be part of this family.”

Jota needed to re-tub the quickest of its 963s, in which Ilott had earlier made it through to Hyperpole with eighth place in opening qualifying.

Ilott’s impact with the barriers broke an insert stud on the mounting of the bottom right front wishbone.

Porsche supplied a replacement monocoque — one of two it brings to European WEC races — and then transferred all the running gear, including the powertrain, and the bodywork to the new tub.

This is demanded by Le Mans and WEC regulations, which preclude the use of spare cars.

Stevens is scheduled to drive the car in the 15-minute warm-up at 1200, four hours before the traditional 1600 start of the race at Le Mans.



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F1 drivers taking part in 2024 Le Mans


Eighteen of the 186 drivers having previously competed in a Formula 1 grand prix, and here they all are…

F1 drivers competing in the 2024 Le Mans 24 Hours

#38 Hertz Team Jota Porsche 963: Jenson Button

#38 Hertz Team Jota Porsche 963: Jenson Button

Photo by: Marc Fleury

• Team: Hertz Team JOTA
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 2
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 306
• F1 wins: 15

Button is returning to Le Mans 24 Hours for his third attempt at the WEC race.

The British driver’s previous two appearances at Le Mans – one in 2018 competing with SMP Racing which ended in an engine-caused DNF, and another in 2023 as part of the experimental Garage 56 entry, racing a modified NASCAR Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 alongside Jimmie Johnson and Mike Rockenfeller.

Button spent 17 years in Formula 1, driving with Williams, Benetton, Renault, BAR, Honda, Brawn and McLaren and won the 2009 world championship. He has tried several different motorsports since the end of his F1 career, including Super GT, sportscar racing, NASCAR Cup and even an Extreme E outing.

Button will drive a Porsche 963 for Hertz Team JOTA alongside current WEC drivers Oliver Rasmussen and Phil Hansen.

#19 Lamborghini Iron Lynx Lamborghini SC63: Romain Grosjean

#19 Lamborghini Iron Lynx Lamborghini SC63: Romain Grosjean

Photo by: Shameem Fahath

• Team: Lamborghini Iron Lynx
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 1
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 179
• F1 wins: 0

Grosjean is one of the most well-known names to leave F1 in recent years, with the French-Swiss spending a drama-filled 10 seasons in the series. During his time he took 10 podiums, with a second at the 2012 Canadian GP and 2013 US GP, but it’s his exit from F1 which is most memorable.

Grosjean’s final race was 2020 Bahrain GP where his Haas made contact with Daniil Kvyat, pitching him into a barrier before his car burst into flames. He thankfully escaped the fire, although he burned his hands, and gaining the nickname of ‘The Phoenix’ on his switch to IndyCar for 2021.

He spent a year with Dale Coyne Racing, two with Andretti Autosport and is currently racing with Juncos Hollinger Racing. While he’s yet to take a race win, he has had six podiums.

Alongside his IndyCar responsibilities, Grosjean competes for Lamborghini Iron Lynx in the IMSA SportsCar championship. He will remain with the team for its Le Mans 24 Hours attempt this year, competing alongside his team-mates Matteo Cairoli and Andrea Caldarelli.

Daniil Kvyat — Hypercar

#63 Lamborghini Iron Lynx Lamborghini SC63: Daniil Kvyat

#63 Lamborghini Iron Lynx Lamborghini SC63: Daniil Kvyat

Photo by: Alexander Trienitz

Team: Lamborghini Iron Lynx
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 1
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 110
• F1 wins: 0

Kvyat will be hoping to reverse his luck at the Le Mans 24 Hours after competing with Prema Racing in 2023. The team were forced to retire the car on lap 113 after a big accident where he ripped the rear wing off and severely damaged the car having crashed during the night.

Kvyat moved into endurance racing after spending a year with Alpine as its reserve driver in 2021. He’d previously spent eight seasons in F1, starting at Toro Rosso in 2014 before replacing Ferrari-bound Sebastian Vettel at Red Bull in 2015. After a mixed first four races of the 2016 season, Kvyat was demoted back to Toro Rosso, with team bosses deciding to replace him at Red Bull with Max Verstappen.

Following a challenging season, which saw just three top-10 finishes, he was dropped midway through 2017, only to return as stand-in at the US GP, before being left without a seat for 2018. He was named as a third driver for Ferrari, but made no starts for the team, before then moving back for his third stint at Toro Rosso in 2019-20 when his F1 career came to a close.

The 30-year-old will compete with his current WEC team Lamborghini Iron Lynx with his team-mates Mirko Bortolotti and Edoardo Mortara.

#83 AF Corse Ferrari 499P: Robert Kubica

#83 AF Corse Ferrari 499P: Robert Kubica

Photo by: Marc Fleury

• Team: AF Corse
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 3
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 99
• F1 wins: 1

Kubica made his Formula 1 debut at the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix for Sauber but was disqualified for his car being underweight. He then spent three full seasons with the team between 2007 and 2009, claiming one race win at the 2008 Canadian Grand Prix.

Kubica moved to Renault for the 2010 and 2011 seasons and alongside his F1 role, he took part in rallying. At the 2011 Ronde di Andora Rally, he suffered a life-changing accident when his car left the road at high speed and crashed into a barrier.

Kubica spent over an hour trapped inside his car as workers tried to extricate him before he was flown to hospital. Due to the severity of his injuries, he missed the 2011 season with Renault and was replaced by Nick Heidfeld.

He returned to racing the following year, predominantly in rallying, before returning to F1 as a test driver for Renault and Williams in 2017. Kubica completed a full comeback in 2019 with Williams but a woeful car meant he was only able to score one top-10 finish.

After one season in the DTM  in 2020 and a test and reserve role at Alfa Romeo between 2020-22, which saw him back two further grand prix starts at Zandvoort and Monza, when Kimi Raikkonen was sidelined by COVID-19, Kubica made his transition into sportscar racing.

Kubica takes on his fourth attempt at Le Mans 24 Hours this year, with his previous three starts all frustrating near-misses for victory in LMP2.

A broken throttle sensor while leading with three minutes to go denied Kubica the LMP2 class win on debut with WRT alongside Yifei Ye and Louis Deletraz in 2021, which was followed by consecutive runner-up finishes in 2022 and 2023. 

In 2024, he joins AF Corse for his first attempt at the endurance race in the Hypercar class, alongside Robert Shwartzman and Ye.

Kamui Kobayashi, Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 - Hybrid

Kamui Kobayashi, Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 — Hybrid

Photo by: Rainier Ehrhardt

• Team: Toyota Gazoo Racing
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 9
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 1 (Toyota Gazoo Racing — 2021)
• F1 race starts: 75
• F1 wins: 0

Kobayashi will race in the Hypercar category, driving Toyota Gazoo Racing’s GR010 Hybrid alongside Nyck de Vries and Jose Maria Lopez, who stands in for the injured Mike Conway in the #8 car. The Japanese driver is also the team principal of the Toyota squad.

He raced in Formula 1 between 2009-14, missing the 2013 season, before joining the Caterham team in 2014. Despite scoring 125 points from 75 starts, Kobayashi only appeared on the podium once – a third place at his home race in 2012.

He has had an illustrious motorsport career, which includes the 2019-20 and 2021 WEC championship titles. For the last six years, Kobayashi has competed in the Le Mans 24 Hours alongside team-mates Lopez and Conway, with the trio claiming the victory in 2021.

#51 Ferrari AF Corse Ferrari 499P of Alessandro Pier Guidi, James Calado, Antonio Giovinazzi

#51 Ferrari AF Corse Ferrari 499P of Alessandro Pier Guidi, James Calado, Antonio Giovinazzi

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

• Team: Ferrari AF Course
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 2
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 1 (Ferrari AF Corse — 2023)
• F1 race starts: 62
• F1 wins: 0

Giovinazzi will be attempting to emulate his previous result at the Le Mans 24 Hours, having taken victory in 2023 with Ferrari AF Corse. He will continue with last year’s team-mates James Calado and Alessandro Pier Guidi.

Giovinazzi made his F1 debut for Sauber in 2017 as a substitute for Pascal Wehrlein at the Australian and Chinese grands prix, as the German driver had injured his neck during a crash at the Race of Champions. He then spent three full seasons with Alfa Romeo between 2019 and 2021 but was unable to finish higher than 17th in the championship, with nine points finishes from 62 starts.

The Italian left the team at the end of the 2021 season but has held a reserve driver position at Ferrari since.

He spent one season in Formula E with Dragon Penske Autosport but finished 23rd in the championship with no points.

Giovinazzi has competed in WEC since 2023 with Ferrari AF Corse and helped the team claim their first outright win in 50 years at the 2023 Le Mans 24 Hours after its last top-class entry in 1973.

#94 Peugeot Totalenergies Peugeot 9X8: Paul Di Resta

#94 Peugeot Totalenergies Peugeot 9X8: Paul Di Resta

Photo by: Marc Fleury

Team: Peugeot TotalEnergies
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 5
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 1 (United Autosports — LMP2 class win — 2020)
• F1 race starts: 59
• F1 wins: 0

Di Resta has forged a career in sportscars since 2019 after ending his full-time stint in DTM in the same season.

He had previously completed four Le Mans 24 Hours with United Autosports in LMP2, bringing home a class win in 2020. Di Resta joined the team in 2018, taking part in Asian Le Mans where he took three second-place finishes and one win, which gave the team the championship victory.

Di Resta joined Force India F1 Team in 2010 but didn’t make his race debut until the following year, going on to complete three full seasons. He made a one-off return at the 2017 Hungarian GP at Williams when he stood in for the unwell Felipe Massa.

He joined Peugeot TotalEnergies in 2022 and will compete in his second Le Mans 24 Hours with the team, alongside his team-mates Vandoorne and Loic Duval.

Jean-Eric Vergne, Peugeot Totalenergies

Jean-Eric Vergne, Peugeot Totalenergies

Photo by: Nikolaz Godet

• Team: Peugeot TotalEnergies
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 5
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 58
• F1 wins: 0

This will be the Frenchman’s sixth attempt at Le Mans, with his best result being fifth in the LMP2 class in 2020. In 2018 Vergne’s #26 G-Drive entry had won the LMP2 class but was disqualified post-race for an illegal refueling component.

The two-time Formula E champion spent three seasons with Toro Rosso in Formula 1 between 2012 and 2014. He was left without a seat when the team chose an all-new line-up of Max Verstappen and Carlos Sainz for 2015.

Vergne will compete at this year’s Le Mans 24 Hours with Peugeot TotalEnergies, alongside his team-mates Mikkel Jensen and Nico Muller.

Sebastien Buemi — Hypercar

Sebastien Buemi, Toyota Gazoo Racing

Sebastien Buemi, Toyota Gazoo Racing

Photo by: Rainier Ehrhardt

Team: Toyota Gazoo Racing
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 12
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 4 (Toyota Gazoo Racing — 2018, 2019, 2020 & 2022)
• F1 race starts: 55
• F1 wins: 0

Buemi will race for Toyota Gazoo Racing alongside his previous team-mates Ryo Hirakawa and Brendon Hartley. The trio have competed in the Le Mans 24 Hours together for the past two years, winning in 2022 and finishing runner-up in 2023.

He has taken four victories at the endurance event with a further four overall podium finishes and has driven for Toyota at each of his 12 appearances at Le Mans.

Prior to his endurance exploits the Swiss driver spent three seasons driving for Toro Rosso, lining up on the grid between 2009-2011, but was replaced by Daniel Ricciardo after being unable to score more than a handful of top-10 finishes each season. He then became the Red Bull reserve driver but has not made another grand prix start during that time.

Buemi moved to Formula E in 2014, taking the championship title for the 2015-16 season after an intense battle with Lucas di Grassi. Buemi has remained in the series since leaving F1 and has two runner-up finishes in the 2016-17 and 2018-19 seasons.

Mick Schumacher, Alpine Endurance Team

Mick Schumacher, Alpine Endurance Team

Photo by: Nikolaz Godet

• Team: Alpine Endurance Team
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 0
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 43
• F1 wins: 0

Schumacher is currently competing in the WEC championship with Alpine in the #36 car alongside team-mates Matthieu Vaxiviere and Nicolas Lapierre.

The son of seven-time F1 champion Michael Schumacher, Mick made his Formula 1 debut with Haas in 2021 but was only able to take two top-10 finishes during his two years with the team. He was replaced by Nico Hulkenberg for 2023 and moved to Mercedes as its reserve driver.

Despite a disappointing run in F1, Schumacher had shown promise in the junior series, having taken the F2 championship in 2020 and European F3 in 2018. He is currently one of the potential candidates to replace Esteban Ocon at Alpine in 2025.

#94 Peugeot Totalenergies Peugeot 9X8: Stoffel Vandoorne

#94 Peugeot Totalenergies Peugeot 9X8: Stoffel Vandoorne

Photo by: Marc Fleury

• Team: Peugeot TotalEnergies
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 2
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 42
• F1 wins: 0

Vandoorne will compete in his third Le Mans 24 Hours after taking an overall podium finish on debut in 2019 with SMP Racing and coming runner-up in the LMP2 class with Jota in 2021. 

The 2021-22 Formula E world champion spent two full seasons in F1 with McLaren but finished 16th in the championship in both 2017 and 2018. Since then Vandorne has spent stints as a test and reserve driver at Mercedes, McLaren and Aston Martin.

He races for Peugeot TotalEnergies alongside his team-mates Paul di Resta and Loic Duval.

#4 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963 of Mathieu Jaminet, Felipe Nasr, Nick Tandy

#4 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963 of Mathieu Jaminet, Felipe Nasr, Nick Tandy

Photo by: Nikolaz Godet

• Team: Porsche Penske Motorsport
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 4
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 39
• F1 wins: 0

Nasr is competing for Porsche Penske Motorsport in the Hypercar class as part of its third entry alongside fellow IMSA regular Nick Tandy and factory driver Mathieu Jaminet.

Nasr is no stranger to endurance racing, taking the outright win at the 2024 Daytona 24 Hours, GTD Pro victory for Pfaff Porsche in 2022 plus a further three podiums at the event in 2012, 2018 and 2019.

The Brazilian previously spent two seasons in F1 between 2015-16, where he raced for Sauber.

He is currently contesting the 2024 IMSA SportsCar championship with his team-mate Dane Cameron, with the pair currently leading the drivers’ standings.

Sebastien Bourdais — Hypercar

#3 Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-Series.R: Sebastien Bourdais

#3 Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-Series.R: Sebastien Bourdais

Photo by: Rainier Ehrhardt

• Team: Cadillac Racing
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 16
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 1 (Ford Chip Ganassi Team USA — GTE Pro class win — 2016)
• F1 race starts: 27
• F1 wins: 0

Bourdais will compete in the Hypercar class of Le Mans 24 Hours for Cadillac Racing. This will be the Frenchman’s second year with the American team and his 17th year entering the endurance event.

For the 2024 Le Mans 24 Hours Bourdais will be partnered with 2016 IMSA SportsCar champion Renger van de Zande and six-time IndyCar champion Scott Dixon.

He previously took a GTE Pro class win in 2016 for Ford Chip Ganassi Team USA with his team-mates Joey Hand and Dirk Muller. He has also come close to an overall victory on several occasions, taking the runner-up position in 2007, 2009 and 2011.

Bourdais made his debut in Formula 1 for Toro Rosso in 2008, having won the Champ Car series for the previous four years. Bourdais spent just a year and a half with the team, including a full season as team-mates with Sebastian Vettel.

In 2009 he was partnered with Sebastien Buemi, but despite two points finishes he was unable to match the performance of his team-mate and after just nine races the team announced that he would be replaced by Jaime Alguersuari.

Bourdais has an illustrious motorsport career outside of Formula 1 though, including victories at the Spa 24 Hours (2002), Daytona 24 Hours (2014) and Sebring 12 Hours (2021). Alongside his Le Mans GTE Pro victory in 2016, he also claimed the GTLM class win at Daytona the following year.

Brendon Hartley — Hypercar

#8 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 - Hybrid of Brendon Hartley

#8 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 — Hybrid of Brendon Hartley

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

• Team: Toyota Gazoo Racing
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 10
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 3 (Porsche Team — 2017, Toyota Gazoo Racing — 2020 & 2022)
• F1 race starts: 25
• F1 wins: 0

Hartley will rejoin Buemi and Ryo Hirakawa for his 11th attempt at the Le Mans 24 Hours.

He has been with Toyota Gazoo Racing since 2019 and has taken two out of his three Le Mans wins with the team — the other with Porsche in 2017. He has also had a further three overall podium finishes at the endurance event including coming runner-up in 2015 when competing with his team-mates Mark Webber and Timo Bernhard.

Hartley has taken four WEC titles during his career in 2015, 2017, 2022 and 2023.

The New Zealander had a brief stint in Formula 1, taking the Toro Rosso seat for the last four races of 2017. He remained with the team for the 2018 season but had just three top-10 finishes and was replaced by Alex Albon.

Hartley made his Formula E debut the following year but was dropped with immediate effect after just five races where he was only able to score one top-10 finish.

He returned to WEC in 2019, to replace Jenson Button at the 1000 Miles of Sebring before taking on the next day’s 12 Hours of Sebring for SMP Racing and Mustang Sampling Racing respectively. Despite an “exhausting” weekend for the Kiwi, he was able to help secure podiums at both races.

#12 Hertz Team Jota Porsche 963: William Stevens

#12 Hertz Team Jota Porsche 963: William Stevens

Photo by: Shameem Fahath

• Team: Hertz Team Jota
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 8
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 2 (JMW Motorsport — GTE Am Class — 2017, Jota Sport — LMP2 — 2022)
• F1 race starts: 18
• F1 wins: 0

Stevens will be looking to claim an outright Le Mans 24 Hours victory after taking two previous class wins in 2017 and 2022. He will return to the Hertz Team Jota for a second year with Callum Ilott and Norman Nato.

He made his debut in Formula 1 driving for Caterham during the final race of the 2014 season, but the team collapsed before reaching the next season. He then joined Marussia for the 2015 season but was unable to finish higher than 13th in uncompetitive machinery.

Nyck de Vries — Hypercar

#7 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 - Hybrid: Nyck De Vries

#7 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 — Hybrid: Nyck De Vries

Photo by: Marc Fleury

• Team: Toyota Gazoo Racing
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 4
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 11
• F1 wins: 0

De Vries will join Kobayashi and Mike Conway stand-in Jose Maria Lopez in the #8 Toyota Gazoo Racing for his fifth start in the race but first in the top class, with his previous entries in LMP2 between 2019-22.

The 2020-21 Formula E champion made his move into Formula 1 after standing in for Alex Albon at the 2022 Italian Grand Prix when the Thai-British driver underwent appendix surgery.

De Vries joined AlphaTauri — now RB — in 2023 alongside Yuki Tsunoda but failed to impress. The Dutch driver was unable to finish in the top 10 and after the first 10 races of the season, he was replaced by Daniel Ricciardo.

He has since moved back to Formula E and races with Mahindra Racing alongside his WEC duties for Toyota.

#311 Whelen Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-SeriesR: Jack Aitken

#311 Whelen Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-SeriesR: Jack Aitken

Photo by: Alexander Trienitz

• Team: Action Express Racing
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 2
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 0
• F1 race starts: 1
• F1 wins: 0

Aitken will attempt his third Le Mans 24 Hours and his second with the Action Express Racing team this year. This will be his second year driving alongside team-mate Pipo Derani, who is the winner of the 2016 24 Hours of Daytona, and his first with Aston Martin F1 reserve driver Felipe Drugovich.

Aitken made his F1 debut at the 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix to cover for George Russell at Williams — when Russell had been called to stand in for Lewis Hamilton at Mercedes after he contracted COVID-19.

He remained with the team until the start of 2023, when he decided to part ways with the team to focus on his sportscar career.

#6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Andre Lotterer

#6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Andre Lotterer

Photo by: Nikolaz Godet

• Team: Porsche Penske Motorsport
• Le Mans 24 Hours starts: 12
• Le Mans 24 Hours wins: 3 (Audi Sport Team Joest — 2011, 2012 & 2014)
• F1 race starts: 1
• F1 wins: 0

Lotterer is a three-time Le Mans 24 Hours winner, taking victories with Audi Sport Team Joest in 2011, 2012 and 2014 and two further podium finishes in 2010 and 2015. While most well-known for his endurance and Formula E racing, the German did have an incredibly short stint in Formula 1, replacing Kamui Kobayashi at Caterham F1 for a one-off race in 2014 at the Belgian Grand Prix.

He outperformed his team-mate Marcus Ericsson, but still only qualified 21st of the 22 drivers. However, his debut came to a fast end after his car faced a mechanical failure on the first lap.

The German has been part of Porsche’s Hypercar programme since it began last year and is team-mates with Kevin Estre and Laurens Vanthoor in the #6 entry that starts the 2024 Le Mans 24 Hours on pole position.



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Le Mans 24 Hours: What's changed for WEC's main event in 2024?




The world’s most prestigious endurance race is back as this weekend drivers will tackle Circuit de la Sarthe for the Le Mans 24 Hours.Ferrari is the defending champion having won the race’s centenary edition in 2023, which was its first overall victory at Le Mans since 1965.  But the Italian manufacturer has bigger competition this year as the Hypercar class, introduced in 2021, now consists …Keep reading



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Le Mans 24 Hours: Full starting grid




The #6 Porsche will line up on pole position after Kevin Estre topped Thursday’s Hyperpole session, with the #3 Cadillac that was qualified by Sebastien Bourdais completing the front row.Alex Lynn had actually set a quicker time than Bourdais in the 30-minute pole shootout, but the #2 Caddy has a five-place grid penalty carried forward from the Spa round of WEC, where team-mate Earl Bamber was …Keep reading



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Winning Le Mans and Daytona in same year would be «amazing»


The factory Penske squad is heading to this week’s blue riband round of the World Endurance Championship at Circuit de la Sarthe with an eye on the top prize, as it aims to expand on the success it has enjoyed so far in 2024.

The IMSA SportsCar Championship arm of Porsche Penske Motorsport started the season with a memorable victory in the Daytona classic in January, while the WEC side of the operation won the Qatar opener and is leading the championship heading to Daytona.

Michael Christensen, who shares the #5 Porsche 963 with Matt Campbell and Frederic Makowiecki, feels it would be a very significant achievement for the Volkswagen Group marque and its partner Penske to take top honours in the two biggest sportscar races of the year.

«That will be amazing,» the Dane told Motorsport.com. «To be honest there’s many things that would be super cool to be a part of. I really dream of winning this race for Porsche Penske Motorsport.

«It would be the 20th win for Porsche overall, it would be the first win for Roger Penske in Le Mans. And you know how successful Roger has been.

«So it will be a big milestone for Roger and it would be a big milestone for Porsche and it would be a big milestone for us drivers. So it would be a dream for all of us.»

On the prospect of Porsche claiming double success in endurance racing, #6 Porsche driver Laurens Vanthoor added: «It will be quite huge if we are able to do that. Also for Penske. So it will be quite an iconic year if we achieve to do that.»

#5 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Matt Campbell, Michael Christensen, Frederic Makowiecki

#5 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Matt Campbell, Michael Christensen, Frederic Makowiecki

Photo by: Alexander Trienitz

It’s been more than three decades since a car manufacturer celebrated victories at Daytona and Le Mans in the same year; in 1990, Jaguar won the two big enduros with its Group C-spec XJR-12.

Porsche last enjoyed success in both races in 1987, with Al Holbert and Derek Bell part of the winning line-up in both IMSA and what was then the World SportsCar Championship.

Porsche’s LMDh director Urs Kuratle said it’s only natural for people to expect the German manufacturer to win in endurance racing given its pedigree, but there is a lot of motivation within the camp to deliver a landmark result this weekend.

«This is what we are working since a year to win here in Le Mans,» Kuratle told Motorsport.com.

«To have won Daytona, to win Le Mans, Monday after the race you will ask me how important is it to win the championship?!

«Obviously with Porsche in endurance racing you want to win, you have to win and you should win every race because that’s very important.

«So when you win it the first time, you have to have it the second time and then you need to win it the third time to keep the trophy again.

«Yeah, it’s a good thing but that’s also the pressure if you compete with Porsche, and also in Penske.

«Penske did achieve [a lot] this year with the [Indy] 500 and all these races. It would be really nice to win with Penske and with Porsche and Penske.

«And not to forget also with Roger, to give it to Roger as well. He really wants to win 24-hour races. That’s an extra push for anybody to work extra hard to achieve it with the brands.»

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Bourdais denies celebrating Le Mans pole prematurely


Thursday’s decisive qualifying session, gathering the top eight cars from each category, was interrupted with just under eight minutes remaining on the clock, due to Dries Vanthoor crashing out at the wheel of the #15 BMW M Hybrid V8 at Indianapolis corner.

At that time, Sebastien Bourdais had provisionally set the fastest time with the #3 Cadillac V-Series.R, a 3m24.816s.

During the red flag, seconds before the session was restarted, members of the Chip Ganassi-run factory team – which usually operates the car in the IMSA Sportscar Championship – were seen celebrating around their driver, whose father Patrick looked particularly elated.

Patrick Bourdais with Cadillac Racing team members

Patrick Bourdais with Cadillac Racing team members

Photo by: Nikolaz Godet

However, as it turned out, not only the session was restarted, but Bourdais’s reference was beaten by Alex Lynn in the sister #2 Cadillac – a full-season World Endurance Championship entrant – as well as Kevin Estre. The #6 factory Penske Porsche’s driver took pole position for the WEC’s most prestigious race with a 3m24.634s marker.

When Motorsport.com asked Bourdais if he actually was celebrating, the Le Mans native replied: «No. If anything, I was telling everyone: ‘There are seven minutes and 40 seconds left, I don’t know why you’re here asking me for pictures.’

«That’s quite funny, because when we weren’t on pole, nobody was there anymore. It was funny, but it’s quite typical from the press.»

Bourdais explained that he would have liked to go back out on track for a final attempt, but a combination of extending his initial run and the red flag interrupting his second outing prevented him from doing so.

#3 Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-Series.R: Sebastien Bourdais

#3 Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-Series.R: Sebastien Bourdais

Photo by: Nikolaz Godet

«We had planned enough fuel to do two and two [laps],» he added. «Because the in-lap was faster during the first run, we kept pushing as there was a risk of rain and there were a few drops already, so you didn’t really know what was going to happen. That third lap of the first run was three or four tenths faster, so we kept going until the end.

«Unfortunately, as you’re not allowed to refuel during Hyperpole, this left us with just one lap for the second attempt, but the red flag happened…

«I don’t think I could have got a better time in one lap on the second run, but we were going to try anyway, and the red flag was completely detrimental to us in that regard. We couldn’t have done another out-lap, a flying lap and hoped to be fine. That’s how it was.»

Bourdais and team-mates Scott Dixon and Renger van der Zande will start the race from second position on Saturday, with the #2 Cadillac taking a five-place penalty due to Earl Bamber’s crash with the #31 BMW LMGT3 car at the previous Spa-Francorchamps WEC round.

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