Toyota ‘showed what we can do, but we remain humble’ – Lopez

Toyota’s dominant 1-2 finish in the season-opening Sebring 1000 Miles showed the rest of the FIA WEC Hypercar field what Toyota is capable of, race winner Jose Maria Lopez told RACER after Friday’s eight-hour event. The Japanese team controlled the …

Toyota’s dominant 1-2 finish in the season-opening Sebring 1000 Miles showed the rest of the FIA WEC Hypercar field what Toyota is capable of, race winner Jose Maria Lopez told RACER after Friday’s eight-hour event.

The Japanese team controlled the race almost from start to finish, with both its GR010 HYBRIDs finishing two laps ahead of the other teams in the Hypercar class. The flawless run has silenced anyone who doubted the team’s ability or the GR010 as a platform, after spending multiple seasons competing against smaller team’s since Porsche’s exit from LMP1 in 2017.

Lopez, who along with Mike Conway and Kamui Kobayashi, led home the 1-2 finish, told RACER that the team wasn’t surprised that AF Corse’s Ferrari 499P was capable of setting pole, after gradually finding pace throughout the Prologue test and free practice sessions. However, he also said the team, which has a decade of WEC top-class experience, believed it was still the favorite, racing against a field packed with new cars from the likes of Porsche, Cadillac and Ferrari.

“Ferrari taking pole was hard to take, but we knew it would be like this with more competitors,” he explained. “I wasn’t surprised with the pole. They showed they had pace; we knew they’d be capable of that. It was a punch, but we didn’t give up because we knew we had a good car for the race. We have lots of experience too in the WEC. Today the gap doesn’t reflect the real gap to Ferrari, we just made no mistakes and were good in the pits, and had a good strategy.

“At the end of the day, in recent years we’ve had tough competition from within our own team. We have ended up fighting the No. 8 for 24 hours and ended with a couple of seconds between us. The pressure is always high here. We have always worked to improve.

“We know it will be a difficult year. Peugeot, Ferrari, Porsche and Cadillac are going to work. We showed what we can do, but we remain humble.”

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The improvements made to the GR010 HYBRID for 2023 also played a significant part in the team’s ability to pull away from the field, Lopez said. For 2023 the GR010 HYBRID is lighter and benefits from a more aggressive aero package and cooling system.

“The car in race conditions is definitely a step forward. Last year our best time was a (1m49.2s); this year we found around 5s. The job the team has done is amazing. Of course, it’s still not easy here because of the bumps, changes in grip, and traffic. It’s one of the most difficult of the year, but I am so proud.”

On a personal level, Lopez’s performance during the race was also significant. During last year’s opener, a mistake from the Argentinian driver cost the No. 7 crew a chance at victory when he wrote the car off in spectacular fashion 111 laps into the race. An error in judgment led to a high-speed, head-on collision with the tire barriers at Turn 11. At the time he was heavily criticized for driving too fast with bodywork rubbing against the front tires following contact earlier in the lap.

This year was an entirely different story. Winning the race, with a faultless performance, has given him a huge confidence boost to start the season and puts him in early contention to win the 2023 world championship.

“Especially after last year, this is great,” he admitted. “I’ve never had it easy here. You need to turn the page and do the job. The most important thing to me is that the team has my back. I have great teammates as well, and I managed to put in good stints and get the victory.”

Toyota dominates WEC 1000 Miles of Sebring

Toyota Gazoo Racing scored an impressive, dominant 1-2 victory in the opening round of the 2023 FIA WEC season at Sebring. The Japanese-flagged team’s GR010 HYBRIDs controlled the race almost from start to finish, after AF Corse’s bid to win on the …

Toyota Gazoo Racing scored an impressive, dominant 1-2 victory in the opening round of the 2023 FIA WEC season at Sebring. The Japanese-flagged team’s GR010 HYBRIDs controlled the race almost from start to finish, after AF Corse’s bid to win on the Ferrari 499P’s debut from pole position quickly faded in the opening hour.

The No. 7 GR010 HYBRID of Mike Conway, Jose Maria Lopez and Kamui Kobayashi took the win, finishing 2.1s ahead of the No. 8 sister car of Brendon Hartley, Sebastien Buemi and Ryo Hirakawa. The two Toyotas spent much of the race together on track, but the crew on the pit wall managed the second half of the race to ensure there were no heroics by the drivers that would risk a 1-2 formation finish.

In the end, the two cars crossed the line over two laps clear of the pack, in a race that was relatively subdued up front in the second half. After so much promise and expectation pre-race that Ferrari, and perhaps Cadillac, could challenge Toyota, the race turned out to hardly be a contest. A combination of mechanical issues, incidents, penalties and a lack of ultimate pace prevented any of Toyota’s rivals from keeping close.

“Thanks to Toyota Gazoo Racing in Japan. This was very tough yesterday, but we were strong today — finished 1-2,” Kobayashi said after the race. “Today is just the start. There are big races coming. We need to work and improve, but I am excited by this. It’s so challenging.”

Lopez was upbeat about his change of fortune compared to 2022 — a win this year, rather than ending on his roof as he did at Sebring a year ago.

“The 2023 GR010 is definitely a step forward,” the Argentinian said. “The job that this team has done is amazing, especially after last year. It’s important for me to win today, and it’s great that the team has my back.”

The most competitive race in Hypercar was for the final podium spot, with Porsche, Cadillac and the Ferraris all spending time in and around the top five. There were plenty of exciting on-track battles, including memorable duels between Laurens Vanthoor (No. 6 Porsche) and Alex Lynn (Cadillac) as well as Miguel Molina (No. 50 Ferrari) and Kevin Estre (No. 6 Porsche). The cars looked extremely tough to drive in the Florida sunshine when the tires are worn at the end of a double stint, making for some nail-biting moments.

In the end, the No. 50 AF Corse Ferrari, after a rollercoaster race, finished up a distant third. Antonio Fuoco, Nicklas Nielsen and Miguel Molina all drove well here, but their chances of converting yesterday’s famous pole into victory faltered in the opening laps.

A big off for Luis Perez Companc at Turn 1, in which the Argentinian rolled his No. 83 Richard Mille Ferrari 488 GTE after sliding backwards off track and into the tire barriers, brought out a lengthy safety car period which prompted a strategy gamble from Ferrari. AF Corse brought both cars in, and both lost time getting stuck in their pit boxes in the traffic, emerging sixth and ninth.

They never recovered. The No. 50 was handed a drive-through penalty for overtaking before the start line under the safety car, and then a 5s penalty for a pit infringement. The No. 51, meanwhile, dropped down the order after Alessandro Pier Guidi clashed with Francesco Castelaccci’s AF Corse GTE Ferrari on the run to Turn 13 at the start of Hour 7, which sent him spinning off track and into the No. 56 Project 1 AO Porsche. Pier Guidi had to limp back, have the car repaired, then return to the pitlane serve a penalty for causing a collision. The car finished 15th overall.

It’s a testament to the pace and reliability of the Ferrari 499Ps that AF Corse will leave disappointed with a podium on the car’s race debut, though. The team now knows where it needs to make gains before Portimao and ultimately Le Mans.

Just off the podium was the Cadillac Racing V-Series.R of Earl Bamber, Alex Lynn and Richard Westbrook. The Cadillac had a strong first outing in the WEC and the Ganassi-operated team, like AF Corse, will take positives from this. The team, with only one car in a class featuring four two-car factory efforts, did extremely well and came so close to a podium. In the end it became a chase between Fuoco and Bamber, with Bamber handed a set of four tires and a 9s gap to eliminate in his final stint, but he was unable to reel in Fuoco and crossed the line 10s behind.

“The car was great. The pace was better than we expected, and we took advantage at the end of one of the Ferraris misfortune, but we’re racing for the podium and we gave it all we had,” said Cadillac Racing team manager and strategist Stephen Mitas. “We’ll keep giving it the same effort we’ve given it so far and try to build on this good result.”

Penalties proved costly for the Penske Porsches, winding up fifth and sixth. The car didn’t have the speed over a double stint to stay in the fight — the grip levels from the rear tires on the 963s fell off a cliff towards the end of each stint, appearing to be a handful to drive.

Perhaps the most disappointing performance, though, was from Peugeot Sport, which made its 9X8 debut last season. Both cars suffered major mechanical issues, beginning before the race even started when Loic Duval was forced to pit the No. 94 on the second formation lap with gearbox issues.

It really has been a trip to Sebring to forget for the French brand, which had neither the pace nor the reliability to be in the mix for even a top five. Both made it to the end, but the No. 93 ended up 31st, and the No. 94 was 32nd. Next time out in Portugal, on a track that is less aggressive than Sebring, you’d expect the 9X8s to be more of a force, but there are no guarantees. Much work is required to get in shape for Le Mans.

The remaining two entries from the non-hybrid boutique manufacturers, Glickenhaus and Vanwall, had races to forget as well. Glickenhaus’ 007 had its engine cut out, retiring after just 62 laps. The Vanwall had a better time, though it could only muster a 30th-place finish, after collisions and a suspension issue cost the new Gibson-powered Vandervell 680 chunks of time.

The Hypercar contest may not have been a classic, but it’s early days for the new-look field. It also served as a strong reminder of just how strong Toyota is. There was plenty of chatter ahead of this race about Toyota’s ability to continue winning against renewed opposition after multiple seasons without major factory opposition. It’s clear that Toyota Gazoo Racing is a well-oiled machine, and the organization’s decade of experience in the WEC makes it extremely hard to beat. The competition will have to be faultless.

In LMP2, HERTZ Team JOTA’s No. 48 ORECA of Yifei Ye, David Beckmann and Will Stevens stormed to victory in dramatic fashion, in a car that’s only due to compete in LMP2 until Spa. There, the team is expected to debut a customer Porsche 963 in Hypercar, scaling back its P2 effort to a single car.

It was a commanding performance from the trio, who led most of the second half of the race — one turned on its head in the fourth hour when United’s No. 23 ORECA retired. In the opening hours the pole-sitting No. 23 from the Anglo-American team built a comfortable lead and was lapping the back of the field until Josh Pierson, in the midst of a superb stint, pulled off at the side of the road, the car losing power.

The race was blown wide open, allowing the No. 48 to take control at the front. It was an impressive run, which almost ended with a disappointing second-place finish after Stevens had to take a splash in the final hour and dropped to second.

Prema’s No. 63 inherited the lead and Mirko Bortolotti looked set to steal the win with the sun setting, but he had to pit with just a couple of laps left, dropping the car to third behind the No. 22 United ORECA. Aside from the disappointing finish, it was a near-flawless run from Bortolotti, Doriane Pin and Daniel Kvyat, who should have title aspirations after a performance like this.

“We knew it would be close,” admitted Stevens. “We had to change our strategy and do a triple at the end. We knew it would be tight. I didn’t think Prema would have to stop, so I was super happy when they did. It’s a strong start to the year. we start as we mean to go on.”

The No. 22 United Autosports ORECA (Filipe Albuquerque, Phil Hanson, Frederik Lubin) fought hard for a second-place finish, salvaging something for the team, doing much to lift the mood.

The Inter Europol ORECA had an impressive, metronomic run to fourth, finishing ahead of the No. 41 WRT ORECA that completed the top five.

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GTE Am was a similar story to LMP2. The car that looked set to win hit trouble, changing the race.

In this case, it was the Iron Dames Porsche. The all-female trio of Michelle Gatting, Rahel Frey and Sarah Bovy, who started from pole, benefitted early from being in the pits during an FCY and held a lead of over half a minute when Bovy handed over to Frey. Unfortunately, the lead wouldn’t last long, as Frey made an error at Turn 1, going off track on the exit, ripping the rear bumper and diffuser off the car.

Frey limped to the pits for repairs, dropping the car down the order, the team forced to switch to recovery mode and spend the remaining hours fighting their way back to eighth. It wasn’t a fairytale first race for Iron Dames with Porsche, but the team looks set to be a force to reckon with.

The No. 33 Corvette Racing C8.R of Ben Keating, Nico Varrone and Nicky Catsburg took the class victory on the US factory team’s home soil and on its GTE Am debut.

Keating set this victory up, the Texan the class of the Bronze drivers in the field; his performance, in trademark fashion, so strong that the team went almost unchallenged after the drama for Iron Dames in the first half of the race. Varrone, on his Corvette WEC debut, was also extremely impressive, completing an iron-man triple stint during the race.

“Ben did a great job with the start and in his first three stints,” Varrone said after the race. “He got us to P2. Then I jumped in the car for three hours, which was tough. Then I handed it over to Nicky, who is a legend. We all know that he knows what to do. He brought it home safely and now I can’t be happier!

“This was a very difficult race for me. I had to do a triple stint in the middle. I’ve had to do a triple stint at Le Mans, but I have to say that Sebring is much more difficult! Ben did a great job at the start to get the car to me. The track was changing a lot during the whole race, so we had to figure out what was happening. Corvette Racing did a great job with that. They did a great job all week long. It’s a dream come true.”

Keating beamed at the result along with his teammates.

“It’s so special to defend home turf. This is the only home race for us, so it’s special to perform well here,” he stated proudly. “All of us didn’t make mistakes, which is great as it’s mayhem out there. Everyone else had some problem or another. It’s a nice way to win.”

The gap to the second place No. 77 Dempsey Proton Porsche was almost 90s at the finish. The Porsche contingent pushed hard and climbed the order, taking second right at the end. With six minutes to go, the No. 57 Kessel Racing Ferrari pitted for a splash, dropping to third agonizingly close to the end.

AF Corse’s No. 21 Ferrari finished fourth with the Iron Lynx Porsche in fifth.

RESULTS

Fuoco claims debut Hypercar pole for Ferrari at Sebring

History was made in the first FIA World Endurance Championship qualifying session of the season, as AF Corse’s No. 50 Ferrari 499P snatched pole position for tomorrow’s 1000 Miles of Sebring. A stunning performance from Antonio Fuoco means the …

History was made in the first FIA World Endurance Championship qualifying session of the season, as AF Corse’s No. 50 Ferrari 499P snatched pole position for tomorrow’s 1000 Miles of Sebring.

A stunning performance from Antonio Fuoco means the Italian brand will lead the field across the line at the start for its first race in the Hypercar category and its first top-class sports car race for 50 years.

Fuoco’s 1m45.067s with the sun setting over the pit straight stunned the Toyota personnel behind the pit wall, who would have been confident of securing pole position after setting the pace in the Prologue test and Free Practice.

The Italian’s lap was by far the quickest time of the meeting so far, and means AF Corse has become the first team to score pole position in each FIA WEC category.

“I feel really good at the moment, I want to thank the guys,” said Fuoco. “Getting pole for Ferrari after 50 years is amazing. The team has done an amazing job — we are putting everything together.

“It was quite difficult because the sun was setting, and visibility was low in the final corners. The car felt really nice though. It’s good to start from a nice position.

“The key tomorrow will be managing tires — we will try to do our best in our first experience. We are really motivated and will do our best.”

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The best a Toyota could muster was a 1m45.281s from Brendon Hartley in the No. 8, two-tenths off the pole time. The No. 7 of Kamui Kobayashi ended up third, almost half a second adrift.

“Today we did our best but Ferrari was a bit quicker in qualifying; they did a great job,” conceded Kobayashi. “We knew they were competitive after the Prologue and free practice sessions, and everyone could see their performance in qualifying. We are definitely part of a fight, and I am enjoying it.

“We have worked hard over the past days to get our cars set up for the race, because obviously this is endurance racing so Friday is the most important day for us. I think we have prepared well and we’re in a promising starting position so we have a great chance. It is going to be an exciting race.”

The sister No. 51 AF Corse 499P slotted in fourth and was the final car to set a time under 1m46s, Alessandro Pier Guidi managing a 1m45.874s after regrouping from an early error, kicking up the dust at the exit of Turn 1.

Best of the rest was the Cadillac Racing V-Series.R following a 1m46.082s from Alex Lynn who secured a top-five spot on the grid for Cadillac’s debut race as a WEC manufacturer.

It was a tough session for Porsche and Peugeot. The No. 6 was the fastest of the two 963s, Kevin Estre setting a lap time two seconds off.

Loic Duval was the fastest driver for Peugeot. The French team’s struggles for speed continued here after a lackluster showing since arriving in Florida, its two 9X8s 2.3 and 3.1 seconds off the pace.

Glickenhaus and Vanwall were also nowhere on pace, both non-hybrid LMHs over four seconds back.

In the LMP2 class, it was Oliver Jarvis who snatched pole position. The Briton in the No. 23 United Autosports ORECA overcame challenges from JOTA, WRT and Alpine and set the fastest time, which was a 1m49.974s.

“I wouldn’t say it was a perfect lap, there was a bit left on the table, but I am really pleased with the lap we got. Delighted to start on pole after a great week of running,” Jarvis said.

His time was just 0.093s quicker than the No. 28 JOTA ORECA of Pietro Fittipaldi, who sat atop the timing screens briefly before Jarvis responded with his flyer with five minutes to go.

Robin Frijns, who told DailySportsCar the team had been struggling with the setup and balance of the No. 31 prior to the session, ended up third. It was a strong performance from Frijns here, to give the Belgian team a spot on row two. A late improvement from Matthieu Vaxiviere put the No. 36 Alpine fourth.

Sarah Bovy saw off the challenge from Ben Keating to take GTE AM pole with the Iron Dames Porsche. JEP/Motorsports Images

The first of the three sessions saw the Bronze-rated drivers battle it out in GTE AM.

After a thrilling 15 minutes, it was Iron Dames’ Porsche 911 RSR 19 that emerged as the polesitter. It was achieved after a superb performance in the first qualifying session of the season from Sarah Bovy.

It was a shootout between Bovy and Corvette Racing’s Ben Keating after their tires got up to temperature, Bovy setting the best time and with two minutes to go, a 1m58.949s. After multiple improvements by both drivers throughout the session, the pair trading the provisional pole position, her time bettered Keating’s best effort in the C8.R by four-tenths.

“It’s amazing, Sarah is doing very well,” said Bovy’s teammate Rahel Frey. “She loves it, but the time to celebrate is tomorrow.”

Third in the running was the ORT by TF Aston Martin, which made it three makes in the top three.

Ahmad Al Harthy, in his first WEC qualifying session will be full of confidence ahead of his world championship race debut tomorrow. It also marked a significant improvement for the Vantages, which had struggled to find pace until today’s track action.

Making it four in the top four, in fourth, was Luis Perez Companc in the Richard Mille AF Corse Ferrari.

UP NEXT: Friday’s 1000 Miles of Sebring is set to get underway at 12:00pm local time.

RESULTS

Toyota ups the ante again in third Sebring WEC practice

A 1m45.783s from Kamui Kobayashi during a qualifying simulation for the No. 7 Toyota Gazoo Racing GR010 HYBRID topped the third and final practice session for the FIA WEC teams at Sebring ahead of qualifying. With each session, Toyota continues to …

A 1m45.783s from Kamui Kobayashi during a qualifying simulation for the No. 7 Toyota Gazoo Racing GR010 HYBRID topped the third and final practice session for the FIA WEC teams at Sebring ahead of qualifying.

With each session, Toyota continues to find pace and looks to be the favorite for pole position this evening. Just what sort of time will be possible in qualifying? It’s going to be fascinating to find out.

The headline from this final 60 minutes of track time wasn’t just the blistering pace of the No. 7, though, it was the repair work that needs to be undertaken by the team ahead of this evening’s fight for grid positions.

Jose Maria Lopez, who had a huge shunt in last year’s event at Sebring, again found himself in the wars during FP3. The Argentinian (who complained that the engine cut out earlier in the lap at Turn 13 on the radio) lost the rear of the No. 7 at high speed on the entry to Turn 17, sending him backwards into the tires and damaging the car’s right-rear corner. This brought out red flags and the session to a premature end.

“It’s not ideal, it’s tough for mechanics. But the good thing is that Jose seems to be OK,” said Kazuki Nakajima, vice president of Toyota Gazoo Racing. “We can recover from here. The car is fast so let’s take something positive.”

It was once again a Toyota 1-2 at the top of the times, with the No. 8 six-tenths back.

Third, just under a second off was the No. 50 AF Corse Ferrari 499P, which ended with a 1m46.777s. Like the No. 7, the No. 50 had an off in the session too, moments after Lopez’s hit, Nicklas Nielsen complained that he lost traction control, which sent the car veering off the track after the rear snapped at the exit of Turn 10. The car ended up beached in the gravel, though with no significant damage.

Fourth in the times was the Cadillac Racing V-Series.R, which the GM brand hopes will be in the mix for a strong grid position later.

“Not sure we have quite the pace to match the Toyotas, but I think we’ve got the pace to fight Ferrari for that final place on the podium,” Earl Bamber said after the session. His teammate Alex Lynn is set to drive in qualifying tonight.

Completing the top five was the No. 93 Peugeot, with a best time 2.1s off the No. 7. The No. 5 Porsche made it five makes in the top six positions.

Further down the order, it was a disastrous session for Vanwall Racing. The car stopped at pit-out at the start of the session, unable to find power. It completed zero laps — not ideal ahead of the car’s first qualifying session.

In the other classes, JOTA led United Autosports in the LMP2 pack. Pietro Fittipaldi’s 1m50.128s was under a tenth quicker than Phil Hanson who reeled off a 1m50.218s.

GTE Am, meanwhile, saw a huge change in fortune for Northwest AMR. The trio of Vantages have propped up the bottom of the timing screens throughout the running at Sebring so far, but in this session the pace improved. Nicki Thiim set the fastest time in the class, a 1m59.030s in the No. 98.

GR Racing’s Porsche ended up second, with the Kessel Racing Ferrari third.

UP NEXT: Qualifying follows at 6:30pm.

RESULTS

VIDEO: Sebring Wednesday recap with Marshall Pruett and Graham Goodwin

Marshall Pruett and Graham Goodwin take stock of Wednesday’s activities at Super Sebring weekend ahead of the FIA WEC 1000 Miles of Sebring and IMSA WeatherTech Championship’s Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring. Presented by At Piloti, it all starts …

Marshall Pruett and Graham Goodwin take stock of Wednesday’s activities at Super Sebring weekend ahead of the FIA WEC 1000 Miles of Sebring and IMSA WeatherTech Championship’s Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring.

Presented by

Proton Porsche out of Sebring 1000 after crash in practice

The FIA WEC field for Friday’s 1000 Miles of Sebring has been reduced to 36 cars. The heavy shunt in Free Practice 2 for the No. 88 Proton Competition Porsche 911 RSR 19 left the car damaged beyond repair, and the team with no choice but to withdraw …

The FIA WEC field for Friday’s 1000 Miles of Sebring has been reduced to 36 cars. The heavy shunt in Free Practice 2 for the No. 88 Proton Competition Porsche 911 RSR 19 left the car damaged beyond repair, and the team with no choice but to withdraw the car from the remainder of the meeting.

The No. 88, driven by Harry Tincknell, Ryan Hardwick and Zacharie Robichon, hit a concrete block head-on at high speed after contact with the Cadillac Racing V-Series.R of Richard Westbrook, resulting in a lengthy red flag.

The contact between Westbrook and Hardwick occurred in the braking zone to the hairpin, Westbrook moving across on the Porsche while trying to take the racing line, clipping the front of the Porsche with the rear of his V-Series.R. Thankfully Hardwick walked away from the hit unscathed.

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“It’s a real shame,” a disappointed Hardwick told RACER after the session. “We had a really good program going here. Proton has a spare car but it’s in Europe so we can’t use it this weekend. The chassis was broken by the impact. We hope to be back at Portimao.”

By missing Sebring, the No. 88’s 2023 FIA WEC program is likely to be reduced to just three races, as RACER understands that the car is unlikely to continue after Le Mans in June. Proton is believed to be planning to scale back its GTE Am effort to a single car once it begins competing with the Hypercar class Porsche 963 it has ordered.

Toyota stretches advantage in second Sebring WEC practice

After AF Corse’s Ferrari 499Ps managed to get close to the Toyotas on pace in the opening practice session of the 1000 Miles of Sebring event this morning, the Japanese team turned the wick up during the red-flag-interrupted FP2. The quickest time …

After AF Corse’s Ferrari 499Ps managed to get close to the Toyotas on pace in the opening practice session of the 1000 Miles of Sebring event this morning, the Japanese team turned the wick up during the red-flag-interrupted FP2.

The quickest time in the session was set by the No. 7 GR010 HYBRID, Kamui Kobayashi posting a 1m46.954s, a tour of the circuit significantly faster than this morning’s quickest lap from Ryo Hirakawa (1m47.649s).

There are clearly chunks of pace from the GR010 HYBRID still to be found it seems. The quickest time this afternoon was over a second faster than the best laps achieved during the Prologue test and you’d expect the team to find even more time in qualifying tomorrow.

Nobody else in the Hypercar field was able to get within a second of the lead Toyota. In third, eight tenths off the sister No. 8 Toyota that finished the day second, was the No. 50 Ferrari of Antonio Fuoco, The Italian completed a 10-lap run and set a best time of 1m48.121s.

Ferrari’s 499P remained the nearest challenger to the Toyotas, but was 0.8s off the pace. JEP/Motorsport Images

The Cadillac Racing V-Series.R was in the mix too, as it has been throughout the event so far. It split the two Ferraris on the timing screens after Richard Westbrook’s 1m48.265.

It wasn’t a clean session for Westbrook, however, as the Briton was involved in contact with the No. 88 Proton Competition Porsche at the hairpin which ended with Ryan Hardwick hitting the concrete blocks before the guardrail section at the hairpin head-on. The damage to the Porsche was significant, and the red flag period for the cleanup lasted around 10 minutes.

It was a rather quiet session for the Porsche and Peugeot Hypercar camps. Porsche’s No. 5 963 was the only car of the quartet across the two teams that lapped quicker than the No. 28 JOTA ORECA that topped LMP2. The No. 5’s best lap was only good enough for seventh, behind the Glickenhaus 007 which had a more promising run, Olivier Pla setting a time almost a second quicker than the team’s best during the Prologue.

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The aforementioned No. 28 JOTA ORECA, which led the way in LMP2, saw Pietro Fittipaldi set a 1m50.326s, a tenth up on the fastest of the two Peugeots, and four tenths quicker than the first of the two United Autosports ORECAs that ended up second and third.

In GTE, the off for the No. 88 wasn’t the only drama in the class causing a red flag in the session. The running had to be neutralized towards the end after an off for the GTE Am pace-setting Kessel Ferrari at Turn 3.

Takeshi Kimura was aboard for the off, his teammate Daniel Serra meanwhile, set the best time in the class, a 1m58.845s.

Corvette Racing’s improved form from FP1 continued here, the No. 33 C8.R finishing up second, with the quickest Aston Martin, D’Station’s No. 777, third. The performance from D’Station represented the highest in the classification an Aston has finished in a session since the teams arrived in Florida last week.

UP NEXT: The third and final Practice session is set for tomorrow morning at 11:55am local time.

RESULTS

Racing on TV, March 16-19

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted. Thursday, March 16 Sebring 1 9:10-9:55am Sebring 1:15-3:20pm Sebring 2 5:30-6:15pm NOLA TA2 8:00-9:00pm (D) Homestead 8:30-9:30pm (D) NOLA TA 9:00-10:00pm (D) Friday, March 17 Sebring qualifying 9:15- …

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted.


Thursday, March 16

Sebring 1 9:10-9:55am

Sebring 1:15-3:20pm

Sebring 2 5:30-6:15pm

NOLA TA2 8:00-9:00pm
(D)

Homestead 8:30-9:30pm
(D)

NOLA TA 9:00-10:00pm
(D)

Friday, March 17

Sebring
qualifying
9:15-
10:25am

Saudi Arabia
practice 1
9:25-
10:30am

Saudi Arabia
practice 1
9:25-
10:30am

Sebring
1000 Miles
11:30am-
8:30pm

Saudi Arabia
practice 2
12:55-
2:00pm

Saudi Arabia
practice 2
12:55-
2:00pm

Atlanta
qualifying
3:00-4:30pm

Atlanta
qualifying
4:30-6:00pm

Glen Helen 1 8:00pm

Saturday, March 18

Saudi Arabia
practice 3
9:25-10:30am

Saudi Arabia
practice 3
9:25-10:30am

Sebring
12 Hours
10:05am-
10:10pm

Atlanta
qualifying
11:30am-
1:00pm

St.
Petersburg
12:00pm-
1:30pm (D)

Saudi Arabia
qualifying
12:55-2:00pm

Saudi Arabia
qualifying
12:55-2:00pm

Atlanta 1:00-2:00pm
pre-race
2:00-4:00pm
race

Atlanta 4:00-5:00pm
pre-race
5:00-7:30pm
race

Sebring
12 Hours
4:30-
10:30pm

Detroit 7:00pm

Glen Helen 2 8:00pm

Sunday, March 19

Saudi
Arabian GP
11:30am-
12:55pm
pre-race
12:55-3:00pm
race

Atlanta 2:00-3:00pm
pre-race
3:00-7:00pm
race

Glen Helen 3 4:00pm

Key: SDD: Same day delay; D = delayed; R = Repeat/Replay

A variety of motor racing is available for streaming on demand at the following sites:

  • SRO-america.com
  • SCCA.com
  • Ferrari Challenge
  • The Trans Am Series airs in 60-minute highlight shows in primetime on the MAVTV Network. For those wishing to tune in live, the entire lineup of SpeedTour events will stream for free on the SpeedTour TV YouTube page. SpeedTour TV will also air non-stop activity on Saturday and Sunday (SVRA, IGT and Trans Am). You can also watch all Trans Am event activity on the Trans Am YouTube page and Facebook page.

Toyota to stay on at Sebring for additional testing

Toyota Gazoo Racing is set to stay in Florida after the 1000 Miles of Sebring weekend to put a GR010 HYBRID through an endurance test before Le Mans. This will be the third and final test for Toyota with its updated GR010 HYBRID since the end of …

Toyota Gazoo Racing is set to stay in Florida after the 1000 Miles of Sebring weekend to put a GR010 HYBRID through an endurance test before Le Mans.

This will be the third and final test for Toyota with its updated GR010 HYBRID since the end of last season. Technical director Pascal Vasselon tells RACER the team will run a single GR010 HYBRID for all six full-season drivers, and the team’s nominated reserve driver Kazuki Nakajima.

For this season Toyota brings the second significant update for the GR010 HYBRID since its 2021 debut. The most visible changes come in the form of a more aggressive aero package. Further improvements have been made elsewhere though, to enhance drivability and aerodynamic consistency.

“The changes are never enough, but we have improved a few areas where we are not at the best possible level, so we are satisfied,” Vasselon said.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1416]

For its post-race running, a third updated GR010 HYBRID has been transported to Sebring, the team unsurprisingly opting to give the pair that will race next Friday a break.

“We have been testing very little this year — we needed a third test,” Vasselon explained. “The problem we had is that we planned it for the time when Portimao was added to the calendar, so we had to move our last test. It isn’t ideal. It’s our last test of the season, and our last test before Le Mans (bar a planned brief shakedown after the race at Spa).”

“We can’t run through the night — it’s not possible here (Sebring) — but over the three days we will complete an endurance test.”

Vasselon was keen to point out that the team hasn’t tested as much as some of its closest rivals in Hypercar this off-season.

“We did not reduce our amount of testing compared to previous years, it just appears that we run a test program that is much less intense than our competitors,” he said. “Unfortunately we are testing a lot less than others. It will be tougher, but we are experienced in the FIA WEC; let’s hope it balances out.”

Since January, Porsche has completed seven days of testing with 963 (with two cars at each test), Ferrari has 12 days of 499P running to show for, and Cadillac has tested its V-Series.R for two days (although it benefits from data sharing with the IMSA GTP-class effort) and Peugeot has run the 9X8 for 10 days. Toyota, meanwhile, has completed nine days of testing with one car at each test.

Corvette Racing is also staying in Florida to test its 2024 Z06 GT3.R. The test car, which ran in camouflage last year and turned laps after the Rolex 24, will take to the track in Sebring for two days of running. Development driver Tommy Milner is expected to drive.

The test car here for Corvette is believed to be the only fully built chassis, with a second car still under construction.

INSIGHT: Corvette’s new FIA WEC Pro-Am home

Corvette Racing, in its 25th anniversary season, has plenty to look forward to. In 2023 it will be fighting on two fronts in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and the FIA World Endurance Championship, competing in two very different GT …

Corvette Racing, in its 25th anniversary season, has plenty to look forward to. In 2023 it will be fighting on two fronts in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and the FIA World Endurance Championship, competing in two very different GT classes, with C8.Rs in two different specifications, with two sets of drivers, run out of two different headquarters.

While its GTD Pro effort in IMSA has a familiar feel to it, running a GTE C8.R modified to compete against GT3 machinery with a full pro driver lineup, its FIA WEC program in GTE Am poses a new challenge for Pratt & Miller. In what will be the final campaign for the GTE spec C8.R in both series, ahead of the launch of the new Z06 GT3.R in 2024, Corvette Racing, for the first time as a factory, is competing in a Pro-Am class.

With the WEC’s GTE Pro class no more after Ferrari and Porsche opted to step up to Hypercar for this season, Corvette has been forced to switch to GTE Am in order to continue competing on the world stage.

It is something that Corvette will need to get used to if it plans to continue making its annual pilgrimage to the Le Mans 24 Hours as a GT manufacturer each year. This is because the WEC and Le Mans as an event will only accept GT3 cars with pro-am lineups once the GTE Am category is removed from the structure in 2024.

With the Hypercar category attracting an abundance of factory teams and GT3 budgets at an all-time high, the new world order in global sports car racing has arrived. Cadillac is already representing GM at the head of the field in GTP and Hypercar, so Corvette, realistically, has nowhere else to turn.

This isn’t bad news, though. Behind the scenes there is a real interest from customer teams, with orders already placed and the potential for programs from left field to emerge in the coming months. At present, RACER understands that a two-car effort in IMSA’s GTD Pro will be joined by up to two customer cars in the first season with the FIA WEC also targeted as a priority program, most likely with a new customer team or teams.

Supporting multiple customer teams around the world going forward, in particular with expansion in sales and support structures expected after 2024, makes both sporting and business sense. It ensures Corvette can continue to have a presence and remain a significant player in the ever-evolving GT racing marketplace, at a time when interest in IMSA and the FIA WEC is at an all-time high.

For this season in the WEC, Corvette Racing has assembled a trio of Ben Keating, Nicky Catsburg and Nico Varrone. They will drive its single No. 33 C8.R in GTE Am, which is being prepped at Larbre Competition’s base in France by Pratt & Miller staff. Interestingly, RACER was told by Corvette that the car is a brand-new chassis and not the Pro car from 2022. Clearly, a lot of resource is being poured into this.

Despite this group having no prior experience competing together, and Varrone and Keating’s time behind the wheel of the C8.R having been limited so far, this group should be considered as potential title contenders.

Keating is the reigning LMGTE Am world champion and Le Mans class winner, who has made the switch to Corvette from British Aston Martin customer TF Sport. The Texan is arguably the most accomplished and talented Bronze driver currently competing in GT racing. He’s driven a slew of GTs and prototypes over the years and the C8.R will be the sixth different GTE car he’s campaigned at Le Mans.

“It’s significantly different than all the others,” Keating explains. “It’s taken a little bit to get used to. I’ve been in a turbo car for the last couple of years, and the big V8 has a lot more torque instantly at low RPMs than having to wait for that big turbo to wind up, so you don’t have that lag — which takes a little while to get used to. The year before, I was in the Porsche RSR and again it doesn’t have the same level of torque that a big V8 has. They all have slightly different handling characteristics.”

To have him joined by Catsburg, another driver with a wealth of experience in different cars — and, crucially, with Corvette in recent seasons as a third driver in its Pro efforts — is key. Varrone is the only question mark here, but he has impressed in his GT racing career to this point. The WEC will be new to him, but if he can adapt quickly, as he is expected to, this will be a crew that won’t be underestimated by anyone in the Am paddock.

“Last year, I raced in the ELMS and the 24 Hours of Le Mans, so I have experience,” Varrone explains. “I didn’t do a full season in WEC but doing races in both championships helped me quite a lot. I don’t think it will be a big change for me. I feel ready for the challenge.”

Sebring has been a happy hunting ground for Corvette over this years, with 13 wins over the years, but getting up to speed quick enough to challenge for victory in the season opener will be no easy feat in this company

In amongst the 14-car field, Corvette will have to get the better of entries from an old rival in Aston Martin Racing, Keating’s former team TF Sport (returning with Aston), Ferraris from AF Corse and Kessel Racing and Porsche run by Team Project 1 and future Hypercar outfits in Proton Competition and Iron Lynx.

It would surprise nobody to see a Corvette factory effort win on its GTE Am debut, but you’d do well to find many weak links in the class. The Prologue test this weekend is therefore crucial because Keating and Varrone’s time behind the wheel has been so limited to this point, having only tested in Bahrain last year and at Sebring.

Both will have to lean on Catsburg to get the most out of the car in the early part of the season. Being the lead driver is something that the Dutchman will not shy away from, though — it’s actually a challenge that excites him.

“It’s definitely going to be different,” Catsburg admits. “I was always the third driver at Corvett,e so I was filling in for the few endurance races — Daytona, Sebring, Petit Le Mans and Le Mans. So this is the first time I’m doing a full season with Corvette Racing with two new teammates. I’m the one with the most experience in the car, which is a first for me. It’s definitely going to be a change.”

The team members on the pit wall will have plenty to learn too. The strategy and racing itself has a different flavour to the always flat-out, often political GTE Pro class that Corvette was part of last season. Balance of Performance isn’t usually as much of a talking point in Am — that’s not to say that there are zero complaints, but the success ballast system does well at keeping the field close and making it extremely difficult to run away with the title.

Corvette’s WEC program in 2023 may not appear as exciting as a full factory bid in a pro class on the face of it, but this is a serious project and it is being taken very seriously internally. Achieving a Le Mans class win and a world championship title in the final year of GTE racing is the aim. If Corvette Racing can pull this off, it would feel just as sweet as any of its previous achievements over the past two and a half decades and serve as a fitting GTE swan song for the GM brand.