Keating makes late switch from spectator to racer at WEC’s Lone Star Le Mans

Ben Keating expected to be a spectator this weekend for the FIA World Endurance Championship race at his home track. Living only an hour and a half from Circuit of The Americas and having a free weekend, the reigning WEC GTE champ and IMSA …

Ben Keating expected to be a spectator this weekend for the FIA World Endurance Championship race at his home track. Living only an hour and a half from Circuit of The Americas and having a free weekend, the reigning WEC GTE champ and IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship LMP2 racer wouldn’t miss a chance to hang out with friends that he doesn’t get to see much of now that he’s not racing in the series full time. But then Proton Competition’s Christian Ried gave the Texan an offer he couldn’t refuse.

“I was expecting to come as a spectator to harass all of my friends from the World Endurance Championship,” Keating said. “I was delighted that it happened to be on a weekend that I did not have anything else going on, so I was planning to be here anyway. Christian Ried, who I competed against for the last four years, is also a good friend. He called me and asked if I wanted to compete in the race, and I couldn’t pass up the opportunity. It’s it’s fun to be back in the series with these people. It’s fun to be back at this particular track. I haven’t raced here since 2019, but I’ve had a lot of a lot of success here.”

Unexpected COTA outing with Proton’s Ford Mustang LMGT3 is a special treat for Keating. Jakob Ebrey/Motorsport Images

So, Keating is racing the No. 88 Proton Competition Ford Mustang GT3 at the Lone Star Le Mans weekend with Mikkel Pedersen and Dennis Olsen. Which is probably just as well, because racers don’t make very good spectators anyway. And the Ford is a good fit for Keating.

“When Christian called and said, ‘Hey, do you want to drive the Mustang?’ It was exciting. It’s awesome. I have four Ford dealerships in Texas. I’m a third generation Ford dealer. Because of my experience in the Ford GT at Le Mans in 2019 I have a lot of relationships, people who are still around in Ford Performance racing,” he said.

“And, it’s fun to to be able to come back and compete again. It’s one level just to come back and see everybody and be a part of the family; it’s another thing to really be back in the seat and and compete.”

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When Keating talks about being part of the family, he means it. Having competed in WEC and IMSA with several different teams, he’s made a lot of friends over the years. And while he competed in LMP2 at Le Mans, Le Mans is a a different atmosphere than a normal WEC race.

“I really love the people of this series. I love the family that this series is,” he said. “I was super excited to come back. Whether it’s whether it’s TF Sport that I raced with for two years, or United [Autosports] that I’m teamed with this year in IMSA, Proton… there are so many different relationships. I have really good, solid relationships that I have in this paddock through the years so I’m hugging all the pit officials and stewards and all of that stuff. It’s just awesome.”

For his first outing in the Mustang GT3, the first time in a GT3 car in a while, and it being a year since he raced any kind of GT car, Keating says that he has pretty low expectations of himself this weekend. That’s despite his past success in the series, and he recognizes that others may have more confidence in him. But he’s at COTA, and he’s going racing, which is enough.

“I’m just happy to be here,” he said. “Even if I’m running in the middle of the pack, there’ll be people to race with, and I’ll have a good time.”

Keating returning to WEC in Proton Mustang for COTA

FIA GTE Am world champion Ben Keating is set to return to the FIA WEC for his home race at Circuit of The Americas on Sept. 1. The Texan, who has been competing full-time in IMSA’s LMP2 class this year with United Autosports, features on the event’s …

FIA GTE Am world champion Ben Keating is set to return to the FIA WEC for his home race at Circuit of The Americas on Sept. 1. The Texan, who has been competing full-time in IMSA’s LMP2 class this year with United Autosports, features on the event’s provisional entry list in LMGT3. He will take up the third seat in Proton Competition’s No. 88 Ford Mustang, which was previously filled by Giorgio Roda until São Paulo, where team owner Christian Ried stood in on short notice.

Keating has already featured in a WEC race this year, as part of United Autosports’ effort at the Le Mans 24 Hours in the LMP2 class. However, this will be his first regular WEC race outside of Le Mans since the 2023 season finale in Bahrain last November. There he drove with Corvette Racing in what was the final race for GTE cars globally.

The only other change on the provisional 37-car entry list comes in Hypercar. Harry Tincknell will rejoin Proton’s Porsche lineup alongside Neel Jani and Julien Andlauer after missing the trip to Brazil. That weekend he took part in the IMSA race at CTMP.

Lone Star Le Mans will be Tincknell’s fourth WEC race of the season with Proton. He also missed Round 3 at Spa.

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Keating, Albuquerque, Hanley unite for Le Mans with United Autosports

United Autosports has firmed up one of its two LMP2 lineups for the 24 Hours of Le Mans, with Ben Keating, Filipe Albuquerque and Ben Hanley set to share its No. 23 ORECA 07 as a Pro/Am trio. “To bring together the experience, skill and …

United Autosports has firmed up one of its two LMP2 lineups for the 24 Hours of Le Mans, with Ben Keating, Filipe Albuquerque and Ben Hanley set to share its No. 23 ORECA 07 as a Pro/Am trio.

“To bring together the experience, skill and determination of not one but three proven Le Mans winners is phenomenally exciting as we prepare for our debut in the LMP2 Pro/Am class,” says Richard Dean, United Autosports CEO. “Le Mans is always exciting … never straightforward, but with this driver lineup, we are making our intentions very clear.”

This announcement ensures a return appearance by 2023 FIA World Endurance LMGTE Am champion and Le Mans class winner Keating. It will be the Texan’s 10th Le Mans start and his first with United Autosports.

“The Pro/Am field in LMP2 is looking very strong,” said Keating, “with a lot of winners taking the wheel. This is really fun for me. I can’t wait to tackle this challenge with United Autosports, Filipe and Ben. We all have a lot of experience and that makes a big difference in this race.”

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The sought-after Bronze-graded racer will team up with his 2024 IMSA co-driver Hanley in one of six LMP2 Pro/Am entries at Le Mans. The UK driver celebrated LMP2 Pro/Am class victory at Le Mans in 2021 and is currently racing with United Autosports in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and European Le Mans Series.

Albuquerque has raced at Le Mans every year with United Autosports since the team made its debut in 2017, achieving a class victory and three top-four finishes along the way.

“Another year, another Le Mans with United Autosports! It’s just amazing … I’m super happy to be racing with this great team that I’ve been racing with for the last eight years. Ben Hanley … we raced together when we were in go-karts, and now we meet again.

“And Ben Keating… he is a superstar of LMP2. For sure, he has more miles than me and he knows Le Mans really well. He has one more victory than me! I have immense respect for him and his drive to keep pushing harder and harder.”

The Pro driver lineup for the team’s No. 22 entry will be revealed at a later date. In addition to its pair of LMP2 class ORECAs United Autosports will also field a pair of McLaren GT3 Evos in the LMGT3 class as part of its full-season WEC program.

‘We joked about going home’ – A look inside Corvette’s remarkable Le Mans comeback

Corvette Racing’s ninth Le Mans class victory came in fine style Sunday, the U.S.-flagged factory team overcoming a two-lap deficit early in the race to take a commanding victory by the end of the 24 hours. In the final GTE race at the Circuit de a …

Corvette Racing’s ninth Le Mans class victory came in fine style Sunday, the U.S.-flagged factory team overcoming a two-lap deficit early in the race to take a commanding victory by the end of the 24 hours.

In the final GTE race at the Circuit de a Sarthe, it was somewhat fitting that Corvette Racing, a servant of the Le Mans 24 Hours’ GT categories since the turn of the century, would achieve a historic victory at the centenary event.

The story of Corvette’s win didn’t start on lap one. Instead, the opening chapter was penned when the mechanics put in a heroic effort to prepare the car for practice on Wednesday. A costly error from Nico Varonne in FP1 at Tertre Rouge left the car badly damaged and the team scrambling.

The job list was huge, with the crew fitting the car with new right side suspension, new right side brakes, a new floor, rear facia, rear wing, decklids, seat belts, right side front and rear fender, right side door (pause for deep breath)…right side rocker, and more.

In a matter of hours, the car was ready to get out for qualifying, allowing Nicky Catsburg to sneak the car into Hyperpole, setting up Ben Keating for a performance for the ages on Thursday night, which saw him take class pole by over a second. Had the team not moved so quickly to prep the car, it would have started at the very back. In the tricky mixed conditions in the opening hours, the outcome of this race could have been oh so different amid the chaos that ensued.

Come the start of the race, the team hit trouble early. In only the second hour a damper failure saw the No. 33 pushed into the garage for a quick fix. Once again the crew moved fast, but it wasn’t possible to get out fast enough to stay on the lead lap. Instead, Keating climbed in and found himself two laps down, tasked with surviving the heavy rain that caused so many incidents in the Am class.

“We joked about going home,” Catsburg said. “Thankfully the car was back to normal and felt good.”

Masterful pit work is no small part of success at Le Mans. Corvette Racing brought it in spades all week long. Alexander Trienitz/Motorsport Images

Varonne, too, felt a win was out of the equation at that point, telling RACER after taking the victory that he felt a win would be “impossible.”

“But somehow we came back like crazy with great strategy and timing,” he continued. “The decisions we made paid off. The car was mega.”

Initially, after Keating survived the race’s first deluge, the Corvette race engineers called him to the pitlane for wets. At that point, the crew thought it would gain back one of its laps as part of the new safety car procedure because the C8.R would be ahead of the class leader in a train behind one of the three safety cars.

For reasons unknown to the team, a group of cars – including the GTE Am leader – were allowed to exit pit lane before the next of the three safety cars came around. The mistake meant that the Corvette was trapped behind the class leader and couldn’t advance to catch back up after all the safety car queues moved. The car stayed two laps down as the sun set over the circuit.

“It was super tricky in the wet,” Keating said when asked about the opening hours when the track was wet in some places, dry in others. “I cost us 20s in an escape road at one point, but I then watched a competitor in the same place hit a wall. So it was a good decision to be cautious!”

The challenge beyond that, with the night hours underway, was clearly two-fold: stay focused and out of trouble while so many other GTE Am cars saw their races end in the barriers, and chip away at the deficit.

“Over half the class retired, which was a big part of our fightback,” Keating explained when asked about the rate of attrition that saw over half the Am field retire during the race. “Some of our biggest (WEC) competitors didn’t make it; second, third, fourth place in the championship were all wrecked. I don’t know if I’ve had a race like this with this many retirements.”

Varonne, like Keating, had to brave the wet weather during the race’s second major downpour. Catsburg felt the Argentinian’s performance — on the wrong tires while the team waited for a safety car that never came — was key in staying in the fight.

“One of the most significant moments in this race for us was Nico’s stint in the wet on slicks,” Catsburg said. “Half of the field completely destroyed their cars and it’s so difficult to stay calm and mistake-free.”

With brake discs glowing and fireworks overhead, the pace of the ‘Vette began to improve substantially as the track dried and Sunday arrived. Keating completed a triple stint before Varonne took over in the morning.

Varonne was simply masterful with the sun rising, setting the fastest GTE time of the entire event as part of a triple stint that saw him make up more than a half-lap on the field. It was the perfect response to his FP1 shunt and resulted in a welcome reception in the garage after his final stint before Catsburg took the wheel for the finish.

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“I felt like I was in the right moment, at the right time on track,” Varonne told RACER. “The car was better through the high-speed corners and in the last sector when the track warmed up. I had clean laps and managed to do the fast lap. I am really happy because after Wednesday my confidence was down. I was so angry with myself. So gaining that confidence back, setting the fastest lap, was so satisfying.”

All of a sudden, by the end of the seventeenth hour with the crowd beginning to build trackside for the end of the race, the Corvette team was back on the lead lap. The progress made before Catsburg’s final stint was enormous. In the final run to the flag, Catsburg simply had to manage the gap as he continued to pull away as other competitors in the top five, including Bronze-rated drivers in the field, burned the last of their drive time with the race coming to a close.

The Dutchman would cross the line far ahead of the chasing ORT by TF Sport Aston Martin. GR Racing and Iron Dames Porsche were more focused on securing podium places than catching the C8.R by that point.

The team’s achievement caused an eruption in the garage. A ninth-class win, at the centenary event, and finally a victory for the C8.R in France in its final attempt.

“I’ve never taken the finish here,” Catsburg said. “I didn’t know it was so super-crazy on the in-lap, so that was nice. That it’s the 100th anniversary makes it special. That it’s the last year of GTE makes it extra special. That it’s the last year of the C8.R makes it extra special. I’m so happy for the whole team because I feel like we should have already won it in the years before. So it’s sweet for this to happen this year.”

Looking ahead, the result at Le Mans has greatly increased the crew’s chances of wrapping up the class title in the WEC early. With three wins in four races this season, including double points secured at Le Mans, Catsburg, Varrone and Keating can crown themselves champions at Monza next month, before the WEC heads to Fuji and Bahrain for the final two races.

That’s next month, though. For now, the celebrations are fully underway in the Le Mans paddock.