Hartley puts Toyota on pole for WEC Bahrain 8 Hours

Brendon Hartley set a 1m46.714s in this evening’s Hypercar Hyperpole session in Bahrain to claim pole position for tomorrow’s FIA WEC season finale, leading a front-row lockout for Toyota Gazoo Racing. Hartley’s flyer in the No. 8 GR010 HYBRID came …

Brendon Hartley set a 1m46.714s in this evening’s Hypercar Hyperpole session in Bahrain to claim pole position for tomorrow’s FIA WEC season finale, leading a front-row lockout for Toyota Gazoo Racing.

Hartley’s flyer in the No. 8 GR010 HYBRID came with more than four minutes left on the clock. It was fast enough to put him three-tenths clear of Nyck de Vries in the sister No. 7 car which slotted in second moments later with a 1m47.037s.

“Big thanks to my teammates for trusting me to do qualifying,” Hartley said. “Yesterday we were not happy with the car, we’ve turned it around. It’s never perfect but I learned from Quali 1, and in Hyperpole the car came alive. It’s been a tough year for car 8 so we want to finish the year on a high.”

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The second row of the grid will be occupied by the No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari 499P and the No. 99 Proton Competition Porsche after strong efforts from Antonio Giovinazzi and Neel Jani respectively.

The No. 50 AF Corse Ferrari will start fifth, 0.8s off. Crucially though, both of the drivers’ title-contending crews from Toyota and Ferrari (in the No. 7 and No. 50) will start ahead of the points-leading No. 6 Porsche which will line up sixth on the grid ahead of the No. 5.

A few key cars failed to make it into the top-10 shootout, including the Cadillac Racing V-Series.R — which took pole last time out — and both Alpine A424s.

After having his penultimate lap deleted for track limits, Alex Lynn pushed on his final flyer at the end of the session but would only climb to 13th from the bottom of the pile in the Cadillac.

“That was my lap,” Lynn told RACER. “That was going to be the one before it was deleted, as it’s a one-lap shootout here really because of deg.”

Mick Schumacher, meanwhile, ended up 17th in the No. 36 Alpine. The German ran wide and off-track at the final corner in the closing seconds of the session after improving through Sectors 1 and 2.

The No. 83 AF Corse Ferrari which won Lone Star Le Mans at Circuit of The Americas will also start outside the top 10 (in 12th), as will the pair of Peugeot 9X8s that set the pace in two of the three practice sessions prior to qualifying. The No. 94 claimed 15th on the grid ahead of the No. 93 that will start last after having three of its laps deleted due to a technical infringement. Jean-Eric Vergne explained that the car suffered with power issues, which caused the engine to cut out and ultimately led to the infringement.

“We should have the pace to be able to fight for points tomorrow though,” he added.

Josh Caygill, Nicolas Pino and Marino Sato celebrate pole with the United Autosports McLaren 720S LMGT3 Evo. JEP/Motorsport Images

In LMGT3, United Autosports locked out the front row with its pair of McLaren GT3 Evos with head-turning efforts from Josh Caygill and James Cottingham.

Caygill put the No. 95 on top, delivering United its first LMGT3 pole and McLaren its second this season (after Inception took pole at Le Mans) with a 2m02.201s. But there was almost nothing to separate the two McLarens, as Cottingham placed the No. 59 second with a time just two thousandths off.

“We had a really good car for quali,” Caygill said. “We worked on race setup and tire management in practice and never showed our ultimate pace. I was happy with the lap, lost a bit at the last corner but overall it’s good.”

The top three in the class were completed by the No. 55 Vista AF Corse Ferrari, Francois Heriau steering his 296 to a 2m02.367s in the Hyperpole shootout.

Sarah Bovy placed the Iron Dames Lamborghini on the second row in fourth with her effort, ahead of the title-winning Manthey Pure Rxcing Porsche which will start tomorrow’s race fifth.

After topping two of the three practice sessions, AKKODIS ASP only managed to sneak one of its Lexus RC F LMGT3s into Hyperpole, though Arnold Robin was unable to improve on 10th. The No. 78 will start behind the Heart of Racing Aston Martin, Fuji-winning Vista AF Corse Ferrari and the pair of TF Sport Corvettes, which will line up sixth through ninth.

D’Station’s Aston Martin came closest to making it into the second part of the LMGT3 sessions, qualifying 11th with a time from Clement Mateu that was just a tenth off making the cut.

Both Team WRT BMWs also failed to make it through, along with the No. 91 Manthey EMA Porsche and both Proton Ford Mustangs.

Tomorrow’s eight-hour WEC season finale at the Bahrain International Circuit is set to get underway at 2pm local time.

RESULTS

Hartley and Herta in at WTRAndretti for IMSA endurance races

Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti (WTRAndretti) has chosen Brendon Hartley and Colton Herta as the endurance co-drivers for the full IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup (IMEC) during the 2024 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season. Hartley will join …

Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti (WTRAndretti) has chosen Brendon Hartley and Colton Herta as the endurance co-drivers for the full IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup (IMEC) during the 2024 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season.

Hartley will join Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque in the No. 10 WTRAndretti Acura ARX-06 while Herta will co-pilot the No. 40 sister car with Jordan Taylor and Louis Deletraz. WTRAndretti plans to announce additional drivers for the Rolex 24 At Daytona in the coming weeks.

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“It’s exciting that we’ve managed to get the services of Brendon Hartley again and Colton Herta as our third drivers who will be doing the IMEC,” said Wayne Taylor, team principal at WTRAndretti. “Brendon has driven for us before, and we’ve got to know him really well. Obviously, Colton is a part of the Andretti Global group which opened the door for us with him. He’s won Daytona in a GT car and drove a LMDh car last year and did a really good job. I’m really excited about having both Brendon and Colton on board.”

First joining the WTRAndretti family for the 2022 Motul Petit Le Mans, Hartley continued his tenure with the team as the Rolex 24 At Daytona co-driver in the No. 10 WTRAndretti Acura ARX-06 earlier this year (pictured). Aside from his time with the WTRAndretti team, Hartley is a four-time FIA World Endurance Championship Drivers ’Champion winner (2023, 2022, 2017, 2015), three-time overall winner at Le Mans and former Formula 1 driver.

“I really enjoyed my time with WTRAndretti at Petit last year and Daytona this year, so I jumped at the opportunity to compete in the endurance races in 2024 when Wayne called me. WTRAndretti knows how to win and going to a two-car team will strengthen the whole operation even further,” declared Hartley.

Although a driver in the NTT IndyCar Series with Andretti Global, Herta is no stranger to the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. The California native has two class victories at the Rolex 24 At Daytona, most recently with an LMP2 overall win in 2022 and a GTLM win in 2019. Complementing his accolades in sports car racing, Herta is a seven- time IndyCar race winner – including his first victory in 2019 at The Circuit of the Americas which earned him the title of the youngest winner in IndyCar history.

“It’s super exciting to join such a prestigious team like WTRAndretti for the endurance events. They’ve shown how successful they can be in the past and I’m looking forward to hopefully adding to that!” said Herta.

While Acura split its two-car ARX-06 effort between two teams for the inaugural season of GTP, both cars will run under the WTRAndretti banner for 2024. It’s a big expansion for the team after Wayne Taylor Racing joined with Andretti a year ago.

The 2024 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season kicks off with the annual three days of Roar Before the 24 testing, Jan. 19 – 21, 2024, followed by the endurance classic, the Rolex 24 At Daytona, Jan. 25-28, 2024. NBC and Peacock, along with IMSA.TV, will provide flag-to-flag coverage of the race on its family of networks.

Hartley wins Toyota shootout for WEC Bahrain 8H pole

Toyota Gazoo Racing locked out the front row for Saturday’s 8 Hours of Bahrain, the final race of the FIA World Endurance Championship season. Brendon Hartley and Kamui Kobayashi went head to head for pole, with Hartley setting the better lap of the …

Toyota Gazoo Racing locked out the front row for Saturday’s 8 Hours of Bahrain, the final race of the FIA World Endurance Championship season. Brendon Hartley and Kamui Kobayashi went head to head for pole, with Hartley setting the better lap of the two under the floodlights, putting the No. 8 on top by almost half a second with a 1m46.564s.

Crucially, with a point for pole, the No. 8 crew now sit 16 points ahead of the No. 7 trio and Hartley and his crewmates Sebastien Buemi and Ryo Hirakawa have edged ever closer to the drivers’ title.

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“It’s for the championship!” exclaimed the delighted Hartley. “I had a difficult qualifying in Fuji. And here it felt like I left something on the table but it was clean — nobody is going to do a perfect lap. The car felt awesome.

“We were one of the only cars to qualify on mediums because everyone is so worried about tire deg here. We think we can make them work in the race, if not it could be tricky for us. Sebastien (Buemi) will start tomorrow’s race — he has Turn 1 to think about.”

On the second row of the grid, a head-turning early 1m47.265s flyer from Alex Lynn was good enough to ensure the Cadillac Racing V-Series.R was the fastest LMDh prototype in the session. The Caddy will start third, ahead of the fastest of the Porsche 963s, the No. 6, which will line up fourth.

“I think it was a really positive day,” Lynn said. “Quickest in Free Practice 3, long-run pace looked really strong and consolidated with P3 in qualifying. Really happy for Cadillac Racing.

“The main thing I think is we’re quick on one lap and we’re quick on the long run. I’m proud of our team and motivated to have a good day tomorrow. I’m excited — I think we’re going to have a good one and challenge for the podium.”

It was a tough qualifying for the championship-contending Ferraris, the No. 50 qualifying ahead of the No. 51 in fifth and sixth respectively, both cars over a second off the pole time.

Tom Blomqvist made United Autosports ORECA sing under the lights. Motorsport Images

LMP2 qualifying saw IndyCar-bound Tom Blomqvist boss the session, setting a 1m52.290s to take pole by 0.2s in the No. 23 United Autosports ORECA. Blomqvist’s eventual best time came with three minutes to go, improving on his previous best of 1m52.863s, which was already good enough to put him on provisional pole.

“Fantastic job by the guys — we had some work to do after yesterday, and the No. 23 crew have really put it together. Credit to them,” said Blomqvist. “It’s a pleasure to drive a well-handling race car in qualifying conditions. Really enjoyable, I couldn’t have asked for much more.

“That’s two poles for me this season, and Olly [Jarvis] got the pole in Sebring at the first race of the year. Unfortunately, we’ve had some bad luck along the way in the races, and the championship hasn’t worked out the way we hoped … but tomorrow, we’ll go for the win!”

Joining the No. 23 on the front row will be the No. 36 Alpine ORECA of Charles Milesi, who pushed hard but couldn’t quite edge Blomqvist with his late 1m52.561s. The No. 31 Team WRT ORECA took third, pushing the Vector Sport example, which held the top spot early after Gabriel Aubry’s first push lap, to fourth.

It was a tricky session for Louis Deletraz in the championship-leading No. 41 WRT ORECA. The No. 41 will start the race 10th with a time 1.2s off pole.

A big lap from Sarah Bovy netted the last-ever GTE pole for the Iron Dames team. Motorsport Images

The No. 85 Iron Dames Porsche 911 RSR 19 will start the final GTE race tomorrow from pole position after a stellar 1m58.692s tour of the circuit from Sarah Bovy.

“Once again she did it — we are very proud of her,” said Michelle Gatting, Bovy’s teammate in the Porsche. “It’s important for what we are doing with this project. It’s emotional because of the last race of GTE. It’s not easy — we showed great pace and let’s hope we can finish it.”

Bovy’s time, set with just under five minutes to go, was challenged in the final minutes of the session, but nobody could snatch the top spot from the Belgian, who finishes the season with three pole positions to her name.

Liam Talbot, the late addition to D’Station Racing’s driver lineup, came closest with a 1m58.982s. The time came on his final flying lap, vaulting the No. 777 Vantage from fourth to a spot on the front row.

Talbot’s lap dropped the ORT by TF Sport Aston Martin to third on the grid after Ahmad Al Harthy’s efforts. Takeshi Kimura steered the No. 57 Ferrari to fourth.

Ben Keating, who briefly sat at the top early in the session, will start tomorrow’s race from fifth in the title-winning No. 33 Corvette Racing C8.R.

“More than where we qualified, I’m happy with the lap time.,” Keating said. “That was one second quicker than anything than did in my qualifying simulation. There is so much tire degradation here that it’s a balance between taking care of the tire — because we have to race on these same tires — and trying to hit the peak of the tire.

“I think the reason I was able to put that lap together was because it was my third one and on the peak of the tire. I kept trying to repeat it, and I couldn’t. It just wasn’t there in the tire. It’s really interesting how my two laps that were closest to that were seven-tenths of a second off. It’s worth that much time. I’m happy with the time but also with the result. Tyler (Neff, race engineer) said before qualifying that he thought a top-five result was possible, and he nailed it.”

Tomorrow’s 8 Hours of Bahrain will start at 2pm local time.

RESULTS

No. 8 crew saves the day for Toyota at Portimao 6H

Toyota Gazoo Racing’s No. 8 GR010 HYBRID scored its first win of the FIA World Endurance Championship season in dominant fashion after the team’s Sebring-winning No. 7 crew lost seven laps due to a driveshaft change being required on the car early …

Toyota Gazoo Racing’s No. 8 GR010 HYBRID scored its first win of the FIA World Endurance Championship season in dominant fashion after the team’s Sebring-winning No. 7 crew lost seven laps due to a driveshaft change being required on the car early in the race.

Sebastien Buemi, Ryo Hirakawa and Brendon Hartley finished a lap ahead of the field, although the race was more intriguing than the Sebring 1000 Miles. But ultimately the Japanese team, with its untroubled winning car, proved capable of keeping Ferrari and the other teams in the chasing pack at arm’s length.

“I felt for car 7 — they kept us honest,” Hartley admitted after the race. “They overtook us at the start before their issue. I’m still convinced the others are coming and will get their ducks in a row for Le Mans.

“It was a great race for us though. Today it was perfect — there were no mistakes from the drivers, pit stops, or on strategy. To take the championship lead is nice. We are still making steps. I am proud that the guys have put our experience to good use and optimized the package we have.”

Finishing second was the No. 50 Ferrari 499P of Antonio Fuoco, Miguel Molina and Nicklas Nielsen, scoring the team its best result to date, improving on the third-place finish in Round 1.

It wasn’t in any way a perfect race for AF Corse, but there were so many encouraging signs. The team’s race pace, and performance in the garage and on the pit wall were much improved in this encounter. As a result, Ferrari was in contention for the opening hours and able to put pressure on the winning car, spending almost five hours on the lead lap.

“Second place represents an excellent performance and a further step forward over the third step of the podium on the debut,” said Antonello Coletta, head of Attività Sportive GT. “We know there’s still a long way to go, and our opponents are very strong. We had a problem with the 499P No. 51 that stopped us from finishing with a double podium, which would have been an outstanding result. We go away happy but aware that we must continue to work, especially on reliability.”

Completing the podium was the No. 6 Porsche Penske 963, on what was an extremely memorable weekend for the young LMDh program. After the IMSA arm of the team claimed the 963 model’s first win globally on Saturday in the IMSA Long Beach sprint race, a first WEC podium today will add to the team’s confidence going forward.

With the third-place finish the No. 6 of Andre Lotterer, Laurens Vanthoor and Kevin Estre became the first LMDh car to finish on the podium in WEC history. It wasn’t a comfortable end to the race, though, as the team under-fueled the car at its last scheduled stop, forcing Lotterer in with 10 minutes to go, almost costing the team third.

Just off the podium, finishing a handful of seconds behind the Porsche, was the car from the only major factory team in Hypercar that didn’t suffer a mechanical drama or significant on-track incident: Cadillac Racing. Over one lap the V-Series.R couldn’t match the front-runners, but the car is significantly kinder to its tires than most of the other cars in the class, which gradually brought the team into play as the race wore on.

Richard Westbrook, Alex Lynn and Earl Bamber, who were out of sync for most of this one due to an additional tire change midway through a stint early in the race, will be thrilled with a second fourth-place finish, which was claimed when the No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari suffered a right-front brake disc failure in the final 30 minutes.

The issue for Alessandro Pier Guidi occurred at Turn 1 after a late race restart for an incident for the Vanwall, which also suffered a brake failure that sent Jacques Villeneuve spinning into the barriers and into retirement at the end of the fifth hour. Pier Guidi went straight on at Turn 1, and then went straight on at the hairpin later in the lap.

He finished, but had to limp home at a reduced pace with the left-front brake disc doing the heavy lifting. This came after Antonio Giovanazzi suffered issues with the car’s brake-by-wire system early in the race while running in the top three. The Italian was forced to complete an ironman stint, lifting and coasting to control the brake temperature while the team worked to solve the issue. It was a stint which he described as the hardest of his career.

Meanwhile, the No. 7 Toyota had to come in for a rear corner change, to replace a driveshaft and the sensor which failed. By regulation the sensor needs to work, so Toyota was forced to bring the car in despite the fact that the issue didn’t affect its performance. It proved a major setback for Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Jose Maria Lopez, who held the championship lead going into the race and left Portugal with a ninth-place finish.

At Porsche, both its cars suffered power steering issues in the race. The No. 6’s was reported as persistent but not catastrophic, while the No. 5 had to spend time in the garage for repairs due to an electronics-focused issue for Michael Christensen late in the race. It came home last of the classified Hypercar runners.

Peugeot’s No. 93 9X8 also had steering issues, the team was forced to replace the steering rack in the build-up to the race. The car started from pit lane and a lap down, forcing its drivers into a recovery drive for the duration, eventually finishing a respectable seventh, behind the team’s No. 94.

The latter had a far more encouraging race, in the mix with the Cadillac and Porsches for a top-five finish throughout. This performance was by no means a complete turnaround for the Peugeot program, but it has clearly taken steps in the right direction since its woeful outing at Sebring.

There were no issues with the hybrid system or the new hydraulic gearbox. Peugeot will therefore have more confidence that it can take further strides at Spa next time out. With a surprise fifth-place finish due to the limping Ferrari falling back, the No. 94 also made it five manufacturers in the top five.

In LMP2, it was a thriller that went down to the wire, again. Winning the race after late drama was the No. 23 United Autosports ORECA of Oliver Jarvis, Giedo van der Garde and Josh Pierson. It was a welcome change in fortune after the team’s rotten luck in the season opener, when an issue with the in-car camera hit the kill switch on the car and they retired from the lead.

The car controlled most of the race, before a fumbled penultimate pit stop as a result of a radio failure dropped Oliver Jarvis to second behind the No. 63 Prema ORECA of Danill Kvyat.

“I had no radio for the whole stint. The battery died and I was on my own,” explained van der Garde, who filled IMSA full-season driver Tom Blomqvist’s seat this weekend, told RACER. “Then suddenly they decided to put Olly in the car as they thought it was an issue with my helmet. We were only supposed to swap the left-side tires at that stop before I took the car to the end. But then suddenly Olly was in the car and I had to unbuckle and sort the drinks system. It was a strange situation, but we did a good job.”

But the final round of stops after the restart wasn’t kind to Prema, as the car dropped to third behind the two United ORECAs, the No. 23 reclaiming the lead, with the No. 22 of Phil Hanson at the end of the race close behind, following Jarvis home

To add insult to injury for Prema, Kvyat lost third in the closing laps to a hard-charging Louis Deletraz in the No. 41 WRT ORECA and came home fourth, the former F1 driver struggling for grip.

The No. 48 Hertz Team JOTA ORECA, in its final outing before the team begins campaigning a Porsche 963 in Hypercar, ended up completing the top five after struggling to feature in the race for the win, and getting involved in multiple lengthy tussles with the cars around it.

Meanwhile, it was a tough day for Vector Sport. After the high of missing out on pole by the smallest margin in WEC history yesterday, today the team suffered a fly-by-wire throttle issue that forced the team in for a lengthy stint in the garage for repairs.

GTE Am came down to a duel in the final hour. Corvette Racing’s pole-sitting No. 33 C8.R and the No. 83 Richard Mille Racing Ferrari ended up in a battle for the lead in the final minutes, with Nicky Catsburg putting on a defensive masterclass to keep Alessio Rovera at bay.

“It takes two drivers to put on a show like that,” Catsburg said after the race, “but I have to say hats off to Alessio for driving fair. He was so much faster at the end, but catching is one thing, passing is another.”

Catsburg’s teammate Nico Varrone described the atmosphere in the Corvette garage during the final hour as “stressful.”

“We are so lucky that our team helped us at every stop,” Varrone told RACER. “We were gaining six or seven seconds each time, they kept us in it. Those guys hit the gym multiple times a week and practice every day — hard work pays off.”

In the end, Rovera was unable to make the move and Corvette held on for the win, taking a commanding championship lead in the process with its second straight win to start the season. It was nevertheless a great bounce-back result for Richard Mille Racing, after crashing out of the race in Sebring.

Completing the podium was the No. 85 Iron Dames Porsche, which was in the mix throughout and came home just 25 seconds off the lead.

Just off the podium was a pair of AF Corse Ferraris that finished fourth and fifth, the No. 54 leading the No. 21. The No. 21 crew of Diego Alessi, Simon Mann and Ulysse De Pauw will leave Portugal scratching their heads and wanting more. The car led much of the early portion of the race, Alessi proving to be the class of the field in the opening stints up against the other Bronze drivers.

Next on the schedule for the FIA WEC teams is the 6 Hours of Spa Francorchamps on April 29.

RESULTS

Hartley leads Toyota sweep of Portimao 6H qualifying

Toyota Gazoo Racing’s GR010 HYBRIDs blitzed FIA World Endurance Championship qualifying at Portimao this afternoon, locking out the front row with both its cars over a second quicker than the rest of the Hypercar runners. The best lap came from …

Toyota Gazoo Racing’s GR010 HYBRIDs blitzed FIA World Endurance Championship qualifying at Portimao this afternoon, locking out the front row with both its cars over a second quicker than the rest of the Hypercar runners.

The best lap came from Brendon Hartley, who set a 1m30.171s, bettering the previous FIA WEC pole lap record by two-tenths in the No. 8. His time was almost three-tenths quicker than the sister car of Kamui Kobayashi.

“It felt really good. We’ve put some effort into qualifying setup this time,” Hartley said. “Ferrari annoyed us by taking pole at Sebring. We expect Ferrari to be closer in the race, as they have focused on long runs. I knew the lap was good –I knew it would be hard against Kamui.

“We felt we would be playing catch-up as we hadn’t tested here before the season. We expect to be fighting the red cars tomorrow.”

The fastest time from the other teams came from Nicklas Nielsen in the No. 50 Ferrari AF Corse 499P, which could only manage a 1m31.596s, 1.4 seconds off the pole time. James Calado completed the second row, though the Briton complained of the braking performance at the rear throughout the session, describing the brakes as “locking up everywhere” on the team radio.

Best of the rest was the No. 6 Penske Porsche, which was the first of a gaggle of Hypercars in the 1m32s. The No. 94 Peugeot ended up sixth, ahead of the No. 5 Porsche and No. 2 Cadillac. The No. 93 Peugeot and Glickenhaus completed the top 10.

Richard Westbrook, who qualified the Cadillac in the session, says the team is still finding its feet at the Portimao circuit.

“We’re not quite pleased with the starting position but the lap time is an improvement,” he said. “Every time out we’re learning and, of course, it is the first time at this track for the car and us in the car. We have a reliable car and like we showed at Sebring we’ll have good race pace. It’s a work in progress.”

Prema Racing’s No. 63 ORECA took pole in LMP2 with a last-gasp effort from Mirko Bortolotti, after his previous provisional pole time was deleted for a Turn 1 track limits violation. The Italian Lamborghini factory driver set a 1m34.303s to go to the top by a thousandth of a second with just a minute remaining, vaulting from 12th to pole.

This pushed Gabriel Aubry’s Vector Sport ORECA to second, after he spent most of the session atop the times, only briefly edged by Bortolotti before his initial time was deleted midway through the running.

“Mirko did an amazing job. He is very impressive. We really need to be proud of what we achieved today,” said Bortolotti’s teammate Doriane Pin after what was Prema’s first WEC pole.

There is an investigation ongoing, though, as the No. 63 had to be worked on in the fast lane of the pit lane when the session went green, which prevented cars from heading out on track. We await a decision from the stewards.

“I am in the pit lane, the engine goes off, I couldn’t restart it — I tried power cycles,” Bortolotti explained. “At that stage, my mechanics came to the rescue and they fired it up quickly so I could go out without losing much time. There was then another issue which was really weird, but luckily the guys fixed it quickly and we could actually qualify on our second set of tires without using the first set. It was undrivable so I had to stop straight away.”

Third in the times was Phil Hanson, who set a 1:34.451 in the No. 22 United ORECA. There were five teams in the top five, as Yifei Ye put the No. 48 JOTA ORECA fourth, while Albert Costa put Inter Europol fifth.

Ben Keating put the Corvette C8.R LMGTE on pole. Motorsport Images

In the GTE Am ranks, Corvette Racing will start from pole position after a stunning lap from Ben Keating late in the GTE session, which like at Sebring, was thrilling. The Texan, who topped the times early with a 1m44.557s, improved twice amid another shootout with Sarah Bovy in the Iron Dames Porsche.

The pair traded fast times, but eventually, Keating set a 1m41.362s to snatch pole, a time that Bovy was unable to better on her final flying lap, which was a 1m41.579s.

This performance from the Corvette (which is carrying the biggest success ballast penalty) and the Iron Dames Porsche came after Ferrari teams topped all three practice sessions in the build-up to qualifying. But when it counted, the fastest Ferrari could only take third on the grid. Diego Alessi in the No. 21 led an all-AF Corse second row, as Thomas Flour in the No. 54 ended up fourth. The fastest Aston Martin, the ORT by TF Vantage, ended up fifth after Ahmad Al Harthy’s 1m41.904s.

“I expected the Ferraris to be up front,” Keating admitted after scoring Corvette’s first WEC pole of the season. “In all the practice sessions they were the quickest car, and we weren’t quite sure what we were going to be able to do.

“I have to give so much credit to the Corvette team. The C8.R has never been to Portimão, and neither has the team. This is not a place where you show up and do well from the beginning. We’ve been making unbelievable, big improvements in the car every time we go out. I couldn’t believe how well the car was set up for qualifying.”

UP NEXT: Sunday’s six-hour race is set to start at 12:00pm local time.

RESULTS

Hartley keeps Toyota on top in final Portimao practice

Toyota Gazoo Racing’s No. 8 GR010 HYBRID set the pace in the third and final practice session of the weekend in Portimao ahead of qualifying, with a 1m31.795s from Brendon Hartley. The Kiwi’s time came after a flurry of fast times from the hypercar …

Toyota Gazoo Racing’s No. 8 GR010 HYBRID set the pace in the third and final practice session of the weekend in Portimao ahead of qualifying, with a 1m31.795s from Brendon Hartley.

The Kiwi’s time came after a flurry of fast times from the hypercar runners in the opening 10 minutes, where Ferrari’s Alessandro Pier Guidi briefly topped the screens.

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The pack was closer during this session as a whole, with the No. 51 Ferrari AF Corse 499P splitting the two Toyotas in the running order with Pier Guidi’s quickest lap. The top seven were also within 1.2 seconds.

Perhaps the most encouraging sign from this final 60-minute practice run was the improvement in outright speed from Peugeot’s 9X8s. To this point, both of the French manufacturer’s cars had struggled to make an impression with lap times, but in FP3 the No. 94 was able to set the fourth fastest time, a 1m32.783s from Nico Müller which was within a second of the No. 8’s benchmark. It was also over a second faster than any lap set by the 9X8 on Friday.

That meant the No. 94 was quicker than the No. 50 Ferrari, the Cadillac and both Penske Porsches, plus the two non-hybrid runners. Will Peugeot’s knowledge of the circuit with the 9X8 from testing, plus its upgraded gearbox put it in the mix when we see the cars gunning for pole later today?

The top five in the standings was completed by the Cadillac Racing V-Series.R, ahead of the Vanwall which set an impressive 1m32.922s to go sixth.

The pair of Penske Porsches continued to struggle for outright speed, its 963s ending up eighth and ninth, though the team, like Ferrari, has been focusing on improving the car’s tire wear on longer runs during the on-track sessions thus far. It will be interesting to see what times the 963 is capable of in qualifying, with new tires and low fuel.

LMP2, meanwhile, was topped yet again by Vector Sport, which set the pace in Free Practice 2 yesterday. The British team appears far more at home here than it did in Sebring, Gabriel Aubry extracting good times from its ORECA.

His best on this occasion was a 1m34.265s, to put him marginally quicker than the first of the two WRT ORECAs — the No. 41 — which slotted in second and third with their hot laps.

The No. 48 HERTZ Team JOTA 07 was fourth, with the No. 22 United example fifth.

In GTE AM, the No. 54 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE EVO ensured a Ferrari topped each session ahead of Qualifying this weekend. The quickest tour of the track was set by Davide Rigon, a 1:40.426.

The Richard Mille AF Corse Ferrari ended up second, with the first of the other manufacturer customer teams, Iron Dames, third. The FP1 and FP2-topping Kessel Ferrari would end up fifth, behind the Iron Lynx Porsche.

The session featured a handful of incidents, including a red flag with 24 minutes remaining after a collision at the hairpin. Gustavo Menezes in the No. 94 Peugeot 9X8 collided with the No. 25 Alpine ORECA while trying to get past up the inside.

The hit damaged the left rear of the ORECA, puncturing Memo Rojas’ tire, which did damage to the bodywork while he tried to limp back to the pits. Unfortunately, Rojas was unable to make it all the way back, stopping on track, and bringing the session to a halt while trackside crews lifted the car onto a flatbed.

This came moments after a spin for the other Alpine, being driven by Julien Canal at the time, at the hairpin, which caused minor contact between the Iron Dames Porsche and No. 28 JOTA ORECA which were trying to avoid the Alpine that was stranded facing the wrong way at the corner exit.

Next up is qualifying, which is due to get underway at 3:30pm local time.

RESULTS