Kobayashi leads first Bahrain WEC practice for Toyota

The No. 7 Toyota Gazoo Racing GR010 HYBRID topped the first practice session of the 8 Hours of Bahrain weekend, with a 1m49.856s from Kamui Kobayashi. The time was set after a lengthy red-flag stoppage and before heavy rain towards the end of the …

The No. 7 Toyota Gazoo Racing GR010 HYBRID topped the first practice session of the 8 Hours of Bahrain weekend, with a 1m49.856s from Kamui Kobayashi. The time was set after a lengthy red-flag stoppage and before heavy rain towards the end of the running.

The red-flag period was caused by strong winds trackside, light rain and banners being blown onto the track at Turn 1. It lasted 45 minutes and came after the front-running Hypercars had completed a handful of laps. This led to race control extending the session by 45 minutes, to 2:30pm local time.

When the track went green again, the entire field headed straight back out to make the most of the extended session, but that was interrupted again by heavy rain with around 30 minutes remaining. Initially, when the rain arrived, only a handful of cars braved the conditions, with both Toyotas, the No. 51 Ferrari and No. 5 Penske Porsche among the first cars to head back out on wet tires.

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The No. 21 AF Corse Ferrari, meanwhile, stopped out on track with WEC newcomer Franck Dezoteux at the wheel shortly after the rain started coming down.

Up front, with no improvements in the closing minutes due to the weather, the No. 8 Toyota ended up second, with a 1m9.960s set by Sebastien Buemi. The No. 99 Proton Competition Porsche 963 came closest to the Toyotas after Gianmaria Bruni completed a 1m50.290s tour of the circuit shortly after the red flag. The No. 6 and No. 5 Penske 963s completed the top five.

Ferrari AF Corse’s 499Ps ended up eighth and ninth, slower than the No. 38 JOTA and No. 2 Cadillac that finished up sixth and seventh.

In LMP2 it was United Autosports’ No. 22 ORECA that ran fastest after Filipe Albuquerque reeled off a 1m54.100s, half a second quicker than the rest of the field. The No. 10 Vector ORECA ended up second, with the No. 31 WRT ORECA third.

D’Station Racing’s No. 777 Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE set the pace in GTE Am, after Tomonobu Fujii managed a 1m59.516s. The No. 57 Kessel Ferrari slotted in second, while the GR Racing Porsche took third making it three manufacturers in the top three.

Free Practice 2 is set to get underway at 5:30pm local time.

RESULTS

Fuoco leads opening Fuji WEC practice for Ferrari

Ferrari AF Corse’s No. 50 499P topped the first practice session of the FIA WEC’s weekend at Fuji Speedway, which was held on a drying circuit after a bout of heavy rain showers throughout the morning. Antonio Fuoco set the fastest time, a 1m35.649s …

Ferrari AF Corse’s No. 50 499P topped the first practice session of the FIA WEC’s weekend at Fuji Speedway, which was held on a drying circuit after a bout of heavy rain showers throughout the morning.

Antonio Fuoco set the fastest time, a 1m35.649s at the end of the session, as multiple drivers began to find pace as the conditions improved. It also made it a 1-2 for Ferrari in the times, making for an encouraging start to the meeting for the Italian team on its first trip to Japan with the 499P.

The No. 51 ended up second in the times, with a 1m38.258s from Antonio Giovanazzi.

Best of the rest was the No. 94 Peugeot TotalEnergies 9X8, after a 1m38.693s at the end of the 90-minute run from American Gustavo Menezes. The two Penske Porsche 963s completed the top five after late flyers, with the No. 6 ahead of the No. 5.

The pair of GR010 HYBRIDs from home favourite Toyota Gazoo Racing ended up sixth and seventh, both 3.6 seconds off the best time from Fuoco.

In LMP2, JOTA’s No. 28 ORECA was quickest and notably ran faster than two of the cars in Hypercar — its own Porsche 963 and the Vanwall.

Dane Oliver Rasmussen set the time, a 1m40.781s, which was almost a second up on the rest of the ORECAs in the category. The No. 23 United Autosports and No. 9 examples ended up completing the top three.

GTE saw Dempsey Proton Racing’s No. 77 Porsche 911 RSR 19 end FP1 with the best time, a 1m43.538s courtesy of Mikkel Pedersen, which was quicker than the bottom two LMP2s.

The No. 54 AF Corse Ferrari slotted in second in the category, with the No. 56 Project 1 AO Porsche third. Local team D’Station Racing emerged as the fastest Aston Martin team, with a 1m47.493s to go fifth, a fraction off the No. 83 Richard Mille AF Corse Ferrari that was top early in the session before falling to fourth.

Remarkably, considering the tricky conditions, there were no notable incidents during the session. The weather thus far has been a talking point in the paddock, with typhoon alerts issued locally yesterday. The forecast for the rest of the meeting remains somewhat mixed.

RESULTS

Goodyear puts WEC LMGT3 tire options to the test

With further growth expected in Hypercar thanks to new entries from Alpine, BMW, Isotta Fraschini and Lamborghini, the LMP2 class being dropped and the introduction of LMGT3, the FIA World Endurance Championship paddock in 2024 will look and feel …

With further growth expected in Hypercar thanks to new entries from Alpine, BMW, Isotta Fraschini and Lamborghini, the LMP2 class being dropped and the introduction of LMGT3, the FIA World Endurance Championship paddock in 2024 will look and feel very different.

But beyond the new class structure and a slew of new teams, there is another significant change in the form of a new tire supply deal that will see Goodyear shift from working in LMP2, to the new LMGT3 class.

Securing this new deal was hugely important for Goodyear and its future at the top end of sports car racing. With Michelin supplying Hypercar for the foreseeable future and LMP2 gone, in order to maintain a presence at the highest level of endurance racing, being granted LMGT3 was imperative, so Goodyear put together a commercial and technological package in the tender process that the ACO couldn’t refuse.

For a major tire brand like Goodyear, shifting its focus from LMP2 to LMGT3 does have significant benefits. In terms of perception, having visibility with a category that features race cars derived from road-going GT cars is valuable. It also works from an R&D point of view.

“Endurance racing is so relevant to what we are doing for road tires,” Goodyear’s endurance program manager Mike McGregor told RACER. “Look at GT3 cars and look at what people are taking on track days, it’s very current and relevant to GT3 race cars.

“This program is not only exciting because we enjoy going racing, but it also gives us knowledge on how to develop a product. What we’ve done within LMP2 and GT in the past is directly relevant to our road tires. For instance, our GT3 RS Porsche compound was specifically developed at the racetrack. We want to do this the right way and put everything into it.”

Developing a new tire for the category on short notice was never going to be an easy task, but Goodyear has a team behind the scenes with decades of experience to draw from to ensure that it produces rubber which allows for good racing and meets the criteria outlined in the future “tire road map” that the ACO and FIA have set out.

Goodyear has less than a year to design, test and sign off tires for the 2024 season, which gets underway next March in Qatar. With the final homologation set for November time, and the announcement made back in April, Goodyear has had to move quickly in order to create the best possible product, which once homologated, is set to be frozen for three seasons.

A huge selection of tires is available at the start of the test, which data and feedback will gradually winnow down as well as drive subsequent development.

At the second of Goodyear’s planned series of major LMGT3 tire tests at the Motorland Aragon circuit in Spain, a double garage is filled to the brim with unused rubber. The stacks of tires that stretched as far as the eye could see immediately brought it home just how much resource goes into developing a new race tire.

It is a lengthy and taxing process. Creating a tire that works well for all of the 10-plus GT3 manufacturers that could enter cars in the FIA WEC and ELMS requires a lot of trial and error. The overarching aim in terms of capabilities is to produce a tire that can run from cold (without tire warmers), is user-friendly for amateur drivers and can double stint on grand prix circuits and triple at Le Mans.

To get ahead of the curve, ahead of being officially granted the contract to supply LMGT3, Goodyear began working on 2024 tires at the start of this year and had already tested on track before the announcement was made in April. The first stop was Vallelunga, before the test at Aragon in May. Further tests will follow, including one in August at Paul Ricard and a provisional opportunity in October, before a final test open to everyone with the frozen homologated tires in November at a yet-to-be-determined location.

“We start with a few concepts that we want to evaluate,” Joao Coelho, Goodyear’s manager of motorsport testing and track support, said when asked about the timeline. “At the first test, you filter some out. Then you take the ones you see with potential and expand on them at the next test, bringing sets based on that, with additional fine-tuning. Then at the final test, we will decide what we want to go racing with.”

That overarching process may sound simple, but the reality is that there is no margin for error. No time or resources can be wasted if it is to deliver the highest-quality tires for competition next season.

At Motorland Aragon Goodyear was joined by representatives from Porsche, Lamborghini, Ferrari and a fourth GT3 manufacturer that wished to remain anonymous. Each manufacturer brought a single car (set up using SRO’s BoP values) and a nominated pro driver.

Goodyear brought 40 engineers to direct the process, led by McGregor and Coelho. From that group, each OEM was assisted by two dedicated track support engineers, one vehicle dynamics engineer, and one R&D engineer, all working independently for their manufacturer. Consistency is key throughout the process, so Goodyear tried where possible to ensure the same drivers and engineers were paired up throughout testing.

Over the four days of track action, the job list for all in attendance is huge at a development test. It all starts with a baseline, which in this case is Goodyear’s current European Le Mans Series GTE wet and dry tires. Why the GTE tires and not its Nürburgring-raced GT3 products? Goodyear feels the GTE tires are suitable because they have been proven to work well with a variety of platforms and weight distributions.

In Spain, it was immediately clear why having a strong baseline is so important. With 36 tire specs to test at Aragon, a good reference point was needed in order for Goodyear to understand the strengths and weaknesses of each new compound and construction it was working with.

Another essential aspect to get right when tire testing is the methodology. At a development test, each invited manufacturer is given multiple batches of five to six tires to sample throughout the day. Goodyear’s engineers know which is which, but the test drivers go in blind.

“We won’t tell the drivers in advance what they are testing. We won’t say if it’s a compound or construction group,” explained Coelho. “It’s not to test them or trick them, we just want their honest, unbiased feedback of how they feel driving the car.”

The first part of the day sees each manufacturer receive a batch of five to six specs. After a run on the baseline tire, drivers then take each new spec out for short stints, an out-lap, five flying laps and an in-lap.

When they get out of the car, the drivers are given a detailed feedback form where they are asked to rate each aspect of the tire and compare it to the baseline. Additional detailed verbal feedback is also taken down.

“They all expect a baseline to start, but we sometimes throw another baseline run at some point during the day,” Coelho added. “Again, not to trick them, but to get them to evaluate track evolution during the day.

“Temperatures, wind, sunlight — it all changes and has an impact. By doing that we can re-center where the baseline is.”

After all the work of prepping and testing the tires is done, the development process is just getting started.

The sheer amount of information Goodyear is left to trawl through when testing finishes is mind-bending. It takes weeks to get through it all. Driver feedback is only one element — the data gathered from each car is just as important and even more complex to decipher. Data is shared freely between Goodyear and the manufacturers, to ensure they can gather as much knowledge about each concept as possible.

“We have lap time information, car data information and we will spend weeks after the test putting all the information together,” said Coelho. “From there we can work out which ones we want to carry forward to the next test and which concepts we want to evaluate again.”

For a driver, tire testing is not an easy task. It requires egos to be left at the door, as superior lap times do not matter.

Instead, the most effective test drivers have the ability to produce consistent lap times and translate everything they’re feeling into cognizant feedback. For some, this comes naturally; for others it can be extremely tricky to compare minor differences between tire specs and provide useful first-hand information.

“You have to be honest,” one test driver at Aragon told RACER. “You’re always having to think, does it understeer more? Is it better at high speed? What is it like on entry?

“Five or six laps of running usually gives you a good idea of the tire. When you get used to it, it’s a really good experience and valuable for a driver too. Sometimes you’re testing nearly identical tires, where the lap time difference is only a tenth or two. Sometimes you get a few curve balls, where you get tires that are built for longevity, and the difference can be seconds per lap.

“You just push 100 percent every lap; if you can do that then you will find the differences. You’ll realize in your mind, ‘Oh I was flat through that corner before,’ or, ‘That snapped on exit, that’s new.’

“For pro drivers, that feeling we get is invaluable to tire engineers, because you can look at two lap times that are identical, but only we know how we achieved that. One of the two laps might have been a lot harder to nail. With data alone, you cannot understand the feeling the tires give a driver.”

In tire testing, consistency rather than sheer speed is the driver’s most valuable asset.

Goodyear also has to take into consideration that every driver performs differently and has varying preferences. This is why having a variety of drivers on hand at each test, and not just using one or two, is the most ideal solution.

“It’s important to not go too far down one direction with the tires, as every driver feels differently and knows what they want,” added Coelho.

Then comes the second part of each day, where each manufacturer’s staff, their driver and their dedicated Goodyear engineers decide which tires are good enough to be tested on long runs.

The longer runs give an even better indication of which tire specs are most suitable. It’s all about whittling down the number of tires that should be developed further ahead of the final homologation. But the DNA for tires that don’t make the cut for the long runs are not necessarily dismissed entirely.

“After the test, we will look over the data and it may be that we create new specs using one tire’s compound, the mold of another, and the construction of another, to get the best of multiple specs,” Coleho explained. “We may take two tire specs that work well and blend them together if both of them work well on an individual car. The evolutions could be in construction, like the inside of the tire walls.”

This is why the hard work really takes place between tests when Goodyear works on a new set of specs using learnings from previous runs. The improved specs are conceived, then manufactured rapidly in Germany and undergo a series of safety checks and simulator runs before being handed over to drivers on the next test.

For the 2024 LMGT3 tires, there are still significant milestones to come. As it stands, no front-engined GT3 cars have yet tested with Goodyear. However, this is set to change at Paul Ricard over the summer, with Ford expected to send a Mustang to test ahead of its planned WEC program with Proton. Corvette also plans to run its new-for-2024 Z06 GT3.R on Goodyear tires before the final homologation.

No Bronze or Silver-rated drivers have had a chance to sample Goodyears either. But this may change at Ricard, as Goodyear knows there is real value to any feedback from less experienced hands.

Furthermore, a decision on the number of homologated compounds that will be used during the season hasn’t yet been made. There could be just one dry and wet tire for the season or multiple specs for use at different circuits.

Kobayashi takes Monza WEC pole for Toyota

Toyota Gazoo Racing claimed its third pole position of the FIA WEC season at Monza this afternoon, ahead of tomorrow’s six-hour race on Ferrari’s home soil. Kamui Kobayashi set the fastest time for the No. 7 GR010 HYBRID team, which is looking to …

Toyota Gazoo Racing claimed its third pole position of the FIA WEC season at Monza this afternoon, ahead of tomorrow’s six-hour race on Ferrari’s home soil.

Kamui Kobayashi set the fastest time for the No. 7 GR010 HYBRID team, which is looking to bounce back this weekend after a hugely disappointing DNF at Le Mans. His best time was a 1m35.358s, set with six minutes remaining in the 15-minute Hypercar session, to put the No. 7 crew on pole for a second time this season.

“The lap times were very close — I am pretty happy,” said Kobayashi. “It’s been very difficult to know now who will be strong so far this weekend, so it’s good to start on the pole.

“It was challenging for everyone, but I think we have a great car for this weekend. It will be hotter tomorrow, so it will be a big challenge for tire degradation. We need to find a solution.”

Ferrari AF Corse came achingly close to securing the dream spot on the grid for its home race. The No. 50 499P of Antonio Fuoco instead ended up on the front row but second with a 1m35.375s. The Italian’s time was just 0.017s off Kobayashi’s flyer.

Toyota’s sister car was fast, too; Brendon Hartley slotted in third with a 1m35.460s in the No. 8.

Peugeot’s No. 93 9X8 will start alongside the No. 8 GR010 on the second row of the grid. The French team has emerged as a surprise contender here, building on its impressive showing in the first half of the Le Mans 24 Hours last month. Jean-Eric Vergne set the French manufacturer’s best lap, a 1:35.662 to come just three-tenths off pole.

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“We are improving our lap times,” said Jean-Marc Finot, senior VP of Stellantis Motorsport. “Yesterday, we worked on long runs to evaluate the consistency of the tires. This morning we did high-speed runs for qualifying. We can see the work that has been done since the beginning of the season.

“We were 2.4 seconds off pole at Spa, and here we are just three-tenths, so it’s a huge step. With nine cars within a second, it will be a big dog fight tomorrow.”

The first of the LMDh teams was Cadillac Racing, its No. 2 V-Series.R set to start fifth after a 1m35.720s from Alex Lynn.

“I think overall it was a decent qualifying for the No. 2 Cadillac, P5 and only three-tenths away from pole position,” said Lynn. “Again, another strong showing by the Cadillac V-Series.R, so from our side we’re happy. We know our strength lies in our race pace, so we’re excited to go racing tomorrow.”

Further down the order, Proton Competition’ new Porsche 963 will start 12th on the grid after Harry Tincknell’s efforts. The team will be satisfied to have come within 1.4s of the No. 7 Toyota in its first qualifying session with the car.

Another career highlight for Robert Kubica: A WEC pole in LMP2. Motorsport Images

Former F1 driver Robert Kubica proved untouchable in LMP2 qualifying aboard the LMP2 championship-leading No. 41 WRT ORECA. The Pole scored his first WEC pole with a 1m39.354s, which was an improvement in the closing seconds on his previous flyer that was also good enough for pole.

“It was a question of not making mistakes,” Kubica said. “There is always pressure, and the track was much hotter. It’s our first pole position of the season. It’s a good one and Monza has always been a good place for me.”

JOTA’s No. 28 ORECA ended up second after a strong performance from Pietro Fittipaldi, who ran fastest in the class during the final free practice this morning.

United Autosports’ No. 22 ORECA completed the top three, Phil Hanson posting a 1m39.790s. Vector Sport’s example ended up fourth ahead of the Le Mans class-winning Inter Europol ORECA that completed the top five.

On-form Sarah Bovy put the Iron Dames up front in GTE Am. Motorsport Images

The GTE Am session saw a superb 1m47.632s from Sarah Bovy put the No. 85 Iron Dames Porsche on class pole. Bovy made multiple improvements in the red flag-interrupted Am session, and it was her 1m47.632s that secured the top spot and an additional point by over 0.4s. She was the only driver to set a lap time under 1m48s.

“We have been feeling good. Sarah was confident ahead of qualifying,” said Bovy’s teammate Michelle Gatting. “She showed she could — the Porsche seems fast. But we’ve seen this before. Tomorrow we have to finish the job.”

“The most important thing for me was to find a good spot on the track, so I focused on overtaking cars on the out lap,” added Bovy. “My tires peaked at the right moment — it was nice to push out there.”

Ahmad Al Harthy put the ORT by TF Aston Martin on the front row of the grid, a late improvement not enough to take pole, but was enough to ensure his Vantage wouldn’t drop onto row two. His final lap, amid a flurry of fast times at the very end, was a 1m48.058s.

The No. 77 Dempsey Proton Porsche driven by Christien Ried took third. Luis Perez Companc ended up fourth, with a 1m48.427s in the No. 83 Richard Mille AF Corse Ferrari to make it three makes in the top four. Mike Wainwright, meanwhile, set an impressive 1m48.464s to claim fifth for GR Racing, having risen as high as second in the final minutes.

It was a challenging session for the championship-leading Corvette Racing C8.R, which is running with 40kg of “success ballast” this weekend. Ben Keating initially struggled with the car’s traction control systems in his first run, had a lap deleted and ended up sixth.

Without securing the point for pole, Corvette now finds itself requiring a win or second-place finish to secure the title this weekend.

“I had hoped we would be higher than P6,” admitted Keating. “It was an unfortunate red flag in the middle of qualifying. I was on my best lap at the peak of the tire and had the best sector one and a pretty good sector two before I had to shut it down at the end. I think that was going to be a really good lap.

“We’re carrying more weight than we were at the beginning of the season. That’s the penalty of the amazing success that we’ve had. If you look at how much it’s worth around this track, it’s probably not far from the pole.

“From a points perspective, I’d rather Sarah Bovy got the pole instead of Ahmad Al-Harthy. That gives us a little bit more margin in the championship, but the fact that both will start up front means they will have a little bit of an advantage at the beginning of the race. We’ll see.”

The aforementioned red flag in the GTE Am session came halfway through. It was called to allow marshals to clear up gravel that was spread across the circuit at the Ascari chicane after Project 1 AO’s Efrin Castro and GR Racing’s Wainwright had separate offs at the same place.

UP NEXT: Sunday’s 6 Hours of Monza will start at 12:30pm local time.

RESULTS

Toyota tops second Monza WEC practice; Kubica leads LMP2

Kamui Kobayashi ran fastest in the second practice session at Monza this afternoon aboard the No. 7 Toyota GR010 HYBRID. The Japanese driver ended up marginally faster than the No. 50 Ferrari AF Corse 499P with a 1m36.363s. The No. 50 Ferrari’s …

Kamui Kobayashi ran fastest in the second practice session at Monza this afternoon aboard the No. 7 Toyota GR010 HYBRID. The Japanese driver ended up marginally faster than the No. 50 Ferrari AF Corse 499P with a 1m36.363s.

The No. 50 Ferrari’s fastest time was just 0.17s off, after Antonio Fuoco lapped the Italian circuit in 1m36.533s.

Making it two Toyota GR010 HYBRIDs in the top three was Brendon Hartley in the No. 8. The New Zealander’s best time was a 1m36.686s.

Cadillac Racing’s V-Series.R was the fastest LMDh prototype in the field, Alex Lynn setting a 1m36.748s. The No. 5 Porsche came closest as the fifth and final car to set a sub-1m37s time.

It was an impressive session for Proton Competition’s new No. 99 963. Harry Tincknell posted a 1m37.181s to put the car sixth fastest. The team only completed 22 laps in the session, however, its 963 the only top-class car to complete fewer than 30 tours of the circuit.

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In LMP2 it was WRT that ran fastest again, the No. 41 ORECA (pictured above) once again topping the times thanks to a hot lap from Robert Kubica. The Pole’s session-topping time was a 1m39.955s, the only lap under 1m40s in the class.

Inter Europol was again quick and ended up second, with the No. 31 WRT sister ORECA third.

Iron Lynx’s No. 60 Porsche led the way in GTE Am, Alessio Picariello completing a 1m46.973s. He was the only driver to set a sub-1m47s time. Riccardo Pera’s 1m47.331s in the GR Racing Porsche came closest.

It was a Porsche 1-2-3 in the category, as Matteo Cairoli ended up third in the Project 1 AO Porsche. Davide Rigon’s late improvement in the FP1 pace-setting No. 54 AF Corse Ferrari wasn’t enough to break the deadlock, the Italian slotting in fourth.

UP NEXT: Track action continues tomorrow with Free Practice 3 at 10:45am local time.

RESULTS

Ferrari to the fore again in first Monza WEC practice

The Le Mans-winning No. 51 Ferrari AF Corse 499P topped the times in the first free practice session of the FIA World Endurance Championship weekend at Monza this afternoon. Alessandro Pier Guidi set the fastest lap for the car late in the session, …

The Le Mans-winning No. 51 Ferrari AF Corse 499P topped the times in the first free practice session of the FIA World Endurance Championship weekend at Monza this afternoon.

Alessandro Pier Guidi set the fastest lap for the car late in the session, a 1m37.533s to go just 0.003s quicker than the Hertz Team JOTA Porsche 963 that spent most of the 90-minute session at the top of the timing screens. Yifei Ye’s 1m37.536 was the No. 38’s best tour of the “Temple of Speed,” putting the British team in a strong position ahead of FP2.

The top three was rounded out by the No. 5 Porsche, which caused an early full-course yellow after stopping out on track. However, it was able to rejoin the session after a reset and finish with a best time just 0.3s off the No. 51 and 38 laps completed.

Hypercar was incredibly close, the top nine ending up with lap times within 0.6s.

Behind the top three, the No. 7 Toyota ended up fourth ahead of the sole Glickenhaus 007 which set an impressive 1m37.917s to go fifth.

Free Practice 1 was the first run for Proton Competition’s brand-new Porsche 963, which was delivered to the team just last week. The German team managed to complete 31 laps and lap faster than all of the LMP2 runners, slotting in 13th.

In LMP2 Team WRT ended up 1-2, with the No. 41 ORECA the quicker of the pair after a 1m40.356s from Robert Kubica. The best of the rest was the Inter Europol Competition ORECA.

GTE Am featured the No. 54 AF Corse Ferrari topping the times, Davide Rigon’s early 1m47.538s enough of a benchmark time to go unchallenged until the end.

The No. 60 Iron Lynx and No. 86 GR Racing Porsches completed the top three, while the championship-leading Corvette C8.R finished up ninth in the classification.

The session was brought to an early end, when red flags were shown with three minutes remaining, following a report of technical issues at race control.

RESULTS

UP NEXT: Free Practice 2 is set to begin at 4:40pm local time this afternoon.

Revised entries revealed for WEC at Monza

The FIA World Endurance Championship has revealed a handful of changes to the entry for the next round of the series, the 6 Hours of Monza that will take place on July 7-9. In Hypercar, the No. 708 Glickenhaus 007 LMH (pictured above) will have …

The FIA World Endurance Championship has revealed a handful of changes to the entry for the next round of the series, the 6 Hours of Monza that will take place on July 7-9.

In Hypercar, the No. 708 Glickenhaus 007 LMH (pictured above) will have Romain Dumas — fresh from taking second place overall at Pikes Peak — driving alongside Olivier Pla and Nathanael Berthon. As planned, the U.S.-flagged team returns to a single-car effort after a hugely impressive run at Le Mans where its 007s finish sixth and seventh overall.

The remaining alterations come in the GTE class. The major change is the withdrawal of the No. 98 Northwest AMR Vantage AMR, which was taken over by Heart of Racing after Paul Dalla Lana retired from racing after Portimao.

The Vantage will not make the trip to Italy because of a clash with the IMSA round at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, which Heart of Racing is committed to with Aston Martin in GTD Pro and GTD.

Two TBAs remain on the list alongside Matteo Cairoli in the No. 56 Project 1 AO Porsche because of the IMSA clash, which means PJ Hyett and Gunnar Jeanette will not travel to Europe.

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Corvette Racing’s Ben Keating is unaffected by the schedule conflict, as IMSA’s LMP2 class will not race at the Canadian circuit.

Elsewhere, at AF Corse Julien Piguet stays aboard the No. 21 Ferrari 488 alongside Simon Mann and Ulysse de Pauw after joining the crew at Le Mans.

At Kessel Racing, Daniel Serra will skip Monza as the round also clashes with a Stock Car Pro Series race meeting at Interlagos. Serra is a full-season driver with Eurofarma RC and currently sits fourth in the standings with two race wins. Kei Cozzolino will take his place in the No. 57.

ENTRY LIST

Vanwall follows up contentious Villeneuve exit by parting ways with Dillmann

The Floyd Vanwall Racing Team has parted ways with French driver Tom Dillmann ahead of the FIA WEC 6 Hours of Monza next month. “Vanwall and Tom Dillmann reached a mutual agreement to end the 2023 WEC collaboration in good terms,” a team statement …

The Floyd Vanwall Racing Team has parted ways with French driver Tom Dillmann ahead of the FIA WEC 6 Hours of Monza next month.

“Vanwall and Tom Dillmann reached a mutual agreement to end the 2023 WEC collaboration in good terms,” a team statement read. “We wish Tom, who supported our program with his skills for the last five years, all the best for the future.”

The relationship between Dillmann and Vanwall dates back to the 2018-19 season when it ran as ByKolles Racing Team.

“Vanwall and I have reached a mutual agreement to end our 2023 WEC collaboration in good terms,” Dillmann said. “I wish the team all the best for the future and thank them for their trust the last five years. For me, it is time to move on and provocate a new chapter. Thank you all for your support.”

Two-time Super GT GT300 champion João Paulo de Oliveira will replace Dillmann at Monza. He will race alongside Vautier and Esteban Guerrieri.

The latest driver change to the Vanwall lineup follows a DNF for the team at Le Mans, where Tristan Vautier joined its roster in place of Jacques Villeneuve, whose relationship with the team came to an abrupt end prior to the 24 Hours.

Vanwall indicated it was doing Villeneuve a favor in dropping him but the French-Canadian has disputed that account. Motorsport Images

At the time, Vanwall team principal Colin Kolles cited a lack of track time for Villeneuve and the impending birth of the 1997 F1 world champion and 1995 Indy 500 winner’s daughter as the reason for him being dropped from the team. Villeneuve responded with a public statement claiming the team hadn’t contacted him to let him know he wouldn’t be going to Le Mans.

“I am deeply disappointed to have learned of my replacement for the upcoming Le Mans 24 Hours through a public announcement released by the Vanwall Racing Team ByKolles on May 25th, 2023,” he said. “To date, I have not received any official communication from the team, which is even more surprising given that I am still under contract to participate in the Le Mans 24 Hours race.

“The timing of the release strangely coincided with my impending arrival at the hospital for the birth of our baby daughter, which had been planned for May 26th. ByKolles was well aware of this personal family event, rendering me unable to respond or address this sudden announcement.

“As a racing family, we have always successfully balanced our personal lives with our professional careers, with racing always holding a prominent place. In fact, my preparation for the Le Mans event was meticulous and well-organized. Considerable time and effort were dedicated to achieving peak physical and mental readiness for this extraordinary challenge that I was really looking forward to.

“Following victories in the Indy 500, IndyCar and the F1 championship, the Le Mans 24 Hours holds special significance for me. Consequently, I am deeply disheartened that the opportunity to participate has been unjustly and arbitrarily denied.

“Under these circumstances, I have made the decision to abstain from participating in the remainder of the WEC season with ByKolles. Instead, I will redirect my focus and energies towards preparing for a more successful and professionally fulfilling 2024 racing season.”

COTA return among 8 WEC races for 2024

The 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship calendar was revealed today at Le Mans, following its approval from the FIA World Motor Sport Council. Next season’s schedule has a fresh look to it, with an increase to eight races and the inclusion of four …

The 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship calendar was revealed today at Le Mans, following its approval from the FIA World Motor Sport Council.

Next season’s schedule has a fresh look to it, with an increase to eight races and the inclusion of four circuits not on the 2023 calendar. During the season the WEC teams will visit the Lusail International Circuit in Qatar, Imola, Spa-Francorchamps, Le Mans, Interlagos, Circuit of The Americas, Fuji Speedway and Bahrain.

“The 2024 FIA WEC calendar is a mix of traditional motorsport venues and key markets that are important for our manufacturers, key stakeholders and partners,” said Frédéric Lequien, CEO of the FIA World Endurance Championship.

“It is always a challenge finding the right balance but with four new venues, two of which are completely new to the WEC, as well as four well-established races, we have created a good mix of old and new. Eight races across five different regions will also bring our series to an even greater audience, as well as building momentum throughout the year. Today’s announcement is yet again another indication of WEC’s very bright future.”

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The season will get underway with a pre-season Prologue test in Doha, Qatar, at the Lusail International Circuit, before the opening race of the season at the same venue a handful of days later. The race, the first for the FIA WEC in Qatar, will run for 1812km (no longer than 10 hours) as a nod to the country’s national day.

From there the WEC will travel to Italy in April for a six-hour race at another new venue to the championship, the Autodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari (Imola). The historic venue replaces Monza on the list of destinations.

Before the Le Mans 24 Hours, the WEC will return to Belgium for its annual round at Spa-Francorchamps as part of the new extended agreement with the circuit. Then, following the Le Mans 24 Hours on June 15-16, the championship will travel to Brazil for the first time since 2014 for a six-hour race at the Interlagos circuit in July. This race has been made possible via an agreement with the city of São Paulo.

In early September the WEC will head back to Circuit of The Americas in Texas for “Lone Star Le Mans,” last held in February 2020. The return to COTA means there will no longer be a 1000-mile race run during a doubleheader at Sebring with IMSA as part of the 12 Hours weekend.

Also in September is a six-hour race at the Fuji Speedway in Japan, before the season-closing eight-hour race in Bahrain at the International Circuit in November.

“The 2024 FIA WEC season promises to be greater than ever before,” added Pierre Fillon, President of the Automobile Club de l’Ouest (ACO). “A record number of entries in the Hypercar class and a calendar of eight races on as many magnificent circuits make for an exciting prospect. Drivers will be getting to grips with four new tracks. That’s quite a challenge!

“It gives me great pleasure to see that the calendar reflects the rejuvenation of our discipline and I am grateful to all the circuits that will be hosting races in the eagerly awaited season to come.”

2024 FIA WEC schedule

Feb. 24-25 – Official Prologue, Qatar
March 2 – Qatar 1812Km
April 21 – 6 Hours of Imola
May 11 – TotalEnergies 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
June 15-16 – 24 Hours of Le Mans
July 14 – 6 Hours of São Paulo
Sept. 1 – Lone Star Le Mans, COTA
Sept. 15 – 6 Hours of Fuji
Nov. 2 – 8 Hours of Bahrain

New class structure confirmed for 2024 WEC

The ACO and FIA have confirmed a new FIA World Endurance Championship class structure for the 2024 season. As expected, the LMP2 class will be removed from the championship in 2024, due to an increase in the size of the Hypercar class (with …

The ACO and FIA have confirmed a new FIA World Endurance Championship class structure for the 2024 season.

As expected, the LMP2 class will be removed from the championship in 2024, due to an increase in the size of the Hypercar class (with additional entries from Alpine, BMW, Lamborghini and Isotta Fraschini expected) and the previously announced introduction of LMGT3, which will replace GTE Am.

“We have to make choices as a consequence of success,” said ACO President Pierre Fillon at the annual Friday ACO conference at Le Mans. “LMP2 will remain the premier category in the European Le Mans Series and the Asian Le Mans Series.”

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While LMP2 cars will not be eligible for the full WEC season, there will be 15 spaces reserved on the Le Mans 24 Hours entry list for teams running in LMP2 in the European Le Mans Series, Asian Le Mans Series and IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.

This news marks the end of all categories from the inaugural FIA WEC season in 2012, which featured LMP1, LMP2, GTE Pro and GTE Am machinery. It also means that for the first time, the WEC will feature just two full-season categories (Hypercar and LMGT3).

Richard Mille, president of the FIA Endurance Commission, confirmed the intentions for LMGT3 to be a class for Pro-Am teams. “GT is the heart of Le Mans,” he said. “We will emphasize gentlemen drivers, who are key in the WEC. The GT3 platform is the FIA’s most successful customer racing category. It’s a good platform to build on in the FIA WEC.”

Mille also confirmed that entry will not be exclusively limited to customers of brands who already compete in the WEC’s Hypercar category.

“Hypercar is increasingly important. What we wanted was to focus on the Hypercar automakers so they could intervene in the GT3 category, but we are open to makes which are not in Hypercar. Diversity is a criteria.”

WEC CEO Frédéric Lequien elaborated further on the eligibility requirements for LMGT3 entries into the 24 Hours of Le Mans after the press conference, telling RACER: “We will do the invitations, which is automatically linked to the results. And then, the other invitations — it’s the job of the Selection Committee.

“We want to let it be open, and to have the choice to have the diversity on the grid. We strongly believe that one of the strengths of the championship is to have diversity and different car manufacturers. The question is the number of places available on the grid. If we have enough places, I would say that we’ll be happy to welcome all the GT3 manufacturers — and at the moment they all want to come. So it would have been a negative signal to say that it’s only limited to the Hypercar manufacturers.”

Lequien confirmed that manufacturers can choose two different teams to represent them in the LMGT3 field, with each manufacturer limited to just two cars. Entries will be open from October to December this year.