A race 100 years in the making, this year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans has been one of the most anticipated editions of the legendary ‘Grand Prix d’Endurance’ in some time.
Automobile Club de l’Ouest (ACO) President Pierre Fillon expects a crowd of over 300,000 spectators on hand with tickets having sold out in December. And it’s not just be because it’s the 100th anniversary of the inaugural race.Out of the standard 62-car entry list, the 16 cars entered in this year’s Le Mans Hypercar class comprise the largest top-class grid for this event since 2011 – with world-renowned automakers like Cadillac, Ferrari, Peugeot, Porsche and Toyota all entering multiple iterations of their new prototype sports cars, several with a decent chance at victory.
None of them will feel more pressure to deliver from a narrative standpoint than Toyota Gazoo Racing with its two GR010 Hybrids. Toyota has won Le Mans for the last five years, but detractors will readily point out that it was only the product of their biggest competitors, Audi and Porsche, vacating the top class in the wake of the Dieselgate scandal.
However the start of the 2023 FIA World Endurance Championship suggests Toyota has become the new standard of excellence. The improved GR010 Hybrid won the first three races of the season at Sebring, Portimao, and Spa-Francorchamps. Only the new Ferrari 499Ps have revealed anything to suggest they could match the Toyotas for pace over a lap or a full stint.
In Sunday’s Test Day, however, the Hypercar field was closely matched. Enticingly so. By the end of the afternoon session the best times of the top seven cars from Toyota, Ferrari, Porsche, and Peugeot were within one second of one another over a three-and-a-half minute lap of the famed La Sarthe circuit.
On the surface, it seems the ACO and FIA’s latest adjustment to the Balance of Performance parameters, aimed primarily at kerbing Toyota’s stark advantage, have succeeded – despite the sanctioning bodies originally intending not to make BoP changes on a race-by-race basis during 2023.
But anyone who’s been to Le Mans a few times and seen how things develop from Test Day to Race Day knows that many of these cars still have more pace to find.
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Plus, of course, a race this long has always been about matching that speed to more important factors such as vehicular durability, strategic execution and error-free driving not only by one’s self or against the other cars in one’s class, but in sharing the road with drivers of all skill levels from two other classes, with their own races to run and trophies to contend for.
That said, it does seem like despite having an additional 36 kilograms of weight added on, the two Toyotas are right in the mix for a sixth win which would certainly silence the narratives of “empty victories”.
Still, it’s hard not to be impressed by the headline-grabbing top times of the two Ferrari 499Ps. And now that tyre warmers have been allowed once again for this race, one of the Scuderia’s biggest weaknesses is resolved for the race. Ferrari has the chance to win Le Mans outright for the first time since 1965 and it would be a famous victory given the marque’s overwhelming image and stature.
A record-extending 20th overall win for Porsche seems closer to grasp than it was before after some good showings for the Penske-entered Porsche 963s. This includes an additional entry from Penske, the number 75, to celebrate Porsche’s 75th anniversary. Porsche have the advantage of numbers, with a fourth 963 run by customers JOTA already up and running and ready for its first Le Mans outing.
Cadillac didn’t leap off the page with top times but its V-Series.Rs did log many laps. The Cadillac Racing team operated by Chip Ganassi enters two cars – the blue number two and yellow number three – and IMSA powerhouse Action Express Racing is also represented with the red number 311.
For the local audience, no manufacturer is getting as much attention as Peugeot and its radical but troubled 9X8 prototypes, which have finally made it to Le Mans. Peugeot showed flashes of real pace as expected with the ‘wingless’ design meant to take advantage of the long Mulsanne Straight. However, there were yet more reliability issues to go with it and the reality may be that finishing the 24 hours would be as great as a win, last achieved by the French marque in 2009.
There’s a hope that the race itself can live up to the hype – all the ingredients are in place for an all-time classic.
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Key developments for the 2023 Le Mans 24 Hours
Privateer hypercar constructors
Vanwall (ByKolles) and Glickenhaus have a tall task in front of them to achieve results. Glickenhaus Racing adds a second car for Le Mans in addition to its full-season entry, while Vanwall Racing has dismissed 1997 Formula 1 world champion Jacques Villeneuve in favour of IMSA top class standout Tristan Vautier.
NASCAR in Garage 56
NASCAR and championship-winning team Hendrick Motorsports has entered a Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 race car, lightened and modified with high-downforce aerodynamics – but still based upon the stock car which regularly competes in the NASCAR Cup series. It is a crowd-pleaser and in the hands of Mike Rockenfeller, Jimmie Johnson, and Jenson Button has lapped than the customer cars in the GTE Am class.
The number 24 Hendrick Motorsports Camaro is entered in the Garage 56 class, an exhibition class reserved for innovative designs. While many concepts have been developed with sustainability in mind, this is also a test bed for other unique race car designs like the 2012 DeltaWing. It will not fight for class honours and, amazingly enough, will not be scored in the final overall classification.
Leading women in LMP2 and GTE Am
Five women will try and be the first to win their class at Le Mans since 1975: The most recent GTE Am winner Lilou Wadoux, the trio of Sarah Bovy, Michelle Gatting, and Rahel Frey from Iron Dames, and Doriane Pin in the LMP2 Prema Racing camp.
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Return of tyre warmers
Tyre warmers, banned for the stated goal of conserving energy, have been reintroduced for Le Mans after a rash of crashes on cold tyres that peaked in the recent Six Hours of Spa-Francorchamps.
New Le Mans Safety Car protocol
A new Safety Car protocol will be used for the first time at Le Mans. A lap of the 13.6km La Sarthe circuit is almost twice that of F1’s longest track, so three Safety Cars are used at the race. In the past this would have its drivers queue up behind one of three cars. This, however, lead to lower-class cars losing significant amounts of time if they picked up the “wrong” safety car.
For this year, the safety car procedure allows cars in LMP2 and GTE Am to pass around and drop back into a single safety car queue each. The new procedure was trialled during test day and the entire process took roughly 30 minutes.
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2023 Le Mans 24 Hours entry list
Hypercar | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Team | Car | Drivers | ||
2 | Cadillac Racing | Cadillac V-Series.R | Earl Bamber | Alex Lynn | Richard Westbrook |
3 | Cadillac Racing | Cadillac V-Series.R | Sebastien Bourdais | Renger Van Der Zande | Scott Dixon |
4 | Floyd Vanwall Racing Team | Vanwall Vandervell 680 | Tom Dillmann | Esteban Guerrieri | Tristan Vautier |
5 | Porsche Penske Motorsport | Porsche 963 | Dane Cameron | Michael Christensen | Frederic Makowiecki |
6 | Porsche Penske Motorsport | Porsche 963 | Kevin Estre | Andre Lotterer | Laurens Vanthoor |
7 | Toyota Gazoo Racing | Toyota GR010 | Mike Conway | Kamui Kobayashi | Jose Maria Lopez |
8 | Toyota Gazoo Racing | Toyota GR010 | Sebastien Buemi | Brendon Hartley | Ryo Hirakawa |
38 | Hertz Team JOTA | Porsche 963 | Antonio Felix Da Costa | Will Stevens | Yifei Ye |
50 | Ferrari AF Corse | Ferrari 499P | Antonio Fuoco | Miguel Molina | Nicklas Nielsen |
51 | Ferrari AF Corse | Ferrari 499P | Alessandro Pier Guidi | James Calado | Antonio Giovinazzi |
75 | Porsche Penske Motorsport | Porsche 963 | Felipe Nasr | Mathieu Jaminet | Nicholas Tandy |
93 | Peugeot Totalenergies | Peugeot 9X8 | Paul di Resta | Mikkel Jensen | Jean-Eric Vergne |
94 | Peugeot Totalenergies | Peugeot 9X8 | Loic Duval | Gustavo Menezes | Nico Mueller |
311 | Action Express Racing | Cadillac V-Series.R | Luis Felipe Derani | Alexander Sims | Jack Aitken |
708 | Glickenhaus Racing | Glickenhaus 007 | Romain Dumas | Olivier Pla | Ryan Briscoe |
709 | Glickenhaus Racing | Glickenhaus 007 | Franck Mailleux | Nathanael Berthon | Esteban Gutierrez |
LMP2 | |||||
Number | Team | Car | Drivers | ||
9 | Prema Racing | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Bent Viscaal | Juan Manuel Correa | Filip Ugran |
10 | Vector Sport | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Ryan Cullen | Gabriel Aubry | Matthias Kaiser |
13 | Tower Motorsports | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Steven Thomas | Ricky Taylor | Rene Rast |
14 | Nielsen Racing | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Rodrigo Sales | Mathias Beche | Ben Hanley |
22 | Unitedosports | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Philip Hanson | Filipe Albuquerque | Frederick Lubin |
23 | Unitedosports | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Joshua Pierson | Tom Blomqvist | Oliver Jarvis |
28 | JOTA | Oreca 07 – Gibson | David Heinemeier Hansson | Oliver Rasmussen | Pietro Fittipaldi |
30 | Duqueine Team | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Neel Jani | Rene Binder | Nicolas Pino |
31 | Team WRT | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Sean Gelael | Ferdinand Habsburg | Robin Frijns |
32 | Inter Europol Competition | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Mark Kvamme | Jan Magnussen | Anders Fjordbach |
34 | Inter Europol Competition | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Jakub Smiechowski | Albert Costa | Fabio Scherer |
35 | Alpine Elf Team | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Andre Negrao | Olli Caldwell | Memo Rojas |
36 | Alpine Elf Team | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Matthieu Vaxiviere | Charles Milesi | Julienal Canal |
37 | Cool Racing | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Nicolas Lapierre | Alexandre Coigny | Malthe Jakobsen |
39 | Graff Racing | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Roberto Lacorte | Giedo van der Garde | Patrick Pilet |
41 | Team WRT | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Rui Andrade | Louis Deletraz | Robert Kubica |
43 | DKR Engineering | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Tom Van Rompuy | Ugo de Wilde | Maxime Martin |
45 | Algarve Pro Racing | Oreca 07 – Gibson | George Kurtz | James Allen | Colin Braun |
47 | Cool Racing | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Reshad de Gerus | Vladislav Lomko | Simon Pagenaud |
48 | Idec Sport | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Paul Lafargue | Paul Loup Chatin | Laurents Horr |
63 | Prema Racing | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Doriane Pin | Daniil Kvyat | Mirko Bortolotti |
65 | Panis Racing | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Manuel Maldonado | Tijmen van der Helm | Job van Uitert |
80 | AF Corse | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Francois Perrodo | Ben Barnicoat | Norman Nato |
923 | Racing Team Turkey | Oreca 07 – Gibson | Salih Yoluc | Tom Gamble | Dries Vanthoor |
LMGTE Am | |||||
Number | Team | Car | Drivers | ||
16 | Proton Competition | Porsche 911 RSR-19 | Ryan Hardwick | Zacharie Robichon | Jan Heylen |
21 | AF Corse | Ferrari 488 GTE Evo | Simon Mann | Julien Piguet | Ulysse de Pauw |
25 | ORT by TF | Aston Martin Vantage AMR | Ahmad Al Harthy | Michael Dinan | Charlie Eastwood |
33 | Corvette Racing | Chevrolet Corvette C8.R | Nicky Catsburg | Ben Keating | Nicolas Varrone |
54 | AF Corse | Ferrari 488 GTE Evo | Thomas Flohr | Francesco Castellacci | Davide Rigon |
55 | GMB Motorsport | Aston Martin Vantage AMR | Gustav Dahlmann Birch | Marco Sorensen | Jens Reno Moller |
56 | Project 1 – AO | Porsche 911 RSR-19 | PJ Hyett | Gunnar Jeannette | Matteo Cairoli |
57 | Kessel Racing | Ferrari 488 GTE Evo | Takeshi Kimura | Scott Huffaker | Daniel Serra |
60 | Iron Lynx | Porsche 911 RSR-19 | Claudio Schiavoni | Matteo Cressoni | Alessio Picariello |
66 | JMW Motorsport | Ferrari 488 GTE Evo | Thomas Neubauer | Louis Prette | Giacomo Petrobelli |
72 | TF Sport | Aston Martin Vantage AMR | Arnold Robin | Maxime Robin | Valentin Hasse-Clot |
74 | Kessel Racing | Ferrari 488 GTE Evo | Kei Cozzolino | Yorikatsu Tsujiko | Naoki Yokomizo |
77 | Dempsey-Proton Racing | Porsche 911 RSR-19 | Christian Ried | Mikkel Pedersen | Julien Andlauer |
83 | Richard Mille AF Corse | Ferrari 488 GTE Evo | Luis Perez Companc | Alessio Rovera | Lilou Wadoux |
85 | Iron Dames | Porsche 911 RSR-19 | Sarah Bovy | Michelle Gatting | Rahel Frey |
86 | GR Racing | Porsche 911 RSR-19 | Michael Wainwright | Benjamin Barker | Riccardo Pera |
88 | Proton Competition | Porsche 911 RSR-19 | Harry Tincknell | Donald Yount | Jonas Ried |
98 | Northwest AMR | Aston Martin Vantage AMR | Ian James | Daniel Mancinelli | Alex Riberas |
100 | Walkenhorst Motorsport | Ferrari 488 GTE Evo | Chandler Hull | Andrew Haryanto | Jeffrey Segal |
777 | D’Station Racing | Aston Martin Vantage AMR | Satoshi Hoshino | Casper Stevenson | Tomonobu Fujii |
911 | Proton Competition | Porsche 911 RSR-19 | Michael Fassbender | Martin Rump | Richard Lietz |
Innovative Car | |||||
Number | Team | Car | Drivers | ||
24 | Hendrick Motorsports | Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 | Jimmie Johnson | Mike Rockenfeller | Jenson Button |
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World Endurance Championship
- Expanded hypercar field and Valentino Rossi’s debut confirmed for Le Mans
- Le Mans winners Ferrari reveal 2024 hypercar livery
- Kubica, Shwartzman and Ye to share third Ferrari hypercar in WEC
- Watch 10 of the best ‘proper’ overtakes from F1, IndyCar, WEC and more in 2023
- Isotta Fraschini Duqueine completes first WEC Hypercar test at Estoril
SadF1fan
7th June 2023, 12:44
Let’s hope Toyota hasn’t been sandbagging.
And that there will actually be a competition.
Proesterchen (@proesterchen)
7th June 2023, 12:47
As if BoP wasn’t bad enough on its own, just willy-nilly breaking procedures and adjusting it on the eve of the only event of any relevance on the calendar taints whatever “competition” people might be treated to this weekend.
asd
7th June 2023, 13:41
What’s the “BoP”??
Anyway, the true size of LMP cars has always been the most confusing and misunderstood thing. Them being so much smaller than a Nascar is blowing me head.
Proesterchen (@proesterchen)
7th June 2023, 15:25
“Balance of Performance” or how to make bad designs “competitive” in a non-sport.
MichaelN
7th June 2023, 19:19
Announcing pre-season that they wouldn’t do BoP changes was always silly; with so many new cars it was bound to happen.
Nothing wrong with BoP either, it just prioritizes other variables. No racing series lets the competitors do everything on their own; there are always limits on where competitors can differentiate themselves.
skylab (@skylab)
7th June 2023, 17:39
We’ve had an entertaining Monaco Grand Prix and an exciting Indy 500 so far this year so here’s hoping for a competitive Le Mans.
MichaelN
7th June 2023, 19:14
This is the second time in three years that a driver smashes into a stationary car with yellows being waved and the red flag already being called. The Canadian Tower Motorsports #13 rammed the crashed #777 after multiple cars had already gone past. Luckily it wasn’t at a high speed part of the track – like in 2021 – but race control needs to straighten these guys out. Not ignore it like in 2021.
Qeki (@qeki)
7th June 2023, 20:05
Hoping for Toyota/Ferrari battle at the front but if everything goes as plannes Toyota will win by handfull of laps
Minardi (@gitanes)
8th June 2023, 4:53
I hate to say it, but even with this incredible field, I fear the new safety car rules are going to ruin the actual race. The cars that are slower will keep automatically catching up every time there is a yellow because now they are waved through to catch up their lap every time. This is so against the spirit of endurance racing. We don’t need a last lap finish in a 24 hour race – what we want is an endurance race when drivers race hard all night and all morning. This is the whole point of a 24 hour race.
MichaelN
8th June 2023, 15:53
@gitanes Preventing the multiple safety cars from splitting the pack is a good idea in theory. That split did play a huge role in deciding the races in previous years, and because strategy in the lower classes is so hard to vary (because of all the regulations on tyres, fuel, etc.) it was almost impossible to turn those huge gaps the two SCs created back around. So while safety cars are always somewhat unfair, it’s no less so to turn a 20 second gap into a 5 second gap than, as it was previously, turn it into a 90 second gap.
Wave-by’s to gift people free laps is indeed silly, and should not be done. It’s weird enough in F1 (why give 90 seconds of free time to a guy in P15 but not to, say, the guy in P2? It doesn’t make any sense) but completely pointless in the WEC, and seems designed only to get a battle for positions straight out of a restart. But the safety car shouldn’t be to spice up the race.
Bullfrog (@bullfrog)
8th June 2023, 20:09
The first Ferrari pole for 50 years! And they’re on a hat-trick, as they’ve been away for 49…
But too much track-limits nonsense, with hundreds of practice and qualifying laps being deleted. Surely, just like F1, there’s too many kerbs and lines in the wrong place. Can’t be the driver every time.