Shock, sensational, spectacular. All those words correctly described Ferrari’s pole position with its 499P Le Mans Hypercar at start of the new era for the World Endurance Championship at the Sebring 1000 Miles. Yet come Friday’s race it was Toyota who were on top. That the Japanese cars were just too good for those from its Italian rival, as well Cadillac, Porsche and Peugeot, was not a surprise.
Toyota, as the incumbent force in the WEC and the winner of the drivers’ and manufacturers’ title doubles four years in a row, had reinforced its status as pre-season favourite through the Prologue test the weekend ahead of race week and then during practice. Only in one of the seven sessions of testing and practice was the GR010 HYBRID LMH beaten in the times. And in the race, Toyota sat pretty at the top of the leaderboard for all but 10 of the 239 laps on the way to a 1-2 victory, two laps up on the best of the Ferraris.
Victory went to the #7 Toyota LMH shared by Kamui Kobayashi, Mike Conway and Jose Maria Lopez after the kind of fierce battle with the sister car that has become de rigueur in the WEC. The winning GR010 and #8 driven by Sebastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley and Ryo Hirakawa were evenly matched throughout; witness the two-second margin between them at the chequered flag.
The #8 Toyota had the slightest of edges over the first half of a race that was always going to go a maximum duration of eight hours rather than the full 1000 miles once there was an early safety car lasting 25 minutes. Buemi headed the Toyota train that gradually pulled away from the chasing pack once pole winner Fuoco ducked into the pits during the one and only safety car of the race.
The gap between the Toyotas in seconds never went into double figures over the opening four hours and for most of the time was just one or two. Kobayashi moved the #7 car to the front late in the fourth hour when Hartley was asked to cede position on the pitstraight. The gap fluctuated more thereafter, before going out to 10s after Kobayashi and Buemi climbed aboard their respective mounts for the penultimate stint. The Swiss dropped back after what Toyota Gazoo Racing technical director Pascal Vasselon described as “three dreadful laps in dense traffic”.
Ten seconds turned into 20 when a mechanic tumbled over as he ran around the car holding a wheel and tyre at the car’s final stop. At that point, the positions at Toyota were frozen, which made Hartley’s charge up towards a conservative Conway an irrelevance.
Vasselon reckoned it wasn’t worth “over-analysing” the respective pace of the two Toyotas. “It’s difficult to elaborate when you are talking about a gap that was nothing,” he said, though it appeared that the #8 car picked up oversteer through the race. The drivers of #7, meanwhile, were able to dial out the understeer they had at the beginning.
Regardless, the updated GR010 looked a class act around the 3.741-mile Sebring International Raceway last week, a far better racing car than 12 months ago. The drive to make a more consistent or raceable machine over the winter has clearly been a success.
“The driveability is much better now,” said Lopez. “It gives you more confidence and allows you to push, but I’m not saying these are easy cars to drive.”
It was a particularly important victory for Lopez after the accident that put the #7 out of the race this time last year and another off during FP3. He lost it on the brakes into the quick Turn 17 horseshoe and damaged the right side of the car.
“Sebring has been tough for us and it wasn’t easy to jump back in the car after the incident yesterday,” said Lopez. “It took a few laps to get my confidence back. I had the support of the team to go out there and get my rhythm back. I’m proud of that.”
Ferrari might have taken the pole, but it conceded after the race that it didn’t go into the 1000 Miles believing it could beat Toyota.
Fuoco, who shared the #50 Ferrari with Miguel Molina and Nicklas Nielsen, found a whopping 1.7s in qualifying on Thursday evening over the simulated run he’d undertaken in the warmer conditions of final practice. It was undoubtedly a special lap: the Italian admitted that was blinded by the sun and couldn’t see through Turn 17 — sometimes aptly known as Sunshine Corner — as he came to the end of the lap.
“If I’m honest, in the last corner, I just sent it, because I had the feeling it was a good lap,” he said. “I had the sun on my visor and it was quite tricky to see the corner, but I had my reference points from free practice. I had a big moment on the bumps, but in the end it worked out.”
Ferdinando Cannizzo, Ferrari’s sportscar racing technical boss, was happy to admit that a victory was probably too much to expect on debut for the 499P.
“After the pole, we knew the race would be a different story,” he said. “A podium was a good result; this was the most we could achieve in our opinion.”
A top-three finish was one of Ferrari’s targets for this race, another to get both cars to the finish without reliability issues. It achieved both so, said Cannizzo, “we have to be happy with our first race”.
The #51 Ferrari was generally behind its sister car through race week after the car was rebuilt around a new monocoque ahead of the start of the meeting proper. James Calado had lost it on cold tyres at Turn 1 on his out-lap in the Sunday morning session of the Prologue, an accident that brought the ban on tyre warmers for 2023 into sharp focus.
Alessandro Pier Guidi was running sixth in #51, also driven by Antonio Giovinazzi, as the race hit six hours when he made contact with the #54 AF Ferrari GTE Am car going into Turn 15 and spun into a second GTE Am, the #51 Project 1 Porsche, at Turn 16. The car sustained right-rear suspension damage that resulted in a 20-minute stop, meaning it could finish no better than 15th and seventh in the Hypercar class.
Cannizzo explained that Toyota “proved the value of experience” on Friday.
“We definitely need to collect more experience, analyse the data and see what we can do better,” he continued. “There are things we can improve; this is something we expected.”
Ferrari wasn’t that far away from Toyota on the averages, just three tenths using a 100-lap sample, though the 499P clearly wasn’t as good over a double as the race-winning machine. The early stop under the safety car and a penalty for an infraction when it ended explained some of the #51 car’s two-lap deficit to the Toyotas.
Cadillac pushed Ferrari close for the final position on the podium, the Chip Ganassi Racing-run V-Series.R LMDh ending up just 10s behind at the flag. The car driven by Earl Bamber, Alex Lynn and Richard Westbrook looked as though it might snatch the podium a couple of hours from home as Bamber homed in on the Italian car, but over the final stints the Ferrari was able to repel the advance.
“I think we had the better double-stint car,” said Bamber, who pointed out that the run of FCYs meant teams had enough tyres left in their allocations to go onto singles for the run to the flag. “Our pace was good today, probably better than expected.”
Ganassi were at pains to point out there was more to come for a team that was working together for the first time at Sebring. The #2 Caddy was overseen by the definitive WEC squad that from next month will begin working out of a base in Germany, rather than the crew made up largely of Ganassi IndyCar mechanics on its appearance at IMSA SportsCar Championship opener at Daytona in January.
“We had a clean race and there is definitely a lot of low-hanging fruit,” said Bamber. “We’re gutted to miss out on the podium after getting so close, but if you’d told us we’d end up fourth before the Prologue, we would have taken that.”
Porsche didn’t have a great race with its 963 LMDh, though unlike on the debut of the car at Daytona it got both to the finish largely without issues. But the pair of Porsche Penske Motorsport entries weren’t on the pace and looked real handfuls out on track on the way to finishing four laps down in fifth and sixth positions.
There was a brief period in the middle of the race when the quicker of the two Porsches, the #6 entry shared by Kevin Estre, Laurens Vanthoor and Andre Lotterer, looked as if it might have something for Ferrari and Cadillac in the battle for the last podium spot, but the German cars were more than a second off the race pace of the Toyotas.
But to make matters worse the #6 fell behind the sister car driven by Michael Christensen, Dane Cameron and Frederic Makowiecki in the penultimate hour when Estre found himself without power as he approached pitlane entry. The car restarted as he ducked into the pits, but the loss of time in the confused stop that followed — he caught the team by surprise — restricted him and his team-mates to sixth. The sister car had also lost time with an electrical glitch, sorted by changing the steering wheel, plus a drive-through.
“It was hard out there,” said Christensen, who didn’t argue with the assessment that the Porsche looked an ill-sorted racing car. “I would agree with that. The car was bearable on new tyres, but then it started to move around and you wondered how you are going to get through a double.”
Estre insisted that there were Source: Autosport