Toyota wins inaugural FIA WEC race at Portimão


The 8 Hours of Portimão witnessed a 1-2 for the Toyota Gazoo Racing team after the No. 8 Toyota GR010 Hypercar driven by Sebastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley and Kazuki Nakajima took a thrilling last gasp victory.

The win is even more iconic as this weekend’s FIA World Endurance Championship race in Portugal marked Toyota’s 100th World Championship sportscar start since its Group C debut in the 1983 Fuji 1000km race.

The winning No. 8 car run an early fuel save strategy which paid dividends at end of race with one less pit stop. This looked set to enable Buemi to lead home sister No. 7 GR010-Hybrid Hypercar driven by Jose-Maria Lopez, Mike Conway and Kamui Kobayashi.

However, a late Full Course Yellow enabled Lopez to catch Buemi with less than 20 minutes of the race remaining and Toyota implemented a race management plan. The sister cars then swapped positions again and Buemi led Lopez home to take victory by just 1.8 seconds.

Today’s win is Buemi’s 19th victory and makes him the joint most successful driver in the WEC alongside Pedro Lamy. Meanwhile, it was Hartley and Nakajima’s 16th victory. The trio currently lead the Hypercar drivers’ standings with 63 points – twenty points ahead of the sister No. 7 car who leave Portugal with 43 points.

Alpine Elf Matmut, who started today’s race in pole position, placed third after taking the fight to Toyota and leading large sections of the race. It marks Nicolas Lapierre, Matthieu Vaxiviere and Andre Negrao’s second consecutive podium for the French outfit. The team are 22 points adrift of Toyota in the team standings.

Elsewhere, WEC debutants Glickenhaus Racing finished fourth after a mighty effort from the American flagged team. Richard Westbrook started the race for the team but suffered heavy time loss during a tough opening stint with tyre overheating problems.

Ryan Briscoe was next to take over at the wheel of the Glickenhaus 007 Hypercar but was involved in three car incident alongside two LMGTE Am cars after two hours, forcing the car into the pit for repairs. Romain Dumas re-joined the race but the car was shortly back in the pits to fix a slipping clutch. The team successfully got the car back on the track so the brand-new Hypercar could continue to gather data ahead of the next event at Monza.

The FIA WEC will now take a short four-week break before the championship resumes for round three at Monza, Italy, next month.

Ferrari takes clean sweep in GTE classes at Portimão

Ferrari claimed a clear 1-2 finish in the LMGTE Pro category at the 8 Hours of Portimão to take the lead of the World Endurance GTE Manufacturers’ Championship from Porsche.

The No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari pairing of James Calado and Alessandro Pier Guidi led the majority of the race after Calado hunted down the pole-sitting No. 92 Porsche driven by Neel Jani in the second hour.

It meant that Ferrari took a conclusive win to bring birthday cheer for James Calado, who celebrated his 32nd birthday in the best manner possible – with champagne on the podium.

The victory though was hard-fought as the AF Corse Ferrari team had to contend with blistering on the Ferrari 488 GTE EVO’s tyres throughout the race as temperatures at the Algarve International Circuit soared.

However, both Calado and Pier Guidi were able to manage the challenges expertly and despite some final hour fuel-saving they were able to claim the bumper 38 points and vault Kevin Estre and Neel Jani in to the lead of the points standings.

Ferrari’s successful day was rounded off when the No.52 car driven by Miguel Molina and Daniel Serra also hunted down the No.92 Porsche in the fourth hour and followed its sister car home for a deserved 1-2.

This was settled in the final hour when the Ferrari was able to complete its final stop under a full-course yellow period which finally repelled the No.92 Porsche in its efforts to fight them off.

Porsche placed third and fourth as, like Porsche it struggled with some tyre blistering in the early and middle stages of the race.

This meant it was powerless to defend from the attacking Ferraris and ensured that Kevin Estre, Neel Jani and Michael Christensen had to settle for third position. The other Porsche 911 RSR-19 of Gianmaria Bruni, Richard Lietz and Frederic Makowiecki completed the order in fourth place.

JOTA takes memorable 1-2 as Da Costa wins on home soil

The LMP2 category saw an epic battle as there were a number of lead changes throughout today’s 8 hour race, which was held in warm and sunny conditions.

However, it was JOTA who took a memorable 1-2 result as the No. 38 Oreca-Gibson belonging to Antonio Felix da Costa, Anthony Davidson and Roberto Gonzalez made a well-calculated overtake on the team’s sister car in order to move into the top spot, just minutes from the chequered flag.

Tom Blomqvist, Stoffel Vandoorne and Sean Gelael finished second after epic fightback in race to the line, with the trio eventually finishing just three seconds adrift of their team-mate’s car. Blomqvist, who was spun around on the first lap, looked like he would keep da Costa at bay in final stages but local hero made a sensational move to edge ahead when it mattered most.

Pole-sitters United Autosports USA looked competitive throughout today’s race but the reigning LMP2 Champions’ advantage dissipated early on following a safety car development. Paul Di Resta, Wayne Boyd and Phil Hanson all put in sensational stints but lost out on a top two position as different tyre strategies played out. The Anglo-American team eventually finished third and it marks the 200th podium for the squad.

Fourth place was awarded to Team WRT who had a drama-filled race, which saw the team fight back after taking two penalties – one for pitlane speeding and a later one for a blue flag infringement. All three drivers – Charles Milesi, Ferdinand Habsburg, Robin Frijns – put in stellar stints but the time lost from the penalties proved too much to be able to fight for a podium spot.

Fifth in category was Polish-flagged squad Inter Europol Competition with its drivers Alex Brundle, Kuba Smiechowski and Louis Delétraz. It was the team’s second fifth place finish in a row. In the first two hours of the race, the car ran as high as second but due to tyre problems in Delétraz’s second stint, the team were forced to settle for fifth.

After a solid race, the Richard Mille Racing Team trio belonging to its all-female line-up of Tatiana Calderon, Sophia Floersch and Beitske Visser took a credible sixth place – one spot ahead of RealTeam Racing who finished seventh.

The new-for-2021 Pro/Am honours also went to the Real Team Racing squad as Esteban Garcia, Norman Nato and Mathias Beche.

Elsewhere, Racing Team Nederland were leading in the early stages of the race but contact for Job van Uitert alongside the Ferrari of Alessandro Pier Guidi caused rear-left suspension damage, leading to a lengthy stint in the pits. The team eventually finished eight.

In the LMP2 teams’ standings, it’s JOTA who now lead the standings as the No. 38 JOTA car lies seven points ahead of the No. 22 United Autosports USA crew. The No. 28 JOTA crew is third with a total of 43 points.

Cetilar Racing victorious with Ferrari in LMGTE Am

There was a double celebration for Ferrari as the Cetilar Racing squad took a popular first class win in the FIA WEC with its distinctive blue 488 GTE Evo machine.

Roberto Lacorte, Giorgio Sernagiotto and Antonio Fuoco powered to victory to become the first ever all-Italian trio to win in GTE Am with a Ferrari.

It was a fierce battle throughout the duration of the race with multiple leaders at varying stages but it ultimately came down to a straight fight between the Cetilar Ferrari and the No. 56 Team Project 1 Porsche of Riccardo Pera, Egidio Perfetti and Matteo Cairoli.

After excellent stints by both team owner Lacorte and Sernagiotto, it was left to Fuoco to fight wheel-to-wheel with both Cairoli and then Pera in the final exchanges.

The Porsche at one stage appeared to have the win in the bag but a late race penalty for an incident with the Real Racing Team LMP2 car was applied and meant Cetilar were able to win by just 5.8 seconds.

Completing the LMGTE Am podium was the No.54 AF Corse Ferrari driven by Francesco Castellacci, Thomas Flohr and Giancarlo Fisichella. They claimed their best result since the 8 Hours of Sebring in Match 2019.