Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2017 24 Hours of Le Mans

This is a good article. Click here for more information.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
85th 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race

201724 Hours of Le Mans
Previous:2016Next:2018
Index:Races |Winners
Map of the course
Layout of the Circuit de la Sarthe
Race car on a white indoor ramp
The overall-winningPorsche LMP Team No. 2Porsche 919 Hybrid on display at the 2017 International Motor Show Germany

The85th 24 Hours of Le Mans (French:85e 24 Heures du Mans) was a 24-hourautomobile endurance race for 60 teams of three drivers inLe Mans Prototype (LMP) andLe Mans Grand Touring Endurance (LMGTE) cars. It was held from 17 to 18 June 2017 at theCircuit de la Sarthe, nearLe Mans, before 258,500 spectators. The race's 85th running, organised by theAutomobile Club de l'Ouest, was the third of nine rounds in the2017 FIA World Endurance Championship. A test day was held two weeks earlier on 4 June.

Earl Bamber,Timo Bernhard, andBrendon Hartley drove aPorsche 919 Hybrid to victory, taking the lead in the final two hours. It was Bamber and Bernhard's second Le Mans victory, Hartley's first, andPorsche's 19th.Toyota'sSébastien Buemi,Anthony Davidson, andKazuki Nakajima finished eighth in aTS050 Hybrid after starting second, and were the only other competitors in the Le Mans Prototype 1 (LMP1) field to finish the race.Oliver Jarvis,Thomas Laurent, andHo-Pin Tung ofJackie Chan DC Racing'sOreca 07-Gibson won the Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) category; they led the race for nearly two hours in the closing stages before finishing second overall. The second DC Racing entry ofDavid Cheng,Tristan Gommendy, andAlex Brundle finished third overall, three laps ahead of theSignatech Alpine ofAndré Negrão,Nelson Panciatici, andPierre Ragues.

TheAston Martin Vantage shared byJonathan Adam,Daniel Serra, andDarren Turner overtook the strickenChevrolet Corvette C7.R ofAntonio García,Jan Magnussen, andJordan Taylor in the final two laps to win the Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance Professional (LMGTE Pro) category forAston Martin Racing. On the final lap, aFord GT passed the Corvette to take second place forPipo Derani,Andy Priaulx, andHarry Tincknell. TheJMW MotorsportFerrari 488 GTE shared byRobert Smith,Will Stevens, andDries Vanthoor won the Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance Amateur (LMGTE Am) class.Spirit of Race'sMarco Cioci,Duncan Cameron, andAaron Scott andScuderia Corsa'sTownsend Bell,Cooper MacNeil, andBill Sweedler completed the class podium for Ferraris in second and third.

Bamber, Bernhard, and Hartley took theWorld Endurance Drivers' Championship lead from Buemi, Nakajima, and Davidson by 17 points. Jarvis, Laurent, and Tung moved to third after their LMP2-class victory. Derani, Priaulx, and Tincknell stayed first in theGT World Endurance Drivers' Championship, with Adam, Serra, and Turner's category win, moving them to second. Porsche overtook Toyota to lead theWorld Manufacturers' Championship by 28.5 points, asFord passedFerrari for theGT World Endurance Manufacturers' Championship lead with six races left in the season.

Background

[edit]

TheFIA World Motor Sport Council confirmed the date for the 2017 race at a press conference held by race organiserAutomobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) on 16 June 2016 at theMusée des 24 Heures du Mans.[1] The event was held for the 85th time at theCircuit de la Sarthe from 17 to 18 June 2017,[2] and the third of nine scheduled rounds of the2017 FIA World Endurance Championship (FIA WEC).[3] The race was scheduled to avoid clashes with other major motorsport events, which occurred in 2016 (when it was held the same day as theEuropean Grand Prix).[4]

Before the race, Toyota driversAnthony Davidson,Kazuki Nakajima andSébastien Buemi led theWorld Endurance Drivers' Championship with 50 points – 17 more than second-placeTimo Bernhard,Earl Bamber andBrendon Hartley, and another five more thanNeel Jani,Nick Tandy andAndré Lotterer in third.[5]Toyota led theWorld Manufacturers' Championship with 69.5 points, 7.5 ahead of second-placePorsche.[5]Ford Chip Ganassi Racing'sPipo Derani,Andy Priaulx andHarry Tincknell led theGT World Endurance Drivers' Championship by two points overAF Corse'sSam Bird andDavide Rigon, andFerrari ledFord by seven points in theGT World Endurance Manufacturers' Championship.[5]

Regulation and circuit changes

[edit]

Following the2016 race, when the lead car failed to complete the final lap and was eventually not classified in the final results, the standards for car classification were changed by the ACO. Instead of the mandatory six minutes for the race's final lap, penalties were assessed on a graduated scale for any lap exceeding six minutes. Failure to complete the race's final lap in under fifteen minutes no longer led to a car being classified.[6]

The event's slow-zone system was also revised, with nine dedicated slow zones around the circuit. Previously, individualmarshal posts were used to mark the beginning and end of slow zones. The dedicated zones were located so the beginning of 80 km/h (50 mph) is in a slow section of the circuit; previous slow zones could begin in areas of the track where cars were required to slow down from high speeds, causing accidents.[7]

The circuit was modified from the Porsche Curves to the FordChicane. Therun-off area where the last right-hand turn goes into the left-hand corner, which begins the Corvette corner, was widened, with the barrier at the Porsche Curves moved further back. The angle of the wall at the left-hand entry to the shortstraight before the Ford Chicane was also altered.[8] TheLe Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) category was revamped with the introduction of a single specification engine fromGibson, with increased power output compared to 2016 LMP2 cars.[9] Cockpit and chassis designs mimicked theLe Mans Prototype 1 (LMP1) regulations for safety.[10] The four approved chassis manufacturers wereDallara,Ligier,Oreca andRiley.[11]

Entries

[edit]

Automatic invitations

[edit]

Teams which won their class in the 2016 24 Hours of Le Mans or won championships in theEuropean Le Mans Series (ELMS),Asian Le Mans Series (ALMS) andGT3 Le Mans Cup (GT3 LMC) earned automatic invitations. The2016 ELMSLe Mans Grand Touring Endurance (LMGTE) championship runner-up received an automatic invitation. The ACO gave two participants selected from theIMSA SportsCar Championship (IMSA) automatic entries, regardless of performance or category. When teams received invitations, they were allowed to change cars (but not their category) from the previous year. The LMGTE-class invitations from the ELMS and ALMS allowed a choice between the Pro and Am categories. ELMS'Le Mans Prototype 3 (LMP3) champion was required to field an entry in LMP2, and the2016–17 ALMS LMP3 champion could choose between LMP2 or LMGTE Am. The2016 GT3 LMC champions were limited to the LMGTE Am category.[12] The ACO issued its initial list of automatic entries on 23 January 2017.[12]

Automatic entries for the 2017 24 Hours of Le Mans[12]
Reason invitedLMP1LMP2LMGTE ProLMGTE Am
1st in the24 Hours of Le MansGermanyPorsche TeamFranceSignatechAlpineUnited StatesFord Chip Ganassi Team USAUnited StatesScuderia Corsa
1st in theEuropean Le Mans Series (LMP2 and LMGTE)RussiaG-Drive RacingUnited KingdomAston Martin Racing
2nd in the European Le Mans Series (LMGTE)United Kingdom JMW Motorsport
1st in the European Le Mans Series (LMP3)United StatesUnited Autosports
IMSA SportsCar Championship at-large entriesUnited StatesKeating MotorsportUnited StatesScuderia Corsa
1st in theAsian Le Mans Series (LMP2 and GT)PortugalAlgarve Pro RacingHong Kong DH Racing
1st in the Asian Le Mans Series (LMP3)United Kingdom Tockwith Motorsports– or –United Kingdom Tockwith Motorsports
1st in theGT3 Le Mans CupUnited KingdomTF Sport

Entry list and reserves

[edit]
Further information:2017 FIA World Endurance Championship § Teams and drivers

In conjunction with announcing entries for the 2017 FIA WEC and theELMS seasons, the ACO announced the full 60-car entry list for Le Mans and two reserves. In addition to the 28 guaranteedWEC entries, 13 entries came from the ELMS, six fromIMSA and eleven from theALMS; the rest of the field was filled with one-off entries only competing at Le Mans.[13] The ACO initially named two cars to the reserve list; RLR MSport later withdrew their LMP2 Ligier, and a fourth entry (from Proton Competition) was not promoted to the race.[14]Audi Sport Team Joest's withdrawal from LMP1 reduced the class to six entries for the race.[15]

Garage 56

[edit]

The Garage 56 concept, which began in 2012 to test new technology at Le Mans, was to be continued by the ACO.[16]Welter Racing intended to enter a three-cylinder 1.2 L (0.26 imp gal; 0.32 US gal) prototype vehicle powered bybiomethane fuel, stored in cryogenic tanks which could withstand very low temperatures, to concentrate and maximise fuel volume.[16][17] Due to funding issues, the car was not entered in the race.[16]

Pre-race balance of performance changes

[edit]

The ACO and the FIA altered thebalance of performance (BoP) in the two LMGTE categories in an attempt to eliminatesandbagging.[18] To reduce performance, theFord GT received a 20 kg (44 lb) minimum weight increase and reduced turbocharger boost across all RPM levels. TheAston Martin Vantage was made 10 kg (22 lb) heavier with anair restrictor elongated by 0.4 mm (0.016 in), and theChevrolet Corvette C7.R had 1 L (0.22 imp gal; 0.26 US gal) less fuel capacity and its air restrictor lengthened by 0.7 mm (0.028 in).Porsche's 911 RSR received a minimum weight increase of 10 kg (22 lb), and its air restrictor was lengthened by 0.1 mm (0.0039 in). The LMGTE Am-class Porsche 911 RSR's ballast was increased by 10 kg (22 lb); the Ferrari 488 GTE and Aston Martin Vantage's ballasts were decreased by 10 kg (22 lb) and 5 kg (11 lb), respectively. All three cars had minor power and restrictor adjustments.[19]

Testing

[edit]

On 4 June, the circuit held two mandatory four-hour sessions as part of a pre-Le Mans testing day.[20] The morning session, held on a dirty track with lap times improving throughout,[21] was led by pre-race favourite Toyota;[15] Nakajima'sNo. 8 car lapped at 3 minutes 20.778 seconds. The second Toyota ofKamui Kobayashi was almost seven-tenths of a second slower, andJosé María López's No. 9 car was third.[21] Porsche were more than two seconds slower than Toyota, and completed the LMP1 field with Bernhard fourth and Lotterer fifth.[22]Oreca 07s led LMP2 with 13 cars leading the time sheets, led byAndré Negrão's No. 36SignatechAlpine – the sole driver to lap below 3 minutes 30 seconds with a 3-minutes 29.809-second lap, ahead ofRebellion andGraff.[21] Corvette led LMGTE Pro withJan Magnussen's lap of 3 minutes 55.726 seconds, followed byPatrick Pilet's No. 91 Porsche and the second Corvette ofOliver Gavin.Matteo Cairoli's No. 77 Porsche led LMGTE Am fromAndrea Bertolini's DH Racing Ferrari.[22]

Toyota led the second session with Kobayashi's 3-minute 18.132-second lap, followed by Buemi and López. Porsche remained slower than Toyota, with their best lap coming from Bamber's No. 2 car, followed by Jani's No. 1 entry.[23]Nelson Panciatici's No. 35 Signatech Alpine lapped faster in LMP2 thanJean-Éric Vergne's No. 24 Manor andAlex Brundle's No. 37Jackie Chan DC Racing entry to lead the sole LMP1privateer (Dominik Kraihamer's No. 4ByKolles RacingENSO CLM P1/01).[24] Gavin missed 91 minutes due to a mid-session engine change but set the day's best LMGTE Pro lap (3 minutes 54.701 seconds) towards the end of the test, beatingFrédéric Makowiecki's No. 92 Porsche. Aston Martin led LMGTE Am withPedro Lamy's 3-minute 58.250-second lap fromFernando Rees'Larbre Compétition Corvette.[24]Erik Maris' No. 33 Eurasia MotorsportLigier JS P217 stopped the session by becoming stranded in the gravel trap in the Dunlop Curves.Paul-Loup Chatin's No. 17 IDEC Sport Ligier andJan Lammers'sRacing Team Nederland Dallara collided at the second Mulsanne Chicane, but both continued without major damage.[24] The session ended less than fifteen minutes early whenRoberto González's No. 25 Manor laid oil on the track and stopped.[24][25]

Post-testing balance of performance changes

[edit]

After testing, the FIA re-adjusted the BoP. The LMGTE Pro-category Corvettes had their performance lowered with an air-restrictor reduction. The Aston Martins, Ferraris, Fords, and Porsches received fuel-capacity increases to equalise refuelling times and stint lengths. The LMGTE Am-class Aston Martin and Ferraris increased their fuel capacity, with the Ferraris receiving turbocharger boost pressure increases.[26]

Practice

[edit]

Practice was held on 14 June,[27] with all 60 cars on the circuit for four hours in hot and sunny weather.[28] Toyota led from the start once again, withNicolas Lapierre setting the early pace and leading for most of the session until Bamber went faster.[29] Kobayashi improved until Jani's lap of 3 minutes 20.362 seconds with five minutes remaining led the session.[30]Alex Lynn's No. 26G-Drive Racing car led LMP2 with less than forty minutes left, with a 3-minute 30.363-second lap fromNelson Piquet Jr.'s No. 13 Rebellion.Bruno Senna's sister No. 31 Rebellion was third.[29] LMGTE Pro was led by Aston Martins and Corvettes from the start until Bird's No. 71 AF Corse Ferrari lapped fastest at 3 minutes 54.832 seconds.Darren Turner's No. 97 Aston Martin, andJames Calado's second AF Corse car were second and third, respectively.[28] Over three DH Racing Ferraris, Lamy's No. 98 Aston Martin was the fastest LMGTE Am car.[29] After Christian Philippon's Larbre Compétition Corvette left the Porsche Curves off the track and hit thetyre barrier, thesafety cars were needed for 75 minutes.[28] Stephane Lemeret's No. 88 Proton Porsche scraped a barrier through the Porsche Curves, but continued to thepit lane for repairs.Roberto Lacorte slid the Cetilar Villorba Corse Dallara into the Mulsanne corner gravel trap and abandoned the car.[28][31]

Qualifying

[edit]

Beginning late Wednesday night in clear conditions, the first of three qualifying sessions to set the race's starting order by the fastest lap times set by each team's quickest driver commenced.[27] Due to a significant practice incident in the firstRoad to Le Mans race, the start was delayed by 20 minutes for barrier repairs at the Porsche Curves.[32] Slow zones andyellow flags limited the amount of quick running,[33] and the rapidly-cooling track meant that the best chance to set the fastest lap times was missed.[34] The session's first timed laps saw Porsche lead early on with a benchmark effort from Jani, followed by Bernhard's 3-minute 19.710-second lap. Fifteen minutes later, Kobayashi had no slower traffic impeding him and took provisionalpole position with a 3-minute 18.793-second lap.[32] Nakajima was six-tenths of a second behind in second, and Bernhard was a provisional third.[33] Lapierre was the slowest of the three Toyotas in fourth, and Jani was fifth. Kraihamer completed the LMP1 field with a lap that was ten seconds slower than Kobayashi's time but clear of the LMP2 field.[34]

Matthieu Vaxivière put TDS Racing's Oreca on provisional pole in LMP2 with a 3-minute 29.333-second lap set late in the session.[34] He was half-a-second clear of Senna, who held the class pole until Vaxivière's lap.Vitaly Petrov's No. 25 Manor was third-fastest, with teammate Vergne fourth.[33] Eric Trouillet, in the No. 39 Graff Oreca, caused the session's first yellow flag when he struck the barriers leaving the second Mulsanne Chicane. The No. 27SMP Racing Dallara caused further disruption when it hit the barriers and had a quickly-extinguished fire.[34] Aston Martin led the LMGTE categories, withNicki Thiim's No. 95 car quickest at 3 minutes, 52.117 seconds;[34]Mathias Lauda was the fastest Amateur-class entry with a 3-minute 55.134-second lap.[32]Risi Competizione's No. 82 Ferrari 488 was eleventh amongst the LMGTEs before ACO officials disallowed their fastest laps for violatingparc fermé regulations by handling the tyres after the session.[35][36]

a serious-looking Kamui Kobayashi
Kamui Kobayashi(pictured in 2010) brokeNeel Jani's 2015 lap record to clinchToyota's thirdpole position at Le Mans.

Thursday's first qualifying session began with a stoppage for a crash. Maris spun and crashed his No. 33 car against the outside barriers leaving the first Mulsanne Chicane 17 minutes in. He was unhurt, but was transported to the medical centre for a precautionary check-up; this meant that the organisers rescheduled the second qualifying to end at 21:30Central European Summer Time (CEST) (UTC+02:00).[37] When it restarted, Kobayashi exited the pit lane early; aided bytailwinds on theMulsanne Straight and headwinds through the Porsche Curves, he reset the track lap record to 3 minutes 14.791 seconds.[N 1][39] The No. 8 Toyota stopped leaving the second Mulsanne Chicane with an engine oil-supply problem which required an engine change. The Toyota returned to the track, but fell to fourth as Buemi could not lap faster.[39][40] Jani and Bernhard in the two Porsches lapped quicker and moved to second and third.[39]Yuji Kunimoto also improved the No. 9 Toyota's best lap, but fell to fifth.[40]

Petrov's Manor set a new LMP2 class lap record of 3 minutes 25.549 seconds, more than a second faster than rookieThomas Laurent in DC's No. 38 entry and Vergne's second Manor; Petrov demoted the ByKolles car to seventh overall.[40] The LMGTE categories had some changes, with Aston Martin remaining the Pro leader;Jonathan Adam bettered Thiim's first session lap, with Calado improving to second.[39]Euan Hankey became the provisional LMGTE Am pole-sitter beforeWill Stevens went faster to take the class pole.Timothé Buret lost control of the No. 23Panis Barthez Competition Ligier on the grass and was stranded in a gravel trap going into Tertre Rouge corner after striking the barrier with half-an-hour left in qualifying.[40]

As temperatures cooled for the final session, more than half the field improved their fastest laps[41] but Kobayashi's time was not bested. He took Toyota's third pole position at Le Mans and their first since2014.[42] Nakajima lapped more than two seconds faster, putting the No. 8 Toyota alongside the sister No. 7 car. Porsche failed to improve from the second session, finishing third and fourth.[41] Hartley slowed and stopped the No. 2 Porsche at Indianapolis corner due to a rising oil temperature.[41] He abandoned the car after failing to return to the pit lane on hybrid power.[43] Lapierre improved early on to go fifth.[41]Oliver Webb used clear air to return the ByKolles car to sixth overall.[44] Lynn reset the LMP2 lap record early on by 11.3 seconds over the 2016 time, demoting the No. 25 Manor Oreca to second.Ho-Pin Tung's No. 38 DC car took third, battling with Senna for the position. The Oreca chassis, as well as the variant Alpine chassis, secured the first nine positions in LMP2; the Dallara of SMP Racing was the fastest of the other chassis, in tenth place.[32][43]

Aston Martin led LMGTE Pro, withRichie Stanaway setting a new class record before Turner improved with a 3-minute 50.837-second lap for Aston Martin's first class pole since 2015.[45] Calado separated the two cars in the closing minutes, and Bird came within 0.048 seconds of Stanaway. All five of LMGTE Pro's manufacturers were within a second of Turner's lap, with the fastest Ford in fifth courtesy ofRyan Briscoe,Antonio García sixth for Corvette, and Porsche seventh throughMichael Christensen.[44] The LMGTE Am lead changed with Rees earning Larbre Compétition's first class pole in ten years with a 3-minute 52.843-second lap, almost four-tenths of a second clear of Lamy's No. 98 Aston Martin andTownsend Bell's No. 62Scuderia Corsa Ferrari.[45][41]

Post-qualifying

[edit]

After qualifying, the FIA imposed an 8-kilogram (18 lb) BoP ballast decrease on the LMGTE Am-category Porsches after they were 9 km/h (5.6 mph) slower on the straight; Porsche had requested a longer air restrictor for better performance.[46]

Qualifying results

[edit]

Provisional pole positions in each class are denoted inbold. The fastest time set by each entry is denoted with a gray background.

Final qualifying classification[47][48]
Pos.ClassNo.TeamQualifying 1Qualifying 2Qualifying 3GapGrid
1LMP17Toyota Gazoo Racing3:18.7933:14.7913:19.9281
2LMP18Toyota Gazoo Racing3:19.431No time3:17.128+2.3372
3LMP11Porsche LMP Team3:21.1653:17.2593:18.210+2.4683
4LMP12Porsche LMP Team3:19.7103:18.0673:20.154+3.2764
5LMP19Toyota Gazoo Racing3:19.9583:19.8893:18.625+3.8345
6LMP14ByKolles Racing Team3:28.8873:26.0263:24.170+9.3796
7LMP226G-Drive Racing3:31.9453:28.5803:25.352+10.5617
8LMP225CEFC Manor TRS Racing3:30.5023:25.5493:26.521+10.7588
9LMP238Jackie Chan DC Racing3:31.0243:26.7763:25.911+11.1209
10LMP231Vaillante Rebellion3:29.8513:27.5643:26.736+11.94510
11LMP213Vaillante Rebellion3:31.6363:27.0713:26.811+12.02011
12LMP224CEFC Manor TRS Racing3:30.8473:26.8713:27.359+12.08012
13LMP228TDS Racing3:29.3333:31.0853:27.108+12.31713
14LMP235Signatech Alpine Matmut3:31.4393:29.3283:27.517+12.72614
15LMP237Jackie Chan DC Racing3:41.3933:28.4323:27.535+12.74415
16LMP227SMP Racing3:34.4073:30.2623:27.782+12.99116
17LMP236Signatech Alpine Matmut3:31.0653:28.8563:28.051+13.26017
18LMP239Graff3:32.9873:36.1283:28.368+13.57718
19LMP240Graff3:32.4773:29.3963:28.891+14.10019
20LMP222G-Drive Racing3:31.9633:28.9373:30.313+14.14620
21LMP232United Autosports3:34.1663:30.6933:29.151+14.36021
22LMP221DragonSpeed – 10 Star3:34.0463:30.3963:29.777+14.98622
23LMP229Racing Team Nederland3:33.7963:31.7663:29.976+15.18523
24LMP247Cetilar Villorba Corse3:34.8463:30.0143:33.412+15.22324
25LMP245Algarve Pro Racing3:37.8143:30.1643:32.425+15.37325
26LMP223Panis Barthez Competition3:35.5593:31.3463:32.888+16.55526
27LMP234Tockwith Motorsports3:41.6283:33.7393:32.536+17.74527
28LMP249ARC Bratislava3:37.2263:33.921No time+19.13028
29LMP217IDEC Sport Racing3:40.1623:36.3623:36.230+21.43929
30LMP243Keating Motorsport3:40.8133:37.3503:37.007+22.21630
31LMP233Eurasia Motorsport3:42.6603:42.916No time+27.86931
32LMGTE Pro97Aston Martin Racing3:53.2963:51.8603:50.837+36.04632
33LMGTE Pro51AF Corse3:53.1233:52.0873:51.028+36.23733
34LMGTE Pro95Aston Martin Racing3:52.1173:52.5253:51.038+36.24734
35LMGTE Pro71AF Corse3:52.2353:52.9033:51.086+36.29535
36LMGTE Pro69Ford Chip Ganassi Team USA3:55.5533:52.4963:51.232+36.44136
37LMGTE Pro63Corvette Racing – GM3:54.8473:52.8863:51.484+36.69337
38LMGTE Pro92Porsche GT Team3:54.2433:52.1773:51.847+37.05638
39LMGTE Pro66Ford Chip Ganassi Team UK3:55.8033:52.5583:51.991+37.20039
40LMGTE Pro67Ford Chip Ganassi Team UK3:54.1183:53.0593:52.008+37.21740
41LMGTE Pro64Corvette Racing – GM3:54.8763:52.3913:52.017+37.22641
42LMGTE Pro82Risi CompetizioneNo time[N 2]3:52.1383:54.129+37.34742
43LMGTE Pro68Ford Chip Ganassi Team USA3:55.0593:52.6263:52.178+37.38743
44LMGTE Pro91Porsche GT Team3:54.5643:52.5933:53.807+37.80244
45LMGTE Am50Larbre Compétition3:56.2593:54.5593:52.843+38.05245
46LMGTE Am98Aston Martin Racing3:55.1343:54.4563:53.233+38.44246
47LMGTE Am62Scuderia Corsa3:57.2673:54.5763:53.312+38.52147
48LMGTE Am77Dempsey-Proton Racing3:55.6923:54.8903:53.381+38.59048
49LMGTE Am55Spirit of Race4:01.0983:54.9413:53.641+38.85049
50LMGTE Am84JMW Motorsport3:56.8903:53.9813:53.977+39.18650
51LMGTE Am83DH Racing3:55.9663:54.8133:54.088+39.29751
52LMGTE Am90TF Sport3:55.9533:54.3193:54.551+39.52852
53LMGTE Am99Beechdean AMR3:57.4633:55.0463:54.328+39.53753
54LMGTE Am93Proton Competition3:58.1963:54.6213:59.046+39.83054
55LMGTE Am61Clearwater Racing3:56.3333:55.9953:54.955+40.16455
56LMGTE Am60Clearwater Racing3:57.3214:02.4363:54.994+40.20356
57LMGTE Am88Proton Competition3:56.5073:55.4684:00.323+40.67757
58LMGTE Am54Spirit of Race3:58.9043:57.0053:56.301+41.51058
59LMGTE Am86Gulf Racing UK3:58.427No time3:56.469+41.67859
60LMGTE Am65Scuderia Corsa3:58.2493:59.842No time+43.45860

Warm-up

[edit]

A 45-minute warm-up session was held on Saturday morning.[27] Nakajima's No. 8 Toyota set the fastest lap at 3 minutes 18.308 seconds; Kobayashi's sister Toyota was three-tenths of a second slower in second. The best-placed Porsche was Tandy's No. 1 car in third, having led for most of the session. Kunimoto and Hartley were fourth and fifth, respectively. Lynn set the fastest LMP2 lap at 3 minutes 27.096 seconds. Briscoe's No. 69 Ford led in LMGTE Pro, with Bertolini's No. 83 DH Racing Ferrari fastest in LMGTE Am by over a second.[49][50]Paul Lafargueoversteered the No. 17 IDEC car in the Porsche Curves, made contact with the barriers before stopping in the gravel trap and returned to the pit lane for repairs.[50]

Race

[edit]

Start to evening

[edit]
White-and-red car
The No. 7Toyota TS050 Hybrid led most of the first ten hours before retiring with clutch trouble.

The weather was hot, with an air temperature of 19 to 32 °C (66 to 90 °F); the track temperature ranged from 27 to 38 °C (81 to 100 °F).[51]Formula One Group's chair and chief executiveChase Carey waved theFrench tricolour to begin the race before 258,500 spectators with arolling start at 15:00 local time.[52][53][54]Mike Conway maintained the No. 7 Toyota's pole-position advantage for most of the first hour, before Buemi overtook him on the outside into Indianapolis turn for the lead after Conway made a braking error at the Dunlop Esses.[55] The first retirement occurred during the opening hour when Webb's No. 4 ByKolles car hit the wall at Tertre Rouge corner after suffering a front-left puncture, damaging both its front bodywork and engine.[2][55] Thiim put the No. 95 Aston Martin in the LMGTE Pro lead at the end of the hour afterAlessandro Pier Guidi moved the No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari to the category lead for the first two laps before dropping to third in class.[55]

Rees briefly passed Hand's No. 68 LMGTE Pro-class Ford, and Rees led the LMGTE Am field until Bell's No. 62 Scuderia Corsa Ferrari took the lead due to a faster pit stop.[55][56] As the class pole-sitter No. 26 G-Drive Oreca ofRoman Rusinov dropped to 14th at the start, the LMP2 lead became a multi-team battle between the No. 38 DC car and the Nos. 13 and 31 Rebellion Racing teams between pit stop cycles.[2][57] Rusinov caughtKhaled Al Qubaisi's No. 88 Proton Porsche and lapped him in the middle of the Porsche Curves before both drivers crashed into theSAFER barrier at high speed.[58][59] Although both cars could be driven to the pit lane, they had severe damage and were retired.[60] The accident triggered the race's first localised slow-zone procedure to enable repairs to the barrier.[61] On the Mulsanne Straight, Conway retook the overall lead in the No. 7 Toyota when his teammate (Buemi, in the sister No. 8 car) went wide at Mulsanne turn.[58][59]

Laurent's No. 38 DC car was gaining on the two LMP2-leading Rebellion cars when its rear snapped out and he crashed lightly against the barrier at Indianapolis corner. Laurent entered the pit lane for new front bodywork, but the car lost two and a half minutes and fell to sixth place.[2][62] AfterMarco Sørensen relieved Thiim in the No. 95 Aston Martin, he was slowed by a left-rear puncture from debris at Tertre Rouge corner. Sørensen relinquished the LMGTE Pro lead toDaniel Serra's sister No. 97 Aston Martin, with the No. 67 Ford in second.[2][63] After three-and-a-half hours, Bamber's No. 2 Porsche was forced to the garage for 65 minutes – and 18 laps – to fix a failed front-axle hybrid harvesting motor which required multiple components (including themotor generator unit).[2][64] Tandy's No. 1 Porsche overtook Davidson's No. 8 Toyota for second overall after a pit-stop cycle, challenging the No. 7 Toyota for the lead.[63]

Vaxivière unsettled the front of his TDS Racing Oreca while braking for the first Mulsanne chicane. He moved left towardsPierre Kaffer's unseen No. 82 Risi Ferrari, which he was lapping in traffic. In the ensuing collision, Kaffer hit the Armco barrier at high speed, forcing the No. 82 car stopped in the run-off area to retire.[65][66] Kaffer was unhurt, but a lengthy slow zone was imposed by race officials to allow for barrier repairs; Vaxivière received a seven-minute stop-and-go penalty for the accident.[67] Following several incidents that left gravel on the circuit, the slow zone was extended past the Dunlop chicane to the Tetre Rouge turn.[68] The slowdown brought the leading cars together[69] and Senna extend the No. 31 LMP2 Rebellion Oreca car's lead to over 90 seconds over his teammate, Piquet, in the second-place No. 13 entry.[67] Tung's recovering No. 38 DC car was third in class, passingPierre Ragues' No. 35 Signatech Alpine.[67] Although Kunimoto had to make an unscheduled pit stop to repair a loose right-side door, the No. 9 Toyota remained fourth.[65][67]

Night to dawn

[edit]
Another white-and-red car
The No. 1 Porsche 919 Hybrid took the race lead until a loss of oil pressure in the engine forced its retirement.

Midway through the seventh hour, Nakajima's No. 8 Toyota passed Lotterer's No. 1 Porsche for second place overall because it was lapping faster as night fell. Nakajima immediately began to pull clear of Lotterer and gain on Sarrazin's race-leading No. 7 Toyota.[70][71] The No. 98 Aston Martin relinquished its lead in the LMGTE Am category to the No. 84 JMW Ferrari of Stevens when Lamy had a front-right puncture from debris. This removed the bodywork from the car's front-right corner, and Lamy dropped to the rear of the category when he made an unscheduled 18-minute pit stop for repairs.[2][72] Senna's No. 31 Rebellion car received a drive-through penalty for passing another car in a slow zone. He dropped from the lead of LMP2 to third, and his teammate Piquet, driving the No. 13 Rebellion entry, became the new class leader.[73]

Buemi was battling Jani's No. 1 Porsche when the No. 8 Toyota began to leak oil, but telemetry indicated no issues. Due to abattery-damaging axle hybrid motor failure emitting smoke from the front-rightwheel arch, he lost 29 laps and nearly two hours while components were changed in the garage.[2][64][72] The left rear ofTommy Milner's No. 64 Corvette was damaged in a spin towards the barrier at the exit of the Porsche Curves due to an incorrectly fitted left rearwheel nut when Milner, struggling to control the car, spun into the pit lane entry gravel.[2][72] The car was beached on a kerb and extricated by a recovery vehicle, but Tincknell's No. 67 Ford took second in the LMGTE Pro.[72][73] Piquet's No. 13 Rebellion car lost the lead in LMP2 to Senna's sister No. 31 car when it spent a minute in the pit lane to repair a failed left rear tail light.[74][75]Olivier Pla got the No. 66 Ford stuck in the left-hand turn gravel run-off area after the Indianapolis corner early in the tenth hour; the car was recovered, leaving gravel on theracing line. The incident led to the race's first safety car's a half-hour for debris removal.[76][77]

During the slow period, Jani spun the No. 1 Porsche at the pit-lane entry but did not lose position.[2] When Kobayashi brought the race-leading No. 7 Toyota to the pit-lane exit, Algarve Pro Racing driver Vincent Capillaire ran up to the car and gave Kobayashi the thumbs-up signal. Kobayashi interpreted this as a marshal's signal to exit the lane, but further confusion was created when Toyota radioed Kobayashi to stop the car because he had passed a red light.[78][79] When racing resumed, Kobayashi had worn out the clutch enough to break it and slowed; the clutch, not designed for starting, was stressed by the engine's power and torque. Kobayashi lost drive in the engine and attempted to return to the pit lane on hybrid power, but got as far as the pit lane entry straight before retiring the No. 7 car because of a low battery charge.[2][64] The No. 7 Toyota's retirement promoted Tandy's No. 1 Porsche to the race lead, Lapierre's No. 9 Toyota to second and Rebellion's No. 31 LMP2-class-leading entry to third overall.[79]

Soon after, in the Dunlop Chicane,Simon Trummer's No. 25 Manor Oreca and Lapierre's No. 9 Toyota's left and right rear corners collided.[64] Trummer retired the No. 25 car in the gravel with major damage, but was unhurt; Lapierre continued with a left-rear puncture which caused the bodywork to fail.[80] Lapierre drove too fast, and rubber chunks from the disintegrating tyre's rim damaged the gearbox hydraulics and an oil line.[2][64] As a result, the car briefly caught fire, and Lapierre drove on hybrid power before being asked by his team to stop near the pit-lane entry and abandon the car on the side of the circuit. As debris from the two stricken cars was removed from the track, safety cars were required for another 32 minutes. The No. 9 Toyota's retirement moved the Nos. 31 and 13 Rebellion cars to second and third overall.[80][81] When racing resumed, Tandy slowed the race-leading No. 1 Porsche because he had a nine-lap lead over the LMP2 order.[2] Hankey's No. 90TF Sport Aston Martin fended offMarvin Dienst's No. 77Dempsey-Proton Porsche for third in LMGTE Am, with second to fourth in class covered by ten seconds.[82][83]

After the race's halfway point,Nicolas Prost's No. 31 Rebellion Oreca car entered the garage for an inspection due to a reported gearbox problem. The inspection took five minutes, and the car dropped to fourth in LMP2 (giving Tung's No. 38 DC car the category lead).[84][85] Christensen lost control of the No. 92 Porsche on the Ford Chicane kerb, heavily damaging the car's rear on the tyre barrier before stopping in the gravel and retired behind the barrier.[77][86][87] The safety cars were deployed for the third and final time (for 24 minutes) to allow for barrier repairs and the extrication of the stricken car afterEmmanuel Collard crashed the No. 28 TDS Oreca into the tyre wall exiting the Porsche Curves at high speed.[77][88][89][90] Collard sustained bruising and exited the car unaided; he was transported to the medical centre and then Le Mans Hospital for checks.[2][89] AF Corse's cars were caught out by the safety car's timing and entered the pit lane, moving the No. 63 Corvette to fourth in LMGTE Pro.[91]

Morning

[edit]
Another white-and-red car
The race-winning No. 2 Porsche 919 Hybrid

After green-flag racing resumed in the early morning, a slow zone was imposed whenJames Allen beached the No. 40 Graff entry in the gravel trap on the left-hand Indianapolis turn after contact with the barrier and was pushed back onto the circuit.[77][90] The slow zone lowered the gap between Sørensen's LMGTE Pro-leading No. 95 Aston Martin and Pilet's second-placed No. 92 Porsche to less than 20 seconds.[92] Because the manufacturers used different tyre brands, the Aston Martin and Porsche LMGTE Pro teams had different pit-stop strategies: the Aston Martins could do two stints on their tyres, while the Porsches could do three.[93] Tung used the slow zone to return the No. 38 DC car to the LMP2 lead when Piquet's No. 13 Rebellion entry lost a minute in it.[92] Calado's No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari had to drop out of the LMGTE Pro lead battle when Calado andRob Bell's No. 90 TF Aston Martin collided at the second Mulsanne chicane; they went to the garage to repair front bodywork damage and a reardiffuser replacement, respectively.[93][94]

The No. 95 Aston Martin relinquished the LMGTE Pro lead toJordan Taylor's No. 63 Corvette, which cycled to Makowiecki's No. 92 Porsche on pit-stop rotation when driver Stanaway, on cold tyres after a scheduled pit stop, damaged the car's left front corner against the tyre wall at the Mulsanne hairpin. Stanaway entered the pit lane for quick repairs and Thiim relieved him.[95][96] The No. 31 Rebellion car stopped in the garage for more than an hour to replace gearbox internals,[2][77] which promoted Panciatici's No. 35 Signatech Alpine to third in LMP2.[97]Will Owen, drivingUnited Autosports' No. 32 car, was fourth in LMP2 when he spun twice (at Indianapolis corner and the Porsche Curves) andDavid Cheng's No. 37 DC entry passed him.Dries Vanthoor lost control of JMW's Ferrari at the pit-lane entry, but retained the LMGTE Am lead.[98] Hartley recovered the No. 2 Porsche to fifth overall by the 20th hour, and the LMGTE Pro lead battle was between three cars: the No. 97 Aston Martin, the No. 63 Corvette and the No. 91 Porsche.[99]

A red, black and white car
Jackie Chan DC Racing's No. 38Oreca 07 took the race lead from the No. 1 Porsche 919 Hybrid, following its retirement.

Lotterer's No. 1 Porsche slowed at the Dunlop Curves after 20 hours and 10 minutes when the engine lost oil pressure. Lotterer attempted to return to the pit lane on hybrid power, but was advised to stop and abandon the car on the Mulsanne Straight when Porsche believed the problem could not be fixed and did not want a slow zone or safety car to slow Hartley.[2][100] Laurent's LMP2-category-leading No. 38 DC Oreca car moved to the race lead after the No. 1 Porsche retired, making him the first LMP2 overall leader in race history.Mathias Beche (second overall) received a stop-and-go while adjusting the brake duct and rear of the No. 13 Rebellion vehicle, and he fell behind Hartley's recovering No. 2 Porsche.[77][101] Laurent lost a minute in the pit lane when the No. 38 DC car's rear bodywork was changed to repair faulty rear brake lights before Bernhard unlapped the Oreca entry to return the No. 2 Porsche to the lead lap, as he was lapping significantly faster on average than the LMP2 car.[102]

Piquet's No. 13 Rebellion car battled Negrão's No. 35 Signatech Alpine for third overall in slower traffic before Piquet's pace unsettled his vehicle through the Porsche Curves and allowed Negrão to pull clear. The Rebellion entry received a ten-second time penalty for Piquet's collision with the No. 49 ARC Bratislava Ligier, and it fell back from the Alpine.[103] Makowiecki's No. 91 Porsche exited the LMGTE Pro race after suffering a left-front puncture and making an unscheduled pit stop.[104] Bernhard closed up on Tung's No. 38 DC Oreca car and overtook it on the inside on the right-hand kink into Indianapolis turn for the race lead with just over one hour remaining.[103] Negrão lost the No. 35 Signatech Alpine's hold on third overall to Piquet's No. 13 Rebellion car in the final hour when he slowly got the Alpine stuck in the gravel at Arnage corner while attempting to rejoin the circuit.[77][105] Adam's No. 97 Aston Martin tried to pass Taylor's No. 63 Corvette for the LMGTE Pro lead, but ran wide and hit the Corvette. He tried again after Taylor drove across the gravel trap at the second Mulsanne Straight chicane and took the category lead on the start-finish straight with two laps remaining, which he maintained to the finish.[2][105]

Finish

[edit]

The No. 2 Porsche team led for the remainder of the race, winning after 367 laps,[2] earning Bamber and Bernhard their second Le Mans victories, Hartley his first and Porsche its 19th. Toyota was able to repair the No. 8 car sufficiently to finish eighth overall and the final LMP1 finisher, nine laps behind the winning Porsche.[106] The No. 38 DC Oreca entry led the final 141 laps of LMP2 to win the category and finish second overall, a lap down.[57] Rebellion's No. 13 car finished provisionally second and third overall, with DC's No. 37 car completing the class podium.[2] Aston Martin secured their first LMGTE Pro Le Mans victory, with Turner taking his third category win and Adam and Serra their first.[107] Tincknell's No. 67 Ford took second in class with a last-lap pass of Taylor's No. 63 Corvette, which had bodywork damage and a slow front-left puncture.[2] JMW, unchallenged since the race's eighth hour, won the LMGTE Am class with the No. 84 Ferrari leading the last 234 laps.[2][57] The Spirit of Race and Scuderia Corsa Ferraris completed the category podium, two laps behind in second and third.[2]

Post-race

[edit]

The top three teams in each of the four classes appeared on the podium to collect their trophies, and spoke to the media at a later press conference. Bamber called Porsche's victory"'incredibly nerve-wracking. A great fightback from us, and one of those fairytale Le Mans stories I think'".[108] Hartley added,"'You can't write these stories. It's Le Mans. It's always unpredictable. Sometimes at the beginning of the race you don't believe that such a story exists. But it did'".[108]Oliver Jarvis said,"'We can't be disappointed winning LMP2 and finishing second, but there was a moment when I saw the #1 Porsche at the side of the track and thought we could actually win! It would have been incredible'".[2] Tung called the LMP2 victory"'extremely important. Not just to win here at Le Mans, it's so special, but also for the World Endurance Championship, it's a very important race'".[109] Jota Sport team director Sam Hignett said an LMP2 car winning overall might have been"'legendary'" with"'a little bit more luck'", but the team was delighted to achieve its objectives.[109] ActorJackie Chan equated his team's class victory to his winning anAcademy Award.[110] FIA presidentJean Todt said that LMP2 cars driven by unknown drivers leading the race and finishing on the overall podium were"'great for racing'".[111]

After the race, third-place-overall finisher No. 13 Rebellion Oreca was disqualified by race officials after it was found that the team had modified its rear bodywork by cutting a hole to allow them to access a faultystarter motor; it was declared an unnecessary modification of approved bodywork. The disqualification moved the second Jackie Chan DC Racing car to third place overall, and second in class.[112] Rebellion Racing issued a statement admitting an"'error of judgement'".[113] Rusinov was assessed a three-minute penalty at the following6 Hours of Nürburgring, with three additional stop-and-go penalties suspended for the following three FIA WEC events, for his second-hour collision with Al-Qubaisi's Porsche.[114] Rusinov called the penalty a"'very harsh decision'", saying that he had apologised to Al-Quabisi and his team; Al-Quabisi told Rusinov that he would have allowed him past at the next corner.[115]

Toyota presidentAkio Toyoda suggested that hybrid technology may not yet have been developed enough to cope with the event's demands.[116] Oreca president Hugues de Chaunac echoed Toyoda, suggesting that the state of LMP1 hybrid cars were too convoluted. Porsche team principalAndreas Seidl felt that the hybrid failures were a consequence of faster racing, and Porsche had not experienced such problems.[117] Jarvis said that ACO rule changes attempting to slow the LMP1 hybrid cars were ineffective and impaired reliability.[118] Capillaire apologised to Toyota (which was accepted) for indirectly causing the No. 7 car's retirement, saying that he ran across the pit lane to encourage Kobayashi.[119] Kaffer accepted an apology from Vaxivière for the incident which took the Risi Ferrari out of the race, and for which Vaxivière was strongly criticised.[120]Prodrive chairmanDavid Richards praised the"'extraordinary'" team effort of his Aston Martin team to win LMGTE Pro; Adam called his pursuit of Taylor"'the stint of my life'", saying that his team's reaction to his race-winning overtake of Taylor"'was quite emotional'".[121]

Bamber, Bernhard, and Hartley took the Drivers' Championship lead with 83 points; Buemi, Davidson, and Nakajima fell to second with 66, and Jarvis, Laurent, and Tung moved from sixth to third.[5] Porsche overtook Toyota to lead the Manufacturers' Championship by 28.5 points.[5] Derani, Priaulx, and Tincknell remained the GT World Endurance Drivers' Championship leaders, with Adam, Serra, and Turner second. Ford took the GT World Endurance Manufacturers' Championship lead from Ferrari with six races left in the season.[5]

Official results

[edit]

The minimum number of laps for classification (70 per cent of the overall winning car's race distance) was 257 laps. Class winners are inbold.[2][122]

Final race classification
PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisTyreLapsTime/Retired
Engine
1LMP12GermanyPorsche LMP TeamGermanyTimo Bernhard
New ZealandBrendon Hartley
New ZealandEarl Bamber
Porsche 919 HybridM36724:01:14.075
Porsche 2.0 L Turbo V4
2LMP238ChinaJackie Chan DC RacingNetherlandsHo-Pin Tung
FranceThomas Laurent
United KingdomOliver Jarvis
Oreca 07D366+1 Lap
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
3LMP237ChinaJackie Chan DC RacingUnited StatesDavid Cheng
FranceTristan Gommendy
United KingdomAlex Brundle
Oreca 07D363+4 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
4LMP235FranceSignatech Alpine MatmutFranceNelson Panciatici
FrancePierre Ragues
BrazilAndré Negrão
Alpine A470D362+5 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
5LMP232United StatesUnited AutosportsUnited StatesWill Owen
SwitzerlandHugo de Sadeleer
PortugalFilipe Albuquerque
Ligier JS P217D362+5 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
6LMP240FranceGraffAustraliaJames Allen
United KingdomRichard Bradley
France Franck Matelli
Oreca 07D361+6 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
7LMP224ChinaCEFC Manor TRS RacingThailandTor Graves
SwitzerlandJonathan Hirschi
FranceJean-Éric Vergne
Oreca 07D360+7 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
8LMP18JapanToyota Gazoo RacingSwitzerlandSébastien Buemi
JapanKazuki Nakajima
United KingdomAnthony Davidson
Toyota TS050 HybridM358+9 Laps
Toyota 2.4 L Turbo V6
9LMP247Italy Cetilar Villorba CorseItalyAndrea Belicchi
ItalyRoberto Lacorte
ItalyGiorgio Sernagiotto
Dallara P217D353+14 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
10LMP236FranceSignatech Alpine MatmutFranceRomain Dumas
United StatesGustavo Menezes
United Kingdom Matt Rao
Alpine A470D351+16 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
11LMP234United Kingdom Tockwith MotorsportsUnited KingdomPhil Hanson
United KingdomNigel Moore
IndiaKarun Chandhok
Ligier JS P217D351+16 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
12LMP217FranceIDEC Sport RacingFrance Patrice Lafargue
FrancePaul Lafargue
France David Zollinger
Ligier JS P217M344+23 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
13LMP229NetherlandsRacing Team NederlandBrazilRubens Barrichello
NetherlandsJan Lammers
NetherlandsFrits van Eerd
Dallara P217D344+23 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
14LMP221United StatesDragonSpeed – 10 StarSwedenHenrik Hedman
SwedenFelix Rosenqvist
United KingdomBen Hanley
Oreca 07D343+24 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
15LMP233PhilippinesEurasia MotorsportFranceJacques Nicolet
France Pierre Nicolet
France Erik Maris
Ligier JS P217D341+26 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
16LMP231SwitzerlandVaillante RebellionBrazilBruno Senna
FranceNicolas Prost
FranceJulien Canal
Oreca 07D340+27 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
17LMGTE
Pro
97United KingdomAston Martin RacingUnited KingdomDarren Turner
United KingdomJonathan Adam
BrazilDaniel Serra
Aston Martin Vantage GTED340+27 Laps
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8
18LMGTE
Pro
67United StatesFord Chip Ganassi Team UKUnited KingdomHarry Tincknell
United KingdomAndy Priaulx
BrazilPipo Derani
Ford GTM340+27 Laps
FordEcoBoost 3.5 L Turbo V6
19LMGTE
Pro
63United StatesCorvette Racing – GMDenmarkJan Magnussen
SpainAntonio García
United StatesJordan Taylor
Chevrolet Corvette C7.RM340+27 Laps
Chevrolet 5.5 L V8
20LMGTE
Pro
91GermanyPorsche GT TeamAustriaRichard Lietz
FranceFrédéric Makowiecki
FrancePatrick Pilet
Porsche 911 RSRM339+28 Laps
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
21LMGTE
Pro
71ItalyAF CorseItalyDavide Rigon
United KingdomSam Bird
SpainMiguel Molina
Ferrari 488 GTEM339+28 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
22LMGTE
Pro
68United StatesFord Chip Ganassi Team USAUnited StatesJoey Hand
BrazilTony Kanaan
GermanyDirk Müller
Ford GTM339+28 Laps
FordEcoBoost 3.5 L Turbo V6
23LMGTE
Pro
69United StatesFord Chip Ganassi Team USAAustraliaRyan Briscoe
New ZealandScott Dixon
United KingdomRichard Westbrook
Ford GTM337+30 Laps
FordEcoBoost 3.5 L Turbo V6
24LMGTE
Pro
64United StatesCorvette Racing – GMUnited KingdomOliver Gavin
United StatesTommy Milner
SwitzerlandMarcel Fässler
Chevrolet Corvette C7.RM335+32 Laps
Chevrolet 5.5 L V8
25LMGTE
Pro
95United KingdomAston Martin RacingDenmarkNicki Thiim
DenmarkMarco Sørensen
New ZealandRichie Stanaway
Aston Martin Vantage GTED334+33 Laps
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8
26LMGTE
Am
84United Kingdom JMW MotorsportUnited Kingdom Robert Smith
United KingdomWill Stevens
BelgiumDries Vanthoor
Ferrari 488 GTEM333+34 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
27LMGTE
Pro
66United StatesFord Chip Ganassi Team UKGermanyStefan Mücke
FranceOlivier Pla
United StatesBilly Johnson
Ford GTM332+35 Laps
FordEcoBoost 3.5 L Turbo V6
28LMGTE
Am
55SwitzerlandSpirit of RaceUnited Kingdom Duncan Cameron
United Kingdom Aaron Scott
ItalyMarco Cioci
Ferrari 488 GTEM331+36 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
29LMGTE
Am
62United StatesScuderia CorsaUnited StatesCooper MacNeil
United States Bill Sweedler
United StatesTownsend Bell
Ferrari 488 GTEM331+36 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
30LMGTE
Am
99United KingdomBeechdean AMRUnited Kingdom Andrew Howard
United KingdomRoss Gunn
United Kingdom Oliver Bryant
Aston Martin Vantage GTED331+36 Laps
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8
31LMGTE
Am
61SingaporeClearwater RacingMalaysia Weng Sun Mok
JapanKeita Sawa
Republic of IrelandMatt Griffin
Ferrari 488 GTEM330+37 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
32LMP245PortugalAlgarve Pro RacingUnited StatesMark Patterson
United StatesMatt McMurry
France Vincent Capillaire
Ligier JS P217D330+37 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
33LMP227RussiaSMP RacingRussiaMikhail Aleshin
RussiaSergey Sirotkin
RussiaViktor Shaytar
Dallara P217D330+37 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
34LMGTE
Am
77GermanyDempsey-Proton RacingGermanyChristian Ried
GermanyMarvin Dienst
ItalyMatteo Cairoli
Porsche 911 RSRD329+38 Laps
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
35LMGTE
Am
90United KingdomTF SportTurkeySalih Yoluç
United KingdomEuan Hankey
United KingdomRob Bell
Aston Martin Vantage GTED329+38 Laps
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8
36LMGTE
Am
98United KingdomAston Martin RacingCanadaPaul Dalla Lana
AustriaMathias Lauda
PortugalPedro Lamy
Aston Martin Vantage GTED329+38 Laps
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8
37LMGTE
Am
93GermanyProton CompetitionUnited StatesPatrick Long
United States Mike Hedlund
Saudi ArabiaAbdulaziz Al Faisal
Porsche 911 RSRD329+38 Laps
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
38LMGTE
Am
86United KingdomGulf Racing UKUnited KingdomMichael Wainwright
United KingdomBen Barker
AustraliaNick Foster
Porsche 911 RSRD328+39 Laps
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
39LMP222RussiaG-Drive RacingMexicoMemo Rojas
JapanRyō Hirakawa
MexicoJosé Gutiérrez
Oreca 07D327+40 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
40LMGTE
Am
60SingaporeClearwater RacingSingapore Richard Wee
PortugalÁlvaro Parente
JapanHiroki Katoh
Ferrari 488 GTEM327+40 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
41LMGTE
Am
54SwitzerlandSpirit of RaceSwitzerlandThomas Flohr
ItalyFrancesco Castellacci
MonacoOlivier Beretta
Ferrari 488 GTEM326+41 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
42LMGTE
Am
83Hong KongDH RacingUnited StatesTracy Krohn
SwedenNiclas Jönsson
ItalyAndrea Bertolini
Ferrari 488 GTEM320+47 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
43LMP239FranceGraffFrance Eric Trouillet
FranceEnzo Guibbert
United KingdomJames Winslow
Oreca 07D318+49 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
44LMGTE
Am
65United StatesScuderia CorsaDenmarkChristina Nielsen
ItalyAlessandro Balzan
United StatesBret Curtis
Ferrari 488 GTEM314+53 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
45LMP249SlovakiaARC BratislavaSlovakiaMiroslav Konôpka
LatviaKonstantīns Calko
NetherlandsRik Breukers
Ligier JS P217M314+53 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
46LMGTE
Pro
51ItalyAF CorseUnited KingdomJames Calado
ItalyAlessandro Pier Guidi
ItalyMichele Rugolo
Ferrari 488 GTEM312+55 Laps
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
47LMP243United StatesKeating MotorsportUnited StatesBen Keating
United StatesRicky Taylor
NetherlandsJeroen Bleekemolen
Riley Mk. 30M312+55 Laps
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
48LMGTE
Am
50FranceLarbre CompétitionFrance Romain Brandela
France Christian Philippon
BrazilFernando Rees
Chevrolet Corvette C7.RM309+58 Laps
Chevrolet 5.5 L V8
DNFLMP11GermanyPorsche LMP TeamSwitzerlandNeel Jani
United KingdomNick Tandy
GermanyAndré Lotterer
Porsche 919 HybridM318Mechanical
Porsche 2.0 L Turbo V4
DNFLMP223FrancePanis Barthez CompetitionFranceFabien Barthez
FranceTimothé Buret
FranceNathanaël Berthon
Ligier JS P217M296Retired
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
DNFLMP228FranceTDS RacingFranceFrançois Perrodo
FranceEmmanuel Collard
FranceMatthieu Vaxivière
Oreca 07D213Accident
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
DNFLMGTE
Pro
92GermanyPorsche GT TeamDenmarkMichael Christensen
FranceKévin Estre
GermanyDirk Werner
Porsche 911 RSRM179Retired
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
DNFLMP19JapanToyota Gazoo RacingArgentinaJosé María López
FranceNicolas Lapierre
JapanYuji Kunimoto
Toyota TS050 HybridM160Puncture
Toyota 2.4 L Turbo V6
DNFLMP17JapanToyota Gazoo RacingUnited KingdomMike Conway
JapanKamui Kobayashi
FranceStéphane Sarrazin
Toyota TS050 HybridM154Clutch
Toyota 2.4 L Turbo V6
DNFLMP225ChinaCEFC Manor TRS RacingMexicoRoberto González
SwitzerlandSimon Trummer
RussiaVitaly Petrov
Oreca 07D152Collision
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
DNFLMGTE
Pro
82United StatesRisi CompetizioneFinlandToni Vilander
ItalyGiancarlo Fisichella
GermanyPierre Kaffer
Ferrari 488 GTEM72Collision
FerrariF154CB 3.9 L Turbo V8
DNFLMP226RussiaG-Drive RacingRussiaRoman Rusinov
FrancePierre Thiriet
United KingdomAlex Lynn
Oreca 07D20Collision
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
DNFLMGTE
Am
88GermanyProton CompetitionAustriaKlaus Bachler
Belgium Stéphane Lémeret
United Arab EmiratesKhaled Al Qubaisi
Porsche 911 RSRD18Collision
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6
DNFLMP14AustriaByKolles Racing TeamAustriaDominik Kraihamer
United KingdomOliver Webb
ItalyMarco Bonanomi
ENSO CLM P01/01M7Retired
Nismo VRX30A 3.0 L Turbo V6
DSQLMP213SwitzerlandVaillante RebellionBrazilNelson Piquet Jr.
SwitzerlandMathias Beche
DenmarkDavid Heinemeier Hansson
Oreca 07D364Disqualified[N 3]
Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8
Tyre manufacturers
Key
SymbolTyre manufacturer
DDunlop
MMichelin

Championship standings after the race

[edit]
2017 World Endurance Drivers' Championship[5]
Pos.+/–DriverPoints
1 1GermanyTimo Bernhard
New ZealandBrendon Hartley
New ZealandEarl Bamber
83
2 1SwitzerlandSébastien Buemi
United KingdomAnthony Davidson
JapanKazuki Nakajima
66
3 3United KingdomOliver Jarvis
FranceThomas Laurent
NetherlandsHo-Pin Tung
50
4 13United KingdomAlex Brundle
United StatesDavid Cheng
FranceTristan Gommendy
31
5 2SwitzerlandNeel Jani
GermanyAndré Lotterer
United KingdomNick Tandy
28
2017 World Manufacturers' Championship[5]
Pos.+/–TeamPoints
1 1GermanyPorsche111
2 1JapanToyota82.5

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for the Drivers' Championship standings.
2017 GT World Endurance Drivers' Championship[5]
Pos.+/–DriverPoints
1BrazilPipo Derani
United KingdomAndy Priaulx
United KingdomHarry Tincknell
74
2 5United KingdomJonathan Adam
BrazilDaniel Serra
United KingdomDarren Turner
63
3 1United KingdomSam Bird
ItalyDavide Rigon
60
4 1FranceRichard Lietz
FranceFrédéric Makowiecki
55
5 1GermanyStefan Mücke
FranceOlivier Pla
45
2017 GT World Endurance Manufacturers' Championship[5]
Pos.+/–ConstructorPoints
1 1United StatesFord117
2 1ItalyFerrari108
3 1United KingdomAston Martin95
4 1GermanyPorsche72

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for the Drivers' Championship standings.

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^Kobayashi's time was nearly two seconds faster than the qualifying lap record set in2015 on the current 13.629-kilometre (8.469 mi) version of theCircuit de la Sarthe and averaged 251.882 km/h (156.512 mph) to beatHans-Joachim Stuck's1985 qualifying run.[38]
  2. ^The No. 82 Risi Ferrari had its lap times from the Qualifying 1 session deleted for the team breakingparc fermé regulations by handling the tires after the session.[36]
  3. ^The No. 13 Rebellion Oreca was disqualified from the race after the team was found to have intentionally modified the bodywork on the car to permit starting it more easily.[112]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Bonardel, Cécile (25 June 2016)."The date of the 2017 24 Hours of Le Mans approved by the FIA World Motor Sport Council".Automobile Club de l'Ouest. Archived fromthe original on 6 January 2017. Retrieved6 January 2017.
  2. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxWatkins, Gary; Straw, Edd; Codling, Stuart (22 June 2017)."Le Mans Report Special"(PDF).Autosport:16–33.Archived(PDF) from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  3. ^Smith, Luke (28 September 2016)."Provisional calendar for 2017 FIA WEC season announced".NBC Sports.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  4. ^Saunders, Nate (30 November 2016)."2017 F1 calendar confirmed; Germany gone, Baku moved to avoid Le Mans clash".ESPN. Archived fromthe original on 1 December 2016. Retrieved6 January 2017.
  5. ^abcdefghij"World Endurance Championship – Season 2017 – Standings". Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. Archived fromthe original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  6. ^Dagys, John (19 December 2016)."ACO Adjusts Final Lap Classification Rule for 24H Le Mans".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved30 May 2017.
  7. ^Watkins, Gary (8 June 2017)."Le Mans slow zone system revised for 2017 24 Hours event".Autosport.Archived from the original on 20 June 2017. Retrieved17 June 2017.
  8. ^Watkins, Gary (6 June 2017)."Drivers wary over safety changes at Le Mans ahead of 24 Hours".Autosport.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  9. ^Dagys, John (14 September 2015)."Gibson Selected as 2017 LMP2 Spec Engine Provider".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved6 May 2017.
  10. ^Dagys, John (11 June 2015)."2017 LMP2 Regulations Confirmed; Constructors Announced in July".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved6 May 2017.
  11. ^"IMSA, ACO, FIA name LMP2 chassis constructors for 2017".Autoweek. 11 July 2015.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  12. ^abc"2017 Le Mans 24 Hours – 14 teams invited". Automobile Club de l'Ouest. 23 January 2017.Archived from the original on 15 February 2017. Retrieved23 January 2017.
  13. ^"Full 2017 Le Mans 24 Hours entry list".Motorsport.com. 16 May 2017.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  14. ^Kilbey, Stephen (25 April 2017)."2017 Le Mans Entry Nears Completion".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 2 October 2017. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  15. ^abWalker, Kate (16 June 2017)."The Contest That Defines a Championship in Auto Racing".The New York Times.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  16. ^abcWalker, Kate (16 June 2017)."Le Mans Innovation Rolls Out of Garage 56".The New York Times.Archived from the original on 23 August 2021. Retrieved30 January 2022.
  17. ^Pruett, Marshall (9 November 2016)."LM24: Garage 56 entry in question for 2017".Racer.Archived from the original on 30 January 2022. Retrieved30 January 2022.
  18. ^Watkins, Gary (3 June 2017)."24 Hours of Le Mans: Ford GT to face Balance of Performance challenges in GTE Pro class".Autoweek.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  19. ^Dagys, John (24 May 2017)."Ford Hit with Weight, Power Adjustments in Le Mans-Specific BoP".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 1 July 2017. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  20. ^ACO 2017, p. 9.
  21. ^abcKilbey, Stephen (4 June 2017)."Toyota 1–2–3 In First Le Mans Test Session".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  22. ^abWatkins, Gary (4 June 2017)."Toyota leads morning of Le Mans 24 Hours test day".Autosport.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  23. ^Watkins, Gary (4 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours test day: Toyota sets pace and beats 2016 pole".Autosport.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  24. ^abcdKilbey, Stephen (4 June 2017)."Toyota Finishes Le Mans Test Day On Top".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  25. ^Dagys, John (4 June 2017)."Toyota Sets Pace at Le Mans Test Day".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  26. ^Dagys, John (10 June 2017)."Corvette Pegged Back in Post-Le Mans Test BoP Changes".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 19 July 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  27. ^abcACO 2017, pp. 52–55.
  28. ^abcdPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (14 June 2017)."Le Mans: Free Practice, Porsche Fastest First".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  29. ^abcLickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd; Codling, Stuart (14 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours 2017: #1 Porsche outpaces Toyota in free practice".Autosport. Archived fromthe original on 19 September 2021. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  30. ^"Le Mans 24 Hours: Jani steals top spot from Toyota in Le Mans practice".Crash. 14 June 2017.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  31. ^Smith, Luke (14 June 2017)."Jani Quickest in Practice as Porsche Hits Back".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 3 August 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  32. ^abcdKlein, Jamie; Straw, Edd; Codling, Stuart (14 June 2017)."Le Mans 24h: Kobayashi takes provisional pole for Toyota".Motorsport.com.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  33. ^abcSmith, Luke (14 June 2017)."Kobayashi, Toyota on Provisional Pole at Le Mans".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 3 August 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  34. ^abcdePotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (14 June 2017)."Le Mans: Qualifying 1, Toyota On Provisional Pole".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 14 September 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  35. ^"FIA WEC 85e Edition des 24 Heures du Mans Qualifying Practice 1 Final Classification"(PDF). Automobile Club de l'Ouest. 15 June 2017.Archived(PDF) from the original on 15 July 2017. Retrieved15 June 2017.
  36. ^abDagys, John (15 June 2017)."Le Mans Thursday Notebook".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved15 June 2017.
  37. ^Ramelet, Quentin (15 June 2017)."24h du Mans 2017: qualifications perturbées après la sortie du Français Erik Maris (Ligier n°33)" [24 Hours of Le Mans 2017: qualifying disrupted after the exit of Frenchman Erik Maris (Ligier n°33)].France Info (in French). Archived fromthe original on 14 November 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  38. ^Baldwin, Alan (15 June 2017). Mulvenney, Nick (ed.)."Motor racing-Kobayashi record lap puts Toyota on pole at Le Mans".Reuters.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  39. ^abcdSmith, Luke (15 June 2017)."Kobayashi Smashes Le Mans Lap Record in Qualifying 2".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved20 August 2023.
  40. ^abcdPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (15 June 2017)."Le Mans: Second Qualifying, Lap Records Smashed At Will".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 19 September 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  41. ^abcdeKlein, Jamie (15 June 2017)."Le Mans 24h: Toyota locks out front row in final qualifying".Motorsport.com.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  42. ^"Toyota startet in Le Mans von der Pole" [Fabulous time for the Japanese: Toyota starts from pole at Le Mans].n-tv (in German). 16 June 2017.Archived from the original on 20 July 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  43. ^abSmith, Luke (15 June 2017)."Kobayashi Takes Record-Breaking Pole at Le Mans".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  44. ^abPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (15 June 2017)."Le Mans: Qualifying 3, Toyota Pole Confirmed".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 19 September 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  45. ^abNewbold, James (16 June 2017)."Aston Martin Denies Ferrari Pole in GTE-Pro".Sportscar365.Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved16 June 2017.
  46. ^Dagys, John (16 June 2017)."Porsche Gets Weight Break in Pre-Race BoP Change".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 11 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  47. ^"FIA WEC 85e Edition des 24 Heures du Mans Qualifying Practice Final Classification"(PDF). Automobile Club de l'Ouest. 16 June 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 16 June 2017. Retrieved30 January 2022.
  48. ^"FIA WEC 85e Edition des 24 Heures du Mans Race Final Starting Grid"(PDF). Automobile Club de l'Ouest. 17 June 2017.Archived(PDF) from the original on 19 September 2017. Retrieved17 June 2017.
  49. ^Smith, Luke (17 June 2017)."Nakajima Leads Toyota 1–2 in Warmup".SportsCar365.Archived from the original on 22 September 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  50. ^abLittle, Martin (17 June 2017)."Toyota Tops Le Mans Warm Up".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  51. ^"85º Edition des 24 Heures du Mans – FIA WEC – Race – Weather Report"(PDF). FIA World Endurance Championship. 18 June 2017. p. 1.Archived(PDF) from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  52. ^ACO 2017, p. 10.
  53. ^DiZinno, Tony (19 June 2017)."2018 Le Mans date set; 258,500 attended this year's race".NBC Sports.Archived from the original on 10 September 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  54. ^Williams, Richard (23 June 2017)."F1 could learn a few things from the magnificent Le Mans 24 Hours".The Guardian.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  55. ^abcdPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (17 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 1 (3-4pm), Toyota Holds Early Lead".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  56. ^Lickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd (17 June 2017)."Toyota driver Buemi heads Toyota 1–2 after Le Mans first hour".Autosport.Archived from the original on 30 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  57. ^abc"FIA WEC – 85º Edition des 24 Heures du Mans – Race – Leader Sequence"(PDF). Automobile Club de l'Ouest. 18 June 2017. pp. 1–3.Archived(PDF) from the original on 21 October 2017. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  58. ^abLickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd (17 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours: #7 Toyota takes the lead in second hour".Autosport.Archived from the original on 30 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  59. ^abNewbold, James (17 June 2017)."LMP2 Polesitter G-Drive Out in Hour 2".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 17 August 2017. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  60. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (17 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 2 (4-5pm), Toyota Leads As First Retirements Recorded".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  61. ^Gigner, Seb (17 June 2017)."2017 24 Hours of Le Mans: Hour 2 Update – Rusinov Crash Causes Extended Slow Zone Period". The Checkered Flag.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  62. ^Lickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd (17 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours: #7 Toyota maintains lead after first driver swaps".Autosport.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  63. ^abSmith, Luke (17 June 2017)."Kobayashi Leads as Porsche, Aston Martin Hit Trouble in Hour 4".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 17 August 2017. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  64. ^abcdeFira, Michael (20 June 2017)."2017 24 Hours of Le Mans – Race Report". TopSpeed.Archived from the original on 30 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  65. ^abPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (17 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 5 (7-8pm), #1 Porsche Splits The Toyotas".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  66. ^Smith, Luke (22 June 2017)."Vaxiviere issues apology after Kaffer crash at Le Mans".crash.net.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  67. ^abcdNewbold, James (17 June 2017)."Porsche Closes in on Toyota at Hour 6 as Risi Cleanup Continues".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 18 August 2017. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  68. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (17 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 6 (8-9pm), Toyota Leads Into Dusk".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  69. ^Lickorish, Stephen; Watkins, Gary (17 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours lead battle closes up during sixth hour".Autosport.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  70. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (17 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 7 (9–10pm), Toyota Moves To 1–2".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  71. ^Lickorish, Stephen (17 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours: Nakajima restores Toyota 1–2 in seventh hour".Autosport.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  72. ^abcdPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (17 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 8 (10–11pm), Trouble Strikes Several Frontrunners".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  73. ^abLickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd (17 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours: Second Toyota hits major trouble in hour 8".Autosport.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  74. ^Lickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd (17 June 2017)."Mike Conway extends #7 Toyota's lead in hour 9 at Le Mans".Autosport.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  75. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (17 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 9 (11pm-12am), LMP1 Evenly Poised".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  76. ^Lickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd (17 June 2017)."Disaster for Toyota gives Porsche the lead at Le Mans in hour 10".Autosport.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  77. ^abcdefgSmith, Fred (16 June 2017)."2017 24 Hours of Le Mans: The Live Blog".Road & Track.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  78. ^Perkins, Chris (20 June 2017)."Watch the Strange Pit Lane Incident That Caused Toyota's Failure at Le Mans".Road & Track.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved13 November 2017.
  79. ^abPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Kilbey, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 10 (12am-1am), Extraordinary Scenes as Toyota Flounders".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  80. ^abPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Kilbey, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 11 (1am–2am), Incredible Heartache for Toyota".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  81. ^Smith, Luke (18 June 2017)."More Heartbreak for Toyota as No. 9 Car Retires in Hour 11".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 19 August 2017. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  82. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Kilbey, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 12 (2am–3am), Porsche In Tentative Command".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  83. ^Newbold, James (18 June 2017)."Porsche in Control at Halfway Mark of 24H Le Mans".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 19 August 2017. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  84. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 13 (3am–4am), Porsche Holds On".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  85. ^Newbold, James (18 June 2017)."LMP2-Leading Oreca to the Garage in Hour 13".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 19 August 2017. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  86. ^Smale, Glen (18 June 2017)."Sunset at Le Mans 2017".Porsche Road & Race.Archived from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  87. ^Holloway, Alice (18 June 2017)."2017 24 Hours of Le Mans: Hour 14 Update – Some Chaos in LMP2". The Checkered Flag.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  88. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 15 (5am–6am), Safety Car as TDS Crashes".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  89. ^abMyrehn, Ryan (18 June 2017)."No. 1 Porsche Leads Under Safety Car After 14 Hours".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 23 August 2017. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  90. ^abPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 16 (6am–7am), GT Battles Continue As Sun Rises".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  91. ^Codling, Stuart; Lickorish, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Neel Jani keeps #1 Porsche on top after 15 hours of Le Mans".Autosport.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  92. ^abLickorish, Stephen; Codling, Stuart (18 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours: #1 Porsche adds another lap to commanding lead".Autosport.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  93. ^abLickorish, Stephen; Codling, Stuart (18 June 2017)."Le Mans 24 Hours: #1 Porsche maintains stranglehold in hour 17".Autosport.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  94. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 17 (7am–8am), 11-lap Lead For #1 Porsche".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  95. ^Smith, Luke (18 June 2017)."Porsche 12 Laps Clear with Six Hours to Go at Le Mans".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 21 August 2017. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  96. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 18 (8am–9am), GTE Pro Lead Changes Hands".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  97. ^Newbold, James (18 June 2017)."GTE-Pro Fight Heating Up With Four Hours Remaining".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  98. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 19 (9am–10am), Porsche From DC & Rebellion With Five To Go".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  99. ^Lickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd (18 June 2017)."Porsche closing on overall 1–2 at Le Mans in hour 20".Autosport.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  100. ^Smith, Luke (18 June 2017)."Race-Leading No. 1 Porsche Stops on Track in 21st Hour".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved28 January 2022.
  101. ^Potts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 21 (11am–12pm), Jackie Chan DC Racing Leads Overall".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  102. ^Newbold, James (18 June 2017)."DC Still Out Front Overall, Porsche Closing in With Two Hours To Go".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  103. ^abPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 23 (1pm–2pm), #2 Porsche Takes The Lead At Last".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  104. ^Lickorish, Stephen; Straw, Edd (18 June 2017)."#2 Porsche snatches lead from #38 LMP2 ORECA ahead of final hour".Autosport.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  105. ^abPotts, Marcus; Little, Martin; Errity, Stephen (18 June 2017)."Le Mans: Hour 24 (2pm–3pm), Porsche Wins To Complete Le Mans Hat-Trick".DailySportsCar.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  106. ^Dagys, John (18 June 2017)."Porsche Wins Wild 24H Le Mans in LMP1 Meltdown".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  107. ^Newbold, James (18 June 2017)."Aston Martin Defeats Corvette in Final Lap GTE-Pro Showdown".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  108. ^abSmith, Luke; Dagys, John (18 June 2017)."Bamber, Hartley Doubted "Fairytale" Win Was Possible".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 23 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  109. ^abSmith, Luke; Dagys, John; Newbold, James (18 June 2017)."DC Racing "Started to Dream" of "Impossible" Overall Victory".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  110. ^Straw, Edd; Freeman, Glenn (19 June 2017)."Jackie Chan: Le Mans 24 Hours LMP2 success like an Oscar win".Autosport.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  111. ^Smith, Luke (20 June 2017)."Todt: Overall Le Mans Podium for LMP2 Cars "Great for Racing"".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 28 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  112. ^abKlein, Jamie (19 June 2017)."Rebellion LMP2 squad stripped of overall Le Mans podium".Motorsport.com.Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved19 June 2017.
  113. ^Loewenberg, Gabriel (23 June 2017)."Rebellion Racing No Longer Challenging Le Mans Disqualification".The Drive.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  114. ^Klein, Jamie (19 June 2017)."Rusinov gets severe Nurburgring penalty for Le Mans crash".Motorsport.com.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  115. ^Bradley, Charles; Zagorets, Yaroslav (21 June 2017)."Rusinov: Le Mans carryover penalty "very harsh" on team".Motorsport.com.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  116. ^DiZinno, Tony (18 June 2017)."Toyoda on Le Mans agony: 'Sorry we weren't able to let you drive all out'".NBC Sports.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  117. ^Dagys, John (19 June 2017)."De Chaunac: LMP1 Hybrids "Too Complicated" of a Car".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 23 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  118. ^Ladbrook, Robert (26 June 2017)."Toyota/Porsche's Le Mans failure show LMP1 'too extreme' – Jarvis".Autosport.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  119. ^Cozens, Jack (22 June 2017)."Toyota receives apology from Capillaire for Le Mans-ending mix-up".Autosport.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  120. ^Glendenning, Mark (21 June 2017)."Vaxiviere apologizes for Le Mans crash".Racer. Archived fromthe original on 7 October 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  121. ^Newbold, James (19 June 2017)."Richards Lauds "Extraordinary" Aston Martin Victory".SportsCar365. Archived fromthe original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved29 January 2022.
  122. ^"FIA WEC 85º Edition des 24 Heures du Mans Race Final Classification – Amended"(PDF). Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 20 June 2017. pp. 1–2. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 21 October 2017. Retrieved20 June 2017.

Bibliography

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to2017 24 Hours of Le Mans.


FIA World Endurance Championship
Previous race:
6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
2017 seasonNext race:
6 Hours of Nürburgring
2026
2025
2024
2023
2022
2021
2019–20
2018–19
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
Races by year
1920s
1930s
1940s
  • 1940–1948: not held
  • 1949
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
Related topics
Related lists
In media
Video games
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2017_24_Hours_of_Le_Mans&oldid=1336700201"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp