logo
Robert Kubica seals emotional Le Mans 24 Hours victory for Ferrari

Robert Kubica seals emotional Le Mans 24 Hours victory for Ferrari

The Guardian15-06-2025
Poland's Robert Kubica sealed a deserved place in motor racing history as he took victory – alongside China's Ye Yifei and Britain's Philip Hanson – at the Le Mans 24 Hours. Hard fought with a relentless determination that has matched his refusal to be cowed after a life-threatening accident, his victory also secured an impressive third consecutive win for Ferrari at the 93rd edition of the vingt-quatre.
The victory after 387 laps for the No 83 privateer Ferrari 499P, run by the Scuderia's works partner AF Corse, was the first overall win at Le Mans for drivers from Poland and China and will make Ye a household name in his home country, while for the 25-year-old Hanson it is a career high point in only his second run in the top, hypercar, category.
However, it was surely of greatest import to Kubica for whom it was an understandably emotional moment. The victor was a triumph for a driver who has fought tirelessly to continue his career after he was seriously injured in a crash at the Andora Rally in 2011, leading to the partial amputation of his forearm. It all but ended his burgeoning F1 career, when he was set to join Ferrari the following year.
However, he demonstrated immense fortitude, not least in returning to racing only a year later and now sealing a win in the greatest sportscar race of them all, putting in an exhausting five stints for more than three hours in the final phase of the race. Vindication for a driver Lewis Hamilton rated as one of the most talented he had raced.
It was clear that tired as he was, nothing could have stopped Kubica from closing out the race himself. 'We deserve it. Happy for Ferrari. Three years in a row with three different crews, it is amazing,' he said. 'I was not supposed to do five stints at the end of the race. It is three hours and something in the car but fortunately I was able to control everything with a cool head, no mistakes and managed to bring it home.'
Moreover it was achieved in an enormously competitive field at the Circuit de la Sarthe. The hypercar class at Le Mans is in absolutely rude health, with eight major manufacturers now competing and three more, including Ford and McLaren, likely to join by 2027. The intensity of the competition at the race was immense with the cars running at sprint race pace solidly, with only one safety car deployed and nothing in it at the sharp end.
At the close the No 83 took the flag by just 14 seconds from the second-placed No 6 Porsche of Kevin Estre, Laurens Vanthoor and Matt Campbell, with the Ferrari No 51 of Alessandro Pier Guidi, James Calado and Antonio Giovinazzi in third and the No 50 Ferrari of Antonio Fuoco, Miguel Molina and Nicklas Nielsen fourth, all within 30 seconds of the lead after a full 24 hours.
Ferrari would doubtless have preferred one of their works cars to have taken the honours and that had looked the most likely result for some time but, regardless, it was a prancing horse that won, their car once more a formidable competitor. In race pace it was indomitable, consistently leading and holding down the top three slots for long periods for their third win since they returned to the top flight at Le Mans in 2023 after a 50-year hiatus. A remarkable achievement for the Scuderia who had previously last won at La Sarthe in their heyday when they took six victories in a row between 1960 and 1965.
Being Ferrari, there was of course drama too. Kubica and his colleagues had been aggrieved when Ferrari issued team orders in favour of the works cars in the mid-period of the race and doubtless felt some sense of justice when the race fell in their favour and they seized their chance.
With just under four hours remaining Pier Guidi had looked comfortable leading the three Ferraris, albeit with little to choose between them, when in a tiny but enormously costly misjudgement, he overcooked it into the chicane leading into the pit lane, clipped the kerb, spun and was left in the gravel. He was able to resume but the lead was gone and the No83 car took to the front.
Sign up to The Recap
The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action
after newsletter promotion
Yet the fight continued to the flag at unforgiving pace, the three Ferrari's hunted down by the No 6 Porsche which as the race entered the final two hours was able to move up to second place.
Indeed the Porsche squad had thrown everything at the Ferraris. Having started at the very back of the hypercar field after being disqualified from qualifying for being underweight, a fired-up Estre launched an absolutely mammoth assault from the moment Roger Federer waved the tricolour to start the race on Saturday afternoon.
He was decisive and committed and in a field of 21 cars, featuring works entries from Toyota, Alpine, Peugeot, Cadillac, BMW and Aston Martin, had moved up to third by the end of the second hour and was in the mix from then on. Indeed the No6 did hold the lead at times as the race ebbed and flowed against Ferrari, who ultimately just had the edge.
The Porsche duly pushed to the last, the final moments impossibly tense as the minutes inexorably counted down but appropriately it was Kubica behind the wheel to see his team home with familiarly steely resolve.
In the LMP2 class the Inter Europol Competition Oreca of Tom Dillmann, Jakub Smiechowski and Nick Yelloly took the flag. The LMGT3 category was won by the Manthey Porsche of Richard Lietz, Riccardo Pera and Ryan Hardwick.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former F1 boss tells Lewis Hamilton to retire
Former F1 boss tells Lewis Hamilton to retire

The Independent

time2 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Former F1 boss tells Lewis Hamilton to retire

Bernie Ecclestone has urged Lewis Hamilton to retire from Formula One, citing the driver 's recent struggles at Ferrari. Hamilton, a seven-time world champion, has failed to secure a podium finish in his first 14 races for Ferrari and recently finished 12th in Hungary. Ecclestone, the former F1 supremo, believes Hamilton is tired and should have retired 'a while ago', suggesting he would be 'cheating himself' by continuing. The 94-year-old also advised Hamilton to negotiate with Ferrari to have his £50m-a-year contract paid out in full if he were to step aside. Hamilton himself has expressed frustration, calling his performance 'useless' and hinting at 'background' issues at Ferrari.

Lewis Hamilton told to QUIT F1 and demand £180m contract in full before ‘anything bad happens'
Lewis Hamilton told to QUIT F1 and demand £180m contract in full before ‘anything bad happens'

Scottish Sun

time3 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Lewis Hamilton told to QUIT F1 and demand £180m contract in full before ‘anything bad happens'

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) LEWIS HAMILTON has been told to quit F1 and demand his £180million Ferrari contract is paid in full. The seven-time world champion caused shockwaves at the Hungarian grand prix last weekend after admititng he was "absolutely useless". 2 Lewis Hamilton has been told to quit F1 Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 2 Bernie Ecclestone believes Hamilton should retire to avoid the risk of racing Credit: Getty Hamilton, 40, finished 12th in qualifying and called for Ferrari to "change driver" after the result. He was equally as despondent after finishing 12th in the grand prix, and now Bernie Ecclestone has told him to quit the sport. Ecclestone told the Daily Mail: "Lewis is very talented, was and probably still is. "But like a lot of leading sports personalities when they reach the top, there is only one way to go, and it's not a good direction. It's only down. READ MORE ON LEWIS HAMILTON 'BEAUTIFUL' Lando Norris' girlfriend Margarida Corceiro shows off sideboob in risque outfit "They get tired. Lewis is tired. He's been doing what he is doing forever. He needs a rest from it for good, a total reset to do something completely different. "He may not think it but he will soon get used to doing other stuff away from motor racing in retirement. I think he should have done it a while ago. "The guy is not a cheat. But he would be cheating himself if he goes on. He should stop now. "If I were looking after him I would negotiate with Ferrari immediately and say, 'If you have someone to replace Lewis, he'll step aside.'" CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS Hamilton has not got off to the best start in his three-year contract with Ferrari, which is worth £60m a season. His team-mate Charles Leclerc qualified on pole in Hungary and has out qualified Hamilton ten times, with the Brit quicker on just two occasions. Toto Wolff defends F1 driver Lewis Hamilton after 'useless' comments He has also failed to podium in 14 attempts with his only success this season coming in China when he won the sprint race. Ecclestone shared concern for Hamtilon and advised him to retire to avoid the risk of racing. He continued: "I wouldn't want anything bad to happen to Lewis. "He's not fighting for a world championship and is at a stage of his life when it wouldn't be worth him spending two years laid up in bed with a broken back or anything else nasty. "He doesn't need to take the risk any longer. He's won seven world titles and that is quite enough."

Tesla UK sales drop 60 per cent in July
Tesla UK sales drop 60 per cent in July

Times

time3 minutes ago

  • Times

Tesla UK sales drop 60 per cent in July

Tesla sales more than halved to below 1,000 in Britain last month as Chinese rivals continued to expand their foothold in the market. Its new car sales dropped 60 per cent in July to 987 units compared with 2,462 a year earlier as the electric carmaker struggles with regulatory challenges, fierce competition and a backlash against its chief executive Elon Musk's political views. The decline pushed its UK market share down to 0.7 per cent while China's BYD claimed 2.3 per cent of all new registrations, data from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) showed. BYD sold 3,184 cars in Britain, up from 768 last year, while another Chinese brand, Jaecoo, also outsold Tesla with 1,915 new registrations, claiming 1.4 per cent of the market — up from zero sales last year when it launched in the UK.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store