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CNA
18-06-2025
- Automotive
- CNA
Motor Racing-Kubica happy to silence doubters with Le Mans win
Robert Kubica said his triumph at the 24 Hours of Le Mans on Sunday, 14 years after a near-fatal rally crash that partially severed his right forearm, should erase any doubts about his capacity to compete in motor racing. The 40-year-old former Formula One driver became the first Polish overall winner of the French endurance race in a car shared with Yifei Ye and Phil Hanson. "I don't think my limitations are limiting behind the wheel. I think if someone had doubts in the past I showed those doubts should not be in place," he told the BBC. Kubica, the first Polish Formula One driver, won the Canadian Grand Prix and finished fourth overall in 2008. He was linked with a move to Ferrari before the crash sidelined him for nearly a year. He returned to motor racing in 2012, focusing mostly on endurance races, before making a return to Formula One in 2019. "There was some very extreme quotes of some people which hurt me because I am the first one who would never like to be back just for marketing or a being a PR muppet," Kubica said. "People pointing the finger, saying maybe it wasn't safe, and having doubts. They are not doing it anymore."


Reuters
18-06-2025
- Automotive
- Reuters
Motor Racing-Kubica happy to silence doubters with Le Mans win
June 18 (Reuters) - Robert Kubica said his triumph at the 24 Hours of Le Mans on Sunday, 14 years after a near-fatal rally crash that partially severed his right forearm, should erase any doubts about his capacity to compete in motor racing. The 40-year-old former Formula One driver became the first Polish overall winner of the French endurance race in a car shared with Yifei Ye and Phil Hanson. "I don't think my limitations are limiting behind the wheel. I think if someone had doubts in the past I showed those doubts should not be in place," he told the BBC. Kubica, the first Polish Formula One driver, won the Canadian Grand Prix and finished fourth overall in 2008. He was linked with a move to Ferrari before the crash sidelined him for nearly a year. He returned to motor racing in 2012, focusing mostly on endurance races, before making a return to Formula One in 2019. "There was some very extreme quotes of some people which hurt me because I am the first one who would never like to be back just for marketing or a being a PR muppet," Kubica said. "People pointing the finger, saying maybe it wasn't safe, and having doubts. They are not doing it anymore."


South China Morning Post
16-06-2025
- Automotive
- South China Morning Post
Le Mans 24 Hours race: China's first winner Ye Yifei says he is in dreamland
Ye Yifei said he felt like he was dreaming after becoming China's first winner at the 24 Hours of Le Mans race with Robert Kubica's AF Corse team in France late on Sunday. Advertisement In a thrilling 93rd edition of the race, the top four were separated by just over 20 seconds going into the final 15 minutes. Former Formula One driver Kubica of Poland and his co-drivers Ye and Britain's Philip Hanson finished just 14.084 seconds ahead of a Porsche driven by Kevin Estre, Matt Campbell and Laurens Vanthoor. The winning AF Corse car takes a curve during the Le Mans endurance race. Photo: AP . Hong Kong was represented by Antares Au and Jonathan Hui Kin-tak , with Au finishing sixth in the Le Mans Grand Touring 3 category and 39th overall in a Porsche 911 GT3 R, and Hui coming 14th in the same category, 47th overall, in a Ferrari 296 Victory by AF Corse's bright yellow 'privateer' Ferrari gave the Italian marque a third consecutive win in the world's most famous endurance race. For Ye, it helped to erase the pain of the 2021 race, when he, Kubica and Louis Deletraz led the Le Mans Prototype 2 category before their Team WRT Oreca suffered an engine failure on the final lap. Advertisement 'I'm at a loss for words,' said Ye, who first arrived in Le Mans at the age of 14 on an exchange programme to try to become a professional driver. 'It's going to take me some time to realise everything that's happened today. Right now I feel like I'm dreaming. Maybe in two seconds I'll wake up and none of this will exist.


Arab News
16-06-2025
- Automotive
- Arab News
Kubica wins ‘mental battle' to triumph at Le Mans
LE MANS: Former Formula One driver Robert Kubica has long since tackled the demons of a near-fatal accident 14 years ago but Sunday's victory in the 24 Hours of Le Mans is arguably his greatest achievement yet. The 40-year-old Pole roared to victory in his bright yellow 'privateer' Ferrari to give the Italian marque a third consecutive win in the most famous endurance race in the world. In a thrilling 93rd edition of the race, which saw the top four separated by just over 20 seconds going into the final 15 minutes, Kubica and his AF Corse co-drivers Philip Hanson and Ye Yifei (#83) finished just 14.084sec ahead of a Porsche (#6) driven by Kevin Estre, Matt Campbell and Laurens Vanthoor. In so doing they knocked the two factory Ferraris, who started the race as favorites, into third and fourth. 'It's been a long 24 hours but an enjoyable one. Grazie mille, grazie a tutti,' said Kubica over the team radio as he took the chequered flag. Kubica was one of Formula One's brightest prospects when he won the 2008 Canada Grand Prix but a harrowing accident in a rally in Andorra in 2011 almost cost him his life. Trapped upside down in his car before being freed and whisked to hospital, Kubica suffered several serious injuries and underwent a partial amputation of his right forearm. 'What happened was very unfortunate, but I was very lucky,' he said after Sunday's victory. 'It took me quite a few years, not only to recover physically but also mentally. 'What happened happened and I have to accept it. One of the worst periods of my life was when my mind wouldn't accept the fact that my arm was failing.' He returned to racing cars, however, winning the WRC2 championship and taking part in sports car races. In 2017 he moved back into Formula One, testing for Renault before racing for Williams in 2019. But Sunday's win which made him the first Pole ever to win Le Mans tops any of his other achievements behind the wheel. 'It was quite difficult to live with, but I'm happy to have achieved my personal goals,' he said. 'The best thing I've achieved in my life — it's nothing to do with racing — it's more the battle I won with my mind.' Both of Kubica's co-drivers were also first-time winners with Ye the first Chinese driver to triumph. 'I'm at a loss for words,' said Ye who arrived in Le Mans at the age of 14 on an exchange program to try and become a professional driver. 'It's going to take me some time to realize everything that's happened today. Right now I feel like I'm dreaming. Maybe in two seconds I'll wake up and none of this will exist. 'In China, the car industry has come a long way. When my father was my age, there were no cars on the roads, and we're talking about the 1990s. Becoming a professional driver was impossible.' With three of the top four, it was certainly a good day for Ferrari but there will undoubtedly be some at headquarters in Maranello who might not be so happy. As the winning car was not entered directly by the manufacturer, but by the AF Corse team, Ferrari will not take the points for victory in the World Endurance Championship. Cadillac locked out the front row of the grid but #12 of Will Stephens, who had taken pole, had to settle for fifth with the second car (#38), featuring former Formula One world champion Jensen Button, coming home in eighth.


South China Morning Post
16-06-2025
- Automotive
- South China Morning Post
Le Mans 24 Hours race: China's first winner Ye Yifei says he is in dreamland
Ye Yifei said he felt like he was dreaming after becoming China's first winner at the 24 Hours of Le Mans race with Robert Kubica's AF Corse team in France late on Sunday. Advertisement In a thrilling 93rd edition of the race, the top four were separated by just over 20 seconds going into the final 15 minutes. Former Formula One driver Kubica of Poland and his co-drivers Ye and Britain's Philip Hanson finished just 14.084 seconds ahead of a Porsche driven by Kevin Estre, Matt Campbell and Laurens Vanthoor. The winning AF Corse car takes a curve during the Le Mans endurance race. Photo: AP Victory by AF Corse's bright yellow 'privateer' Ferrari gave the Italian marque a third consecutive win in the world's most famous endurance race. For Ye, it helped to erase the pain of the 2021 race, when he, Kubica and Louis Deletraz led the LMP2 category before their Team WRT Oreca suffered an engine failure on the final lap. 'I'm at a loss for words,' said Ye, who first arrived in Le Mans at the age of 14 on an exchange programme to try to become a professional driver. Advertisement 'It's going to take me some time to realise everything that's happened today. Right now I feel like I'm dreaming. Maybe in two seconds I'll wake up and none of this will exist.