Five of thdrivers have been promoted from racing in the GTE class, while the sixth, Antonio Giovinazzi, is a Ferrari F1 reserve driver (having raced for Alfa Romeo) and has worked with the team since 2016, forming a group with years of shared experience, despite the Hypercar only making its race debut in the current World Endurance Championship season.
The six have been heavily involved in developing the car from its early days last year, continuing to hone its set-up over the first three races this year, in preparation for Le Mans.
“When it came out the factory for its first run, we were thinking, ‘Oh my God’; it started accelerating itself, the brakes didn’t work and all these sort of things,” says Worcestershire-born James Calado, the only British driver in Ferrari’s line-up. “We were thinking, you know, this is a tricky car to get right.
“But we knew that the performance was there. The numbers from the simulations that we do back in the factory showed that the car had phenomenal potential.
“The guys are working day and night every single day to make this car perform and they’ve given us an amazing car.”
Calado shares the No51 car with Giovinazzi and Alessandro Pier Guidi, who qualified 0.8sec behind the sister car in Thursday’s Hyperpole shootout.
“You look at it like a baby growing up,” said the Italian. “We started from the beginning, spending many hours in the simulator, then all of us were involved in the development programme during the last year. At the end you feel proud of yourself if the car is quick and doing well.