'It's not enough to be fast': Ferrari sets Le Mans pace, but prepares for a fight

Le Mans News

Two Ferraris will head the pack at the start of this year's 2023 Le Mans 24 Hour race. Its drivers claim they'll be happy to just finish... but are still thinking how to defeat Toyota for the win

Ferrari hypercars side by side at Le Mans in 2023

Ferrari has locked out the front row for this year's Le Mans 24 Hours

Ferrari

When Antonio Fuoco raced at Le Mans last year, he spent a lot of time looking in his rearview mirrors, as faster prototype cars zoomed up behind his Ferrari 488 GTE.

This year he’ll be doing the same for very different reasons: now at the wheel of Ferrari’s 499P Hypercar, the 27-year-old Italian put it on pole with a stunning lap that he’s still smiling about a day later.

“It was a really, really good lap,” says the No50 car driver. “I think one of the best of my career so far.”

Ferrari No50 crew celebrate pole in 2023 Le Mans 24 Hours

Fuoco and No50 crew celebrate pole

Ferrari

The timing was impeccable: Ferrari has two cars at the front of the grid for the 2023 Le Mans 24 Hours, just as it did in 1973 when Arturo Merzario headed the last top-level factory entry.

“It felt so good also because after 50 years Ferrari is back at Le Mans,” says Fuoco. “We put all our effort into this project and the guys deserve this result; everyone has pushed for it and we achieved it.”

It’s no surprise to hear a driver crediting the team, but the platitudes seem more heartfelt than usual in this case, given Ferrari’s decision to puts its faith in its own drivers and staff.

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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.”

Ferrari Hypercar on Le Mans start finish straight at night in 2023

Night practice ahead of the race: Ferrari’s concern is reliability

Ferrari

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.

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“Three years ago, not one of us expected to be here then, luckily for us, Ferrari decided to come back after such a long period. It’s great to be part of the history of this brand — especially as an Italian driver — we are driving for Ferrari in the right period!”

Ferrari has opted to build a Hypercar, which offers more design freedom than the alternative and cheaper LMDh option — run by Porsche and Cadillac — which requires manufacturers to use certain off-the-shelf components, including the chassis and hybrid system.

So far this season, Hypercars have led the way. Toyota, in its third year of racing its Hypercar, has won all three races, but Ferrari has been next in line, with a podium finish in every race so far, and pole position in its debut race at Sebring.

It has largely all been a dress rehearsal for the prestige of Le Mans. “The car is designed for this track!” says No50 driver Miguel Molina.

Porsche 963 Hypercar at Le Mans in 2023

Toyota is seen as favourite but Porsche 963 (pictured) has shown pace

Porsche

While the hopes of Italy and Ferrari’s global fans might be on the drivers, each of them is guarded when it comes to their chances of victory and downplays the importance of pole in a 24-hour race. The team points out that none of its cars has had a trouble-free race yet — and Le Mans is four times longer than those.

“24 hours is long. It’s not enough to be fast,” says Giovinazzi. “To win the reliability needs to be good, we can’t make mistakes and if we can put it together, we can be in a good position in the race.

“I think Toyota sits in front of us. In the race, they are not too fast in terms of pace [but] they have more experience; they have already won a few Le Mans, then in terms of car performance, in terms of tyre wear and degradation they are better.”

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“If we can put pressure to them, it’s a long race so is they can make a mistake and then we can use that to be in front of them.”

Toyota may not be the only team in the fight, however. Porsche has shown impressive pace in practice and qualifying, while Peugeot and Cadillac are also closer to the frontrunners.

Their causes were helped last week when Toyota was given a 37kg weight penalty and Ferrari 24kg in a late adjustment to the Balance of Performance rules, which are designed to create closer racing. Rivals benefitted: Cadillac was given 11kg more, Porsche 3kg and Peugeot is unchanged.

Teams have been threatened with sanctions if they criticise the system, and refused to discuss the impact, but it’s clear that several teams are unhappy at the decision and how it could affect the race result.

All will start to be revealed when the flag drops at 3pm (BST) tomorrow and two Ferraris lead the grid across the line.

“You never know what the others have got until we start the race,” says Calado who is already a three-time WEC champion and two-time Le Mans winner in the GTE class. “We know that this race isn’t won on outright lap time, we know it’s about trying to look after the car over 24 hours.”