WEC’S CULTURAL LEGACY: 8 STAGES, 24 HOURS, ENDLESS LEGENDS.

Explore the World Endurance Championship's profound influence on motorsport culture , bridging the past and present through a celebration of legendary circuits, technological milestones, and the iconic 24 Hours of Le Mans. This journey through WEC not only unveils the series' role in advancing the sport but also delves into its significance in shaping motorsport's rich cultural heritage, connecting enthusiasts to the timeless passion and history that fuel the essence of racing.


FIA WORLD ENDURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP: RACING AT THE PINNACLE

Across four continents, eight races and a combined 72 hours of intense on-track competition, the FIA World Endurance Championship is the pinnacle of long-distance sports car racing.

It’s a series that pits major manufacturers and private teams against one another in two classes of racecars – production-based LMGT3 machines and exotic Hypercar prototypes – at some of the most spectacular and challenging race circuits around the world. And it’s where Lexus and AKKODIS ASP Team will compete with a pair of competition-proven Lexus RC F GT3 machines in the new-for-2024 LMGT3 class.

For more than a decade, the WEC’s globe-trotting test of driver and machine has produced some of the most spectacular and close-fought competition in motorsports and provided leading auto manufacturers with a platform to prove and develop cutting-edge technologies in the cauldron of competition.  

Centerpiece of the WEC is the world-famous 24 Hours of Le Mans, a race which over the past 100 years has attracted countless legendary manufacturers, teams and drivers, all aiming for a place in history as winners of the toughest, most prestigious sports car race on the planet.

The competition in the WEC will be harder fought than ever in 2024. When Lexus goes for glory in LMGT3, it will be taking on nine other prestige marques, each showcasing their road car-based GT3 racers with a two-car team.

“Being part of the WEC is something every driver wants,” explains José Maria Lopez, who’ll race for AKKODIS ASP Team in 2024. “It’s really competitive, and it has an amazing range of cars, manufacturers and professional teams. To get the chance to race there is incredible, but to win is the ultimate challenge.”

The WEC produces breathtaking action, with races often in doubt right down to the final laps, and winning margins frequently just seconds. For drivers and teams, the differing formats – four races of six hours’ duration, three at eight hours each, plus the 24 Hours of Le Mans – and ever-evolving strategies needed to stay ahead mean each race is its own fast, furious and incredibly complex puzzle.

The 2024 WEC season begins in Qatar on March 2nd and ends in Bahrain on November 2nd. The six races in between include Le Mans on June 15-16, plus stops in Italy, Belgium, Brazil, the USA and Japan. For whoever comes out on top after that whirlwind world tour, the 2024 WEC’s LMGT3 crown will have been richly deserved. 

FIA WORLD ENDURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP: FAST, FRANTIC & UNPREDICTABLE

The FIA World Endurance Championship resonates with passionate motorsports fans and automotive enthusiasts alike. It’s a series which looks to the future and recognizes sports car racing’s storied history and traditions, and all while showcasing some of the world’s most spectacular cars and best drivers in a no-holds-barred battle for on-track supremacy. 

For the world’s leading auto manufacturers – including Lexus in 2024 – the WEC’s new LMGT3 class provides a prestigious showcase for the synergy between road and racecar development, appealing directly to current and aspiring high-performance road car owners. There’s a well-worn adage, “win on Sunday, sell on Monday,” but it’s never truer in the ultra-competitive and world of the WEC.

In LMGT3, expect fast and frantic action and frequently unpredictable results. That’s in part because the WEC mandates a pro-am driver lineup for each car racing in the class. Each entry in LMGT3 must feature an FIA Bronze-rated driver (a non-professional), alongside a Silver-rated driver (reserved for new and or aspiring pro drivers), and a Platinum- or Gold-rated factory-contracted pro driver.

“The pro-am element makes it very special. You need a balanced lineup in each car,” stresses Jerome Policand, whose AKKODIS ASP Team will run a pair of Lexus RC F GT3 racecars in LMGT3. “In many ways, though, the amateur driver is the most important in the car.

“The difference between professional drivers can be a couple of tenths of a second each lap. However, with Bronze-rated drivers, if they’re not in a comfortable environment and trained and supported well, the gap between them can be multiple seconds. That can be the difference between first and last place.”

This creates a fascinating team dynamic – one in which the pro drivers cannot afford to be thinking just of themselves. Instead, they often sacrifice their own track time and the use of fresh tires during the practice sessions to help their amateur drivers build confidence and dial themselves into a track.

“The challenge is to make your Bronze and Silver drivers as fast as they can be,” says AKKODIS ASP Team pro driver Kelvin van der Linde. “It’s all about working together and setting your car up so it works for all three of us, not just the pro. With the racing so close, all of us need to push hard every single lap. Nobody gets an easy ride in the WEC.”

And that only makes winning even sweeter…


24 HOURS OF LE MANS: BATTLE AGAINST TIME

The 24 Hours of Le Mans is more than just a race, it’s a battle against time itself and the ultimate challenge in motorsports.s

In 2024, a pair of competition-bred Lexus RC F GT3 racecars will take on that challenge when they compete for victory in the FIA World Endurance Championship’s newly-created LMGT3 class at the greatest racing series  of endurance in all of motorsports. But to win at Le Mans, they’ll need speed, reliability, resilience…and perhaps a little luck, too.

The 24 Hours of Le Mans is the jewel in the crown of the WEC and its status as a legendary event in world motorsports  long pre-dates the championship’s inaugural season in 2012.

Since 1923, teams and drivers from around the world have descended on northwestern France, to a cathedral of speed on the outskirts of the historic cathedral city of Le Mans, to race twice around the clock on one of the world’s greatest and most daunting circuits. For one week in June, it’s the center of the racing world and an event like no other.

Over the past century, the 24 Hours has grown from a modest grassroots spectacle, held on rugged terrain in the Sarthe region as a test of the durability of four-seater production cars, to one of the world’s most famous and significant sporting events.

The Grand Prix d’Endurance in the modern era has become more than just a 24-hour race. It’s a festival of motorsports and automotive progress held on the iconic, 8.47-mile/13.63km Circuit de la Sarthe. For its challenge and prestige, Le Mans is a magnet for auto manufacturers, independent teams, drivers and a huge number of fans from around the world. Over a quarter of a million spectators make the pilgrimage to Le Mans each year, and millions more watch from home.

And on Sunday, June 16, as the clock ticks to 4pm, they’ll all get their answer to motorsports’ toughest question: who’s triumphed in the battle against time itself?

24 HOURS OF LE MANS: MORE THAN A RACE

Race week at the 24 Hours of Le Mans is a battle against world-class opposition, the circuit and the clock. 

Despite the mid-June date, the French summer can be fickle, with constantly-changing conditions and rain often playing their part. The shifts in temperature and track conditions only add spice to a contest which, in its sheer intensity, has felt more like a 24-hour, flat-out sprint race in recent years due to the enormous strides in reliability that manufacturers have taken.

The race itself is the culmination of a mighty effort, with preparation work starting long before the teams arrive at the circuit for race week and continuing through the hours of practice and qualifying. It means an endless blur of late nights and early starts for each team member, even before the field takes the rolling start at 4pm on Saturday, June 15 .

For the drivers behind the wheel, the 24 Hours of Le Mans is also a test of physical and mental endurance, but of a different nature. Lexus’s roster of drivers – three in each of its two AKKODIS ASP Team-run entries – will be required to drive at the limit of the Lexus RC F GT3’s capabilities for hours at a time, concentrating on a fast, error-free performance on every single lap, as well as focusing on the wider race strategy, which often requires fuel- and tire-saving to gain a competitive edge in the closing hours.

“Le Mans is always special,” says Jose Maria Lopez, an overall winner at Le Mans in 2021 who’s taking on the challenge with AKKODIS ASP Team in 2024. “No matter which year, which car, which class, when you get there, you know something big is coming. For everyone who competes there, the intensity never lets up.”

Drivers in LMGT3 must also deal with a congested circuit and near-constant traffic. For the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the regular WEC field will swell from 37 cars to more than 60, the full-season entries joined by a selection of the best teams and drivers from the leading European and North American endurance series.

With so many cars on track, a drivers’ ability to manage traffic is in the spotlight. Pulling off surgical passes on your LMGT3 opponents while simultaneously staying clear of the overall victory-chasing Hypercars blasting past is key to a clean race. Make the tiniest of errors and you can lose heaps of time or, much worse, end up in the barriers and into retirement after a costly misjudgment.

Le Mans is a race where a thousand things need to go right, yet only one mistake can end it all. Avoid that one mistake, and you could become part of racing history: a 24 Hours of Le Mans winner.

24 HOURS OF LE MANS: LIGHTS, CAMERAS, ACTION!

The Circuit de la Sarthe is steeped in history, in no small part because it’s one of the world’s toughest, most unforgiving race circuits. A unique blend of permanent race track and public roads, including the fearsomely fast Mulsanne Straight, it winds through the bucolic French countryside to test the skill and nerve of everyone behind the wheel and give the 24 Hours of Le Mans a unique character. It’s a track that can – and will – bite.

Modern GT3 racecars – including Lexus RC F GT3, fresh off a championship-winning 2023 season in North America’s high-profile IMSA serie s – feature highly-sophisticated, competition-specific components and electronics, and are perfectly suited to the challenge and spectacle of Le Mans. The racing is so tight and even between the competing teams that any mistake, no matter how small, can prove costly in a contest where the winning margin each year is usually seconds, rather than minutes, laps or hours.

And it’s this technological progress that transcends the sporting nature of the event and broadens its appeal for global auto makers. Often considered the ultimate high-speed laboratory by manufacturers, it’s a platform for them to work with their partner teams to test new technologies and solutions to the limit.

In recent years, the effectiveness and efficiency of hybrid powertrains has been accelerated in the cauldron of competition, as have innovations such as LED headlight technology and 100-percent sustainable fuel. And looking further into the past, such staples as windshield wipers and disc brakes were first tried and stress tested through 24 grueling hours at Le Mans. It’s a truly relevant race which consistently resets the present, kickstarts the future, and takes lessons from the past in equal measure.

There’s an element of romance, mystique and legend to the 24 Hours of Le Mans and its storied past, too. It’s no wonder that it’s a race that has captured the imagination – and fed the obsessions – of many notable moviemakers and actors over the years, all seeking to capture on screen the raw emotion and physical test it delivers.

From the creation of Hollywood movies such as Steve McQueen’s visceral, epic “Le Mans” and the fast-paced narrative of “Ford vs Ferrari” starring Matt Damon and Christian Bale, to groundbreaking documentaries like “Truth in 24,” it’s a race that never strays far from the epicenter of popular culture.

Over the years, a number of famous actors have even taken part in the race for real. The likes of Paul Newman, who finished second overall in 1979, and more recent participants like Patrick Dempsey and Michael Fassbender all felt the pull of Le Mans’ gravity after experiencing its cocktail of speed, drama, danger and human resilience in person from behind the catch fencing.

But out on track or up on the silver screen, the biggest star is always the 24 Hours of Le Mans itself.


FIA WORLD ENDURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP: 2024 WORLD TOUR

With 72 hours of racing to complete at eight tracks in eight countries on four continents during the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship, the AKKODIS ASP Team is getting ready for a high-speed global tour.

Partnering with Lexus for its first-ever FIA WEC program , AKKODIS ASP Team will race a pair of RC F GT3s in the all-new LMGT3 category, taking on what will be a huge challenge for everyone involved.

Each stop on AKKODIS ASP Team’s debut WEC season, which starts in Qatar on March 2 and closes exactly eight months later in Bahrain, will feature a different set of challenges. Every race track visited demands something different from the cars and drivers, and the local weather conditions can vary wildly during the season.

From a strategic standpoint, the task is a sizeable one, too. With four different lengths of race – six, eight , 10 and 24 hours – the engineers and tacticians tasked with determining strategy must work out a unique gameplan for every track and race length, and be prepared for the unexpected, too.

While many of the teams and drivers involved are familiar with the challenges that many of the WEC’s host tracks present, each race will still feel like a fresh start. The LMGT3 class is making its WEC debut, and teams have yet to build experience with the new-for-2024 Goodyear race tires that every car in the class must run on as a performance-leveling twist . Before every race, each precious practice session will be crucial to finding a suitable car setup and helping the drivers feel comfortable behind the wheel.

It’s a journey into the unknown and a true test of teamwork. To win the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship will require speed, commitment, consistency and fast thinking at every stop on the calendar.

FIA WORLD ENDURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP: VARIETY SHOW

In 2024, the WEC will visit four tracks that have featured on the schedule since the championship’s inaugural season – Belgium’s Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, France’s Circuit de la Sarthe for the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Fuji Speedway in Japan, and the Bahrain International Circuit. They’re joined by four new or returning venues to complete a challenging, eight-race calendar.

Of the four ever-presents, each one features wildly different characteristics and a unique challenge for the AKKODIS ASP Team’s pair of Lexus RC F GT3s competing in the LMGT3 class.

Spa, in the heart of Belgium’s Ardennes Forest, is perhaps the most challenging. A fast-flowing, technical circuit that features huge elevation changes, the daunting uphill sequence of Eau Rouge and Raidillon, it’s a place that rewards precision and bravery. The Spa weather is notoriously fickle, too. Recent years have seen the WEC teams contending with searing heat, heavy rain, sleet, hail and even snow – sometimes within hours of each other.

After that comes the centerpiece of the season, the 24 Hours of Le Mans on June 15-16. It’s held on the enormous 13.63km/8.47-mile Circuit de la Sarthe track that’s a mixture of permanent race track and closed public roads. A low-drag setup for maximizing top speed is key because, despite the layout featuring 38 corners, drivers run at full throttle for an incredible 85 percent of the lap.

Le Mans, of course, features night racing too, and with much of the track in darkness, that only adds to the challenge of dealing with near-constant traffic among the 60-car field.

Fuji Speedway on September 15 is another track that demands low drag thanks to its almost mile-long (1.475km) main straight, while Bahrain’s eight-hour season-closer on November 2 races into dusk on a circuit that’s extremely harsh on tire wear.

Of the new or returning tracks, Qatar’s Losail International Circuit makes its WEC debut by kick-starting the season with 10 hours of racing on March 2. Next up, the Autodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari in Imola, Italy, is new to the championship, too, with six hours of action on April 21.

And after Le Mans, the WEC crosses the Atlantic for a South and North American swing. Sao Paulo in Brazil returns after a decade-long absence from the calendar for a six-hour race on July 14, and the Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas is back for the first time since 2020 with its own six-hour shootout.

FIA WORLD ENDURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP: EXPERIENCE IT

There are many ways to enjoy the action and excitement as Lexus races in the FIA World Endurance Championship for the first time in 2024.

Being trackside and cheering on the cars and stars of the WEC at each of 2024’s eight races on four continents is an experience like no other, with the 24 Hours of Le Mans as the season’s spectacular centerpiece on June 15-16. The legendary race will attract more than 300,000 fans to northern France for its twice-around-the-clock test of speed and endurance.

But every stop on the WEC’s 2024 global tour is a must-see, with multiple ticket and hospitality options allowing fans to take in the sensory overload of practice, qualifying and the races themselves. Fan villages, open paddocks and autograph sessions all add to an unforgettable experience.

And with the races lasting from six to 24 hours in duration, there’s plenty of time for fans to take in the spectacle from multiple places at every track and enjoy the speed and skill of the cars and their drivers.

For a truly extraordinary race day at each of the WEC’s eight events, the Le Mans Spirit Club is the ultimate, all-inclusive VIP experience, featuring exclusive grid walk access, world-class dining and hospitality, the best seats in the house, shuttle tours of the track, and even podium ceremony access.

Beyond the race track, the WEC is easily accessible for fans following the action at home or on the go. Lexus fans from around the world can catch every race, thanks to the championship being broadcast in almost every key market, or you can watch using the WEC’s in-house streaming service. Streams for each qualifying session and race from the eight-round season are available on the official FIA WEC App and through the series’ website (fiawec.com), ensuring fans can enjoy every lap.

The WEC also produces an in-house fly on the wall documentary series throughout the season. Called “Full Access,” it goes behind the scenes at each race, bringing fans the inside stories from the tracks, pits and paddocks. It’s available free of charge, along with live Free Practice 3 broadcasts, on the WEC’s dedicated YouTube channel.

The 2024 WEC season starts in Qatar on March 2, and whether you’re at the track, at home or on the go, you won’t miss a second of the action.

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