FROM DREAMS TO PODIUMS: CUSTOMER MOTORSPORTS FOR LEXUS

Lexus champions the ultimate racing lifestyle through the RC F GT3, a beacon for professional racers and gentleman drivers alike, drawn by the thrill of competition and the allure of the motorsport world. As they navigate their journey from aspiration to the global stage, Lexus stands beside them, turning dreams into reality and fostering a deep bond between driver, machine, and the pursuit of excellence on and off the track.


LEXUS & AKKODIS ASP TEAM: A WINNING TICKET

For one dedicated and ambitious race team and its talented lineup of pro and am drivers, the Lexus RC F GT3 is a ticket to the planet’s most prestigious sports car championship. That’s the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship, with its globe-trotting, eight-race season that includes the world-famous 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Lexus’ customer motorsports program is providing the cars and the experience to help make dreams come true for its newest customer and partner, AKKODIS ASP Team. The French-based GT racing specialists will enter a pair of competition-proven RC F GT3s in the WEC’s new-for-2024 LMGT3 class – the first time that the Lexus name has appeared in the series.

Lexus will provide support in key areas to ensure that AKKODIS ASP Team is ready for the challenge of competing at the highest level against world-class teams representing eight other major manufacturers on a hotly-contested LMGT3 grid.

The RC F GT3 racecar, developed over multiple years by Lexus in collaboration with the brand’s road car engineers, is already a proven winner on the race track. But unleashing its full capabilities requires specialist knowledge and experience – something Lexus’ customer motorsports program brings to its partner teams around the world so they can fully focus on adding more race wins and titles.

The level of support from Lexus’ customer motorsports program is custom-built for each of its teams’ specific needs, but the quality of service and interaction remains the same. Depending on the customer team's experience level and the championship's scale and profile it competes in, the program can provide everything from at-track spares support to a comprehensive framework featuring technical assistance and factory-supplied driving talent.

For AKKODIS ASP Team’s 2024 WEC journey, Lexus’ customer motorsports program will fast-track its quest for wins and championships, providing support and assistance every step of the way. That begins with bringing factory pro Jose Maria Lopez to anchor the driver lineups alongside fellow pro Kelvin van der Linde, and extends to engineering support for the team’s RC F GT3 machines across the eight races that make up the WEC’s global tour.

AKKODIS ASP Team brings its own essential strengths, too, including a wealth of experience at the highest levels of GT3 racing and a collective will to win and competitive mindset that will push the program forward both on and off the race track.

All of that adds up to a true partnership with a single aim: winning.

LEXUS & AKKODIS ASP TEAM: ACCELERATED LEARNING CURVE

It’s been a whirlwind few months since AKKODIS ASP Team’s program for the FIA World Endurance Championship began to take shape in early summer 2023. With essential support from Lexus' customer motorsports program, the team is gearing up to compete in the 2024 WEC’s ultra-competitive LMGT3 class.

“Lexus’ customer motorsports program has been excellent,” he explains. “I truly didn’t expect the level of support and collaboration we received when we first started working together. At our first test, we took eight people from our side to run one of the RC F GT3s and Lexus provided 10 people to help us out. We are so grateful for this.”

One key role Lexus has had to play is helping adapt the RC F GT3 for some of the nuances of competition in the WEC. The series’ technical regulations require various modifications for the GT3 cars taking part in the new-for-2024 LMGT3 class, including the addition of torque sensors. This allows the WEC’s rule-makers to monitor each car's power output in real-time during a race, helping ensure all the competing marques are running on a level playing field and that the competition is fair.

Also, to allow a wide variety of brands and car types to compete together, all LMGT3 racecars must fit into a tightly-defined aerodynamic performance window. That’s required some adjustments to the RC F GT3’s aerodynamic package, and that’s where Lexus’s customer motorsports program has been able to bring its knowledge and experience to the table.

“During preparation and testing, Lexus’ support has allowed us to gain so much ground quickly,” says Policand. “It feels like we gained a year’s worth of knowledge in our first four days together.”

How Lexus assists its partner team will evolve as the testing and preparation phase switches to actual racing.

“We will work on our own mostly in the season, that’s the expectation,” says Policand, “but there will be an open and ongoing relationship. We bring our experience as a team to achieve the best results at the track, but we need Lexus’s customer motorsports program to help us get up to speed. It’s a strong and effective way of working together.”

And it’s a way of working that gets its first true test at the opening race of the 2024 WEC season, the Qatar 1812km on March 2.


AN AMATEUR RACER’S BIGGEST STAGE

What makes the 24 Hours of Le Mans so different from almost every other major sporting event on the planet? Each year amateur participants emerge victorious.

While much of the hype surrounding the FIA World Endurance Championship and its centerpiece event is centered on the factory teams and the world-class elite drivers that drive for them, it’s the amateur drivers racing alongside them who remain the foundation of the sport.

Sports car racing at its highest levels is unique in that many series require teams to compete with amateur drivers – often referred to as “gentlemen drivers” – in their lineups. For these gentlemen drivers, the challenge and risks that they take on are exactly the same as for their professional teammates, so they must tap into the talent and experience of the pros they share their car with to hone their speed and race craft and prepare them for some of the world’s biggest races.

Some gentlemen drivers own teams as well as race; others, such as Arnold Robin, who’ll race an AKKODIS ASP Team-entered Lexus RC F GT3 in the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship’s ultra-competitive LMGT3 class, simply find gaps in their busy work and family schedules to hit the track. But they all have one thing in common: they all seek a place in history.

Motorsports’ unofficial “Triple Crown” comprises the Indianapolis 500, Monaco Grand Prix and 24 Hours of Le Mans, but only one offers amateur competitors a legitimate chance of winning.

And it’s the allure of standing on top of the podium at the Circuit de La Sarthe, a venue where the defining stories of many of motorsports’ greatest names have been written, that keeps gentlemen drivers coming back year after year.

A UNIQUE DYNAMIC: WEC’S PRO-AM DRIVER LINEUPS

In the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship’s LMGT3 class, each entry must have a non-professional, but experienced FIA “Bronze-rated” driver in its lineup. They will all likely race alongside an aspiring professional graded as “Silver” and a highly-experienced and highly-skilled “Gold” or “Platinum” pro driver.

As a pro/am formula, the team dynamic in LMGT3 is entirely different to the WEC’s other category, the Hypercar class for high-tech prototypes, which features all-pro lineups. In LMGT3, the professional drivers will take on the role of mentoring and coaching the gentlemen drivers in their lineup throughout the season. This often involves hours of analyzing data and onboard footage, finding a car setup that suits their driving style, and even working on fitness plans. But when the result is a faster, more competitive and consistent teammate, the effort is worth it.

“Pro drivers help you in every aspect,” explains AKKODIS ASP Team “Bronze” driver Arnold Robin. “During a race weekend they are coaching you on your driving, and then between races, they are there to help you work on your fitness and simulator work.”

Robin will share AKKODIS ASP Team’s No. 78 Lexus RC F GT3 with “Platinum”-rated Kelvin van der Linde and “Silver”-rated Timur Boguslavskiy in the 2024 WEC, and the Frenchman knows that his own performance is crucial to its overall competitiveness.

“Many drivers, like me, have personal driver coaches, too, to help ensure I am ready from the moment I arrive at the circuit,” he says. “It’s never been so important to have professional drivers around you that are willing to help, because the level in pro/am racing has never been so high.”

In LMGT3, having a strong, consistent “Bronze” in your lineup could be the difference between winning a race and finishing outside the top 10. This is because the ability of amateur drivers often varies far more than the professionals in the class.

The fastest factory driver may be only a few tenths a lap quicker than the slowest (a relative term…), while the most consistent “Bronze” driver may be able to find multiple seconds per lap over the other amateur drivers in the field. Over a six-, eight-, 10- or 24-hour race, this can have an enormous impact on the final classification.

In WEC LMGT3, the “Bronze”-rated drivers are tasked with driving their car in Qualifying and usually take the start of the race, too. They are put under immense pressure to deliver, adding to the drama and unpredictability of each race weekend. But for Robin, that’s so much of what makes it special.

“I know that what I do can have a profound effect on how my team performs,” he says, “but I love the challenge and I love the pressure, too. Really, this is like nothing else!”

ARNOLD ROBIN: FROM LOCAL TO TRACKS TO GLOBAL CIRCUITS

Arnold Robin is one of the two experienced non-professional drivers representing AKKODIS ASP Team in the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship LMGT3 campaign, alongside Takeshi Kimura from Japan. Robin's narrative is deeply intertwined with the world of motorsport, particularly with the iconic 24 Hours of Le Mans, a race that runs through the veins of his hometown and has fueled his passion for racing since childhood.

"My passion has always been endurance racing, because it’s a team sport where you share the car with other drivers,” he says. “And then you have Le Mans, which for me is the most important race in the world. Growing up where I did, you feel emotions that only Le Mans generates. Where I come from, I think every kid’s goal is to race in the 24 Hours."

“I’ve always been around racing,” he adds. “When I was young, I raced go-karts for two years, then had to stop racing for a while, but I picked it up again when I was 20 and I raced with my father for 10 years. My brother Maxime also raced, and I spent time following him before I began competing at a high level in 2018.”

Robin works in real estate during the week, and races on the weekends. It’s tough to juggle both things, but his dream of winning the 24 Hours of Le Mans makes the sacrifices and effort worthwhile.

“I love my job, but it makes finding the space for racing, fitness, and simulator work tough sometimes!” he says. “I have to really work hard to prepare for the season. It’s a real challenge.”

Nevertheless, Robin comes into the 2024 season carrying confidence and momentum from a successful campaign in the Le Mans Cup series, where he won the GT3 class title. He’s versatile, motivated, and keen to learn, making him an ideal fit for AKKODIS ASP Team’s debut WEC campaign.

Beyond the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the WEC provides a rare opportunity for Robin to be part of an FIA World Championship. The classic circuits that host the eight-race calendar and the level of competition, he says, makes it the most appealing and challenging place for a gentlemen driver to race.

“It’s amazing, we have nine major automotive brands and really strong lineups in all 18 entries,” he says. “The challenge and the level of competition will be the highest it’s ever been for GT drivers in the WEC. If you’re tuning in, I expect the LMGT3 battles to take a lot of the TV time!”


LEXUS RC F GT3: FIRST IMPRESSIONS

For Lexus customer AKKODIS ASP Team, the buildup to the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship season and its debut season in the new LMGT3 class has been relentless as it seeks to mold a group of potent, but disparate elements – unfamiliar racecars, new drivers and team personnel – into one competitive whole.

During the winter of 2023-’24, the French team has travelled across Europe, completing multi-day tests at a variety of race circuits as it learns the ins and outs of the Lexus RC F GT3, the car it will compete with for the first time in Qatar’s WEC season-opener on March 2.

For drivers, building track time before the first race is vitally important. It allows them to get to know the band of engineers and mechanics they’ll come to rely on, get comfortable with the cockpit they’ll spend countless hours strapped into, and simulate potential scenarios they may encounter during a race weekend.

AKKODIS ASP Team’s Arnold Robin, a Bronze-rated amateur driver who’ll experience all the same challenges and pressures as the team’s pro drivers, got his first taste of his new team and the Lexus RC F GT3 at a track he knows well, Circuit Paul Ricard in Le Castellet, France.

The RC F GT3, powered by a proven and potent, 5.4-liter, naturally-aspirated V8 engine that’s based on the 2UR unit found in the RC F street car, has been designed to be a forgiving racecar as drivers zero in on its impressive on-track performance. Such a trait is vital for the challenge ahead in the 2024 WEC, as the Bronze-rated Robin must feel comfortable and confident behind the wheel in order to produce quick, consistent laps under immense pressure.

“The RC F GT3 has been developed over a number of years,” says Robin, “and it’s incredibly well balanced for a ‘Bronze’-rated driver like me. It’s so easy to drive, I was surprised at how quickly I felt I could push. The engine in particular is wonderful; it’s such a strong platform to work with.

The RC F weighs only 1,300kg (2,870lb) and includes race-specific aerodynamics to reduce drag and increase cornering performance. Combined with its impressive stopping power, that all adds up to a real workout for its drivers.

“The acceleration and braking is amazing, and through the corners you really feel the force on your head and neck,” explains Robin. “For sure, it’s very physical, but the challenge is pushing yourself to reach the car’s potential and find those final few tenths of a second over a lap. Those tenths can be the difference between winning and losing.”

CHEMISTRY LESSONS AND PASSING THE TEST

At his first test with the Lexus RC F GT3, Arnold Robin got a chance to spend some valuable time getting to know his AKKODIS ASP Team teammates, “Platinum”-rated pro driver Kelvin van der Linde and title-winning GT driver Timur Boguslavskiy.

As the RC F GT3 is new to all three drivers, the running provided a valuable opportunity for them to bond – call it a high-speed chemistry lesson – over the shared challenge of getting up to speed in the machine they’ll be racing in the FIA World Endurance Championship’s all-new LMGT3 class in 2024.

As the Bronze-rated “Am” in the No. 78 machine’s Pro-Am lineup, Robin cannot be the weak link. He’s aware of that but says that working with and learning from his co-drivers, his team, and Lexus - a brand whose GT3-based customer racing program thoroughly supports aspiring amateur drivers in reaching their potential - is not only helping him grow as a racecar driver, but feeding back into his life outside of racing.

“Kelvin is really motivated,” says Robin. “He loves working on a project and he enjoys helping me to improve. Timur, too, is a team player who works in the same way. They know that helping me to improve how I race, how I think and how I focus, pushes the whole team forward.

“Of course, I get so much insight and feedback on how to maximize mine and the car’s potential on the track, but racing is very much a mental process, too. It’s about accelerating your thought processes and having the clarity and the focus to be able to react to any situation. That means not being overloaded, so that you have the capacity to react in the right way.”

Professional athletes call it “Flow,” a state of optimal consciousness where they feel “at one” with their situation, with an effortless focus that often allows them to reach their highest level of performance. Through interacting with and learning from his teammates, that’s something Robin aspires to.

“It is incredible to see these guys working and to see how they do this to such a high level,” he says. “That’s something I aim for, too. I enjoy working to elevate every aspect of my racing, and it’s something that can help me away from the race track, too.

“Some Bronze drivers spend so much time on racing that they are like pros, but I work in real estate and love my job. It’s a challenge to balance my work and my racing, but the ability to focus and operate at a higher level, and have that extra mental bandwidth that I’m learning from my racing is a huge help.

“AKKODIS ASP is such a professional team, but also so friendly and supportive. To be a part of it for such an important season, I cannot wait to start repaying their confidence in me. It’s a dream come true.”

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