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International Motor Sports Association 

 

www.imsa.com

 

About the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA)

International Motor Sports Association, LLC (IMSA) was originally founded in 1969 and owns a long and rich history in sports car racing. Today, IMSA is the sanctioning body of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, the premier sports car racing series in North America. IMSA also sanctions the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge and IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge, as well as four one-make series: Ferrari Challenge North America, Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by BFGoodrich Tires, Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America and Porsche Carrera Cup North America. IMSA – a company within the NASCAR family – is the exclusive strategic partner in North America with the Automobile Club de l’Ouest (ACO) which operates the 24 Hours of Le Mans as a part of the FIA World Endurance Championship. The partnership enables selected IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship competitors to earn automatic entries into the prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans.


Cadillac Wins Again at Motul Petit Le Mans as No. 6 Porsche Clinches Championship

TDS Wins LMP2 Race While AO’s ‘Spike’ Claims LMP2 Title


 

October 11, 2025

By John Oreovicz

IMSA Wire Service

Provisional Results

Provisional Points

Provisional Michelin Endurance Cup Standings


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – Cadillac Whelen ended the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship with its second consecutive race win, Aston Martin and Lamborghini starred, and Porsche Penske Motorsport delivered another championship-winning performance.


 

All of that played out over 10 hours in glorious Georgia sunshine and then into night before a record crowd Saturday at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta as Earl Bamber, Jack Aitken and Frederik Vesti drove the No. 31 Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R to a 5.182-second victory over Roman De Angelis, Ross Gunn and Alex Riberas in the No. 23 Aston Martin THOR Team Aston Martin Valkyrie in the 28th annual Motul Petit Le Mans.


 

The season-ending round of the WeatherTech Championship was packed with close competition and drama from start to finish, culminating in Mathieu Jaminet and Matt Campbell clinching the driver’s and manufacturer’s championships for Porsche Penske Motorsport in the premier Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) class with a third-place finish in the No. 6 Porsche 963 they shared with Laurens Vanthoor.  


 

With the No. 31 Cadillac’s Petit Le Mans victory and its win September 21 at the TireRack.com Battle on the Bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Aitken vaulted from sixth place to second in the driver’s standings. It was Cadillac’s fifth triumph at one of the world’s crown jewel endurance sports car races.


 

“I wouldn’t have predicted back-to-back wins to finish the season, but we were knocking at the door quite a lot and putting ourselves in position to win,” Aitken said. “Everything finally came together, and it’s been a true pleasure the last couple of weekends.”


 

Aitken was fastest in two of the three practice sessions in the lead-up to the race, and he qualified the No. 31 Cadillac on the outside of the front row. He stalked Tom Blomqvist in the Motul Pole Award-winning No. 60 Acura Meyer Shank Racing with Curb Agajanian Acura ARX-06 through the first two stints before taking the lead early in the third hour. 


 

But Bamber soon suffered the misfortune of a punctured tire while running under caution shortly after he took over the No. 31. That started a furious comeback drive that saw the Whelen Cadillac scythe through the 12-car GTP field to regain the lead at the six-hour mark. They were able to control the race from there, their main drama coming when the last four hours ran caution-free, forcing a late stop for fuel that cut their comfortable lead to less than a second. But their competitors also required a late splash-and-go.


 

“That was a true IMSA race,” said Bamber. “The guys did a great job keeping me updated and we timed the strategy perfectly at the end. Just a phenomenal job by Cadillac to get the victory here. We’ve built a good core team, and winning these last few races has really been sweet.”


 

The Aston Martin Valkyrie garnered many fans around the world in 2025, in large part due to the sound of its shrieking V-12 engine. The car’s best result in IMSA competition prior to Saturday was sixth place at the Motul SportsCar Grand Prix at Road America in August.


 

“I was told before I got in the car that we were fighting for third place,” said De Angelis, who despite being the youngest driver in the team was tabbed to drive the anchor stint. “I don’t think I realized until 15 minutes to go we were in with a shot for the win. It would have been fun to have a chance to fight, but from where we started the year, or if you had told me this morning we would be second, I probably would have laughed.


 

“It’s pretty special to cross the line for the first podium for Aston Martin and The Heart of Racing.” 


 

Another popular entry among fans – the No. 63 Automobili Squadra Corse Lamborghini SC63 shared by Romain Grosjean, Edoardo Mortara and Daniil Kyvat also achieved its best result in worldwide sports car competition with a fourth-place finish that saw Grosjean vying for the win in the latter stages before having to peel off for fuel.


 

Jaminet and Campbell wound up with a 187-point provisional edge over Aitken in the driver’s standings, while Porsche expanded its slim two-point edge over Acura at the start of the race to a 42-point cushion. Jaminet and Campbell also teamed to win the IMSA Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) championship for Porsche in 2022.


 

Julien Andlauer, the scheduled third driver for the No. 6 Porsche, was a late scratch due to health reasons. Vanthoor stepped up to serve as the third driver for both Porsche Penske Motorsport entries.


 

“There was so much traffic getting into the track that we almost missed the recon laps, and half an hour before the race, we didn’t have a third driver,” Jaminet said with a smile. “After all that, it went pretty smooth, I have to say. We had a really good car going into the race and the team did really good preparation. Here we are, up on the podium and with a championship. I couldn’t be more happy than today, for sure.”


 

“That’s two years in IMSA together and two championships,” added Campbell. “Coming back together this year after a couple years apart has worked phenomenally and we hit the ground running. We really showed our consistency and experience together, and that put us in position for this championship title.”


 

LMP2: Thomas’ Winning Exit Strategy

Steven Thomas knew entering the Motul Petit Le Mans weekend that it would likely be his last race in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. 


 

Being the fastest qualifier for the Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) class and going on to claim his second consecutive win in the classic 10-hour endurance race was the perfect send-off.


 

Despite losing the Motul Pole Award due to a post-qualifying technical infringement on the No. 11 TDS Racing ORECA LMP2 07, Thomas drove from the back of the field to the lead in his opening double stint. Hunter McElrea and Mikkel Jensen completed the job, with Jensen crossing the line 48.903 seconds ahead of Tom Dillmann and the No. 43 Inter Europol Competition ORECA LMP2 07 he shared with Bijoy Garg and Jeremy Clarke. To boot, the No. 11 TDS trio also won the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup on a tiebreaker over the No. 43 car thanks to more race victories. 


 

“It was actually really emotional,” Thomas said after his second consecutive WeatherTech Championship LMP2 race win (coming on the heels of a victory at the TireRack.com Battle On The Bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway) and seventh of his career. “I was able to put it on pole in my final race, which was super exciting, and then like an hour later they said so you failed scrutineering, so you’re starting in the back.


 

“I started in the back, and it was it was just so much fun,” he continued. “When I got out of the car, I’d done my drive time and that was the end for me. Ending on this victory and maybe the best stint I’ve ever driven was like a dream. That is the perfect ending.”


 

Jensen, who owns 12 IMSA race wins, was Thomas’s co-driver for the last three years, and he paid tribute to his team owner and friend.


 

“It’s just amazing to finish on top,” Jensen said. “Steven is not only my Bronze driver, he’s also become a great friend and we’ve created memories for life. That’s why emotions are really high and it’s just been an incredible end to the season. Steven has done his best racing ever, starting from the back of the field and giving me the car in P1.”


 

PJ Hyett, Dane Cameron, and Jonny Edgar finished sixth at Petit Le Mans in the No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07 to claim the LMP2 class championship for the 2025 season. Hyett also won the IMSA Jim Trueman Award as the top Bronze-rated LMP2 driver, which carries a guaranteed entry into the 2026 24 Hours of Le Mans.


 

“Pretty amazing,” said Cameron, who has now won five IMSA championships in five different classes. “Obviously this is the goal when you start the year. I believed in the project and that the potential that was there. It just needed a little glue to hold everything together and elevate things a little more. 


 

“I’m grateful to PJ and Gunnar (AO Racing co-owner Jeanette) that they had the trust in me to be the guy to get them there.”


 

IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship competitors will enjoy a well-deserved break before reconvening at Daytona International Speedway in November for 2026 homologation testing.

 


Motul Petit Le Mans - Post-Race

Press Conference Transcript

BRASELTON, Ga. (Oct. 11, 2025) – An interview with all four class winners and second-place overall finishers at Motul Petit Le Mans, as well as four class champions of the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Champiionship.


 

THE MODERATOR: Let's get started with our GTP class race winners to Motul Petit le Mans. In the No. 31 Cadillac Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R, from your left to right, it is Earl Bamber, Jack Aitken, and Frederik Vesti.

Earl, congratulations. Why don't you start us off. What did it take to bring it home tonight, and how nerve-wracking was the last hour at least?


 

EARL BAMBER: We had a great car all day. I mean, I guess it started to get nerve-wracking when we got the puncture in the middle of the day. The guys did an amazing strategy. We had a really fast car in the middle of the day.

Everyone sort of caught up on pace a little bit in the night. Fred probably set it up really, really well to give us a six-to eight-second gap at the last pit stop. Then we were sort of in the last two stints probably carrying the others on strategy with the fuel save, just making sure we stayed one or two laps ahead of them on the fuel.

Then when the others in the alternate strategy were sort of out front just covering both options on strat, got close with the 63, but I have to say the cars in the timing standard did an amazing job to keep me updated.

We had a car with enough pace where we could manage the fuel and sort of cover the people sprinting behind us that have already stopped and the people fuel saving.

Huge credit to the team. Huge credit to the guys on my left. They just did an amazing job in the second race, where we haven't touched a single thing.

And the guys just in the pit lane have done an amazing job.

So we had a couple of races that we definitely should have won or we should have probably won a couple more this year, but we learned from those and we're built from this, and now to go back-to-back, it's something very special for the whole team, and what we've managed to build up this 2025 season.

And I think Jack finished second in the championship as well.


 

JACK AITKEN: Somehow.


 

EARL BAMBER: Somehow.


 

JACK AITKEN: That's -- I was shocked.


 

THE MODERATOR: We'll pick up where Earl left off, second in the championship. Jack, could you have imagined finishing the season second in the championship kind of based on how things had gone maybe the first (indiscernible)?


 

EARL BAMBER: Yeah, I mean, it would be hard to sit here and say that I expected or would have predicted a back-to-back win to close out the season.

On the other hand, I think, like Earl has said previously, we've been knocking on the door quite a lot this season. We've put ourselves in the position to be up the front quite a lot, especially in the second half of the season.

All that happened these last two events. Stuff has gone our way a little bit. Yeah, we didn't make mistakes, and we had a quick car. We made the right calls on strategy, but we've done a lot of that in the first half of the season and kind of got nowhere as well.

It's kind of vindicating to see those wins come through.

Yeah, pretty special to see the team have that weight lifted off their shoulders because I think they're really deserving of those results, and it's been a true pleasure the last couple of weekends, yeah.


 

THE MODERATOR: As mentioned, this is your second win here at IMSA, and you're into your first season here. I guess what are your takeaways from racing here?


 

FREDERIK VESTI: Well, I'm just super proud of the whole team. As mentioned, we had a lot of bases this whole year, but struggled in the beginning to get the results.

At Indy, we won, and yeah, today we had a great car, but we had a big setback with that puncture. Yeah, it was quite nerve-wracking all the way.

We managed to win it, which is huge for me. My second win in IMSA, and to do it here at Petit Le Mans is very special.


 

THE MODERATOR: Thanks. We'll slide over. We'll get questions for our second pole finishers, Roman De Angelis and Alex Riberas had joined us in the No. 23 car. Roman, take us through that last stint. Obviously pretty exciting, but I can imagine it was even more so in your seat down from your perspective.


 

ROMAN DE ANGELIS: I think stressful is probably a better word. Yeah, just obviously we kind of knew what position we were in. I was told before I got in the car that that P3 is where we were fighting based on fuel strategy. 31 and the 6 were quite a bit ahead of us and had a lot less fuel to put in.

So kind of just thought that I was managing P3 and hopefully getting our first podium of the Valkyrie program, which obviously an exciting day for all of us on the IMSA side as well as the WET [phonetic] side. Honored to be part of that.

Yeah, the last stint I don't think I realized until 15 minutes to go that we were kind of in the shot for the win. Obviously we had a few cars that were locked down between us and the 31, which is unfortunate.

It would have been fun to at least have a chance to fight, but I think based on where we've been all year and the progress that we've made from the start, obviously we're racing against manufacturers that have been in the top category for two or three years now. Lots of experience at every track.

Obviously it's been a tough year from our position, but yeah, I think if you would have told me this morning that we were going to be second, I probably would have laughed. Not because the effort wasn't there, but just, I mean, based off Indy, which was a pretty hard weekend for all of us, yeah, I mean, to be second in our first season at Petit Le Mans, which is normally one of the hardest races of the season, is pretty special. Honored to be part of that.


 

THE MODERATOR: Alex, watching Roman there from the pit box, tell me about the nerves as you guys were watching this thing play out.


 

ALEX RIBERAS: Yeah, we were basically saying with Ross how much worse it is to be being in the pit stand versus than being in the car. It's so much easier to handle the stress when you're the one in control behind the wheel, for sure. I have to take my hat off for Roman. Finishing a race like Petit Le Mans in GTP at 24 years old, that is a lot of responsibility.

So I was just, you know, witnessing history in the making and just being so proud of what Roman and Ross have achieved this year. They both progressed, and I'm just proud of the whole team.


 

THE MODERATOR: We'll slide over to Ross. What does this mean for the Aston Martin Valkyrie program?


 

ROSS GUNN: First of all, sorry I was late. It's incredible. There are so many people here today supporting. It was just a very, very special day for us. We came in a year ago testing for the first time in the U.S., and I think really we were expecting to be back markers at the start of the year and really learning as much as possible.

We always had the aim that come Petit Le Mans, we would hopefully be at least fighting and be in the shot of the podium, and I think we achieved that.

Incredibly proud of everybody. For Aston Martin to have a car in the top class in the podium is a huge achievement. For me, I'm just so proud to be a part of it.


 

THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.


 

Q. Can you explain the puncture? The car came into the pits twice, I believe. It was during a yellow. Was the puncture after that first stop?


 

EARL BAMBER: Yeah, we did the first stop, and then actually we were just cruising around. Out of turn five, one of the blowers just blew, like, a load of crap into -- basically into the side of the car from the right-hand side.

We were coming around the next lap, and the guy said, Start to warm up. Then I saw the right rear at 1.22. And then I was like, That's not great. Then it was 1.2 and then 1.1, .18, .17. Then I was like, yeah, okay, I think we have a puncture.

So we just took the precaution. It was the right call because we had a giant hole in the tire.

That's racing. You know, at the end of the day I think the team knew how to rebound from that. Everyone was calm. We did the right strategy. It took us a stint to gain a fuel advantage, and then we could manage to jump in the pit cycle, and then we had the car pace.

It's a shame because it probably would have cost us the cup because I think we missed out by a point, but at the end of the day that's racing. I think other cars had the same issue, and that's sort of part of it. I think there was massive debris everywhere after that accident. It could have been earlier, but that's sort of the moment where it happened to us.


 

Q. Roman, what did it mean for the team to give faith to have you finish the race, and especially considering the position you guys were in fighting in the podium position and ultimately fighting for a win at the end?


 

ROMAN DE ANGELIS: Yeah, it was pretty special to cross the line for the first podium for the Heart of Racing and Aston Martin.

I think for myself it's kind of interesting to be in the top class racing against guys, you know, that have raced in Formula 1 or INDYCAR and things like that where I didn't really come from that background.

Yeah, definitely pretty special to be involved in this program and to have the trust from the Heart of Racing, everyone involved on that side, and Aston Martin as well to put the faith in me this year to think that I was ready to be in this position, let alone finishing a race that, yeah, we were on the podium.

It was pretty special, and honored to be a part of it and super fortunate to be in a position where they put their trust in me. So, yeah, just a very surreal moment, and hopefully many more of these.


 

Q. Ross, when you consider how the Valkyrie's racing life starting with doors flying off, the learning curve that this car had from the start of the season to the very finish and the fact that the Valkyrie itself was on the cutting room floor, not even all that long ago, how gratifying is this result?


 

ROSS GUNN: It's huge for everybody. I think as you touched on, (indiscernible) you expect from a new program, but we worked super hard at the start of the year on the liability. We didn't really focus on anything performance-wise until after Le Mans.

Then to be finishing two cars at Le Mans was a huge, huge achievement for everybody. I think that was, again, our aim at the start of the year was to try and achieve that.

Yeah, I mean, to be honest, it's been a privilege to be a part of something that's been continuously improving. I think for us the main thing was that on the end of the season, as I already mentioned, we wanted to be fighting for something a bit more than just a fifth or a sixth.

Yeah, I think this weekend is definitely something that we can be proud of and hopefully use that going into next year and be hopefully fighting for more.


 

THE MODERATOR: We'll start with our LMP2 winners from left to right, Steven Thomas, Mikkel Jensen, and Hunter McElrea. This is the sixth IMSA victory for TDS Racing, second consecutive win. Also the team's second straight win here at Motul Petit Le Mans.

Steven, just take us through kind of the emotions of this moment, having finishing up the season here with back-to-back victories for the second consecutive year (off microphone).


 

STEVEN THOMAS: One thing you left out, this is our second season Endurance Cup championship, which we also won tonight. I will say, before we got to Indianapolis, we thought we had no chance

So I would say, yeah, this is my final IMSA race, and it was actually really emotional. I was able to put it on pole in my final race, which was super exciting. Then like an hour later, they said, no, you failed scrutineering, you're out, you're starting in the back.

And then I started in the back, and it was just so much fun. When I got out of the car, I had done my drive time, and that was the end for me. Racing has been so wonderful to me, but then I handed it to the two best prototype drivers I think around, and I was pretty confident.

The NBC guy came by, and I told him, What do you think is going to happen? I said, I think we're going to win because I got Mikkel Jensen in the car, and he's the best in the business.

I would say as we got through the night realizing it was the end for me, but we were ending on this victory, and maybe the best stint I've ever driven, it was like a dream. It was the perfect ending.

Unless one of you out here can find me a sponsor for next year, this will be the last IMSA race for me. I'm going to keep racing. I love racing more than anything in the world. I'll be doing much more cheaper racing, amateur racing. I might be able to do some stuff in Europe next year. We'll see. It's cheaper, but IMSA has been unbelievable. It's been the best experience in my life, honestly.


 

THE MODERATOR: Thanks for being here. Mikkel, to you. I know coming out of the car or coming out into this there were some emotions there. What has it meant to you to race with Steven and Hunter and the team?


 

MIKKEL JENSEN: It's just amazing to finish on top. It's been three awesome years together with ups and downs, but Steven is not only my Bronze driver, he's also become a great friend and a relationship I really appreciate. We have created memories for life here. That's why emotions are really, yeah, outside -- or really showing tonight.

It's just been an incredible end to the season. Steven has done his best driving ever, starting from the back of the field after getting his pole taken away, giving me the kind P1 after two and a half hours.

It's sad that the story is finishing here, but really appreciating to have been part of this program with Steven and TDS and Hunter as well. Yeah, great way to finish the season.


 

THE MODERATOR: Mikkel and Hunter, four wins now, back-to-back times two the last year and this year. What's it been to you?


 

HUNTER MCELREA: It means a lot. Yeah, it's been a crazy journey with Steven and Mikkel. I wouldn't be racing without this. It's been pretty crazy. Kind of went by really fast in a way. It feels like I just -- I actually got this drive because Mikkel sent me a message on Instagram asking many I wanted to drive. It was crazy for me.

It's been a life-changing opportunity. Yeah, I have to thank obviously Steven and Emily so much the last few years because it's been a lot of ups and downs. It hasn't been easy at times. I feel like results like this make it worth it, and he deserves it more than anything. He put it on pole and drove from last to first. Yeah, makes your life a little easier when your Bronze gives you the car in the lead.

Yeah, well-deserved for everyone. Yeah, deja vu of last year. Just ending on such a high. Really happy for everyone. Yeah, just trying to soak it up.


 

THE MODERATOR: We'll slide over to our GTD Pro winners and get questions going again, Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO. From left to right, Max Hesse, Danny Harper, and Connor De Phillippi. Let's start with Max. This is the second win, but certainly a crowned jewel in IMSA, if not in all of sports car racing. What does it mean for you?


 

MAX HESSE: Yeah, it's awesome. A really big thank you to the team, to BMW, to my teammates. As you've mentioned, second victory. We won The Six Hours of Watkins and also now here. So being on the podium in Sebring and Indy. So Endurance Cup-wise we have done really, really well.

Had some potential I think in the sprint rounds, which we left on the table, so a bit disappointed we couldn't fight more for the championship in the end. But, yeah, we've got the Endurance Cup, so super excited for the first year here.


 

THE MODERATOR: Over to Dan. You started racing from the GTP pole. Obviously a good sign going into the roads. Tell us about it.


 

DAN HARPER: Max summed it up very well. It's been a very up-and-down season. The Sprint Cup not so good. Endurance Cup very good. It will be nice to go for a second attempt and put it all together in a championship fight, but that's not up to us.

Yeah, a great way to end the year, two poles in a row in Indy and here. A podium in Indy and now a victory here. It's all going to the guys. The pit stops were fantastic all race. They always brought us in at the right time. A bit of fortune has to go into that, but they were fast, no mistakes. Also, my teammates, no mistakes, and extremely fast and giving me the car in the lead and was able to bring it home.

Very happy and a great way to end the year.


 

THE MODERATOR: Connor, you had the -- how does this one compare?


 

CONNOR DE PHILLIPPI: It's amazing, honestly. It's been a while since I've won. This is my first one with BMW. Just happy to have that box checked. Obviously when I did win that one, I was these young whippersnappers here, their age.

It's just great to see both of them. They've risen to the occasion all season. Especially this weekend. Started off with a bang on pole, and the whole race they both executed flawlessly, and we got to the lead early on and got the track position in clean air. And around this track clean air was everything. And we tried to maintain that the whole race, and we managed to do that.

We had great people calling strategy. At IMSA level, especially in the pro category, to get a win, it's literally an effort of, like, 25 people. It has nothing to do with only us. It's so many others. When everyone does a perfect job, whether it's pit stops, tire pressures, and all these little intricacies that you have to get right to get a win, and everyone did that today.

Just super proud of the entire team, both my teammates, and happy to get the win today.


 

THE MODERATOR: Questions.


 

Q. Dan, you just said there is a bit of uncertainty regarding your BMW and GTD Pro and who is going to go and where? Do you think these boys have delivered -- you have left the impression that you'll be able to give it a second run next year?


 

DAN HARPER: Yeah, I mean, I think we've done good. Of course, there's always room for improvement from everyone's side, from the team. They made a mistake at some stage, I made a mistake at some stage. We for sure have learned so much. And yeah, it's always nice to go for a second attempt, I think, from what we've all learned and progressed through the year, that's what we want to do, so let's see.


 

THE MODERATOR: Anything to add, Max?


 

MAX HESSE: As Dan mentioned, generally the team has been doing really, really well this year having for the first time two cars, it's a huge effort. The guys really stepped up on it. Yeah, would be very happy to do another year. If not, I'm sure we will be busy somewhere else.


 

Q. For you guys, this was your first Petit. From us, the 48 was pretty much up there all race long. Was this a dream run for you guys in terms of coming here for the first time?


 

MAX HESSE: I would say so, yes. I think as Connor has mentioned, the track position was really key, so once he got that move down on the Porsche, I think around the three-hour mark, I would say, that was really helping us a lot. I think we had great pace. Also towards the end of the race with the temperatures coming down, that normally helps our car a bit. Everything came together in the end.


 

Q. Connor, you drove both cars. How did that work out, and did it go to the plan that was sort of planned out before the race?


 

CONNOR DE PHILLIPPI: It went to plan, yeah. I think, unfortunately, with the 1 car having the problem early on, the focus shifted more towards the 48 and using more my drive time there versus the 1.

Overall, yeah, the weekend was pretty seamless. It was able to use me for different setup things throughout the weekend, and I think it led us down the path where we are now with having a fantastic race car.

The race was pretty straightforward. Just had to manage that four-hour rule and really just having to have two helmets, because each car wants the radio on the other side, so that was the most complicated part of it.


 

Q. Was that the first time you've done double-duty in a sports car race?


 

CONNOR DE PHILLIPPI: Actually the only other time I've done was 24 hours (indiscernible) the year I won it. So now I'm 2 for 2 doing double-duty. So hopefully I get another shot.


 

Q. Connor, Steven, and Mikkel have said they're moving on to new horizons in 2026. Where does this leave you?


 

HUNTER MCELREA: I don't know yet. Anybody able to drive?


 

Q. What was your reaction when they told you about the mechanical black light for the brake lights?


 

HUNTER MCELREA: I wasn't in the car for that.


 

MIKKEL JENSEN: You were.


 

HUNTER MCELREA: I didn't get the -- I didn't get told about it.


 

MIKKEL JENSEN: You boxed --


 

HUNTER MCELREA: Oh, I don't know. I just found out. I got told to pit, and last year I got in trouble because I made fun of my engineer because I can't understand him because he's very French, but I'm not going to say that this time. Yeah.


 

MIKKEL JENSEN: That's why you boxed 15 laps earlier than planned and where why our whole race got into shit (laughing).


 

HUNTER MCELREA: No comment.


 

STEVEN THOMAS: I just wanted to say thanks to the media. In the five years that I've been involved in IMSA the sport has grown so much, and I think a lot of it is the great coverage and the story telling that you guys do. So, thanks, it's been really something to see the sport grow like this.


 

THE MODERATOR: Thank you, Steven.


 

THE MODERATOR: We have the No. 21 Af Corse Ferrari 296 GT3 team. From your left to right, Alessandro Pier Guidi, Lilou Wadoux.

Alessandro, take us through kind of how things wrapped up here for the team. I believe you guys last won the Michelin Endurance Cup, so mission accomplished?


 

ALESSANDRO PIER GUIDI: Yeah. Actually yes. We came here, main goal, the first target was to try to achieve the championship. We planned all the strategies to be in the best position. I did two at the four hour and eight hour. Then we tried to go to the end.

My two teammates and the team did an amazing job, let's say, 70%, 80% of the race. We were very quick. I think we did a very good job with the car, with the strategy, pit stop, everything.

At the end to win Petit, you must be perfect. This year we have been lucky a few times, but at the end we put all together in the right moment.


 

THE MODERATOR: Let's move to Simon. Your first IMSA victory. How does that feel winning your first race like this, especially against pretty tough competition out there?


 

SIMON MANN: Yeah, for sure. Alessandro did very well. The team did a fantastic job, but being able to win my first IMSA race at Petit is for sure a dream. I mean, such a legendary race, and to be able to come out on top is obviously fantastic.

Obviously the target was the championship, so to be able to win the race is an extra bonus for sure.


 

THE MODERATOR: Lilou, second win here at IMSA. How do you like racing here?


 

LILOU WADOUX: For sure, I think it's my favorite championship. I like the track. It's nice. And it's difficult to win here. Like, it's proper resting until the end of the race. Yeah, it's my second victory, and I'm so happy to watch this with the team and this line-up because in the beginning of the year we had some up and down.

Yeah, I'm happy to finish the season like that.


 

THE MODERATOR: Questions.


 

Q. Two questions. Lilou, first for you. First woman to win a Petit Le Mans class win since 2005. You mentioned how tough it is to race in IMSA. With combining those two together, how more gratifying does this win make for you?


 

LILOU WADOUX: Oh, for sure I am happy to be the first one, but at the end I'm a driver like (indiscernible). When I have a helmet on my head, nobody know if it's a girl or boy.

Yeah, I'm super happy to have this, because it's not nothing to win a Petit Le Mans. Yeah, at the end I want to continue like that, but to be compared like those drivers.


 

Q. Second question for all three of you all, whoever would like to answer. From Thursday on, it just seemed like -- especially in GT the Ferraris, they were just so well-tuned, well-connected to the track. What was it that just had the 296s dialed in and connected all weekend long?


 

ALESSANDRO PIER GUIDI: For us, it's quite a good track for Ferrari here, historically. So 296 is not different from the others. We have a well-balanced car. We did a very good job, I think, we came here doing a test day one or two months ago. I don't remember exactly. I think helped.

A good setup, a good car, the best as we could, and yeah, as you said, Ferrari was quite quick in the GTD class. But I think the car was nice, and the team did an amazing job putting it all together. That's always the result.


 

Q. This looked like a pretty perfect run except for one moment where you were in a spin down there in turn ten. Was there any concern that would be much more than it turned out to be?


 

ALESSANDRO PIER GUIDI: Actually, I was trying to stay as much out of the trouble as I could, because my first goal was crossing the four-hour -- the eight-hour mark and close the championship. And actually, it wasn't a nice moment.

Luckily, everything went well. I didn't lose as much time. I have been able to recover the car quite quick. Didn't go into the gravel. Stay on the track. Yeah, it wasn't nice, but sometimes it is racing.

We know with this amount of car, this amount of category, contact can happen. I'm sure no one did on purpose. At the end it's just racing.


 

THE MODERATOR: We're joined by GTP champions in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. GTP champions in the No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963. From your left to right Mathieu Jaminet and Matt Campbell, co-drivers for today. Next to Matt, Laurens Vanthoor, and we also have Urs Kuratle, Porsche Director of Motorsport LMDH.

Things got a little interesting this morning. Had to draft in Laurens. Tell us what it means to bring home another title here.


 

MATHIEU JAMINET: Yeah, the day didn't start as good as we wish. It took us one hour, 40 to get to the track, which is good news because there is a lot of fans out there. So this is positive, but we nearly missed the recon lap, so managed to work and park on the side of the road to get there.

Then we realize we have no third driver, so Larry jumped in, which he did great, by the way, so thank you, Larry, to jumping in. Saved our ass.

Then we went racing finally, and it went well. We had a very good car going into the race. The team did a really good prep. We still had some question marks after qualifying, you know, but we made the right choices on setups, and to say we had a good package is always nice. Yeah, here we are. Grabbed the podium and championship, so can't complain.


 

THE MODERATOR: Thanks, Mathieu. Tough act to follow, Matt. What's it mean to you?


 

MATT CAMPBELL: I think he summed up the day pretty well. Phenomenal to get another championship with Mathieu. That's two years in IMSA partnering together and two championships, so very proud of that.

Doing it next to a good friend with Mathieu, we've formed a really good partnership over the last years. Even though we might not have driven together in the last couple, coming back together this year it's worked phenomenally, and we've really hit the ground running.

For sure wasn't the whole year we wanted. From the start of the year lacking a little bit behind the 7, but I think it really showed our consistency and our drive together that put us in this position for the championship title. So very, very special day. A day I won't forget.

Extremely grateful to the whole team and Mathieu and also Larry stepping in. Unfortunately, Julien had the issue, but yeah, great day, and clinching every championship, so it makes it that much more special for the team as well.


 

THE MODERATOR: What are your thoughts on what transpired for you today? All of a sudden you needed to step in and pinch-hit.


 

LAURENS VANTHOOR: Yeah, it was a pretty unique day for me in that way. I think half an hour before the race we decided we had to do that. I think one hour in the race they told me, Larry, you're next. I said, Which car? We don't know yet. That was kind of how the day went.

In the end, there was no time to think about it. I just wanted to help Matt and Mathieu and the team. Mathieu gave me the car in the lead. First time in the 6 in the weekend, and hopefully not making a mistake. Do not mess up the championship.

It was a day for me to help them and not make mistakes, and I'm happy I could help a little part. Very happy to have been a part of the success of Porsche Penske. I think it's quite impressive, so it's an honor to be a part of it.


 

THE MODERATOR: 63 IMSA titles for Porsche. Especially given the news of the week, how sweet is this?


 

URS KURATLE: Yeah, first of all, I couldn't be prouder of the team and the drivers also. Thanks, Larry. He is well-paid, so it's okay.

We won championships. Having a back-to-back championship is quite remarkable, and I couldn't be any prouder to be part of the team.


 

THE MODERATOR: Questions.


 

Q. How did the strategy change with having Larry in both cars, because I think pre-race the idea was to have the third driver do the middle stint in the middle of the day, and that had to sort of shake things up a bit.


 

URS KURATLE: It became a little bit of a mathematical game for driving times, et cetera, but after strategies, yeah, as usual they managed the situation really good, and drivers are flexible, everybody. The team was flexible today. At the end of the day, it did not matter too much.


 

Q. What happened with the 7 and Felipe on the final lap? Do you know exactly? We didn't see it on the screen.


 

URS KURATLE: Yeah, I personally have to review it on the screen, but I see he was a little bit pushed out at the end, but we have to see. I have to review it. I haven't seen it in TV actually yet.


 

Q. Larry, how was it sort of driving both cars? Did they feel different setup-wise? Did you have a different seat that had to get fitted into for the 6? Were there any other challenges at this last-minute thing?


 

LAURENS VANTHOOR: No, very luckily we had the same base seat in both cars, which was on purpose. My inserts fitted in that seat.

It's a Porsche 963. As he said, it was a bit different. There are different ways of applying some tools, some software, but I felt comfortable in the car from the first laps. It actually went a lot smoother than you would think and than you would expect. Luckily, let's say. It was an interesting day.


 

Q. Mathieu, those closing stages of the race were quite complex with the late pit stop. Did you know you were going to have to pit to top up on fuel or...


 

MATHIEU JAMINET: Yeah, obviously we tried to stretch it and hoping to make it to the end. There was some saving that last stint, but yeah, the result of yellow was possible so at some point we just decided to follow 31 and, yeah, just giving up on taking too much risk and, yeah, trying to go more on the podium and trying to win the race and just taking too much risk and maybe taking yourself out of the race.

In the end quickly we realized, yeah, this is the target, and we kind of bring home at some point.


 

Q. At that position you were ahead of the Acura, so you knew you had the Manufacturer's Championship. Was that in your mind as well?


 

MATHIEU JAMINET: That's correct. Yeah, we knew we (indiscernible) everything. I think the 7 was a bit further back. Yeah, it was up to me and the team to for sure not do a mistake, a stupid mistake, that could be very costly in the very last minutes. I was pretty relaxed, but yeah, didn't make sense to push too much and take too much risk at that point.


 

Q. Given the news of the week and the potential implications, did it cross your mind that this would be potentially your and Mathieu's last race together?


 

MATT CAMPBELL: Yeah, for sure. These things cross your mind, but at the end of the day we all focus on the job at hand. We wanted to try and clinch this championship. What happens after this weekend is obviously a little bit out of our control, but nevertheless, try and make the most of these special moments because, yeah, to do it with this guy, it's a really good feeling, once again. Yeah, what the future holds we'll have to wait and see.


 

Q. When did Cam jam as your collective name stick around? About when did that start in?


 

MATT CAMPBELL: It could be earlier than that. We've been together since 2019. Obviously two years in IMSA and now two championships, so it's a very special partnership. Actually, since more or less we've been driving together, we've only finished outside of the either first or second in championship once. We've always been in contention all these years.

To finally be back together now after a couple of years away, it's really, really cool to be able to be in this position and say we're champions once again because, yeah, it's a phenomenal partnership. It's been working extremely well for a long time. Yeah, to come home with No. 1 is very special.


 

Q. Mathieu, anything to add?


 

MATHIEU JAMINET: No, let's see what the future brings. Might be same; maybe not. (Indisernible) -- if we are not on the same car, then it will be outside the racetrack, so we'll see.


 

THE MODERATOR: We are joined by Penske Racing President, Jonathan Diuguid. This is the seventh championship for the team, second consecutive. Give us some perspective, if you could, to what this title means to this team.


 

JONATHAN DIUGUID: Yeah, I think it's difficult to put into perspective, to be honest, because you never go into a season expecting it.

But I think what put us here was the hard work of not just one driver, one group, or one person, but as a collective group and never giving up even though we were in the doldrums of the middle of the season, where the results weren't coming and frustration levels got high, but showed up here leading all the championships and left here leading all the championships.

That's kind of what we're -- what the main goal is and what we're trying to do and really happy to be able to be successful because some of them are really tight.

I think we were running the double digits very early on in the race, and one thing went our way, and we never gave it up after that.


 

Q. To Matt and Mathieu, my question for you two is, if there was one point in the season where it looked like it was like, okay, we can actually seize this championship, what was that point in the season where you guys said we actually think we can do it?


 

MATT CAMPBELL: I think we can both probably say and agree it was for sure Laguna was a turning point. I would say it was after Laguna where it really started to, you know, look like something was maybe going to be possible. Consistency is key in a championship run, and more or less from Laguna onwards that's where we were consistent and getting those valuable points.

Let's say we weren't always the most competitive car, but we were sort of punching above our weight in those races towards the end of the year and scoring those points, which is important, and making sure we finished races.

I would say that was definitely a bit of a turning point where we were able to see maybe there was something possible. For sure in the last races, you know, not making mistakes, doing good job, and yeah, that was a key point for our championship.


 

Q. Mathieu?


 

MATHIEU JAMINET: Well --


 

JONATHAN DIUGUID: It wasn't when we changed the chassis, that wasn't the turning point?


 

MATHIEU JAMINET: No, it started to get more (indiscernible) right after that, but yeah. I would say the expectations was to fight for a championship, to be very honest. Obviously when you start the season, you want to win. At the end of the day, this is what motivates us.

I've been pretty close with Nick the last few years. A few things didn't work out, out of our control, and we missed a shot. Yeah, this year coming back with Matt for sure we knew there would be a very good chance.

Yeah, start of the year was a little bit frustrating, but I always knew we have a championship shot. It was about staying on track, not making mistakes, and it's going to come our way.

This is exactly what happened, and we support each other. We do it on bad days. It was perfect. It worked out pretty well. Yeah, I cannot be more happy than today, that's for sure.


 

Q. I just wanted to get your perspective on the last minute Larry fill-in on the 6 and how that changed strategy. Because I think the plan was to run the third drivers for the middle portion of the race, and how did that shake things up with the two cars?


 

JONATHAN DIUGUID: Julien was pretty gutted to be in the situation he was in this morning, and not to give any of that away or whatever. But it was a pretty hectic hour before the start of the race, to be honest.

My hat's off to John Doonan and Beaux (Barfield) and Paul Walter and everybody that made themselves available to help work through that difficult situation to change the driver last minute. Larry, honestly, stuck his hand up when it started going the wrong direction and said, Hey, I'll do whatever you guys need to do.

From that point, it was just management between the 6 and the 7 cars of the drive time. Obviously the 6 car did a more conventional driver rotation, but in the end I don't think it affected the 7 car negatively in either way.

In general, that's the strength of the group we have. I think Jaminet has the base seat for everybody, so we can swap seats from car to car without major issues. Larry was ready to go and jumped in. Did a great job.


 

Q. Laurens, I know we talked about you jumping in the car. How was the pressure of the whole situation because you're not just jumping in a different car. You're jumping in a car that's in the middle of a championship fight, and you're going to be a key part of that during the race. I guess you didn't have a lot of time to think about it before you did it, but...


 

LAURENS VANTHOOR: No, honestly, there was no time to think about it. It had to be done.

Yeah, like I said before, I got the car in the lead, and I know these guys are fighting for the championship. The very last thing you want to do is make a mistake or to mess it up.

Honestly, at this point you don't think about it. Now in hindsight maybe, but I was just trying to do the best that I could in the situation. Yeah, very, very happy for both of them that they managed to pull this off and could help 1%.


 

THE MODERATOR: We're joined now by LMP2 champion, No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07, Dane Cameron, PJ Hyett, co-driver. PJ can't join us this evening, but we also do have the co-driver in this event, Jonny Edgar.

Dane, again, the mission coming in was pretty clear. There were some twists and turns along the way, it seemed, but I guess just tell us what it means to win now five championships and what it was like to do it with this group.


 

DANE CAMERON: Yeah, honestly, pretty amazing. That's obviously the goal when you start the year, and believed in the project and the pieces that were there that it had this potential to bring a championship. Just needed a little bit of, yeah, just a little glue to hold everything all together and elevate things a little bit more.

Just grateful, thankful that PJ and Gunnar thought that I could be the guy. I thought there was some potential there to do it.

Yeah, like I said, the mission was to get some wins for Spike after a tough year for them last year. Of course, the moon shot is to get the championship. Yeah, that all came together.

So a difficult year in certain parts and a very strong, consistent year in other parts. I think of all the years that I've won the championship. This is probably the longest ten hours that I've spent here. It was a pretty long day, pretty stressful day. Looked like it was kind of going to slip away there at a couple of points.

But, yeah, tried to run with the rest of the staff that we have here, just deliver the message that you just need to -- that it probably would get bumpy at some point, but just to stay calm, to stay with it, to keep fighting all the way to the end.

At the end of the day, I'm really grateful and thankful for Jonny doing a really great job for us. It's nearly all the races that we have we have Jonny, so it's a bit of a shame in a way that two races makes the difference for him also not being champion. He was really spectacular for us this year and a huge part of this result. Thankful to have him.

Honestly pretty incredible. Five is quite a special number.


 

THE MODERATOR: Jonny, how special is it for you to contribute to what happened here with this team today and obviously throughout the season?


 

JONNY EDGAR: Yeah, it's been amazing to be part of the team. Thankful for the opportunity to drive with him. Yeah, driving with someone like Dane, obviously before this year Daytona winner, four-time IMSA champion -- yeah, Dane helped a lot, just lot of details that I think the experience brings. That's helped.

Obviously PJ has been great all year, and I think the team has done a great job. Yeah, I'm happy to have helped a bit towards the championship. Yeah, I think some of the endurance races we were unlucky, so it's a shame we never managed to win one.

I think especially Daytona it was looking quite good, and we had an issue. Yeah, the team has been amazing. I think everything we've been able to control, we've normally done a good job. Even when races have, yeah, at moments it's gone bad, we managed to recover.

Like today, early on we had a puncture, and it was not looking great, but then, yeah, a couple of hours to go we were in P2 again leading in points. Then, yeah, once 22 had an issue, it was just about bringing it home and taking no risks that we kind of -- yeah, two and a half hours to go, we kind of backed off. Then it was just about surviving until the end.


 

THE MODERATOR: Questions.


 

Q. Dane, I believe there might have been an issue during the final driver change with the seat belts. Was that what happened that sort of led to sort of a slower stop there?


 

DANE CAMERON: Yeah, we didn't get one plugged in there, and I was trying to get it. I tightened some other ones, and it gets a little more complicated then.

Yeah, just threw the door open as I was trying to deal with it to call for help a little bit. So, yeah, happens every once in a while. It was unfortunate it was there, but obviously we were in a decent point at that standing.

Yeah, a little bit of a change there. A little bit of an issue on the belt.


 

Q. Was there any dramas later in the race after that or no?


 

DANE CAMERON: No. Like Jonny said, once the 22 had their unfortunate issue, we were pretty comfortable there to the end. It's a little bit of a known issue sometimes on these cars, so we got a little bit gun shy and that, well, let's make sure we don't have the same, and it doesn't get away from us. So we kind of just, yeah, pulled the chutes a little bit and made sure we got home with all the pieces pointed the right way.


 

Q. There are still questions I'm sure about driver line-ups and stuff for next year, but PJ is going to get the invite to Le Mans, and considering the team's success last year and if you are in that position again, what would it mean to sort of go back there and potentially to go for back-to-back Pro-Am LMP2?


 

DANE CAMERON: I would certainly be happy to be a part of that again. Yeah, when I joined the program and knew obviously Le Mans was likely to be a part of it and doing the stuff in Europe also, right from the get-go I believed that having Louis and I and PJ was something that was kind of-- I was eyeing that straight away that I thought we could win Le Mans.

It's obviously a bit of a dream until you get there, and it was kind of a dream week for us. That was, yeah, more than I would have expected. I would love to do it again, for sure. It seems to be a little bit better luck race for me than Daytona.


 

Q. Jonny, you're due an upgrade that more reflects your true talent that you have shown throughout your career. Having said that, it does mean that if you come back to AO Racing, it would likely be in a different role. If it is, would you have liked to continue with AO Racing at some point?


 

JONNY EDGAR: Yeah, I think obviously being upgraded changes my situation for next year, and yeah, obviously last week I found out. Not too sure what next year looks like for me yet, but yeah, if an opportunity came about, I would love to be back with the team.

I've loved the opportunity to race with them, and they do a great job. It's such a new team, and to have won GTD Pro last year, LMP2 this year, Le Mans winners all within three seasons, it's a great group to work with. Definitely any opportunity I got to work with any part of the team again would be great.

Yeah, in Long Beach I got to drive in the GTD car, and that went great. I really enjoyed that. Yeah, the whole team is great. Just a good group of people as well to be around.


 

Q. Dane, fifth championship, IMSA WeatherTech Championship. The significance of that would also -- the versatility of having done it in five different cars, five different classes, five different programs. What does all that mean to you?


 

DANE CAMERON: Yeah, it was touched on earlier in the week in some of the pre-event stuff, but yeah, for a bit I think it's quite special that they're all a little bit different. So to be able to adapt to different cars, different teams, manufacture, rule-set, know everything from GT3 to kind of the DPI era to now spec category, as well as the hybrid era and all these things, yeah, I think that's a really tremendous parts of sports car racing and really something I guess if you want to say from the older days of the guys that were just jump in and go and deliver results and things like that.

That was something I certainly aspired to when I made my shift to sports cars a decade and a half ago was you wanted to -- you didn't want to be only a guy who could do a certain thing. I didn't want to be only GT or only (indiscernible) or whatever. Being able to have titles in kind of, yeah, the classes is very special to me. I'm very proud of that.

I think, you know, sometimes guys get a little bit of a run for whether it's car BOP class or whatever, and this doesn't devalue any of those, but I think it's unique, and it's special, and I'm certainly proud of the fact that they've all been in competitive eras and different categories and different challenges, all the rest.

It was, yeah, certainly a goal I had when I came here. Just to get one was a dream, and to be at five is honestly, yeah, astonishing really. I'm very proud of that.


 

Q. Dane, I want to kind of delve into this a little bit. 2025, you are fresh off a title with Penske and GTP. You come down to LMP2, a team that hasn't won in the division. Really a still second-year program, still pretty young. Got the first wins, and now here you are with a championship. How does this title rank in regards to the four, especially considering what all you and the team dealt with this year?


 

DANE CAMERON: Yeah, I don't know if I could ever pick favorites from any of them. They're all very different. The journey is different from all of them. The situation is different from all of them, but yeah, I would say this one is as valuable or as meaningful to me as any of them, as much as it is to win an overall and to do it with a Manufacturer. This is just as much.

I don't have any less love or value for this one being a spec category or pro-am thing like that. It's hugely competitive here. There's a ton of talent, you know, guys that are also racing in Hypercar programs, guys that are on their way to Hypercar program. It's every bit as competitive as any other category.

Yeah, it's been a little bit of the last couple of years -- even though we won the championship last year, it was personally a tough stretch for me. For me to feel back kind of on my own two feet a little bit is good. Yeah, I'm very, very proud of this one.


 

THE MODERATOR: We have our GTD PRO champions in the No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsport Corvette Z06 GT3.R, Antonio García and Alexander Sims, left to right, as well as Jessica Dane, who is program manager for Corvette. Six titles, what does it take to stack up that many championships in a competition like this?


 

ANTONIO GARCIA: I think running for the best team. I think that's the answer. Running with the best team. Running with the best teammates, and over the years I think I had the best ones. Yeah, that's pretty much it.


 

THE MODERATOR: Alex, before I ask you anything about winning championships, what's going on with the hair and all this?


 

ALEXANDER SIMS: Whenever I get asked this question, I just say, what's going on with your hair?


 

THE MODERATOR: I have mine under a hat.


 

ALEXANDER SIMS: It's always personal with you. I just have a personality, you know? I'm me, and unashamedly so.


 

No, I decided I think it was (indiscernible). I can't remember. My dad had a mullet years ago. I remember seeing a family photo of him with one, so I was, like, sod it, I'll do it myself. That's as deep as it goes. Then I thought I would shave the 'stache on this morning just for a bit of fun.


 

Now that we won the championship, then we can also (indiscernible) about it, because otherwise, I would be looking a bit stupid if we hadn't, so I feel good.


 

THE MODERATOR: So about that, winning the championship, second championship here in WeatherTech. What does it mean, and what does it mean to do it with Corvette?


 

ALEXANDER SIMS: It's wonderful. Honestly, the year we've had has been really quite phenomenal. We've executed very, very well at pretty much every single weekend.

Our Corvette has been working well at many of the circuits, if not all of them. Although we hadn't necessarily always had the fastest car, it's been a really nice car to drive, consistent, and easy to extract the pace out of it.

Yeah, when a fourth or a third was the best possible result we could get, then that's what we got. Then, yeah, with a second or a first, like at Virginia, was possible, then we were able to get that. Consistency was executed super well throughout the year.

Antonio, Danny, both have -- well, yeah, and myself, I think we've had pretty flawless races most of the season. Very little damage on the car, things like that that would put us back. It's just been be a really nice, smooth year.


 

THE MODERATOR: Jess, 16 championships for the team, 40 for Chevrolet. What does that say about the legacy of this program and what does it mean to add another one here tonight?


 

JESSICA DANE: Yeah, the stats are fairly phenomenal, and for me I came onto this program literally a year ago, and understanding the depth and the history of Chevrolet in motorsport, Corvette in motorsport, it's something in the grand scheme of things, I'm a tiny blip on that radar.

It's really an honor to be a part of that from a personal perspective, but from a broader perspective, yeah, it's just testament to everyone at General Motors and Chevrolet and Corvette Racing who are so passionate about going racing and understanding the benefits of doing so and everything that we can extract from a championship like IMSA to benefit our wider organization.


 

THE MODERATOR: Questions.


 

Q. Antonio, we just had Dane Cameron up here, who also won his fifth WeatherTech Championship title just like you today, although Dane did it with five different teams. You've done it with one team. What's the secret ingredient? What's made it to successful with this organization through these years?


 

ANTONIO GARCIA: I think it's consistency. Not only the year consistency, but also keeping the key elements of the team as long as you can, basically.

So if you go around the whole Corvette crew and members, there is quite a few that have been there for a long time. When that happens, everything runs very, very smooth. Obviously you are taking new members once in a while for sure. You need to keep the ball rolling, but I think that consistency and be loyal to every single member of the team, that's what it takes, because I think it's a real family.


 

Q. I believe this is the first championship title for the GT3 car.


 

ANTONIO GARCIA: Yeah.


 

Q. You got the first win in WeatherTech Championship last year. What's it mean to get another first for the package?


 

ANTONIO GARCIA: Yeah, very grateful. The car has been running really, really good. Yeah, it's just another proof of that pretty much every car that Corvette Racing, Team Chevy builds is capable of winning.

I was very lucky to win with many versions of the Corvette, but again, with the same key members, which is Pratt Miller, so everything stays pretty much the same, even if we all evolve, the cars evolve, so yeah.


 

Q. I'm trying to make sure I frame this correctly. Antonio, for you in particular with you being part of Corvette Pratt Miller for as long as you have been, with today's championship finale, I think I mentioned this to you on the grid when we spoke, these close championship battles, you only had 13 points, and essentially it's, like, especially if it was top 5, and fortunately you guys finished third. It was basically first car to the line wins. Tell us about those types of scenarios, and how have you in Corvette time and again in those tight situations just managed to maintain composure, because it was very back and forth throughout the day, but as the dusk and night came, it looked like you came to the fore and stayed there.


 

ANTONIO GARCIA: I was nervous today. Even if I'm as old as I am and as experience I have to date, I felt everything had to be perfect. So that's why I was kind of with a little bit of that extra pressure in a way.

Once the flag went, I think I forgot about everything I think it's not only me. I think the whole everybody on the team knew what to do. I think that, in a way, takes a lot of pressure away, because you know everybody that surrounds you, either them as Alex or Danny, as drivers or every single member of the team, you know everybody is going to be doing the best they can or the best.

Yeah, I mean, that's probably another -- yeah, another great day for Corvette Racing and Team Chevy, so yeah.


 

Q. I have a question for Alex. I think we all try to -- we all frame this as a David versus Goliath title fight. Exactly how deep did Corvette Racing need to dig throughout the course of the season to keep the proverbial David at arm's length in this championship?


 

ALEXANDER SIMS: Yeah, we've had to be on our absolute A-game throughout the year thanks to the great competitors that we've got in GTP PRO.

For a while, it seemed to be the 77 that was going to run us closest, and then the 81 sort of started to come strong midseason with their results and once we finished through until this weekend really, really strongly.

So it was the consistency that we were all able to achieve this year was really key that we were thereabouts every single weekend. Yeah, it's been a real pleasure, honestly, working against the competitors that we've had. It's been a lot of fun, close racing. I would like to just give credit to IMSA, the Championship, and the stance that they've taken.

Honestly I'm a big supporter of the way that they had to react I think to some of the slightly dodgy situations that were presented to them at Road America. It's kept the racing clean and really, really fair.

There have been moments where I felt I've lost out because of that. I've had to give people space, but that's only right. Then I expect that in return.

So it's been cool. It's been really good working against those guys, but full credit honestly to the primary crew that we've been working with. We've just executed super well all year long.


 

THE MODERATOR: We have our GTD champions in the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3. We have Indy Dontje, Philip Ellis, and Russell Ward. Tell us what it meant to you to help contribute to a second championship with this group.


 

INDY DONTJE: Yeah, it's really special. I mean, to help these guys win their second championship is some pressure, but Winward gave me a great car. The team did great pit stops, and my teammates did also a fantastic job.

In the end it almost feels like an easy job, but we made it stick, and proud to be part of it, yeah.


 

THE MODERATOR: Philip, coming into this race, it wasn't as close in your GTD Championship as some other championship battles or any of the other championship battles in the WeatherTech Championship. Maybe what kind of pressure was there on you guys coming into this race, knowing that you didn't have to do a lot to win it, but you had to do something?


 

PHILIP ELLIS: I mean, there's always stuff that can go wrong. Until it's done, it's not done. Then, obviously, we still had the manufacturer's title to fight for, so that's what we raced for today. Glad we got that as well. Super happy with that.

Not so happy that we couldn't finish it off with a podium. That would have been nice. Honestly in the end it's still our best finish to date with a P5 in Atlanta. It is something to work on for next year, for sure.

As you say, it wasn't a lot of pressure on us. I think it was a lot of pressure on the other teams, the competitors. As you have seen throughout the season, it's been a lot of up and downs for a lot of people. We had our mix of bad luck, and so did our competitors, fortunately.

But, yeah, it's not the most satisfying way to win the championship, to be honest, after seeing the race start, to be honest, and knowing that you've won it. It's nice, but I would have liked to win it on the track.


 

THE MODERATOR: Russell, as I said, second consecutive championship, and Winward Racing has turned into quite a juggernaut in the WeatherTech Championship and other places in the world. Just tell us a little bit about the team that you all have put together and how proud you are of what's going on here.


 

RUSSELL WARD: I think they're the unsung heroes of racing. These are the guys that are up until 9:00 every night with the car and making it perfect and just getting everything 100%.

So we had the same group as last year, and you know, we're going to have the same group next year that we have this year. So I think we're going to be an equal force next year, and just really hats off to the guys. They provide such an amazing piece of equipment for us to drive. As long as we don't put a foot wrong, I mean, it tends to come our way.

Yeah, just really hats off to the guys back at the shop in Houston and all the work they put into the car.


 

THE MODERATOR: Questions.


 

Q. Russell, what would you say was the defining moment of your season? Was it any of the three wins, or was it perhaps digging from however many laps down you were at Daytona after the throttle issue to come back and finish forth with a chance to win?


 

RUSSELL WARD: Yeah, you know, it was an interesting year. A lot of new equipment in the car with the torque sensors and a little bit uncertainty on our part going into Daytona. I think that really set us up for the remainder of the year.

You saw pace we had at Daytona and how we were able to come back seven laps down. For us I think you hit it right on the head. That was the defining moment. When we left that race, I mean, although we didn't have the result that we wanted, I mean, we left there with our heads held high and knew that we had a really good car, and we had done a lot of development on the system.

And then went into the next race, which is arguably more difficult than Daytona, and we won it. For us it's just consistent, just plug away, I mean, every day making improvement.

Also, really the key that we found to being successful here in the IMSA Championship is you've really got to finish every single race and do the best that you can to finish every lap of every single race because it's incredibly difficult out there for the GT cars with all the different traffic and things like that and it breathes a lot of incidents.

So thankfully I've got a really experienced group of drivers here who take care of the car and are incredibly quick. I think just the whole package together is really firing on all cylinders, and really proud of the group.


 

Q. Earlier in the week during practice you shared a little bit about expanding Winward's footprint at IMSA. Why now is this the right time to start thinking about adding to it in IMSA?


 

RUSSELL WARD: Yeah, you know, we've really got a good group of people that are enjoying working with us and are consistently wanting to be a part of the team. With the new facility in Houston, it's really opened up kind of the amount of space that we have, and I think it's just the natural progression for us to extend the amount of cars that we have here, but personally I think this will be the limit.

It's difficult to put the group together and really keep that group continuity. For us, I mean, we're really excited about the new program, and hopefully we can put on a good show.


 

Q. What is it about y'all's relationship, the chemistry that just clicks well together? You guys continue to win races, and as you have said, Indy was a great example. Daytona, another great example of the season you guys have. What is it about you two as a team together that just works so well?


 

RUSSELL WARD: Yeah, you know, I am totally new to racing compared to some of the pros here that have been here for several decades. What I tend to have found is some teams, you know, you try to put the best sports players together, and they don't tend to click well. What you need to find is a group that is pushing for the result of the team does not the result for yourself.

Definitely Indy and Philip do an incredible job of how do we improve the car and what's the problem with the car, not necessarily focusing on themselves. I just think that's the key to having a good relationship with the racers and coming in there without any expectations and just racing the racetrack and trying to go as hard as you can.

These two are incredibly special race car drivers. They're humble, and they just want the best. We all put the work in before a racetrack and come here and are able to perform.


 

PHILIP ELLIS: Yeah, I mean, Russell touched on everything. I think the only thing you can add to that is we are really close friends off track as well, so the work doesn't really stop when we leave the race weekend.

We are all super close. We've known each other for a couple of years now, and as he said, we just click. It's just a tight group of friends. On track we just work really well together. The same with the team as well. I think that's our key to success.


 

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

 

 


Paul Miller Racing BMW, Af Corse Ferrari Secure Motul Petit Le Mans GT Class Wins

Corvette, Winward Mercedes-AMG Wrap Championships 


 

October 11, 2025

By Jeff Olson

IMSA Wire Service

Provisional Results

Provisional Points

Provisional Michelin Endurance Cup Standings


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – BMW won the battle, but Corvette won the war.


 

The No. 48 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO, anchored by an outstanding final stint by Dan Harper, claimed the race win Saturday night in the Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) class in Motul Petit Le Mans at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.


 

Meanwhile, the No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R, co-driven by Antonio Garcia, Alexander Sims and Daniel Juncadella, celebrated the GTD PRO season championship with a third-place finish.


 

The No. 48 BMW, shared by Harper, Max Hesse and Connor De Phillippi, was listed a lap ahead of second-place No. 4 Corvette Racing entry co-driven by Nicky Catsburg, Tommy Milner and Nico Varrone.


 

The No. 3 Corvette, with Sims behind the wheel at the end, claimed the manufacturer championship for Chevrolet, the team championship for Corvette Racing, and the driver championship for Garcia and Sims.


 

“Obviously, we didn’t have probably the pace to pass people on the track, but we did just a fantastic job again – saving fuel, doing everything right and gaining positions, taking every opportunity,” said Garcia, who celebrated Corvette Racing’s 16th IMSA championship and sixth in the modern era since 2014. It’s Garcia’s sixth as well, and second for Sims. 


 

“I think that’s a group thing. That will never happen without Corvette Racing, and all the teammates that I’ve had over the past 16 years.”


 

While Corvette was enjoying the championship, Harper had to work for the race win. With little more than an hour left in the 10-hour race, he passed Catsburg for the lead through Turn 11 and never looked back.


 

“I was very fortunate that he got held up a little through the last corner and I was able to get a good run onto the start-finish straight and get it inside for Turn 1. We had some great wheel-to-wheel action through the esses. He was very fair to me, and I was equally fair to him.”


 

Sims added, “It’s incredibly intense here at Petit Le Mans every single time I do it. But it’s so thrilling. The track is just amazing, such a nice sequence of corners and so many cars. All the traffic and the shenanigans in the race keep you on your toes.


 

"Our Corvette has been working well at many of the circuits, if not all of them. Although we haven't necessarily always had the fastest car, it's been a really nice car to drive -- consistent and easy to extract the pace out of it. When third or fourth is the best possible result you can get, then that's what we got. ... It's just been a really nice, smooth year."  


 

DragonSpeed, Corvette Racing’s closest rivals in the GTD PRO championship, was in contention for most of the race before its luck ran out in the waning hours. Between a penalty and contact with another car, the No. 81 Ferrari 296 GT3 fell to seventh at the finish for the trio of title contender Albert Costa and co-drivers Giacomo Altoe and Davide Rigon. Costa finished second in the championship. 


 

The victory for BMW also clinched the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup championship for the No. 48 BMW over its Paul Miller Racing sister car, the No. 1 BMW M4 GT3 EVO co-driven by Madison Snow, Neil Verhagen and De Phillippi.


 

GTD: Winward Takes Title as Af Corse Wins Race

The season championship in Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) took only minutes to decide. Deciding the winner of the race took all 10 hours.


 

Russell Ward and Philip Ellis clinched the championship shortly after the green flag waved, securing the points title in the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3, the team’s second championship in two years. They also clinched the manufacturer’s championship for Mercedes-AMG, made all the more challenging by being the brand’s only full-season entrant.


 

“This year was a little bit more difficult,” Ward said. “We didn’t have two full-season entities in Mercedes-AMG, so to bring that home in the final race is a really nice carrot on top of the cake. Just an awesome day for us.” 


 

While Ward, Ellis and Indy Dontje were enjoying the championship, Af Corse was claiming the race win with its No. 21 Ferrari 296 GT3 co-driven by Simon Mann, Alessandro Pier Guidi and Lilou Wadoux, who became just the third woman to win at Petit Le Mans and the first in 20 years. 


 

“It’s pretty difficult to win here,” Wadoux said. “It’s proper racing until the end of the race. It’s a nice victory, and I’m happy to achieve this with the team. It’s nice to finish like this.”


 

The No. 21 Ferrari also captured the Michelin Endurance Cup in GTD.


 

Pier Guidi crossed the finish line 4.158 seconds ahead of the No. 023 Triarsi Competizione Ferrari 296 GT3 co-driven by James Calado, Kenton Koch and Onofrio Triarsi. Koch persevered through an ankle injury that forced him to shift to right-foot braking for the first time in more than a dozen years. 


 

Jack Hawksworth finished third in the No. 12 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3 he shared with Frankie Montecalvo and Parker Thompson.


 

The race opened with a first-lap pileup that took out several contenders in the GTD class. As Manny Franco spun in the No. 34 Conquest Racing Ferrari 296 GT3, he was struck by the No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 driven by Brendan Iribe. The crash also collected Joey Hand in the No. 66 Gradient Racing Ford Mustang GT3, Trent Hindman in the No. 45 Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Huracan GT3 EVO2, and John Potter in the No. 44 Magnus Racing Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo.


 

All except Franco were evaluated and released on site, with Franco back in “good spirits” after returning back to his Conquest Racing team later in the race after being transported to a local hospital for further evaluation.


 

With the season complete, the 2026 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship launches with the 64th Rolex 24 At Daytona on January 24-25, 2026.

 


 

Unofficial 2025 Championship Nuggets | WeatherTech Championship

Motul Petit Le Mans

Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta - Saturday, October 11, 2025

Additional results are available at results.imsa.com.


 

Unofficial points are available at pitnotes.org/points.

GTP Champions

No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport | Porsche 963

  • Seventh IMSA class championship in 12th season (ALMS LMP2 2005, 2006, 2007; IMSA DPi 2019, 2020; IMSA GTP 2024)
  • Fourth championship in the IMSA modern era (since 2014)
  • Second consecutive GTP class championship, have won two of the three
  • Fifth IMSA championship with Porsche following their three LMP2 championships with Porsche from 2005-2007
  • Team Penske’s 48th Championship across all forms of motorsport
  • Team Penske’s 15th sports car championship across USRRC, Can-Am, Trans-Am, ALMS, and IMSA WT; eight have been with Porsche and 10 have been running the number No. 6
  • Team Penske has won at least one motorsports championship every year since 2012


 

Mathieu Jaminet

  • 30 years old from Woippy, France
  • Second career IMSA WeatherTech class championship in ninth season
  • Last championship was GTD PRO in 2022 with Matt Campbell
  • First GTP class championship
  • Only second duo of drivers to win a GT championship followed by a prototype championship together – first was Sascha Maassen and Lucas Luhr, who won the American Le Mans Series GT championship together in 2002 & 2003 followed by the LMP2 championship in 2006, also in the Porsche Penske No. 6 car
  • Seventh pair of drivers to win a championship together in two different classes 


 

Matt Campbell

  • 30 years old from Warwick, Queensland, Australia
  • Second career IMSA WeatherTech class championship in seventh season
  • Last championship was GTD PRO in 2022 with Matt Campbell
  • First GTP class championship
  • Only second duo of drivers to win a GT championship followed by a prototype championship together – first was Sascha Maassen and Lucas Luhr, who won the American Le Mans Series GT championship together in 2002 & 2003 followed by the LMP2 championship in 2006, also in the Porsche Penske No. 6 car
  • Seventh pair of drivers to win a championship together in two different classes 


 

Porsche

  • 63rd IMSA manufacturer’s championship, most of all manufacturers all-time
  • Ninth manufacturer’s championship in the IMSA modern era (since 2014)
  • Second consecutive IMSA GTP manufacturer’s championship
  • Porsche has won two of the three modern GTP class championships


 

LMP2

No. 99 AO Racing | ORECA LMP2 07

  • Second IMSA class championship in third season
  • Second consecutive Teams championship following GTD PRO championship in 2024
  • First LMP2 championship for Spike the Purple Dragon
  • Last time a team won consecutive championships in different classes was Pfaff Motorsports (2021 GTD, 2022 GTD PRO)
  • Earned their first IMSA LMP2 class win at CTMP in July


 

Dane Cameron

  • 36 years old from Newport Beach, CA
  • Fifth career IMSA WeatherTech class championship in 21st season, 18th year
  • Previous championships - IMSA GTD 2014; IMSA P 2016; IMSA DPi 2019; IMSA GTP 2024
  • Second consecutive championship following GTP championship in 2024
  • First IMSA LMP2 class championship
  • First championship with AO Racing


 

PJ Hyett

  • 42 years old from Naperville, IL
  • First career IMSA WeatherTech class championship in third season
  • Earned his first IMSA class win at CTMP in July


 

GTD PRO

No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports | Corvette Z06 GT3.R

  • 16th IMSA class championship in 30th season, 27th year (ALMS GTS 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004; ALMS GT1 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008; ALMS GT 2012, 2013; IMSA GTLM 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021)
  • First GTD PRO class championship
  • Fifth different class the team has won the championship in
  • 16 teams championships is most of all teams all-time
  • Sixth championship in the IMSA modern era (since 2014)
  • Ended a year-plus winless streak at VIR in August


 

Alexander Sims

  • 37 years old from London, England, United Kingdom
  • Second career IMSA WeatherTech class championship in sixth season
  • First championship was in GTP in 2023 with Action Express Racing
  • First championship in GTD PRO


 

Antonio Garcia

  • 45 years old from Madrid, Spain
  • Sixth career IMSA WeatherTech class championship in 26th season, 18th year (ALMS GT 2013, IMSA GTLM 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021)
  • Six championships are tied for 4th most all-time
  • All six championships have come with Pratt Miller Motorsports
  • Fifth championship in the IMSA modern era, most among all drivers


 

Chevrolet

  • 40th IMSA manufacturer’s championship
  • Last manufacturer's championship was 2021 in GTLM
  • Eighth manufacturer’s championship in the IMSA modern era (since 2014)
  • First GTD PRO manufacturer’s championship
  • Third different manufacturer to win the GTDPRO championship in as many years (Lexus – 2023, Porsche – 2024)


 

GTD

No. 57 Winward Racing | Mercedes-AMG GT3

  • Second IMSA class championship, second consecutive, in fifth season
  • First championship was GTD in 2024
  • First team to win consecutive GTD championships since Meyer Shank Racing in 2019 and 2020


 

Philip Ellis

  • 32 years old, British nationality
  • Second IMSA WeatherTech championship in fifth season
  • Second consecutive championship following 2024 GTD championship


 

Russell Ward

  • 36 years old from Seabrook, TX
  • Second IMSA WeatherTech championship in fifth season
  • Second consecutive championship following 2024 GTD championship


 

Mercedes-AMG

  • Second IMSA manufacturer’s championship, second consecutive
  • First championship was in 2024 in GTD
  • Third manufacturer to win two consecutive GTD manufacturer’s championships (Lamborghini 2018-19, BMW 2022-23)

 

 


 

Unofficial Results, Points & Post-Race Nuggets | WeatherTech Championship

Motul Petit Le Mans

Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta - Saturday, October 11, 2025

Unofficial Race Results


 

Additional results are available at results.imsa.com.


 

Unofficial points are available at pitnotes.org/points.

GTP

No. 31 Cadillac Whelen (Action Express Racing)

  • 31st IMSA class win
  • Second consecutive win following win at Indianapolis
  • Last time Action Express Racing won consecutive races was in 2019 at Sebring and Long Beach
  • Last time Cadillac won consecutive endurance races was at 2019 Petit Le Mans and 2020 Rolex 24
  • Third IMSA class win in GTP
  • Second overall win at Petit Le Mans (2019-DPi)
  • Third IMSA class win at Petit Le Mans (2015-P, 2019-DPi)
  • Second IMSA class win in 2025 (Won at Indianapolis RC)
  • Cadillac’s fifth Petit Le Mans overall win, second most of all makes
  • Cadillac’s second consecutive win at Petit Le Mans


 

Earl Bamber

  • 35 years old from Wanganui, New Zealand
  • 10th IMSA class win in 83rd start
  • Second win in GTP
  • Second consecutive win following win at Indianapolis
  • First win at Petit Le Mans in 11th start; first win at Road Atlanta in 12th start
  • Previous best finish at Petit Le Mans was second in 2014 in GTLM
  • Second win in 2025 


 

Jack Aitken

  • 30 years old from London, England
  • Third IMSA class win in 22nd start
  • All three wins have been in GTP
  • Second consecutive win following win at Indianapolis
  • First win at Petit Le Mans in third start
  • Previous best finish at Petit Le Mans was fifth in 2024 in GTP
  • First win at Road Atlanta in third start
  • Previous best finish at Road Atlanta was fifth in 2024 in GTP
  • Second win in 2025 season in ninth start


 

Frederik Vesti

  • 23 years old from Langelund, Denmark
  • Second IMSA class win in seventh start, 
  • All two wins have been in GTP
  • Second consecutive win following win at Indianapolis
  • First win at Petit Le Mans in second start
  • Previous best finish at Petit Le Mans was fifth in 2024 in LMP2
  • Second win in 2025 season in sixth start


 


 

LMP2

No. 11 TDS Racing

  • Sixth IMSA class win, all in LMP2
  • Second consecutive win following win at Indianapolis
  • Second win, second consecutive at Petit Le Mans (2024-LMP2)
  • Last team to win consecutive races at Petit Le Mans in LMP2 was Tower Motorsports in 2021 & 2022
  • Second IMSA class win in 2025
  • Wins after multiple issues today – DQ from pole, contact in pits with No. 43, Spun while leading after contact with No. 74, Drive-through for tire operational requirements, Black flag for non-functioning brake light, Incident with No. 73


 

Mikkel Jensen

  • 31 years old from Hasselager, Denmark
  • 12th IMSA class win in 32nd start
  • All 12 wins have been in LMP2
  • 12 wins is the most of all drivers in the modern LMP2 class
  • Second consecutive win following win at Indianapolis
  • Third win, second consecutive at Petit Le Mans in sixth start (2020, 2024 LMP2)
  • Second win in 2025 season in sixth start


 

Steven Thomas

  • 58 years old from Carl Junction, MO
  • Seventh IMSA class win in 35th start
  • All seven wins have been in LMP2
  • Second consecutive win following win at Indianapolis
  • Second win, second consecutive at Petit Le Mans in fifth start (2024 LMP2)
  • Last win at Petit Le Mans was in 2024 in LMP2, 0 starts between
  • Second win in 2025 season in seventh start
  • Announced retirement from full-time racing after Petit Le Mans


 

Hunter McElrea

  • 26 years old, New Zealand nationality
  • Fourth IMSA class win in 11th start
  • All four wins have been in LMP2
  • Second consecutive win following win at Indianapolis
  • Second win, second consecutive at Petit Le Mans in second start
  • Second win in 2025 season in sixth start


 


 

GTD PRO

No. 48 Paul Miller Racing

  • 18th IMSA class win
  • Last win was at 2025 Road America GTDPRO with car No. 1
  • Fourth IMSA class win in GTDPRO
  • Second IMSA class win at Petit Le Mans (2014-GTD)
  • Last win at Petit Le Mans was in 2014 GTD with car No. 48
  • Third IMSA class win in 2025 (Won at Watkins Glen, Road America)
  • Second IMSA class win in 2025 for car No. 48 (Won at Watkins Glen)
  • BMW’s fourth Petit Le Mans class win, first since 2019


 

Connor De Phillippi

  • 33 years old from San Clemente, CA
  • Seventh IMSA class win in 78th start
  • Last win was at 2023 Watkins Glen in GTP, 18 starts between
  • Second win at Petit Le Mans in ninth start
  • Last win at Petit Le Mans was in 2017 in GTD, 7 starts between
  • Third win at Road Atlanta in 10th start
  • Last win at Road Atlanta was in 2020 in GTLM, 5 track starts between
  • First win in GTDPRO
  • First win in 2025 season in sixth start
  • Previous best finish in 2025 was second (1 times) last at Road America in LMP2
  • Raced in both the No. 1 and No. 48 today, but only scored points in the No. 1 car


 

Max Hesse

  • 24 years old from Wernau, Germany
  • Second IMSA class win in 10th start
  • Both wins have been in GTD PRO
  • Last win was at 2025 Watkins Glen in GTD PRO, 4 starts between
  • First win at Petit Le Mans in first start
  • Second win in 2025 season in 10th start


 

Dan Harper

  • 25 years old from Hillsborough, Northern Ireland
  • Second IMSA class win in 10th start
  • Both wins have been in GTD PRO
  • Last win was at 2025 Watkins Glen in GTD PRO, 4 starts between
  • First win at Petit Le Mans in first start
  • Second win in 2025 season in 10th start


 

GTD

No. 21 Af Corse

  • Fifth IMSA class win
  • Last win was at 2024 Watkins Glen LMP2 with car No. 88
  • Second IMSA class win in GTD
  • Last win in GTD was at 2022 Sebring with car No. 47
  • Second IMSA class win at Petit Le Mans (2011-GT)
  • First IMSA class win in 2025
  • Ferrari’s 13th class win at Petit Le Mans, second consecutive in GTD


 

Alessandro Pier Guidi

  • 42 years old from Tortona, Italy
  • Fourth IMSA class win in 27th start
  • Last win was at 2024 Daytona in GTD PRO, 5 starts between
  • Second win in GTD
  • Second win at Petit Le Mans in sixth start (2019 GTLM)
  • First win in 2025 season in fifth start
  • Previous best finish in 2025 was fifth (1 times) last at Watkins Glen in GTD


 

Simon Mann

  • First IMSA class win in 19th start
  • Previous best finish was second (1 time) last at 2024 Daytona in GTD
  • First win at Petit Le Mans in fourth start
  • Previous best finish at Petit Le Mans was fifth in 2023 in GTD PRO
  • First win in 2025 season in fifth start
  • Previous best finish in 2025 was fifth (1 time) last at Watkins Glen in GTD


 

Lilou Wadoux

  • 24 years old from Amiens, France
  • Second IMSA class win in 10th start
  • Last win was at 2024 Watkins Glen in LMP2, 5 starts between
  • First win in GTD
  • First win at Petit Le Mans in second start
  • Previous best finish at Petit Le Mans was sixth in 2024 in LMP2
  • First female to win at Petit Le Mans since Liz Halliday in 2005
  • Third female to win at Petit Le Mans (Milka Duno, Liz Halliday)
  • First win in 2025 season in fifth start
  • Previous best finish in 2025 was fifth (1 time) last at Watkins Glen in GTD

 


 

Cadillac Wins Motul Petit Le Mans as Champions Crowned

Thrilling Finish to 28th Annual Event to Cap Off 2025 IMSA WeatherTech Championship Season


 

October 11, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Unofficial Race Results


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – Cadillac has gone back-to-back at the Motul Petit Le Mans to conclude the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.


 

With an authoritative drive, the trio of Jack Aitken, Earl Bamber and Frederik Vesti scored their second straight Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) and overall victory in their No. 31 Cadillac Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R. The same trio won the TireRack.com Battle On The Bricks at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.


 

Cadillac also won last year’s Motul Petit Le Mans in the hands of the Chip Ganassi Racing-prepared, Cadillac Racing-branded No. 01 entry.


 

The win came amidst a flurry of final pit stops within the half hour of the 10-hour race, as teams topped off their energy tanks to make the finish. The No. 31 Cadillac led most of the race but needed a final topper to ensure the victory, and then emerged ahead of the trailing pack to secure the win with Bamber driving to the finish.


 

"Any one of us could have done it, any stint of the day," Bamber said. "It shows the strength of the team. It shows what we set out to do at the beginning of the year with Whelen Cadillac -- to build something really special. And I think what we've done this season -- we could have won a couple more races, came close, were in position -- but we'll definitely take two of the biggest of the season."


 

In second, the Aston Martin THOR Team scored the best finish for the new No. 23 Aston Martin Valkyrie globally with the trio of Roman De Angelis, Ross Gunn and Alex Riberas. 


 

GTP champions Matt Campbell and Mathieu Jaminet finished third in the race aboard the No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963, in the car they shared with Laurens Vanthoor. The result also sealed Porsche the GTP manufacturer championship. It’s the second consecutive GTP championship for the Porsche Penske Motorsport team and second in IMSA for both Campbell and Jaminet, who won the first Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) in 2022 aboard a Pfaff Motorsports Porsche.


 

“This championship is a testament to the entire Porsche Penske Motorsport team and the hard work and dedication they invest into this program every day,” said Roger Penske, Founder and Chairman Penske Corporation. “The season started with four consecutive victories, including back-to-back (Rolex) 24 Hours of Daytona wins, and has continued into 10 total podiums. That type of success isn’t accomplished without great drivers, leaders and a resilient crew. The commitment to winning together has been unwavering and defending the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship title is reflection of those efforts from all the men and women across both Mooresville and Germany.”


 

In its last scheduled race, the Automobili Lamborghini Squadra Corse No. 63 Lamborghini SC63 just missed the podium with the trio of Romain Grosjean, Daniil Kvyat and Edoardo Mortara in fourth place.


 

The TDS Racing trio of Steven Thomas, Mikkel Jensen and Hunter McElrea completed a fairytale ending to Thomas’ last scheduled WeatherTech Championship start aboard its No. 11 ORECA LMP2 07 in Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2). After starting from the rear due to the car being found to have bodywork mass beyond a permitted homologated limit, the car was moved from first on the grid to last on the grid. However Thomas took the car to the lead in his opening stint and McElrea and Jensen kept it there for the majority of the rest of the race.


 

AO Racing confirmed its season championship in LMP2, with PJ Hyett and Dane Cameron fighting through a sometimes tough Saturday aboard its special “spooky’ livery No. 99 ORECA LMP2 07.


 

In the GT classes, both Paul Miller Racing and Af Corse ran out front for the majority of the race. The trio of Dan Harper, Max Hesse and Connor De Phillippi started on pole in Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) to win PMR’s third race of the season aboard the No. 48 BMW M4 GT3 EVO. In Grand Touring Daytona (GTD), the trio of Alessandro Pier Guidi, Lilou Wadoux and Simon Mann shared the winning No. 21 Af Corse Ferrari 296 GT3. 


 

Although the GTD PRO title battle occasionally flipped, Antonio Garcia and Alexander Sims held on for the title in their No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R.  In GTD, as soon as a first-lap incident eliminated multiple GTD competitors, Russell Ward and Philip Ellis wrapped their second straight title in the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3. 


 

Unofficially, the manufacturer’s champions for the season are Porsche in GTP, Chevrolet in GTD PRO and Mercedes-AMG GT3.


 

Also unofficially, the No. 7 Porsche 963 of Nick Tandy and Felipe Nasr (GTP), No. 11 TDS ORECA of Thomas, Jensen and McElrea (LMP2), No. 48 PMR BMW of Harper and Hesse (GTD PRO) and No. 21 Af Ferrari of Mann, Wadoux and Pier Guidi (GTD) have won the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup titles. IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup manufacturer winners are Porsche (GTP), BMW (GTD PRO) and Ferrari (GTD).


 

IMSA will launch its 2026 season with the 64th Rolex 24 At Daytona January 24-25, 2026, with the Roar Before the Rolex 24 test the week before. 

 


 

 

Under Two Hours to Go in 28th Motul Petit Le Mans

Cadillac Whelen Leads As WeatherTech Championship Title Battles Intensify


 

October 11, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Hour 8 Results

Hour 8 Michelin Endurance Cup


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – Third or part-time drivers entered as part of the 10-hour Motul Petit Le Mans made critical contributions to their full-season co-drivers between Hours 5 and 8 in the run to the finish of the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season. You can see the finish on Peacock in the U.S. and IMSA.TV and the IMSA Official YouTube channel internationally. 


 

Frederik Vesti, third driver of the No. 31 Cadillac Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R in Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) alongside Jack Aitken and Earl Bamber, launched away after a seventh hour restart by setting four new fastest laps of the race in five laps in short order after the green flag. He built a lead to north of 10 seconds before turning over to Aitken, who led at the eight-hour mark over Matt Campbell in the No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963. Both cars hit the pits either just before or right at the eight-hour mark. 


 

Laurens Vanthoor, splitting drive time between the Nos. 6 and 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963s, ran further down the order in his No. 7 car stint but higher in the order in his No. 6 car stint. The two Porsches are vying for the GTP driver championship while also fighting Acura for the manufacturer championship. 


 

Meanwhile Jonny Edgar – who’d won a race co-driving with Vanthoor this year in Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) on the streets of Long Beach for AO Racing – helped AO’s full-season Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) entry of PJ Hyett and Dane Cameron move into the LMP2 title lead in the No. 99 ORECA LMP2 07. For most of the period, he ran third behind the No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA and No. 11 TDS Racing ORECA, which enjoyed a titanic battle between Paul Di Resta and Hunter McElrea – TDS’ third driver. 


 

Alas, that battle ceded to the LMP2 championship fight ending right before the end of the eighth hour. The No. 22 United car went behind the wall with an unspecified issue when running in a podium position. This issue may position the No. 99 AO car to secure this title, especially as it moved into the lead at the eight-hour mark amidst pit stops. 


 

The title script also flipped multiple times in Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) over the period. It appeared as though DragonSpeed would move into the championship lead as Giacomo Altoe moved into third in the No. 81 Ferrari 296 GT3 in the seventh hour as part of a three-car pass and crucially, ahead of the No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R wheeled by its third driver Daniel Juncadella.


 

But in the eighth hour, DragonSpeed suffered a setback as it briefly stopped on course in Turn 10 and resumed after contact with another car, and also received a drive-through penalty for having tires without crew. 


 

The updated order in GTD PRO saw the No. 48 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO ahead of the No. 14 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3 and No. 3 Corvette.


 

In GTD, Ferrari stayed out front with the No. 21 Af Corse Ferrari 296 GT3 ahead of the No. 12 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3 and No. 023 Triarsi Ferrari. 


 

IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup Updates


 

Af Corse’s No. 21 Ferrari unofficially wraps up the GTD Michelin Endurance Cup title with the maximum five points, so by three ahead of the No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3. However, with a three-point gap and the No. 70 unable to score more than two points in the final stint, this will secure the crown.


 

Porsche is also clear in the GTP manufacturer’s championship in Michelin Endurance Cup, with a five-point lead over Acura and seven over Cadillac (54-49-47).


 

The driver titles in the Michelin Endurance Cup are as follows:


 

GTP: No. 7 Porsche leads No. 60 Acura by two (44-42) and No. 6 Porsche by three (41)

LMP2: No. 43 Inter Europol ORECA leads No. 11 TDS by one (42-41)

GTD PRO: No. 48 Paul Miller Racing BMW leads No. 1 PMR BMW by two (47-45)


 

Porsche Battling Acura Through Four Hours at Motul Petit Le Mans

TDS, PMR BMW and Af Ferrari Lead Additional Classes


 

October 11, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Hour 4 Results


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – In front of a sellout crowd on a sunny Saturday morning from Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, Porsche Penske Motorsport’s IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship-leading No. 6 Porsche 963 is out front after four hours in the 28th Motul Petit Le Mans. Race coverage continues on Peacock, IMSA.TV and IMSA’s Official YouTube channel.


 

The battle in Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) is twofold between Porsche and Acura in both the 10-hour race itself and for the season-long GTP manufacturer’s championship. Mathieu Jaminet leads in the No. 6 Porsche over Colin Braun in the No. 60 Acura Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb-Agajanian Acura ARX-06 by 4.381 seconds with Kevin Magnussen third in the No. 24 BMW M Team RLL BMW M Hybrid V8.


 

Jaminet and Matt Campbell led teammates Felipe Nasr and Nick Tandy in their No. 7 Porsche 963 in the full-season WeatherTech Championship driver standings by 131 points entering the weekend and 128 leaving qualifying. A top-eight finish will assure the No. 6 Porsche 963 pair the title. 


 

However, Porsche led Acura by only two points among manufacturer’s leaving qualifying, meaning whichever is the higher finishing manufacturer entry wins that title.


 

The Porsche Penske Motorsport race was affected before it even began. In a statement before green flag, the team announced that Julien Andlauer will not compete in today’s race in the No. 6 car. Laurens Vanthoor, who is already entered to drive the No. 7 car, has been added to the driver lineup for the No. 6 car also. Vanthoor will be required to achieve minimum drive time in each car, but only will receive championship points in the No. 7. 


 

Vanthoor was running ninth in the No. 7 Porsche at the four-hour mark, fulfilling the first of his two drive-time requirements in that entry before he runs a stint in the No. 6 car at some point in the race’s remaining six hours.


 

In Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), TDS Racing has completed a last-to-first run to the lead courtesy of a monster first stint from Bronze-rated Steven Thomas in his last anticipated WeatherTech Championship start for now. The No. 11 TDS Racing ORECA LMP2 07, which won last month at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and also last year at Michelin Raceway, still leads in the hands of Hunter McElrea with Mikkel Jensen likely due to finish the race. The championship contending No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA of Paul Di Resta was second, having taken over from Daniel Goldburg. Goldburg entered the race 87 points behind AO Racing’s PJ Hyett and Dane Cameron in their No. 99 ORECA. The No. 99 car was delayed with a right rear tire puncture after contact from another car.


 

Paul Miller Racing again maximized its result at the four-hour mark in Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO), with Connor De Phillippi out front in the No. 48 BMW M4 GT3 EVO ahead of the No. 14 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3. The American driver is splitting both that car and the No. 1 car this race. In the championship battle, the No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3 ran third, just one spot ahead of the title-leading No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R.


 

Ferrari ran 1-2 in Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) with the No. 21 Af Corse Ferrari 296 GT3 of Alessandro Pier Guidi out front ahead of Triarsi Competizione’s No. 023 Ferrari and the No. 12 Vasser Sullivan Lexus. 


 

Five full-course cautions flew during the opening four hours, the most eventful of which was a five-car GTD incident (Cars 34, 44, 66, 70) that occurred through the esses at Turn 4 for 20 minutes before a second yellow for debris. 


 

Four of the five drivers involved in the first incident either returned to the pits or were all evaluated and released. Manny Franco in the No. 34 Conquest Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 was transported to a local hospital for further evaluation but later updated from his Conquest team to be “doing well and remaining in good spirits.”  


 

The first of three segments in the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup this race is complete too with points awarded and title battles very close here. The top three scorers get five, four and three points respectively at the four-, eight- and 10-hour marks. All others get two points per segment. 


 

In GTP, the No. 7 Porsche 963 now leads the No. 60 Acura ARX-06 by just one point (41-40). In LMP2, the No. 43 Inter Europol Competition ORECA LMP2 07 leads the No. 11 TDS ORECA by three (40-37). In GTD PRO, the two PMR BMWs are separated by one point (43-42) with the No. 1 car ahead of the No. 48 car. And in GTD, with the No. 70 Inception Ferrari 296 GT3 out, it’s now tied with the No. 21 Af Corse Ferrari 296 GT3 (36 apiece). 

 

Two More Titles Wrapped at Four-Hour Mark


 

The number of cars impacted and retired ensured the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 would finish high enough in the 19-car GTD field to unofficially wrap the second straight WeatherTech Championship title for Russell Ward and Philip Ellis.


 

“It really doesn't change our approach to the race when it comes to strategy and stuff like that,” Ward told the IMSA Radio broadcast. “According to what we’d been calculating, if one car retired, we'd win the championship. It’s basically the exact same position as last year. Familiar territory. But for us, it really doesn't change our approach in the race. We're gonna try to go as fast as we can to win the race.” 


 

In the two-car battle for the Bob Akin Award – presented to the top-finishing Bronze-rated driver in GTD and includes an invitation to the following year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans – having taken evasive action to avoid the opening-lap incident, Orey Fidani’s No. 13 AWA Corvette will finish ahead of, and thus break a tie with, Brendan Iribe’s No. 70 Inception Ferrari. The No. 70 car was officially retired in the second hour.


 

“It’s really unfortunate for the No. 70 guys,” Fidani admitted.” You don’t want to win that way. But that’s how racing goes sometimes. I’m super happy to go back to Le Mans. There’s a lot to look forward to next year with a new team (13 Motorsports), a new shop, a lot of new things for a new year, and we get to go back to Le Mans.” 

 


 

Purple Sector 1: Blomqvist Speeds To Motul Petit Le Mans Pole

Inter Europol Rolls Off First in LMP2


 

October 10, 2025

By John Oreovicz

IMSA Wire Service

Updated results will be distributed as soon as they are available at results.imsa.com.


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta is a driver’s dream, with high-speed corners that test a driver’s courage and risk/reward balance.


 

Tom Blomqvist blazed to the Motul Pole Award for the 28th annual Motul Le Mans by 0.199 of a second on Friday, and timing screens showed all of that advantage was earned in the short, 8-second sector that begins the 2.54-mile lap from the start/finish line through Road Atlanta’s treacherous Turn 1. Or, in Blomqvist’s case, just 7.978 seconds. 


 

That purple – or fastest – first sector netted Blomqvist a lap of 1 minute, 9.628 seconds (131.326 mph) established a Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) class record at the track. Acura has broken a tie with Cadillac with 10 poles to date in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship’s three-year modern GTP era.


 

Blomqvist’s confidence negotiating Turn 1 was rewarded with the sixth pole of his IMSA career and put him and co-drivers Colin Braun and Scott Dixon in the best possible position to start Saturday’s 10-hour race. 


 

“This track rewards commitment and bravery and I really enjoy driving it,” Blomqvist said. “I love qualifying, especially here, because it’s a small track and there’s a lot of traffic out there in practice. It’s such a thrill when you take the fuel out of the car, no traffic to worry about, new tires that you can properly warm up. Then you just kind of hold on.


 

“Our car is generally pretty friendly, and I’ve had a lot of confidence and been good through that sector all weekend,” he added. “You’ve just got to trust that the car is going to stick – you carry a lot of speed into the corner and hope you come out the other side.” 


 

The practice pace-setting No. 31 Cadillac Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R qualified on the outside of the front row in the hands of Jack Aitken, who will be joined Saturday by Earl Bamber and Frederik Vesti. Nick Yelloly (co-drivers Renger van der Zande and Tristian Vautier) also demonstrated Acura’s single-lap speed by qualifying third fastest, the last car under the 1 minute, 10-second barrier. 


 

GTP points leaders Mathieu Jaminet and Matt Campbell, who are paired at Road Atlanta with Julien Andlauer, qualified the No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963 sixth, two places behind their teammates Nick Tandy, Felipe Nasr, and Laurens Vanthoor in PPM’s No. 7 entry. The Porsches split the No. 23 Aston Martin THOR Team Aston Martin Valkyrie, with Ross Gunn’s P5 effort representing Aston Martin’s best GTP qualifying performance to date.


 

Among drivers, Jaminet and Campbell and the No. 6 Porsche enter the season finale with a 128-point cushion over their No. 7 teammates Nasr and Tandy, down from 131 before qualifying.


 

With Acura’s full-time driver pairings fourth and seventh in the standings, their goals Saturday will be a race win and a manufacturer’s championship for Acura.  The 35 qualifying points move Acura to within two points of Porsche for the manufacturer’s championship. 


 

“Today was only one small portion of the job we need to do this weekend,” Blomqvist said. “It’s a nice thing for all our egos in the team and we’re going to sleep a little bit better than if we were down the back. But tomorrow is the day when we need to get the job done.”


 

LMP2: Inter Europol Inherits Top Spot in Qualifying

The IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup leaders in Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) will have the best starting position for their attempt to secure a championship-within-a-championship.


 

Inter Europol Competition initially was set to start second, with Jeremy Clarke qualifying the No. 43 ORECA LMP2 07 he shares with Tom Dillmann and Bijoy Garg. 


 

However, post-qualifying technical inspection revealed that the No. 11 entry driven by Steven Thomas was found to have bodywork mass beyond a permitted homologated limit. Therefore, the car was moved from the pole position to the rear of the LMP2 field.


 

Clarke’s lap of 1 minute, 13.397 seconds (124.582 mph) sees the first-year WeatherTech Championship driver claiming his first Motul Pole Award.


 

The subsequent runners behind move up, including both LMP2 championship contenders. 


 

LMP2 championship leader PJ Hyett will start second in the No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07 he shares with Dane Cameron and Jonny Edgar. The car set a lap quick enough for pole, but lost it due to causing a red flag in a Thursday practice session.


 

The championship rival No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA, qualified by Daniel Goldburg and shared by Paul Di Resta and Rasmus Lindh, now move up to third.


 

Entering the weekend, Hyett led Goldburg by 85 points and post-qualifying, that gap is now 87 points. 


 

Saturday’s Motul Petit Le Mans goes green at 12:10 p.m. ET. Live coverage starts on network NBC at noon ET, with full flag-to-flag streaming on Peacock, IMSA.TV and IMSA’s Official YouTube channel internationally.

 

 


Harper, Patrese Score GT Class Poles for Motul Petit Le Mans

No. 48 BMW and No. 47 Ferrari Generate Fun Pole Numerology


 

October 10, 2025

By Jeff Olson

IMSA Wire Service

Updated results will be distributed as soon as they are available at results.imsa.com.


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – The Nos. 48 and 47 cars in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship are separated by one number and one class. But both were number one on Friday afternoon in qualifying for Saturday’s Motul Petit Le Mans to cap off the 2025 WeatherTech Championship season.


 

Dan Harper (No. 48 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO) and Lorenzo Patrese (No. 47 Cetilar Racing Ferrari 296 GT3) won the Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) and Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) class poles, respectively. 


 

Harper took a chance that paid off in the 15-minute GTD PRO session. 


 

Harper posted a fast lap of 1 minute, 18.523 seconds (116.449 mph) in the No. 48 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO to claim the top starting position in the Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) class in the car he shares with Max Hesse and Connor De Phillippi.


 

“We sort of took a bit of a gamble and went for it,” Harper said after his best lap was just 0.167 seconds faster than Aaron Telitz’s fastest lap in the No. 14 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3 he’ll co-drive with Ben Barnicoat and Kyle Kirkwood.


 

Nicky Catsburg secured the third spot on the GTD PRO grid in the No. 4 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R he shares with Tommy Milner and Nico Varrone.


 

The team’s No. 3 Corvette, which leads the GTD PRO points with co-drivers Antonio Garcia, Alexander Sims and Daniel Juncadella, will start eighth in class. Championship rivals DragonSpeed qualified fourth in the No. 81 Ferrari 296 GT3, with Albert Costa slotting in there after losing his fastest lap – what would have been a pole time – due to causing a red flag in practice. 


 

Harper indicated the team’s focus on saving tires through practice sessions leading up to qualifying could help when the race enters its final hours Saturday. 


 

“We focused more on saving tires through all the practices for the race,” Harper said. “It’s hard to know what the others do, but at least from what we could see that we may have managed to save a set compared to most other cars, which could help come the race.”


 

GTD: New Patrese, New Polesitter Aboard Cetilar Ferrari

Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta suits 20-year-old Italian driver Lorenzo Patrese just fine, the son of former Formula 1 Grand Prix winner Riccardo Patrese. 


 

Competing at Motul Petit Le Mans for the first time, Patrese helped Ferrari sweep three of the top four starting positions in the Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) class Friday for Saturday’s 10-hour IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season finale.


 

Patrese led the way in the No. 47 Cetilar Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 he’ll co-drive Saturday with Roberto Lacorte and Miguel Molina with a lap of 1 minute, 18.316 seconds (116.757 mph), was just 0.289 seconds ahead of the No. 021 Triarsi Competizione Ferrari 296 GT3 driven by Riccardo Agostini, who will start second in class with co-drivers AJ Muss and Robert Megennis.


 

Patrese's first experience at Petit left him in awe.


 

“It’s definitely amazing,” he said. “I think I still need to get some more of it in me. It was quite a surprise, for sure. The car was feeling good. I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”


 

He credited his Cetilar crew with providing a car that’s been fast on Road Atlanta’s 12-turn 2.54-mile circuit since the team arrived.


 

“The car was amazing,” Patrese said. “We tested here two weeks ago, and the car already felt good. This weekend is going so well, so far so good. Let’s just hope we can keep the momentum going.”


 

Valentin Hasse-Clot was third in the No. 19 van der Steur Racing Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo, the only non-Ferrari qualifier among the top four GTD starters. Lilou Wadoux was fourth in the No. 21 Af Corse Ferrari 296 GT3.


 

Class points leaders Russell Ward and Philip Ellis will start fifth in the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 in the car they share with Indy Dontje. Having qualified ahead of their GTD championship rivals, Winward is poised to secure its second straight title by taking the green flag Saturday.


 

Saturday’s Motul Petit Le Mans goes green at 12:10 p.m. ET. Live coverage starts on network NBC at noon ET, with full flag-to-flag streaming on Peacock, IMSA.TV and IMSA’s Official YouTube channel internationally. 

 


 

Ibiza Farm McLaren, VGRT Cupra Double Up Michelin Pilot Challenge Wins at Michelin Raceway

Heylen/Mars (GS) and Gottsacker (TCR) Secure Season Titles


 

October 10, 2025

By John Oreovicz

IMSA Wire Service

Race Results

Championship Points

 

BRASELTON, Ga. - While the focus was on the championship battles for both IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge classes, both race winners followed up their triumphs from Indianapolis Motor Speedway with a second straight win at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. 


 

Michael Cooper and Moisey Uretsky drove the No. 44 Ibiza Farm Motorsport McLaren Artura GT4 to their third win of 2025 in Grand Sport (GS) in the season-ending Fox Factory 120. Meanwhile Eric Powell and Tyler Gonzalez scored their second straight victory in Touring Car (TCR) in their No. 99 Victor Gonzalez Racing Team Cupra Leon VZ TCR.


 

Jan Heylen and Luca Mars (No. 28 RS1 Porsche 718 GT4 RS CS in GS) and Harry Gottsacker (No. 98 Bryan Herta Autosport with Curb Agajanian Hyundai Elantra N TCR) secured the respective class championships, albeit after slight roller coaster races in both classes.


 

In GS, Cooper passed Jaxon Bell in the No. 23 Copeland Motorsports Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2 he shared with Ford Koch in the short chute between Michelin Raceway’s Turns 6 and 7 and pulled away to win by 4.323 seconds. Robby Foley and Beltre Curtis took third place in the No. 96 Turner Motorsport BMW M4 GT4 EVO.


 

Meanwhile, Mars and Heylen drove a calculated race to claim sixth place in the No. 28 RS1 Porsche. That was enough to clinch the GS crown by 70 points (2,720-2,650) over CarBahn with Peregrine racing’s No. 39 BMW M4 GT4 EVO and the driver duo of Jeff Westphal and Sean McAlister, who finished fourth Friday.


 

By adding to their prior victories at Daytona International Speedway and in the most recent Michelin Pilot Challenge round at IMS, Uretsky and Cooper matched season champions Heylen and Mars with a class-high three triumphs. The Ibiza Farm McLaren pair finished fifth in the standings.


 

“It’s unbelievable – it’s been an incredible season,” said Uretsky, who earned the Motul Pole Award on Thursday – his first career pole. “We’ve got a great group of people who have been working their butts off. It’s just fantastic to get this result, especially at the last race of the season at our home race – our team is based 10 minutes away, just outside Road Atlanta. We’ll be back next year with the McLaren to do it all over again.”


 

The majority of the GS field pitted during the only full-course caution of the race, which resumed with 45 minutes of the two hours remaining. Cooper made the winning pass just a few minutes later.


 

“From there, it was just about getting the car home and not running out of fuel,” Cooper said. “We were the only ones that took two tires during the pit stop, so I think we had a little bit of an advantage there.”


 

Heylen added another GS championship to the crown he won in 2021 (also with Porsche), while 19-year-old Mars became one of the youngest champions in season history.


 

Heylen and Mars built a 340-point advantage over Jenson Altzman (No. 13 McCumber McAlee Racing with Aerosport Ford Mustang GT4) after their victory at Watkins Glen International in June. The margin remained at +240 over Westphal and McAlister in late August following another win for the No. 28 Porsche at VIRginia International Raceway, but the cushion was cut to just 100 markers heading into the season finale.


 

But Mars and Heylen kept themselves in the top seven all day at Road Atlanta to reward RS1 with its third Michelin Pilot Challenge championship (2016 ST, 2017 GS).


 

“The RS1 team and the Porsche were incredible all year – a big shout-out to them, huge thanks,” said Mars. “The last race came down to the wire and I was a little nervous on the pit box, but as usual, Jan got it done.”


 

Heylen, 45, clearly enjoyed his latest accomplishment.


 

“The challenge for us this year is that we led the championship from the second round,” Heylen observed. “You’re always a bit of a target. You’re racing out there with guys with different level of experience and maybe a different mindset. For us, it was important to not make mistakes, to drive by the rules, and not get penalties. Sometimes that can get a little bit frustrating, and it Feels like you’re the only ones out there doing exactly that while everybody else is racing for the win, regardless of the outcome. I feel like we did a good job dealing with that. They never come easy, and I’m super proud of the team and Luca. It takes a whole year of hard work and consistency to be here.


 

“This is as much as you can have racing,” he added. “I love being in the IMSA paddock, especially in the Michelin Pilot Challenge. It’s super fun.”


 

TCR: Gottsacker Nabs Another Title for BHA as Cupra Wins Again 

It was business as usual at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta for Bryan Herta Autosport and Hyundai for the season, while the newest car on the Touring Car (TCR) grid added a second straight triumph. 


 

For BHA and Hyundai, it was another year, another IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge Touring Car (TCR) class championship. And for Cupra, it was another race, and another TCR win. 


 

Tyler Gonzalez and Eric Powell won in the No. 99 VGRT Cupra Leon VZ TCR. They ended the season with two consecutive triumphs in the Cupra after switching from Hyundai mid-season.


 

Meanwhile Harry Gottsacker co-drove the No. 98 Bryan Herta Autosport with Curb Agajanian Hyundai Elantra N TCR to a fourth-place finish in the Fox Factory 120, which was enough to clinch the TCR championship by 20 points over BHA’s No. 76 Hyundai driven by Denis Dupont and Preston Brown. 


 

It was the sixth TCR championship for BHA and Hyundai during the nine-year history of IMSA sanction. All have come in the last seven years, including the 2023 crown he shared with Robert Wickens.


 

This year, Gottsacker shared the No. 98 Hyundai with Mason Filippi at every venue except Watkins Glen International, when Filippi was competing in the 24 Hours of the Nurburgring. Parker Chase co-drove with Gottsacker to a third-place finish in that race.


 

Gottsacker, 26, is set to get married in just one week. He cited the win he scored with Filippi at Mid-Ohio in one of the year’s two four-hour endurance races as a highlight and called his drive to fourth place on Friday “a tough day.”


 

“We worked really hard to get here and the Hyundai Elantra N TCRs have been just great all season,” Gottsacker remarked. “I feel like our strong suit is we were really consistent, and consistently fast. I can’t thank Bryan Herta Autosport enough – every weekend we show up, and the car is absolutely ready to go. Everybody works so hard, and we execute at the end of the day. I’m super thankful to Bryan Herta, Sean Jones, Ross Rosenberg, and Hyundai.”


 

VGRT’s season turned around with the mid-season switch to Cupra, which was particularly effective for Powell.


 

“I didn’t get the best of starts and lost a position, and I knew my job after that was to kind of conserve the tires and little bit of fuel and let the race come to me, and that’s what happened,” Powell said. “I struggled a bit in the Hyundai, and when we switched to the Cupra, it just drove the way I wanted it to drive. We just destroy people on corner entry, and it takes care of its tires really well.”


 

Karl Wittmer and LP Montour in the No. 93 MMG Honda Civic FL5 TCR led Gottsacker by 10 points heading into the finale, but they had a troubled day that ended on the sidelines with a mechanical issue. They dropped to third in the standings behind Dupont and Brown.

 


Catalano, Walker, Porto Capture VP Racing Challenge Friday Wins at Michelin Raceway

Adelson Secures GTDX Title By Starting the Race


 

October 10, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Race Results

Championship Points


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – The IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge wrapped its 2025 season on a crisp, cool, Friday morning from Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta with one final surprise to wave the checkered flag on the campaign.

 

For the first 44 minutes of the 45-minute race, it appeared the three Thursday winners would double up on Friday. However, the overall winner changed hands on the final lap when overall leader Oscar Tunjo lost his right front tire and wheel exiting Turn 12 just after taking the white flag, which opened the door for his teammate Valentino Catalano to score his eighth victory of the season in Le Mans Prototype 3 (P3).

 

Meanwhile, the GT-based classes still saw repeat winners as Jake Walker (Grand Touring Daytona X, GTDX) and Kiko Porto (Grand Sport X, GSX) both won their ninth races of the season. This race ran green from the start to the checkered flag after a second formation lap to warm the Michelin tires in the cool temperatures.

 

After Catalano (P3) and Porto (GSX) clinched their respective VP Racing Challenge class championships on Thursday, Adam Adelson (GTDX) did the same on Friday by taking the green flag.

 

From pole, Tunjo was poised to lead flag-to-flag in P3 and overall in the No. 31 Gebhardt Intralogistics Motorsports Duqueine D08 over his teammate Catalano in the sister No. 30 Gebhardt Duqueine D08. But as the white flag flew over Michelin Raceway, the race complexion changed.

 

In a near identical scenario to a moment at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, Tunjo’s most recent VP Racing Challenge weekend of competition, he lost his right front tire and wheel as he slowed onto the front straight and then pulled off course. At CTMP, Tunjo lost his left front tire and wheel.

 

That promoted Lucas Fecury in the No. 80 Toney Driver Development Ligier JS P320 up to second, 38.900 seconds in arrears, with Brian Thienes third in his No. 77 Forte Racing Ligier JS P320.

 

“That was a better race than yesterday for me,” said Catalano, who finished second to Tunjo on Thursday. “We did some changes on the car, and it felt a bit better. Happy to end the season with a win. Yeah, really unlucky for my teammate like in Canada. Happy for the team that we still won the race and we're good for the championship.”

The GTDX podium was identical to Thursday, with Walker in the No. 6 Turner Motorsport BMW M4 GT3 finishing ahead of Adelson in the No. 24 Wright Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 R and Samantha Tan third in her No. 38 ST Racing BMW M4 GT3.

 

This one also featured another strong pass from Walker on Adelson after another excellent battle between them. Walker tried multiple times into Turns 10A and 10B to pass Adelson but was unsuccessful until Lap 10 of the race. He completed an over-under from the outside into Turns 10A and B which led to the inside for Turns 11 and 12, completing the pass down the hill onto the front straight. Walker pulled away to win by 8.703 seconds.

 

“Adam was really fast again. We were going down into Turn 10 and I tried to make a move prior and I overshot the corner a little bit. I backed it up. I stayed alongside and went through, and I was able to just squeeze it off at the top of the hill,” said Walker.

 

New champion Adelson added, “I've only won one other championship before, and that was when I was co-driving with Elliott (Skeer). For me, this is the only single-driver series I'm really eligible for. So, to be able to get it done on my own, and with the support and the amazing job that Wright Motorsports did, it means the world.”

Porto enjoyed an uneventful race from pole in his No. 8 RAFA Racing Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2 in GSX, also leading flag-to-flag. The joy doubled for the RAFA team as Ian Porter recovered from a fraught weekend to complete a 1-2 finish in second in the No. 68 RAFA Toyota, 20.237 seconds behind. It marks the team’s second 1-2 finish of the season, the first since the third race of the VIRginia International Raceway weekend. It also propelled Porter into second overall among all GSX drivers. Justin Di Benedetto (No. 4 Di Benedetto Racing Porsche 718 GT4 RS CS) finished third.

 

“We know the Supra is very, very good in the cold,” Porto said. “So I felt this today. I was able to improve my fastest lap of qualifying with a ton of fuel in the car.”

 

Porter added, “All this hard work that I put in throughout the last two or three years is paying off right now. I think that there's a lot more to go for me. Amazing to get P2 in the overall championship and the race.”

 

Of note, the result also means Toyota completed a perfect season in GSX, winning all 12 races. RAFA Racing won 10 of those with Porto taking nine wins and Porter one, while BSI Racing’s Steven Clemons won the other two.

 

Bronze Cup season champions Thienes, Tan and Porter also claimed their respective class Bronze Cup victories Friday.

 

The new VP Racing SportsCar Challenge season opens at Daytona International Speedway as part of the Roar Before the Rolex 24 weekend, January 16-18, 2026.

 


 

Motul Petit Le Mans - Pole Winners

Press Conference Transcript

BRASELTON, Ga. (Oct. 10, 2025) – An interview with Motul Pole Award winners of the four IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship classes at Motul Petit Le Mans.


 


 

THE MODERATOR: Joined now by our overall class pole winner for Motul Petit Le Mans, Tom Blomqvist.

Tom, congratulations. Talking about the pole here today, tell us about how that session went, how it set you guys up for the race tomorrow.


 

TOM BLOMQVIST: Yeah, I mean, I guess speaking about the session, I love qualifying, especially around here. It's a small track. Obviously throughout practice we probably never, ever get a clear lap.

I think we're, like, what, two seconds faster than we've been all weekend. It's just such a thrill when you take the fuel out of the tires, new tires, no traffic to worry about, you can warm up the tires in the correct way. You kind of hold on.

It's one of those laps where it rewards a little bit of commitment and bravery. Yeah, I just really enjoy driving it. Thankfully the guys gave me a good car, a good enough car to get the job done.

It's only one small portion of the job we need to do this weekend. It's more a nice thing for our egos in the team, right? We're going to sleep a bit better than if we were down the back.

Tomorrow is when we need to kind of get the job done really.


 

THE MODERATOR: We'll go to questions.


 

Q. Tom, you parked with four minutes to go. Is it because you didn't think there was anything left to improve or other guys couldn't beat your time?


 

TOM BLOMQVIST: Yeah, I didn't feel like I could go any faster. To be honest, I probably should have stopped even a lap earlier. Yeah, you just know your tires, they're not good for many laps, especially around here.

So when you see that delta starting to not go in a friendly direction, then you kind of feel it underneath you.

Yeah, there's no point in driving around. You're not going to find a miracle out of nowhere. I boxed. We need to use those tires tomorrow at some point. Have to keep them as fresh as possible.


 

Q. Can you kind of expand on this being a high-commitment track.


 

TOM BLOMQVIST: Yeah, I mean, I was quite surprised to hear that. It's a really short sector, obviously turn one. I guess I got pole by I think just under 2/10ths. That's where it was done (smiling).

Yeah, I mean, I had a good car. Our car's generally pretty friendly. I've had a lot of confidence. I think I've been pretty good all weekend in that sector.

Yeah, you kind of just have to trust that the car's going to stick. You just got to carry a lot of speed into the corner and kind of hope you come out the other side (laughter).

Yeah, there's a lot of trust you have to put in the car. My car was kind of good enough to take that speed. Went in the first lap, I thought, Okay, it's going well, it's going to stick. The next lap try a little bit harder. It was fine.

Yeah, it's fun. It's definitely a fun place to send it, I guess.


 

Q. Tom, single lap pace clearly there. What is the long run pace of the car and how is it at night?


 

TOM BLOMQVIST: I would say typically you can see obviously this year we've had a few pole positions. It's definitely an area that our car seems to excel in, let's say.

Honestly, we put a lot of work into making our car as good as possible in the race. We didn't really focus too much on qualifying.

But yeah, around here it's super important. We know we're going to have some super stiff competition. The 31, the two Porsches, have been looking really good, especially on their long-run performance. We know honestly I think they're looking actually a little bit better than us at the moment. We've also got a really fast car, especially in the night.

Yeah, we're relatively confident, that's for sure. It's difficult to get a read on what everyone's do in practice, right? It's a good sign that when we send the car as fast as we kind of can go and we're at the pointy end, that obviously a good sign. That typically carries regardless, but we still have to do 40-odd laps on a set of tires. That's going to be extremely important.

Yeah, I think it's going to be a good fight tomorrow.


 

Q. Tom, I know you can only run your own race. Having said that, are you confident that race control will continue to be strict on avoidable contact, blocking incidents, particularly with the stakes being much higher at Petit tomorrow?


 

TOM BLOMQVIST: I have drivers briefing after this. I'll find out if anything has changed.

We go into the race expecting the same as Indianapolis, which obviously I think everyone is still adapting to because it is, let's say, a different way we have to go racing now. Some form's a little less instinctive, as well. As drivers, we have to be a bit more on our toes, be a bit smarter I guess in a way.

A number of people being called out at Indy. I'm sure a lot of them learned their lessons. Yeah, find out soon if they're going to be a little bit more lenient or if it's going to stay the same.

We have to adapt and not get caught up in any of it.


 

THE MODERATOR: Tom, congratulations.


 

TOM BLOMQVIST: Thank you.


 

THE MODERATOR: Good afternoon, everybody. Get started here.


 

Lorenzo Patrese, congratulations. As I mentioned first career pole position. Prestigious race. What does it mean to you to get that starting spot and how do you expect things will play out for your team tomorrow?


 

LORENZO PATRESE: I mean, it's amazing. It's really good feeling. We've had a quite unfortunate season till now. Really unlucky. It feels amazing. The car really felt good.

For sure tomorrow we have quite a good starting space. It's really tough race, really long, so let's just hope things turn out well and then we'll see the last few hours.


 

THE MODERATOR: No. 48 M4 GTE EVO Dan Harper. Tell us about maybe how that session played out for your team, what your expectations are heading into 10 hours ever rating tomorrow.


 

DAN HARPER: Thank you. Obviously nice to start up front. Second time in a row. Especially here, I think it's quite difficult to overtake. Having that track position is probably quite key. But obviously it's a very long race. Last night was my first laps here in the dark.

With the Prototypes coming quick and quite frequently, it was quite tricky to manage. I think that will also be quite an important factor throughout the whole race, but especially when it gets dark at night.

We have a lot of focus on that during the practice sessions. We focused also on the race pace because tire deg here is quite high, at least for us. We hope it's the same for the rest and we go for a good result tomorrow.


 

THE MODERATOR: Steven Thomas, obviously coming off your third straight win at Indianapolis. You guys have had good success here also previously. Another pole position. Just take us through kind of this little chunk of the season as we wind things up, kind of how we've gotten to this point, what you're looking forward to.


 

STEVEN THOMAS: Yeah, I mean, first part of the season wasn't so great for us. I think we turned it around. Three-peating in Indy, we were really on top of our game. Now the car is quite good.

Being on pole here, I think it's very similar to the turnaround we had last year. We won the final two races last year and won the Endurance Cup. We're a little further away in the Endurance Cup this year, but it's still attainable. We're hoping to race well and finish the season strong.


 

THE MODERATOR: Congratulations. Thank you.


 

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

 


 

Qualifying Results | WeatherTech Championship

Motul Petit Le Mans

Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta - Friday, Oct. 10, 2025

Qualifying Results


 

Practice 3 Results

Practice 2 Results

Practice 1 Results


 

Additional results are available at results.imsa.com.

 

 


 

Strong Early Showing For Cadillac At Motul Petit Le Mans

AO in LMP2, Lexus in GTD PRO and Ferrari in GTD Pace Other Classes


 

October 9, 2025

By John Oreovicz

IMSA Wire Service

Practice 1 Results

Practice 2 Results 


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – With four year-long IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship titles on the line, 53 competitors pounded around Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta Thursday in preparation for the season-ending Motul Petit Le Mans.

 

Jack Aitken set the overall and Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) class pace in two of three Thursday practice sessions in the No. 31 Cadillac Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R. The 30-year-old driver of English and South Korean heritage improved his morning time of 1 minute, 11.260 seconds (128.318 miles per hour) in the 90-minute morning run to 1:10.882 (129.002 mph) with eight minutes remaining in the afternoon session. Aitken shares the No. 31 Cadillac with Earl Bamber and Frederik Vesti.

 

“It’s been a good start for the No. 31 Whelen Cadillac, carrying over from our victory at Indianapolis (Sept. 21 in the TireRack.com Battle on the Bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway),” stated Aitken. “We had a productive couple of days of testing here in early September and look to carry this form into qualifying tomorrow.”

 

The pace comes in the first IMSA race weekend after Cadillac Racing announced Jeromy Moore as its new LMDh chief engineer, overseeing both of Cadillac’s global prototype programs.

 

"As a member of the Cadillac Racing team, I’ll apply my experience across vastly different programs to guide and complement the already strong team to help achieve our ultimate goals of success in Le Mans, across the WEC and IMSA series,” Moore said.

 

Acura Meyer Shank Racing with Curb-Agajanian has posed the strongest threat to the three-car Cadillac GTP attack in the second half of the season, and Tom Blomqvist ran second to Aitken in the morning.

 

The No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963, which leads the GTP driver’s and manufacturer’s championships, moved up from seventh to second in the afternoon, with Matt Campbell posting a 1:11.175 (128.471 mph) flyer with just five minutes to go.

 

Campbell and Mathieu Jaminet lead Nick Tandy and Felipe Nasr in the No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche by 131 points, with Dries Vanthoor and Philipp Eng another 14 points back. Vanthoor was fourth fastest Thursday afternoon in the No. 24 BMW M Team RLL BMW M Hybrid V8 he shares with Eng and Kevin Magnussen. Julien Andlauer (No. 6) and Laurens Vanthoor (No. 7) are the Penske Porsche third drivers this race, with Colin Braun and Scott Dixon joining Blomqvist aboard MSR’s No. 60 Acura. 

 

The manufacturer’s championship is much closer, with Porsche holding a slim 7-point edge over Acura. BMW is 118 points off the lead.

 

Urs Kuratle, Director of Factory Racing for Porsche Motorsport, said it is highly unlikely any kind of team orders will come into play during Saturday’s 10-hour race.

 

“With the No. 6 car in the position it’s in for the championship, we don’t think it’s necessary to do some management decisions,” Kuratle said. “The drivers handle that quite well on the track and usually we try to leave them. The No. 6 car has a clear lead, and we need as many points as possible in the manufacturer’s championship.

 

“We feel good here, as prepared as we can be,” he added. “The weather seems to be stable, so that’s one thing to take out from the calculations. When you lead the championship, it’s always good to have stable conditions.”

 

The weekend forecast calls for conditions similar to Thursday’s – dry, with temperatures in the low- to mid-70s.

 

In Le Mans Prototype 2, the championship leading No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07 driven by Dane Cameron set fastest time of the day with a 1:12.859 (125.502 mph) lap in the morning session. However, Cameron’s co-driver P.J. Hyett will need to set two laps fast enough to potentially secure the class Motul Pole Award after the No. 99 car was dinged for causing a red flag during the afternoon session and will therefore forfeit the fastest qualifying lap. Cameron and Hyett share their No. 99 “Spike” LMP2 car – adorned in a special “Spooky” Halloween livery this weekend – with third driver Jonny Edgar.

 

Albert Costa (No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3), who runs a close second to Antonio Garcia and Alexander Sims (No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R) in the Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) standings, faces a similar hurdle after also causing a stoppage of the afternoon session. Costa, Giacomo Altoe and Davide Rigon are in the No. 81 Ferrari with Daniel Juncadella joining Garcia and Sims in the No. 3 Corvette.

 

The No. 14 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3 was the quickest GTD PRO competitor Thursday, with Aaron Telitz laying down a 1:19.180 (115.483 mph) lap early in the afternoon session. Telitz, who shares his car with Ben Barnicoat and Kyle Kirkwood, was also second fastest in the morning for Lexus, which scored a GTD PRO win at Petit Le Mans in 2022.

 

Ferrari showed plenty of strength in the GTD class, taking second and third in the morning behind the points-leading No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3, then sweeping the top three spots in the afternoon. Lorenzo Patrese, the 20-year-old son of longtime Formula 1 competitor Riccardo Patrese, was quickest in the No. 47 Cetilar Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 at 1:19.077 (115.633 mph), followed by a pair of similar entries fielded by Triarsi Competizione. Patrese shares his No. 47 Ferrari with Roberto Lacorte and Miguel Molina.

 

The WeatherTech Championship field will wrap up a long day of Thursday track activity with a 90-minute night practice session. Qualifying by class starts at 3:20 p.m. ET Friday, with coverage streamed on Peacock in the U.S. and via IMSA.TV and the official IMSA YouTube channel internationally. Similar coverage is available for Saturday’s 28th annual Motul Petit Le Mans, joined by NBC television for the first three hours of the race.

Catalano, Porto Seal Titles in First VP Racing Challenge Race at Michelin Raceway

Adelson Poised to Wrap GTDX On Friday; Tunjo, Walker, Porto Win Thursday Race


 

October 9, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Race Results


 

BRASELTON, Ga. – Provided they started the first of two IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge races Thursday at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, Valentino Catalano and Kiko Porto would unofficially clinch their respective championships.


 

The class leaders in Le Mans Prototype 3 (P3) and Grand Sport X (GSX) did so with ease in the first of two 45-minute races at the track, although only one of them won the race itself.


 

In P3 and overall, Catalano, driving the No. 30 Gebhardt Intralogistics Motorsports Duqueine D08, finished second to his teammate Oscar Tunjo in the sister No. 31 Gebhardt Duqueine.


 

“It’s the first year for me in America to be able to race here, and to win straightaway in my first year and in such a cool place like here in Road Atlanta, is really amazing for me,” Catalano said. “I really enjoyed the race here and it's really cool to be back. Special to win as a German driver with a German team.”


 

Tunjo, back after missing the VIRginia International Raceway tripleheader due to a schedule conflict, finished ahead by 5.389 seconds after leading the entire race from the pole. Series debutante Lucas Fecury finished third in the No. 80 Toney Driver Development Ligier JS P320, with the team making its first start since the Daytona opener in January.


 

“We were a bit unlucky at CTMP, so it was good to be back here and deliver the win for Gebhardt,” added Tunjo, who scored his second win of the year, first since Mid-Ohio in June.

The battle in Grand Touring Daytona X (GTDX) continued as Jake Walker (No. 6 Turner Motorsport BMW M4 GT3) kept his hot streak alive with his fifth consecutive victory, eighth this season, leading home Adelson in the No. 24 Wright Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 R by 3.714 seconds.


 

Adelson led the opening 17 laps but ran wide exiting Turn 7, which opened the door for Walker to scythe through. Nonetheless, Adelson will wrap the GTDX title so long as he starts Friday morning’s second race of the weekend.


 

“Yeah, Adam and I had a great battle,” Walker admitted. “He's super quick. I really had to work hard to try to get around him. He made a mistake, unfortunately, so that ended that battle. But tomorrow will be really good, I'm sure.”


 

Porto was the one presumptive champion to take the checkered flag first on Thursday, taking the No. 8 RAFA Racing Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2 to his eighth victory of the season en route to winning in GSX by 14.714 seconds. Porto passed Steven Clemons’ No. 76 BSI Racing Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2 on Lap 3 and took control of the race.

“It feels amazing. It feels a consequence of everything the boys from RAFA Racing to put it all together,” Porto said. “I remember getting in the car at Daytona for the first practice. The amount of work they’ve done since then to give me this bullet of a car, all this year. It just a pleasure to be the chosen one to drive the No. 8 car from RAFA Racing. Not much mistake this year from them, so it's just absolutely an honor to represent this group.”


 

Bronze Cup winners Thursday included Brian Thienes (No. 77 Forte Racing Ligier JS P320, P3), Samantha Tan (No. 38 ST Racing BMW M4 GT3, GTDX) and Allen Patten (No. 21 Thunder Bunny Racing BMW M4 GT4 EVO, GSX). Thienes, Tan and Ian Porter (No. 68 RAFA Racing Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2) have unofficially clinched the Bronze Cup titles in their respective classes, as well.


 

Patten finished second among all GSX entries ahead of fellow VP Racing Challenge first-timer Jon Brel, another Bronze Cup-entered driver in the No. 53 Kingpin Racing Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2.


 

The race had three full-course cautions, two for a GSX car off course and one more for debris on track.


 

The final race of the VP Racing SportsCar Challenge season is Friday morning at 8:30 a.m.


Practice Results | WeatherTech Championship

Motul Petit Le Mans

Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta - Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025

Practice 3 Results

Practice 2 Results

Practice 1 Results


 

Additional results are available at results.imsa.com.

 

 


IMSA’s 2025 Challenge Series Champions Highlight Future Potential Stars

Michelin Pilot Challenge and VP Racing SportsCar Challenge Alike Blend Veterans with Young Driver Potential


 

October 15, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Michelin Pilot Challenge Standings

VP Racing SportsCar Challenge Standings


 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The beauty of competing in IMSA’s Challenge series – either Michelin Pilot Challenge or VP Racing SportsCar Challenge – is that you’re racing in a series among drivers and teams that may be on the way up in their careers and also among established veterans known for their racecraft, experience and success over a broader period of time. The theme of champions in both series in 2025 was the strong blend of both.


 

In Michelin Pilot Challenge, 45-year-old veteran Jan Heylen and 19-year-old young gun Luca Mars started strong and then fought through a roller coaster second half of the season to hold off a cadre of contenders in Grand Sport (GS) in their No. 28 RS1 Porsche 718 GT4 RS CS. Harry Gottsacker, who is both young and experienced at age 26, emerged as the solo champion in a three-team fight for the Touring Car (TCR) crown in his No. 98 Bryan Herta Autosport w/Curb-Agajanian Hyundai Elantra N TCR to extend that team and manufacturer’s incredible run of form.


 

The VP Racing SportsCar Challenge champions represent three names who have brighter IMSA futures ahead: 19-year-old Valentino Catalano in Le Mans Prototype 3 (P3), 28-year-old Adam Adelson in Grand Touring Daytona X (GTDX) and 22-year-old Kiko Porto in Grand Sport X (GSX). 

 

IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge GS

In GS, Heylen and Mars couldn’t have started 2025 any stronger, with two wins and five podiums from the first five races to build a 300-plus point lead on their rivals. But nothing is ever that simple in a series known as much for its wild swings of momentum as its intense competition, so other title contenders emerged at various points during the season. 


 

Jeff Westphal and Sean McAlister won twice as part of seven top-five finishes in their No. 39 CarBahn by Peregrine racing BMW M4 GT4 EVO. Jenson Altzman emerged as a title contender alongside first Sam Paley, then Nate Cicero sharing in the No. 13 McCumbee McAleer Racing with Aerosport Ford Mustang GT4, with a breakthrough win at Road America. Consistency also kept Stevan McAleer’s separate car he drove – the No. 27 Auto Technic Racing BMW with Austin Krainz – in the fray as well.


 

After two tough races, VIR swung the tables back to Heylen and Mars with a crucial third win of the season to have a buffer zone heading into the final two races of the season. They wrapped the titles – Heylen’s second (2021 GS) and Mars’ first – with a sixth place at Michelin Raceway.


 

“It takes a whole year of hard work and consistency to be here,” Heylen said. “That was the mindset starting at Daytona. It wasn’t always easy. But really happy we brought it home. You’re racing guys with so many different levels of experience and mindsets, so it was important for us not to make mistakes.” 


 

Mars added, “I learned a lot from Jan. He’s one of the best drivers I’ve ever raced with. We pulled through. The last race came down to the wire but as usual Jan got it done.” 


 

The No. 39 car was second in the season points standings with the No. 27 car third, Altzman and the No. 13 team fourth and Michael Cooper and Moisey Uretsky finishing the year strong in fifth with back-to-back wins aboard their No. 44 Ibiza Farm Motorsports McLaren Artura GT4. Turner Motorsport was the year’s only other winner with Francis Selldorff and Dillon Machavern at Mid-Ohio. A total of 16 different entries from all seven GS manufacturers (Porsche, BMW, Ford, McLaren, Mercedes-AMG, Aston Martin, Toyota) scored at least one podium in 2025.  

 

IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge TCR

TCR stood as a three-horse race, with two Herta Hyundais winning the first four early season races (Nos. 76 and 98), then needing to withstand a summer surge from north of the border in the No. 93 Montreal Motorsports Group (MMG) Honda Civic FL5 TCR shared by LP Montour and Karl Wittmer who delivered back-to-back wins at Watkins Glen and Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.


 

Gottsacker, who drove all but one race with Mason Filippi in the No. 98 in the car lead engineered by Megan Ryder, was relatively assured a finish atop the standings until a rough-and-tumble round at VIR where contact from another car sent the No. 98 car down to P11. Contact and a penalty for the sister No. 76 car of Preston Brown and Denis Dupont took them down the order too and combined with a late podium pass for the No. 93 Honda, it set up a two-race battle for the title.


 

The No. 93 car appeared to seize momentum with the points lead taken after another late podium pass in Indianapolis but lost it all in a mechanical-affected finale at Michelin Raceway where for the third time all season, this car finished outside the top four. Dupont drove an amazing final stint to get up to second but was one spot short of a title. That left it to Gottsacker to secure his second TCR title, having also done so alongside Robert Wickens in 2023. 


 

“We finished exactly where we needed to finish, thanks in large part to a great engineer, Megan, on the box and Mason who was a huge part of this championship,” Gottsacker said. “It all came down to the wire after a friendly battle with these guys. Incredible preparation and execution all weekend.” 


 

IMSA 3D Scholarship recipient Celso Neto and co-driver Ryan Eversley enjoyed a good season with fourth in the championship with three podium finishes in the No. 7 Precision Racing LA Audi RS3 LMS TCR. A late rally propelled VGRT’s Tyler Gonzalez and Eric Powell to fifth in points, winning the last two races after the team switched to the new Cupra Leon VZ TCR. 


 

In a class frequently paced by Hyundai, all four TCR manufacturers won races and all four finished in the top five in points. Two other cars (Mark Wilkins and Bryson Morris, No. 33 Herta Hyundai and Luke Rumberg and Jaden Conwright, No. 31 RVA Graphics Motorsports by Speed Syndicate Audi) also won races and 10 different TCR cars scored at least one podium.


 

IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge

Although Valentino Catalano didn’t have a primary full-season rival for the P3 title, it didn’t diminish the quality of his achievements.


 

Driving the No. 30 Gebhardt Intralogistics Motorsports Duqueine D08, the German won eight of 12 races to seal the title. Three other drivers won races as well.

Adam Adelson won the first GTDX title with three race wins by getting a perfect start to the season in Daytona. The owner/driver of the No. 24 Wright Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 R swept the season-opening doubleheader and never looked back, while mainly engaged in a tight battle with AJ Muss in the No. 66 Af Corse Ferrari 296 GT3.


 

Meanwhile, after a nightmare Daytona, Jake Walker did everything he could to play catch-up with nine wins in the final 10 races in the No. 6 Turner Motorsport BMW M4 GT3. 

GSX showcased the potential of RAFA Racing and its two drivers, Kiko Porto and Ian Porter, who were among the revelations of the season. The Brazilian won nine of 12 races in the No. 8 Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2, and with Porter also winning one, the RAFA organization won 10 GSX races.


 

Adding in BSI Racing’s Steven Clemons two wins, and Toyota enjoyed a perfect season in GSX with all 12 victories. 

 

Bronze Cup Champions


 

While 2024 GS champions Team TGM endured a challenging 2025 with its No. 46 entry, its Bronze Cup entry of Ted Giovanis and Hugh Plumb still kept momentum in Michelin Pilot Challenge GS to win that accolade in their No. 64 Aston Martin Vantage AMR GT4 EVO for a second straight year.


 

In VP Racing Challenge, three of the top full-season finishing entries – Brian Thienes (No. 77 Forte Racing Ligier JS P320) in P3, Samantha Tan (No. 38 ST Racing BMW M4 GT3) in GTDX and Ian Porter (No. 68 RAFA Racing Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2) in GSX – won their respective Bronze Cup titles. 

 


 

IMSA Honors its Best at WeatherTech Night of Champions

Champions Receive Special Rolex Timepieces for the First Time


 

October 13, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

BRASELTON, Ga. – After a thrilling 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship capped off by record-setting attendance at Motul Petit Le Mans, champions took home their trophies – and special timepieces – at Sunday’s WeatherTech Night of Champions held at Chateau Elan Winery & Resort just a few miles away from Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. 


 

For the first time, the season champions across all four WeatherTech Championship classes received specially engraved Rolex timepieces at the end of the night’s proceedings.


 

Those recipients included Mathieu Jaminet and Matt Campbell in Grand Touring Prototype (GTP), Dane Cameron and PJ Hyett in Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), Antonio Garcia and Alexander Sims in Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) and Russell Ward and Philip Ellis in Grand Touring Daytona (GTD). 


 

All the championship-winning elements of 2025 were highlighted, including the manufacturer, driver and team champions and the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup champions in all four WeatherTech Championship classes. The Jim Trueman Award (Hyett in LMP2) and Bob Akin Bronze Cup Award (Orey Fidani in GTD) also were presented.


 

IMSA officially welcomed the newest members of its third Hall of Fame class, including inductees Bob Akin, Dan Gurney, Don Panoz, Rob Dyson, Elliott Forbes-Robinson, Bob Tullius and the BMW CSL, Jaguar GTP XJR-5 and XJR-7 and Lola T600 race cars. Those inductees received an IMSA Hall of Fame medallion in addition to special artwork created by longtime motorsports artist Jim Swintal. 


 

In addition, several special awards were handed out to start the night, including the VP Racing Front Runner Award, Motul Pole Award, CrowdStrike Endurance, Teamwork & Speed Award, BDO Knows Strategy Award, the Michelin All-Hands for the Win Award, the IMSA Team Marketing Award and IMSA Marketing Achievement Award. 


 

A full rundown of champions honored is below:

WeatherTech Championship Class Champions

 

GTP: Mathieu Jaminet and Matt Campbell (Driver, right), Porsche Penske Motorsport No. 6 (Team), Porsche (Manufacturer)

LMP2: Dane Cameron and PJ Hyett (Driver), AO Racing No. 99 (Team)

GTD PRO: Antonio Garcia and Alexander Sims (Driver), Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports No. 3 (Team), Chevrolet (Manufacturer)

GTD: Russell Ward and Philip Ellis (Driver), Winward Racing No. 57 (Team), Mercedes-AMG (Manufacturer)


 

IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup Champions

 

GTP: Nick Tandy and Felipe Nasr (Driver), Porsche Penske Motorsport No. 7 (Team), Porsche (Manufacturer)

LMP2: Steven Thomas, Mikkel Jensen and Hunter McElrea (Driver), TDS Racing No. 11 (Team)

GTD PRO: Dan Harper and Max Hesse (Driver), Paul Miller Racing No. 48 (Team), BMW (Manufacturer)

GTD: Alessandro Pier Guidi, Lilou Wadoux and Simon Mann (Driver), Af Corse No. 21 (Team), Ferrari (Manufacturer)


 

Trueman/Akin Champions

 

Jim Trueman Award: PJ Hyett, No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07, LMP2

Bob Akin Bronze Cup Award: Orey Fidani, No. 13 AWA Corvette Z06 GT3.R, GTD


 

Special Awards


 

VP Racing Front Runner Award:


 

GTP: No. 31 Cadillac Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R

LMP2: No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07

GTD PRO: No. 48 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO

GTD: No. 12 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3


 

Motul Pole Award:

 

GTP: Dries Vanthoor, No. 24 BMW M Team RLL BMW M Hybrid V8

LMP2: PJ Hyett, No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07

GTD PRO: Giacomo Altoe, No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3

GTD: Jack Hawksworth, No. 12 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3


 

CrowdStrike Endurance, Teamwork & Speed Award:

 

Season: No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3

 

BDO Knows Strategy Award:

 

Season: No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07


 

Michelin All-Hands for the Win Award:

 

GTP: No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963

GTD PRO: No. 64 Ford Multimatic Motorsports Ford Mustang GT3


 

IMSA Team Marketing Award:

Presented to all teams as universal participants as part of Resilient Racers program that debuted at TireRack.com Battle On The Bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Physical awards were presented to representatives from Austin Hatcher Foundation and Camp Boggy Creek – IMSA’s two proud charities – who partnered with IMSA for Resilient Racers.


 

IMSA Marketing Achievement Award:


 

Season: BDO 

 


Three Takeaways: Motul Petit Le Mans

Major Event, Major Crowd, Major Champions


 

October 13, 2025

By John Oreovicz

IMSA Wire Service

BRASELTON, Ga. – Endurance sports car races - like professional golf tournaments – don’t instantly achieve “major” status.


 

But 28 years since its creation by longtime friend of sports car racing Don Panoz, who was inducted into the IMSA Hall of Fame this year, the Motul Petit Le Mans at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta has truly earned its place among sports car racing’s majors.


 

That includes the first two IMSA “crown jewel” events to start the season, with the Rolex 24 At Daytona and the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring. Of course, the race that inspired the name of the late Panoz’s signature event is the 24 Hours of Le Mans.


 

Marking This Motul Petit Le Mans Major


 

Want proof? Between some 241 race transporters and all the cars and trucks that carried in thousands of week-long campers and daily ticket holders, the Road Atlanta infield appeared filled to capacity by early Thursday afternoon. Local landowners came to the rescue, renting their properties to IMSA to create additional parking areas outside the compact 2.54-mile circuit. 


 

On Friday and Saturday, vehicles were lined up for more than two miles in each direction on the Winder Highway with spectators eager to enjoy the perfect Fall weather and a full slate of road racing action that included Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup by Michelin, Porsche Carrera Cup North America, IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge, the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge, and of course the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship’s 10-hour season finale. 


 

Post-race traffic went much smoother after IMSA took the unprecedented step of asking competitors to remain at the circuit and not start rolling their transporters until at least midnight (the race ended at 10:10 p.m.) to speed up the exit process for fans. 


 

"We had a complete sellout," said IMSA President John Doonan. "We had to stop selling tickets because we couldn't fit any more people in.


 

“From the attendance to the racing, it was truly an epic weekend.”


 

Needless to say, it was a record crowd for Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. “I’ve never seen anything like it,” exclaimed IMSA Radio lead announcer John Hindhaugh.


 

Doonan shared memories of coming to Road Atlanta since he was a 7-year-old race fan. 


 

“I look down from the top of the hill on this paddock filled with competitors … and I’m astounded,” he said. “That whole area was a swamp. Michelin Raceway has come a long way, and it’s fitting that it holds such an important role in our history. The original IMSA logo was inspired by cars going through the Road Atlanta Esses.”


 

The packed house was rewarded with a generally clean race that featured two extended periods of green flag racing, with only one full-course caution over the final six hours of racing. The outcome was in doubt until the final moments as energy strategies played out.


 

Porsche’s Proactive Podium and Title Improvisation 

Porsche Motorsport and Team Penske share a reputation for ordered perfection. That’s not how Motul Petit Le Mans race day started for Porsche Penske Motorsport, but it ended with Mathieu Jaminet and Matt Campbell standing on the podium after a third-place finish hoisting trophies for IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship driver’s, team and manufacturer titles – with a bit of unexpected help.


 

Jaminet revealed that he and Campbell nearly arrived late for the final reconnaissance lap prior to the grid walk and race start. And then they got some unwelcome news about their intended co-driver.  


 

“It took us one hour, 40 minutes to get to the track - which is good news (for IMSA) because there is a lot of fans out there,” Jaminet recalled. “This is positive, but we nearly missed the recon lap, so managed to work and park on the side of the road to get there. Then we realized we had no third driver.”


 

Upon arrival, Campbell and Jaminet learned that third driver Julien Andlauer would be unable to participate in the race. Pressed for time, Porsche worked together with IMSA to come up with the instant solution of having Vanthoor - who was scheduled to co-drive the No. 7 Porsche with Nick Tandy and Felipe Nasr – pull double-duty in both Porsches. 


 

“‘Larry’ (Vanthoor) stuck his hand up when it started going the wrong direction and said, ‘Hey, I’ll do whatever you guys need to do,’” said Team Penske President and Porsche Penske Motorsport Managing Director Jonathan Diuguid. “From that point, it was just management between the 6 and the 7 cars of the drive time.”


 

It was Porsche’s second consecutive championship in the three years of IMSA’s modern Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) class era, and Porsche’s record 63rd manufacturer’s title in IMSA competition.


 

“Larry is well-paid, so it’s okay,” joked Porsche’s Director of LMDh Factory Racing, Urs Kuratle. “I couldn’t be prouder of the drivers. Having a back-to-back championship is quite remarkable, and I couldn't be any prouder to be part of the team.”


 

Corvette Racing Crowned Once More 

The old joke used to run something along the lines of “Death, taxes, and another championship for Corvette Racing.” But the Corvette factory team operated in partnership with Pratt Miller Motorsports had not achieved a title since Antonio Garcia and Jordan Taylor claimed the final GT Le Mans class championship in 2021. 


 

That aberration ended Saturday night at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta as Garcia and Alexander Sims in the No. 3 Corvette Z06 GT3.R notched their first GTD PRO title with a third-place finish in the Motul Petit Le Mans – Corvette Racing’s 16th team and Chevrolet’s 15th manufacturer championship since 2001.


 

This was a title built on consistency and execution, bolstered by a single but timely victory at VIRginia International Raceway.


 

“It’s just more proof that every car that Chevrolet and Corvette Racing builds is capable of winning,” said Garcia. “I was very lucky to win with many versions of the Corvette, but with the same key Pratt Miller team members. Even if we all evolve, the cars evolve.”


 

Garcia earned his sixth IMSA championship, while Sims has now carded a pair of his own.


 

“I was nervous today,” Garcia admitted. “Even if I’m as old as I am and the experience I have to date, I felt everything had to be perfect. So that’s why I was kind of with a little bit of that extra pressure in a way.


 

“But once the flag dropped, I think I forgot about everything. Another great day for Corvette Racing and Team Chevy.”

 

 


 

Full Fields Continue For 2026 IMSA WeatherTech Championship, Michelin Endurance Cup

State of the Sport Reveals Grids for 2026 Season

BRASELTON, Ga. (Oct. 9, 2025) – IMSA continues to pack its paddocks and fields full of competitive cars as it prepares for the 2026 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. IMSA President John Doonan revealed the full-season entry list for both the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup rounds as part of today’s annual State of the Sport presentation from Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.


 

A total of 45 entries (11 GTP, 12 LMP2, 8 GTD PRO, 14 GTD) have been confirmed for the full-season WeatherTech Championship. That number grows to 54 cars (4 additional GTD PRO, 5 additional GTD) for the five Michelin Endurance Cup races. With further extra entries anticipated for the 64th Rolex 24 At Daytona, the 2026 season in January is expected to again feature a car count north of 60 cars. 


 

“Once again, the quality and quantity of cars and teams is on display for the 2026 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season,” said IMSA President John Doonan. “All of our GTP, LMP2, GTD PRO and GTD classes are highly represented. We know teams have a choice of where to race, and we’re thankful they continue to race in IMSA to provide the best possible sports car racing for our fans.” 


 

A class-by-class breakdown is below:

 

Grand Touring Prototype (GTP)


 

The same 11 cars that have raced most full-season rounds in 2025 will provide consistency in GTP for 2026, with one key change. BMW M Team WRT will field the two BMW M Hybrid V8 entries next season.


 

Beyond those two BMWs, there will again be two entries from Porsche Penske Motorsport, Cadillac Wayne Taylor Racing, Acura Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb-Agajanian and single entries from Cadillac Whelen, Aston Martin THOR Team and JDC-Miller MotorSports. Aston Martin THOR Team’s Valkyrie will make its first Rolex 24 race start in 2026 after premiering in 2025 at the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring.

Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2)


 

The LMP2 field remains strong with 12 full-season cars split among 11 teams. While United Autosports USA fields two cars, single entries come from CrowdStrike Racing by APR, Tower Motorsports, TDS Racing, Era Motorsport, Intersport Racing, Inter Europol Competition, Bryan Herta Autosport with PR1/Mathiasen, Team Tonis, Pratt Miller Motorsports and AO Racing.


 

Intersport and Bryan Herta Autosport are the two new entries to the class in 2026, and both have strong support from HMD Motorsports (Intersport) and multi-time IMSA LMP2 champions PR1/Mathiasen (Herta). Additionally, Team Tonis steps up to a full-time effort for 2026 after making its first WeatherTech Championship start at Road America.

Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO)


 

The GTD PRO class features eight full-season entries and a further four Michelin Endurance Cup entries.


 

Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports and Ford Multimatic Motorsports continue with two-car full-season efforts, joined by single entries apiece from Paul Miller Racing, Pfaff Motorsports, Vasser Sullivan Racing and AO Racing.


 

Confirmed Michelin Endurance Cup entries come from Triarsi Competizione, Risi Competizione, 75 Express and Manthey Racing. 


 

Manthey Racing joins IMSA with two entries split one car apiece between the WeatherTech Championship’s two GT classes, one GTD PRO and GTD, for the Michelin Endurance Cup races. Risi Competizione is back on its own, while its 2025 technical partner team DragonSpeed moves into GTD. 

Grand Touring Daytona (GTD)


 

GTD boasts a 14-car full-season grid with five Michelin Endurance Cup entries.


 

The 14 full-season entries come from 14 teams: Vasser Sullivan Racing, 13 Motorsports, Riley, van der Steur Racing, Heart of Racing Team, Conquest Racing, DXDT Racing, Wayne Taylor Racing, Winward Racing, Gradient Racing, Inception Racing, DragonSpeed, Turner Motorsport and Wright Motorsports.


 

Additional entries come from Af Corse, Triarsi Competizione, Lone Star Racing, RS1 and Manthey Racing for the Michelin Endurance Cup. 


 

Riley moves into GTD from LMP2, 13 Motorsports (formerly AWA) has an updated team name, and RS1 steps up from IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge competition.

 

 


 

IMSA and Michelin Finalize Long-Term Partnership Extension Poised to Last Until 2035

Michelin to Continue as “Official Tire of IMSA;” IMSA Michelin Sustainability in Racing Award to be Introduced, and Michelin to Remain Entitlement Partner of Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta

BRASELTON, Ga. (Oct. 9, 2025) – The iconic Michelin Man will remain a familiar presence at IMSA events well into the next decade, as officials from the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA) and Michelin today announced a long-term extension of their successful partnership. The agreement ensures Michelin is planned to continue as the “Official Tire of IMSA” through the 2035 season.


 

“Michelin has been an exceptional partner in helping IMSA deliver the best endurance sports car racing in the world,” said IMSA President John Doonan. “Their commitment to innovation, performance, and sustainability aligns perfectly with our vision for the future. This long-term extension reinforces our shared dedication to excellence both on and off the track and provides a firm foundation for continued stability and growth for our sport.”


 

Since 2019, Michelin has served as the exclusive tire supplier for IMSA’s top-tier series. Under the renewed agreement, Michelin will continue to supply tires for all entries in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge, and IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge. Michelin also remains the entitlement sponsor of the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge and the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup, which includes five premier endurance races in 2026:


 

  • Rolex 24 At Daytona
  • Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring
  • Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen
  • Motul SportsCar Endurance Grand Prix at Road America
  • Motul Petit Le Mans at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta

Additionally, Michelin has similarly extended its entitlement sponsorship of Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, further solidifying its long-term commitment to IMSA and the sport.


 

“Since the beginning of our expanded partnership in 2019, Michelin has been more than just a tire supplier — they’ve been a true strategic partner in helping IMSA elevate the level of competition, innovation, and fan engagement across our platforms,” said IMSA CEO Ed Bennett. “This extension is a testament to the strength and shared vision of our relationship. Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, as both a world-class racing facility and a symbol of our collaboration, continues to play a central role. It’s where our partnership comes to life in a tangible way, and we’re proud to continue building on that foundation together.”


 

“Michelin has been innovating for more than 130 years, and competition has always been at the heart of that journey,” added Alexis Garcin, executive vice president of Michelin. “From the first removable bicycle tire to the Pilot Sport Endurance range, many of our breakthroughs have consistently come from the racetrack. IMSA gives us a competitive ecosystem to validate new technologies under real pressure, and that’s exactly where Michelin thrives.”


 

A new highlight of the partnership is the introduction of the IMSA Michelin Sustainability in Racing Award, debuting at the 2026 Rolex 24 At Daytona. Building on IMSA’s longstanding collaboration with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and decades of shared sustainability initiatives with Michelin, the award will showcase the innovative Hybrid Electrified GTP platform and Michelin’s sustainable tire technology. It reflects the shared commitment of IMSA and Michelin to advancing sustainability and innovation in motorsports.


 

The award will honor the GTP car that demonstrates the highest sustainability performance at each race, culminating in a season-long champion. Using an AWS-developed architecture, real-time data will be captured and analyzed across three key metrics: tire usage, energy efficiency (including 80 percent renewable biofuel and regenerative electric power), and race finish position. Results will be integrated into race broadcasts and digital platforms, with winners recognized during podium celebrations and across IMSA’s social channels. The season champion will be celebrated at the IMSA WeatherTech Night of Champions, with Michelin leadership presenting the award on stage.


 

“Michelin is proud to extend our partnership with IMSA, building on years of collaboration that have helped advance innovation both on and off the track,” said Nora Vass, Director of Marketing for Michelin Motorsports. “Together, we’re committed to delivering exceptional performance and shaping the future of sports car racing for teams, drivers and fans alike.”


 

This marks the second extension of the IMSA-Michelin partnership since its inception in 2019. A previous renewal in 2023 extended the relationship through the 2028 season. With this latest agreement, the partnership now stretches well into the mid-2030s.


 

Beyond its technical contributions, Michelin remains one of IMSA’s most active marketing partners. Notably, Michelin continues to support the popular “Win The Weekend Presented by Michelin” docuseries, which has aired on IMSA’s official YouTube channel since 2023, currently with over 2.5 million viewers per episode, and will continue into 2026.

 


IMSA and BDO USA Announce Expanded Multi-Year Collaboration Focused on Strategy and Engagement

BRASELTON, Ga. (Oct. 9, 2025) – IMSA and BDO USA, one of the nation’s leading accounting and advisory firms, have renewed and substantially expanded their partnership through a new multi-year agreement. 


 

This was among several announcements made during today’s IMSA State of the Sport event at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, held on the eve of the Motul Petit Le Mans weekend.


 

The partnership has enabled BDO to build on a successful collaboration that has fostered business growth and strengthened client relationships. BDO will continue to welcome VIP clients and guests at IMSA events through an enhanced IMSA VIP Experiences program, which will now be available to more professionals and clients nationwide.


 

In addition, the BDO Knows Strategy Award will remain a feature on IMSA Radio broadcasts. Given the critical role strategy plays in every IMSA race, this award recognizes the teams, drivers, and manufacturers who have demonstrated exceptional strategic execution leading to successful results on the raceway.


 

“Strategy and agility are hallmarks of IMSA races and closely reflect BDO’s own approach to their client advisory work,” said Brandon Huddleston, vice president, IMSA Partnership Marketing and Business Development. “This extension serves as a testament to BDO’s enhanced presence and influence within the IMSA paddock.”


 

Learn more about BDO at www.bdo.com

 


Nicky Hays Named 2026-27 IMSA 3D Scholarship Recipient

California Native Moves into IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge for 2026 Season

BRASELTON, Ga. (Oct. 9, 2025) – One of the more impressive under-the-radar drivers of the 2025 Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America season will have a chance to expand his IMSA career into IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge in 2026. Nicky Hays’ perseverance and patience paid off as he’s been named the latest IMSA Diverse Driver Development (3D) Scholarship recipient.


 

Hays, a Huntington Beach, California native who holds dual citizenship from the Philippines, was awarded the scholarship for 2026-27. It provides benefits worth up to $380,000 to compete in one of four IMSA-sanctioned series, with support from IMSA and multiple corporate partners. 


 

“Nicky is a very deserving recipient of the IMSA 3D Scholarship,” said Brandon Huddleston, vice president, IMSA partnership marketing and business development. “He’s been impressive to watch through the IMSA ladder this year as he’s gained greater sports car experience. He also impressed the scholarship committee with the way he applied the feedback the IMSA team provided on last year’s submission to the 2026 program he pulled together. IMSA is proud to name him as the newest recipient of this important initiative.”


 

Hays emerged from a talented pool of 12 finalists who attended IMSA-led modules that cover topics such as marketing, business development, personal branding, media training and nutrition. The process concluded with the submission of a business plan detailing the program they put together for 2026. For Hays, that is a seat with Random Vandals Racing in the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge Grand Sport (GS) class, as Paul Sparta’s team will return to the IMSA paddock after a year away.


 

Business plans are nothing new to Hays who has already developed an entrepreneurial business mindset outside of motorsports and owns and operates his own small business. He also credits his mother with giving him the mentality to keep pushing and raising funds to pursue his racing career.

“She pushed me to apply to things twice if you don’t succeed at first and to not give up,” said Hays, who was a previous scholarship finalist in 2024 and reapplied this year once he gained more sports car racing experience. “She came to America [from the Philippines], lost everything, but has made a success for herself. It’s helped to push me to make a career in the industry when it may be out of reach for most people.” 


 

Hays’ racing career follows a somewhat traditional path of newer sports car entrants, who have an open-wheel background before shifting into sports cars. He raced in both Europe and America in single-seaters, developed some coaching opportunities, went through multiple sports car academy programs and made a pair of Porsche Carrera Cup North America starts in 2023.


 

He has raced the ProAm season of Lamborghini Super Trofeo this year alongside Antoine Comeau with ANSA Motorsports. Hays’ pass for the class win at Watkins Glen’s second race this year stands out as one of the top passes and moments of the season for that series.


 

Talent alone doesn’t provide opportunities and so it was a networking moment that ultimately propelled Hays forward in the scholarship process proceedings, thanks to meeting another of IMSA’s 2025 breakout stars: IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship driver Kenton Koch. Hays explained the outreach.


 

“I’d reached out to Kenton in May because I saw he was racing with Random Vandals as well in another championship,” Hays said. “I’d met him earlier this year and asked him if they had any interest in being in IMSA once again, because I knew they’d been in Michelin Pilot Challenge before. 


 

“It’s funny, he then asks for my contact details and then the next day I get a text from Paul Sparta [team principal]. We hopped on a call, learning more about the scholarship and what the team’s plans might look like. He started watching my races in Super Trofeo, and we went back and forth, and he was a huge supporter and advocate. With his business background, he can sell anybody on anything in the best way. I was really confident.”


 

“I’d met him early on and I was pretty impressed,” Sparta said. “He’s in Super Trofeo now but we started talking and connected early on for what it’d take to do a full season in Michelin Pilot Challenge. I’d heard about the scholarship for the last couple years. It’s a great program with great value. I think they’ll be instantly competitive.”


 

Hays highlighted two other Californians that stood out for him as racing mentors in Phil Giebler and Patrick Long, the latter who’s become Porsche’s top American driver ambassador in recent years after his multi-championship and major race-winning sports car career. He also noted Manny Pacquiao’s impact from the Filipino side as a sporting icon he watched growing up.


 

“On the Filipino side, Manny Pacquiao is such a cultural hero and was one of the best boxers to do it; he was in his peak popularity from the mid-2000s to the mid-2010s,” Hays said. “That’s kind of the same thing where he came from nothing and became one of the best, arguably the best in the world.” 


 

Hays made natural steps forward from year one to year two to garner this opportunity.


 

“I took what I learned from 2024 to try to tick every box this year,” Hays said. “There’s so many people to thank, from Kenton who didn’t need to do what he did, to Paul, to Catlin [girlfriend], to my family and to IMSA. I have to thank everyone there who puts so much time and effort into this. It'll open your eyes into what you need to do to grow as a driver if you want to continue to have a career.”


 

The IMSA 3D Scholarship promotes and empowers drivers from a variety of backgrounds and experiences to participate in an IMSA-sanctioned series; eligible series this year included WeatherTech Championship, Michelin Pilot Challenge, IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge and Mustang Challenge. The scholarship includes benefits from IMSA and a number of its corporate partners: Michelin, VP Racing Fuels, OMP, Bell, Recaro, RAFA Racing Club and LAT Images.


 

The application process for the 2027-28 IMSA 3D Scholarship will open in January 2026. 

 


IMSA Esports Set for A Triple Play This Fall

iRacing Arcade To Launch; Project Motor Racing to Premiere; IMSA Esports Global Championship Set For 2025 Season

BRASELTON, Ga. (Oct. 9, 2025) – IMSA’s Esports presence digitally will kick into high gear this fall as the on-track portion of the 2025 season concludes with Motul Petit Le Mans from Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. 


 

Confirmation of two new games – one announced today during IMSA’s State of the Sport address and a second with its release date revealed – is paired with the countdown to the start of the new 2025 IMSA Esports Global Championship on iRacing season in November.  

 

iRacing Arcade Launches with GTP Presence at Motul Petit Le Mans

 

The newest and latest place to sample IMSA machinery – including cars from the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship’s Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) class – is iRacing’s new iRacing Arcade. It’s a new collaboration between iRacing and Original Fire Games, which will release its demo on Steam on Monday, October 13. IMSA cars including those from GTP will be integrated throughout the game. 

The iRacing Arcade game is designed for race fans of all ages to pick up and play. The game features pocket-sized versions of some of real-world racing’s most famous cars and circuits. Build your motorsport legacy in an engaging career mode that sees you develop team facilities, unlock boosts, and climb through the racing ranks, or hit the global time attack leaderboards to post the fastest laps. After it demos on Steam, it will be on console in early 2026. For more information on the game, visit www.iRacingarcade.com.


 

Of note, iRacing Arcade signage will appear this weekend on the No. 85 JDC-Miller MotorSports Porsche 963 GTP entry at Motul Petit Le Mans.


 

Max Esterson, one of the world’s top iRacers, is set to make his WeatherTech Championship debut in the car alongside two-time Motul Petit Le Mans winner Neel Jani and Tijmen van der Helm. 


 

Project Motor Racing Confirms November 2025 Release Date

 

Back in July for National Video Game Day, Project Motor Racing was among the titles highlighted where fans can find IMSA content in the virtual world. Now, there’s an official release date for the new game.

Project Motor Racing will be released on November 25 and will heavily feature a bevy of IMSA cars and tracks throughout the game. They’ll span several eras of IMSA’s more than 50-year history and build up to include cover artwork featuring the Lamborghini SC63.


 

The game will be available on PC, PS5, and Xbox platforms. Project Motor Racing released more details on the IMSA content available here via its website

 

2025 IMSA Esports Global Championship on iRacing Gears Up for New Season


 

Announced in August, the countdown is on to the start of the newest IMSA Esports Global Championship on iRacing. Its first of four races is set for Sunday, November 2, at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, so the Esports Global Championship starts at the same venue where the on-track season concludes.


 

Subsequent races are at Sebring International Raceway on Sunday, November 16, a GTP at Long Beach then GTD at VIRginia International Raceway doubleheader on Sunday, November 23 and the finale at Daytona International Speedway on Sunday, December 7.


 

Signups for the open qualifiers are now live online, with Time Attack Pre-Qualifying giving iRacing members their chance to secure a spot on the grid.


 

More information is available here, via VCO Esports’ Instagram. Additionally, you can register here. The IMSA Esports Global Championship on iRacing is supported by AMD, Michelin and VCO.

 


 

What to Watch For: Motul Petit Le Mans

Championship Battles; Saturday Night Optimization; Testing the Limits


 

October 9, 2025

By David Phillips

IMSA Wire Service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – What began more than nine months ago on a chilly Florida winter afternoon at Daytona International Speedway’s Rolex 24 At Daytona comes to an end Saturday on what figures to be a cool Georgia fall evening at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta with Motul Petit Le Mans. That would be the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, an 11-race weekend season featuring the world’s fastest sports cars competing on North America’s classic road racing courses. 


 

It’s a series and season that have produced more twists and turns than a gymkhana, one that will crown champions in the Grand Touring Prototype (GTP), Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) and Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) categories as well as the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup, which honors achievements in the WeatherTech Championship’s five long distance events. 


 

Championships - and More - at Stake


 

With drivers, teams and manufacturer titles at stake in four classes (LMP2 awards only drivers and team titles as all competitors run Gibson-powered ORECA LMP2 07s) in both the WeatherTech Championship and Michelin Endurance Cup, plus the Jim Trueman Award for LMP2 competitors and Bob Akin Award for Bronze-rated GTD competitors, there are more than 20 championships on the line this weekend. 


 

As for the WeatherTech Championship, apart from GTD, where Philip Ellis, Russell Ward and the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 basically just need to take the green flag in order to clinch the driver, team and manufacturer crowns, every championship in every class is in play. 


 

Speaking of GTD points, Brendan Iribe and Orey Fidani are (once again) vying for the Bob Akin Award given annually to the top scoring Bronze-rated driver in the WeatherTech Championship’s GTD class. In addition to a trophy, the award winner gets an automatic invitation into the following year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans. Fidani and Iribe have split the award the past two seasons with Iribe winning in 2023 and Fidani winning last year. Iribe’s win at Indianapolis tied Fidani for the Bob Akin Award points lead, meaning whichever driver finishes ahead Saturday wins.

Meanwhile, another ticket to Le Mans is in the offing for the winner of the Jim Trueman Award, presented each season to the top finishing Bronze-rated driver in LMP2.


 

PJ Hyett, who co-drives the No. 99 AO Racing (aka “Spike”) ORECA with Dane Cameron, heads Daniel Goldburg in the No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA in the race for the Trueman Award. With just 85 points separating Hyett and Goldberg, that contest too will likely go down to the wire on Saturday night.


 

Saturday Night’s All Right

 

Speaking of Saturday night . . . 

 

As Elton John once observed, Saturday night’s all right for fighting. That has surely been the case in previous Motul Petit Le Mans as, with a multitude of championships typically on the line, the final hour or two of the 10-hour event have produced some of the most intense racing in any given season. 


 

Understandably. On one hand, competitors fighting for a title often drive hyper-aggressively in seeking to either defend their points lead from a rival or, if the situation is reversed, overtake the points leader. On the other hand, competitors who have fallen out of championship contention have little or nothing to lose by going for the race win. Adding to the competitive cocktail is the fact that the race typically attracts an enhanced field (in this year’s case 53 cars) to do battle on the 2.54-mile, 12-turn Michelin Raceway layout - or approximately 21 cars per mile.

 

“It’s always a fascinating race,” says Matt Bell, Fidani’s co-driver in the No. 13 AWA Corvette Z06 GT3.R. “It’s always multiple championship battles up for grabs, which probably makes this, in my opinion, the hardest sports car race in the world when you throw in the traffic, the length of the track and the amount of cars there with everything on the line.”

 

Adding to the challenges is the fact that track conditions are constantly changing throughout a race that starts at 12:10 p.m. ET and ends at 10:10 p.m. Optimizing for the night may be a better strategy than nailing the setup for the heat of the day. 

“The night at Petit is incredibly important in terms of the race result,” says Alexander Sims, driver of No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R. “It’s sometimes the case that, depending on the car … you have to make a compromise and put up with a difficult car in the day so that it’s there for you at night. And that sometimes is a pretty bold call to make, honestly, to have to endure five, six hours of racing where you don’t have the pace, to trust that it’s going to come good in the end. And obviously sometimes it would and sometimes it wouldn’t.” 

 

But you have to still be around when night falls in order to take advantage of a car that’s at its best in the cool of the evening.

 

“It’s a challenge at the beginning,” says Albert Costa, driver of the No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3. “You survive the first, I don’t know, four hours in the sun and then you prepare all weekend for the night and this is going to be the most important thing. But you also need to keep the car alive . . . so I think the word I would describe is survive, just survive.” 

 

Testing the Limits


 

IMSA’s Road America weekend saw nearly as many yellow caution flags on track as yellow penalty flags in an NFL football game. The last two weekends have seen a shift from race control towards enhancing the cleanliness of driving standards. Although there has still been a flurry of penalties – more than 30 drive-throughs were assessed at the six-hour TireRack.com Battle On The Bricks – the driving standards have improved.

At least according to Ollie Millroy, driver of the No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 (center, in-between co-drivers Brendan Iribe and Frederik Schandorff).

 

“All that they’re saying is race each other guys, go side-by-side a whole lap if you like, just race like adults,” he said. “I really don’t think that they’re being unreasonable. The rules are pretty clear. We all know what they’re expecting. 

 

“I actually said to Beaux (Barfield) the race director after Indy that I just thought that generally, even between the different classes as well, the driving standards were just so much better the last two races. We were on the receiving end of one of these new harsh penalties at VIR . . . so it was painful, and we were obviously not happy about it; it’s not what you’re used to in IMSA. But I think generally the message is definitely getting across to all of us as drivers what they’re expecting to see in race control.”

 

“Honestly I’m quite happy with it,” Sims added. “I think the rules are there to be respected . . . Everybody can make mistakes. That happens. But there has certainly been a lot of racing in the past that was not mistakes. It was people knowingly driving other people off the track and, yeah, going beyond what I think the spirit of the racing should be. I think we can all probably agree that Road America was too out of hand. And so I think the right reaction has happened.”


 

As ever, timing is everything if or more likely when push comes to shove on Saturday. Have an issue or make a mistake early, and there’s time to recover. Have it late, and it may deprive you of some season-long hardware. 


 

The pursuit of all the titles comes Saturday at noon ET on NBC, with streaming via Peacock, IMSA.TV and IMSA’s Official YouTube channel.

 


 

 

 

 

Championship Tale of the Tape – 2025 Motul Petit Le Mans

GTD PRO Closest With LMP2, GTP and GTD Titles Also Up For Grabs


 

October 8, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Official Points


 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Here’s a breakdown of the four IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship class-clinching situations heading into Motul Petit Le Mans from Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. The 2025 season finale airs at noon ET, Saturday, October 11 on NBC with flag-to-flag streaming via Peacock, IMSA.TV and IMSA’s Official YouTube channel internationally.  

 

Grand Touring Prototype (GTP)

 

  1. Matt Campbell/Mathieu Jaminet, No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963, 2,582 points
  2. Nick Tandy/Felipe Nasr, No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963, 2,451 (-131)
  3. Philipp Eng/Dries Vanthoor, No. 24 BMW M Team RLL BMW M Hybrid V8, 2,437 (-145)


 

The maximum points swing available in a 12-car grid is 186 points (maximum 385 for first with 35 in qualifying and 350 in the race, minimum is 199 with 19 in qualifying and 180 in the race). 


 

A top-seven finish clinches the title for Campbell and Jaminet regardless of Tandy and Nasr’s achievements. Even if Tandy and Nasr delivered a perfect points weekend, their maximum achievable is 2,836 points. Campbell and Jaminet could qualify last and finish seventh to wrap the title. 


 

The odds are more remote for Eng and Vanthoor, with a maximum achievable of 2,822 points. To have any chance at the title, the No. 24 team will need to win the race. And in that instance, even if Campbell and Jaminet qualified last, the No. 6 drivers could clinch with an eighth-place finish. 


 

With the 131 and 145-point gaps, respectively, the No. 6 car would need to finish 10th or worse for the race swing to be made up, depending on qualifying points the No. 7 and No. 24 cars achieve. 


 

The GTP manufacturer title is much closer, with Porsche only seven points clear of Acura. Acura could make up that deficit in qualifying on its own. Whichever manufacturer places its first car higher wins this title.

 

Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2)

 

  1. PJ Hyett/Dane Cameron, No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07, 1,972 points
  2. Daniel Goldburg, No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA LMP2 07, 1,887 (-85)


 

AO Racing can win titles in two different WeatherTech Championship classes in as many years, if Hyett and Cameron secure the LMP2 crown. A podium finish would ensure it. Goldburg’s maximum achievable is 2,272 points, which would come up short of any number scored by Hyett and Cameron if they’re on the podium come Saturday night. 

 

Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO)

 

  1. Antonio Garcia/Alexander Sims, No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports, 2,942 points
  2. Albert Costa, No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3, 2,924 (-18)


 

The most successful GT team of the millennium, Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports, is seeking its first GTD PRO crown against a team in its first full season in the top GT class. DragonSpeed, in partnership with longtime Ferrari stalwarts Risi Competizione, has produced one of the most surprising but compelling championship challenges.


 

The points situation is simple. More likely than not, whichever car finishes ahead on track will emerge as champion. 


 

Chevrolet holds a 46-point lead over Ferrari, 62-point lead over Ford and 80-point lead over BMW among manufacturers. This is a little more solid, but not guaranteed, for Chevrolet.

 

Grand Touring Daytona (GTD)

 

  1. Russell Ward/Philip Ellis, No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3, 2,817 points
  2. Casper Stevenson, No. 27 Heart of Racing Team Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo, 2,593 (-224)
  3. Kenton Koch, No. 023 Triarsi Competizione Ferrari 296 GT3, 2,564 (-253)


 

Similar to 2024, Ward and Ellis are in a near-assured title state in GTD. Even if Stevenson secures his maximum points potential of 2,978, all Ward and Ellis would need to do is finish 16th among the 19 GTD cars entered to ensure enough points even if they qualified near or at the back of the class. 


 

Mercedes-AMG holds a comfortable 114-point lead among manufacturers, ahead of Ferrari.

 

IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup


 

Points for the championship earned at the four-, eight-and 10-hour marks of the race will define the Michelin Endurance Cup winners. Current leaders are the No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963 in GTP, No. 43 Inter Europol Competition ORECA in LMP2, the No. 1 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO in GTD PRO, and the No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 in GTD. PMR will wrap GTD PRO with either of its two cars, while the other three classes could flip. 

 

Trueman / Akin Award


 

The Jim Trueman Award in LMP2 will simply mirror the LMP2 championship standings, where Hyett leads Goldburg by 85 points. And the Bob Akin Award in GTD is simple too; whichever of Orey Fidani’s No. 13 AWA Corvette Z06 GT3.R or Brendan Iribe’s No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 finishes ahead wins to break that tie. 


 

IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup Set for Showdown at Motul Petit Le Mans

Battles in GTP, GTD Closest Among the Four Classes


 

October 7, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

IMEC Points


 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Through the first four rounds of the 2025 IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup, several teams and manufacturers have maximized their in-race points-scoring opportunities versus their race-end results. Heading into Motul Petit Le Mans to cap off the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season, two of the four class titles are fairly tight.


 

The IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup serves as a championship-within-a-championship at the series’ five-longest races. These five (Rolex 24 At Daytona, Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring, Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen, TireRack.com Battle on the Bricks and Motul Petit Le Mans) add up to 58 total hours of racing, with points awarded at one or more in-race intervals before the finish.


 

At Motul Petit Le Mans, points are awarded at the four-, eight- and 10-hour marks. The top three in each class get five, four and three points at the intervals with all others scoring two. A maximum swing of nine points is possible from the most (15) to least (six) in-race. 


 

Porsche vs. Acura in GTP


 

In Grand Touring Prototype (GTP), Porsche Penske Motorsport’s No. 7 Porsche 963 used wins at the first two rounds in Daytona and Sebring and maximum points at five of the seven intervals in these two rounds to build a significant lead. But the gap has shrunk leaving Indianapolis Motor Speedway. 


 

After tough Watkins Glen and Indianapolis races, Felipe Nasr and Nick Tandy in the No. 7 Porsche still hold a three-point lead (39-36) over the No. 60 Acura Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb-Agajanian pair of Colin Braun and Tom Blomqvist in their Acura ARX-06. Indianapolis winners Cadillac Whelen with the trio of Jack Aitken, Earl Bamber and Frederik Vesti in their No. 31 Cadillac V-Series R. sit third, six points back. Among manufacturers, Porsche leads Acura by two, and Cadillac by five (45, 43, 40).


 

Three Cars Vying for LMP2 Crown

Strong Indianapolis races for winners TDS Racing, last year’s full season champions Inter Europol Competition and two-race winners in 2025, United Autosports USA, have positioned these three ORECA LMP2 07 entries to be in contention for the Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) Michelin Endurance Cup title.


 

Tom Dillmann and Bijoy Garg lead the way in their No. 43 Inter Europol ORECA by five points over Steven Thomas, Mikkel Jensen and Hunter McElrea in the No. 11 TDS ORECA and Daniel Goldburg, Paul Di Resta and Rasmus Lindh in the No. 22 United ORECA (37-32). 


 

Four other teams – CrowdStrike Racing by APR, Riley, AO Racing and Tower Motorsports – remain mathematically alive but need huge individual races and each of the top three to stumble, particularly the No. 43 car, to have any chance of a last-race comeback. 


 

Paul Miller Racing BMWs Well-Positioned in GTD PRO


 

Paul Miller Racing will add to its Michelin Endurance Cup success in Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO), having won that title in its first year in the class in 2024. Leaving Indianapolis, its two BMW M4 GT3 EVOs sit first and second in points with the No. 1 trio of Madison Snow, Neil Verhagen and Connor De Phillippi four points clear of teammates Dan Harper and Max Hesse in the No. 48 car (41-37). The only question is which car will end on top.


 

AO Racing’s Laurin Heinrich and Klaus Bachler are best of the rest in third in their No. 77 Porsche 911 GT3 R, but 10 adrift of the No. 1 BMW heading into Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta and therefore unable to make up the maximum nine-point swing. BMW has a 16-point lead over Porsche in manufacturers (50-34) and has wrapped the GTD PRO manufacturer’s title in the Michelin Endurance Cup.  


 

Inception Surges to GTD Lead


 

It’s anyone’s guess who will win the Michelin Endurance Cup title in Grand Touring Daytona (GTD), but Inception Racing’s win with Brendan Iribe, Frederik Schandorff and Ollie Millroy coupled with issues for its two closest rivals in Indianapolis gave them a good shot. 


 

The No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 now leads the No. 21 Af Corse Ferrari 296 GT3 and the No. 27 Heart of Racing Team Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo by three points (34-31) with Wright Motorsports within a shout in fourth at four points back with its No. 120 Porsche 911 GT3 R. Several others down to Winward Racing and Triarsi Competizione in eighth and ninth have remote mathematical paths available. 


 

Ferrari’s success in this class has netted it the GTD manufacturer’s title in the Michelin Endurance Cup, with a 15-point gap over both Porsche and Aston Martin.


 

The race is live on NBC at noon ET, Saturday, Oct. 11. Flag-to-flag streaming starts at noon ET via Peacock and internationally on IMSA.TV and IMSA’s Official YouTube channel. 

 

 


Tight Battle for 2025 Jim Trueman and Bob Akin Awards Before Motul Petit Le Mans

Hyett Tops LMP2 Field while Fidani, Iribe Tied Among GTD Bronze-Rated Entries


 

October 8, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Trueman/Akin Points


 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. The annual battle for IMSA’s Jim Trueman and Bob Akin Awards, earned by the top-scoring full-season Bronze-rated drivers in Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) and Grand Touring Daytona (GTD), respectively, is reaching a fever pitch heading into the final race of the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season, Motul Petit Le Mans. The recipients earn an automatic invitation to the 24 Hours of Le Mans next June as IMSA rewards those drivers who make their primary living outside the cockpit. 


 

AO Racing’s PJ Hyett asserted himself atop the LMP2 and Jim Trueman Award standings at Road America, while the last two Bob Akin Award winners in GTD, Brendan Iribe and Orey Fidani, are tied for the top spot.

 

Hyett’s Summer Surge Moves Him atop Jim Trueman Award Standings

Hyett and AO Racing raced this year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans courtesy of their success in another series, where they won the European Le Mans Series championship as part of a partnership effort with TF Sport. Hyett stole the march on the Jim Trueman Award with his second straight WeatherTech Championship LMP2 win in his No. 99 ORECA LMP2 07 at Road America co-driving with Dane Cameron, building on the summer swing of momentum the team has had in multiple series and on multiple continents.


 

Hyett holds an 85-point advantage, 1,972 to 1,887 over Daniel Goldburg in the No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA, heading to Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. Twelve cars are entered in the LMP2 for the season finale, which opens a potential 160-point in-race swing between finishing first (350 points) and 12th (190 points). That swing could expand or shrink based on qualifying points earned – which range from 35 to 19 in a 12-car grid – as well. 


 

Goldburg was particularly unlucky to finish last in an LMP2 season-high 14-car grid at Road America, which created a 180-point swing from Hyett in first to Goldburg in 14th. Nonetheless, with two wins in the first three IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup races this season, Goldburg and teammates Paul Di Resta and Rasmus Lindh will need to erase Hyett’s gap in pursuit of the Jim Trueman Award for Goldburg in 2025.


 

Fidani, Iribe Tied Heading to Atlanta

In GTD, AWA won the season-opening Rolex 24 At Daytona coupled with Inception Racing finishing 18th in class, and seventh among the 10 cars with a Bronze-rated designation. That put AWA in strong position to repeat its win of the Bob Akin Award in 2025 and gave Orey Fidani a first race gap of 110 points to Brendan Iribe in these standings. 


 

That shrunk to a 30-point gap with Fidani ahead of Iribe leaving the Michelin GT Challenge at VIRginia International Raceway and then was erased entirely when Iribe scored a breakthrough first WeatherTech Championship win at the TireRack.com Battle On The Bricks at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway with Frederik Schandorff and Ollie Millroy in the No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3. 


 

Iribe has been the top scoring Bronze-rated entry on five occasions to Fidani’s three this season, but Fidani’s higher-scoring finishes have come on Iribe’s off days to create the tie. As the Indianapolis winner explained post-race, the showdown will be one to watch.


 

“I think it all comes down to the last race, just how IMSA and the fans want it,” Iribe said. “Not exactly how we want it, but we'll take it, and it'll be exciting. Can't wait for Petit.”

Fidani’s No. 13 AWA Corvette Z06 GT3.R posted its best finish since the Rolex 24 ranking sixth among all GTD cars at Indianapolis, although a higher potential finish was derailed by a late-race drive-through penalty assessed for blocking.


 

The car count means everything to the Bob Akin Award in GTD because Iribe and Fidani have been the only two full-season entrants. That means whichever driver finishes ahead of the other gains maximum points if it’s only those two scoring points. 


 

Extra Bronze-rated entries have run Michelin Endurance Cup races. There were 10 Bronze-rated entries at the Rolex 24 At Daytona, seven at the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring and six at the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen and four in Indianapolis. Six are currently entered for Motul Petit Le Mans.


 

Iribe won the Bob Akin Award in 2023 with Fidani doing so in 2024. Both have been able to take their teams to Le Mans, with Inception going in 2024 and AWA – in its Canadian-liveried Corvette – doing so this year. 


 

Only one of the two is guaranteed to do so in 2026, and the subplot of which of the No. 13 Corvette or No. 70 Ferrari finishes ahead at Road Atlanta is yet another angle to watch in the final race of the WeatherTech Championship season. 

 

 


 

Entry List Notebook – IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta

Championship Leaders on the Doorstep of Clinching Titles on Motul Petit Le Mans Weekend


 

October 8, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Entry List


 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Courtesy of season-long success, the Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta rounds as part of the Motul Petit Le Mans weekend figure to be coronations rather than challenges for the IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge championship leaders.


 

Valentino Catalano (Le Mans Prototype 3, P3), Adam Adelson (Grand Touring Daytona X, GTDX) and Kiko Porto (Grand Sport X, GSX) created their championship-contending credentials at the season-opening doubleheader Roar Before the Rolex 24 weekend at Daytona International Speedway in January. Their accolades achieved throughout the year will likely build to a crescendo on Thursday afternoon in the first of two 45-minute races at Michelin Raceway.


 

Catalano (370-point lead) and Porto (430-point lead) can clinch on Thursday provided they maintain at least 350-point gaps leaving the first race of the event. Adelson can’t clinch on Thursday as he enters with only a 210-point lead, but he’ll be able to do so on Friday so long as he starts as his closest rival won’t be able to put enough cars in between to offset the gap. 


 

Bronze Cup leaders in the three categories are also similarly assured heading into Michelin Raceway. Brian Thienes has the P3 Bronze title wrapped already, with Samantha Tan 220 points ahead in GTDX and Ian Porter 190 points clear in GSX. 


 

In P3, Catalano has taken to his first full American racing season in style. The 19-year-old Italian has won seven of 10 races in the No. 30 Gebhardt Intralogistics Motorsports Duqueine D08, culminating with a three-race sweep at VIRginia International Raceway.


 

“They’ve done such a good job. We came to the championship in Daytona and I had a clean sweep; the cars were prepared perfectly there,” he said. “The team has a history in IMSA and America (in the mid-1980s), so it’s good to do it in modern times.” 


 

The P3 grid expands to eight cars at Michelin Raceway with several additions. Gebhardt expands to three cars with Oscar Tunjo returning after missing VIR due to a schedule conflict, with his replacement Alexzander Kristiansson slotting over from the No. 31 to a freshly numbered No. 1 Duqueine D08. Toney Driver Development returns for the first time since Daytona with its No. 80 Ligier JS P320 and Jon Hirshberg, Forte Racing’s second driver, continues for a second straight weekend in his No. 86 Ligier. FastMD Racing with Remstar, last year’s P3 Team Champions, are also back with their No. 87 Duqueine D08.


 

GTDX saw the championship complexion change at VIR as Adelson’s closest title rival, AJ Muss, missed the weekend. That left Adelson in his No. 24 Wright Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) to contend with Jake Walker in his No. 6 Turner Motorsport BMW M4 GT3 for the weekend. Walker continued his run of form with three wins to secure seven in the last eight races. Tan’s No. 38 ST Racing BMW M4 GT3 and Kyle Washington’s No. 32 GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) complete the class. 


 

Walker had a challenging Daytona where he only scored 220 points from the two-race weekend while Adelson scored a maximum 700 with two wins. That 480-point gap between Adelson and Walker has closed to 210 now, but realistically it had been an Adelson and Muss title battle all season with Muss’ run of seven podiums in as many races. 


 

For Adelson, losing his primary season-long championship rival was bittersweet heading into VIR, even as he praised Walker’s race craft as a rival. 


 

“First of all, I have a lot of respect for AJ – he’s a great competitor and sportsman,” Adelson said. “He was new to GT3 racing and showed incredible talent and pace. He was my rival. I want to fight for it. I don’t want an easier path than fighting tooth-and-nail.”  


 

Adelson said: “Jake and I are very neck-and-neck competitors. Now that I am battling him a bit, it’s great racing wheel-to-wheel with someone like that.” 


 

Porto has been one of three breakout stars in GSX all season, along with RAFA Racing teammate Porter and BSI Racing’s Steven Clemons. In three separate Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2 cars, this trio has provided exciting, close and clean racing for most of the year to win the first 10 races among them. Porto has seven wins, Clemons two and Porter one.


 

Porto, in his No. 8 RAFA Racing Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2, hasn’t always been the fastest sometimes fighting through in-race pace challenges, but the Brazilian has praised his team’s work ethic and consistency to ensure he’s been up front. After his seven wins, he also has two runner-up finishes and his only issue came back in March at Circuit of The Americas. He’s established himself as a driver to watch in the future and is poised for bigger things within the IMSA paddock. 


 

“The third race at VIR we finally went a step ahead in terms of balance of the car. It’s been good to learn so much about the Supra, and it’s been a good teaching moment. It’s been a while since I’ve been to Atlanta, so I’m looking forward to end the year on a high,” Porto said.


 

The GSX grid has consistently been the biggest in the VP Racing Challenge this season and that stays true again for the Michelin Raceway finale with 13 cars, including Kingpin Racing with two cars and series newcomers Thunder Bunny Racing with the No. 21 BMW M4 GT4 EVO. 


 

VP Racing Challenge teams practice and qualify on Wednesday. The two races are Thursday at 1:05 p.m. ET and Friday at 8:30 a.m. 


 

Fast Facts

IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge

Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta – Braselton, Georgia

October 8-10, 2025


 

Race Days/Times: Thursday, Oct. 9, 1:05 p.m. ET, Friday, Oct. 10, 8:30 a.m. ET

Peacock Streaming Coverage: LIVE – Flag-to-flag beginning at 1:00 p.m. Thursday, 8:25 a.m. Friday (available outside the U.S. on IMSA.tv and IMSA’s Official YouTube channel)

Circuit Type: 2.54-mile, 12-turn road course

Classes Competing: Le Mans Prototype 3 (P3), Grand Touring Daytona X (GTDX), Grand Sport X (GSX)

Race Lengths: 45 minutes


 

VP Racing SportsCar Challenge Track Records

  • P3: Jagger Jones, Duqueine D08, 1:16.522 / 119.494 mph, October 2024 (Qualifying)
  • GSX: Luca Mars, Ford Mustang GT4, 1:26.588 / 105.603 mph, October 2024 (Qualifying)


 

2024 VP Racing SportsCar Challenge Race 1 Winners:

  • P3: Steven Aghakhani, No. 6 MLT Motorsports Ligier JS P320
  • GSX: Luca Mars, No. 59 KOHR Motorsports Ford Mustang GT4


 

2024 VP Racing SportsCar Challenge Race 2 Winners:

  • P3: Jagger Jones, No. 87 FastMD Racing with Remstar Duqueine D08
  • GSX: Tyler Hoffman, No. 9 Kingpin Racing Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO

 


 

 

 

Entry List Notebook – IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge Fox Factory 120

Championship Battles Tight in Both GS, TCR Heading to Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta 


 

October 6, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Entry List

 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Respective three-way title tilts in both classes headline what should be another frantic finale to the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge season, the Fox Factory 120 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. Just 120 points cover the top three contenders in Grand Sport (GS), while only 70 points do so in Touring Car (TCR).


 

In GS, Jan Heylen and Luca Mars have paced the field most of the season in their No. 28 Porsche 718 GT4 RS CS with a season-high three wins. But three finishes of ninth or worse in the last four races has seen a once unassailable looking lead shrink, rapidly. They’re 100 clear of Jeff Westphal and Sean McAlister in the No. 39 CarBahn by Peregrine racing BMW M4 GT4 EVO, and 120 ahead of Jenson Altzman in the No. 13 McCumbee McAleer Racing by Aerosport Ford Mustang GT4.


 

A top-five finish would assure Heylen and Mars the title. But if they stumble, the door is wide open. Both Heylen (2021 GS) and Westphal (2019 GS) are past Michelin Pilot Challenge champions and seek their second series championships. 


 

In TCR, the battle is much closer. Karl Wittmer and LP Montour took the points lead for the first time in their No. 93 MMG Honda Civic FL5 TCR, literally doing so on the final lap of the last race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway when Wittmer made a pass to get onto the podium. They’re 10 points clear of Harry Gottsacker in the lead No. 98 Bryan Herta Autosport w/Curb-Agajanian Hyundai Elantra N TCR, a car he shares with Mason Filippi. The second BHA title contender – the No. 76 of Preston Brown and Denis Dupont – sits third, 70 points back.


 

In nearly any case, whichever of the No. 93 Honda or No. 98 Hyundai finishes ahead on the road will win the title. The No. 76 Hyundai would need to finish multiple spots ahead of both cars to make up the difference. 


 

In the not-unlikely scenario of a tie, the tiebreaker would go to the No. 93 Honda, and even that takes some work to get there.


 

Entering Michelin Raceway, the No. 93 Honda, No. 98 Hyundai and No. 76 Hyundai all have two wins and one runner-up finish this season. The No. 93 Honda leads with three third-place finishes to the No. 98’s one and No. 76’s zero. 


 

The 43 cars on the entry list are split 27 GS and 16 TCR to tie the season-high entry achieved at the season-opening BMW M Endurance Challenge At Daytona. Of note, the VIRginia International Raceway-winning No. 31 RVA Graphics Motorsports by Speed Syndicate Audi RS3 LMS TCR resumes competition after skipping Indianapolis. 


 

Michelin Pilot Challenge teams practice for one hour on Wednesday, one hour Thursday, qualify late Thursday afternoon before racing on Friday at 12:40 p.m. ET. The race streams on Peacock and live, globally on IMSA YouTube ad-free courtesy of Michelin. 


 

Fast Facts

Fox Factory 120

Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta – Braselton, Georgia 

October 8-10, 2025


 

Race Day/Time: Friday, Oct. 10, 12:40 p.m. ET

Live Streaming Coverage: LIVE – Flag-to-flag beginning at 12:40 p.m. ET, Peacock in the U.S., globally on IMSA.tv and IMSA YouTube ad-free courtesy of Michelin

Circuit Type: 2.54-mile, 12-turn road course

Classes Competing: Grand Sport (GS), Touring Car (TCR)

Race Length: Two hours

 

Michelin Pilot Challenge Track Records

  • GS: Akhil Rabindra, Aston Martin Vantage GT4, 1:25.715 / 106.678 mph, October 2019 (Qualifying)
  • TCR: Bryson Morris, Hyundai Elantra N TCR, 1:26.962 / 105.149 mph, October 2024 (Qualifying)


 

2024 Fox Factory 120 Winners

  • GS: Michael McCarthy/Riley Dickinson, No. 91 KellyMoss with Riley Porsche 718 GT4 RS CS
  • TCR: Mark Wilkins/Mason Filippi, No. 98 Bryan Herta Autosport with Curb-Agajanian Hyundai Elantra N TCR

 

Storylines

  • GS With Three Title Contenders: The No. 28 RS1 Porsche 718 GT4 RS CS shared by Jan Heylen and Luca Mars has had a roller coaster run to lead the GS points by 90 leaving Road America, 240 leaving VIR and now just 100 leaving Indianapolis. The No. 39 CarBahn by Peregrine racing BMW M4 GT4 EVO of Jeff Westphal and Sean McAlister have a shot 100 back, with Jenson Altzman also in with a shot 120 back in third in his No. 13 McCumbee McAleer Racing with AEROSPORT Ford Mustang GT4. A top five for the No. 28 car clinches the GS championship.
  • TCR Three-Way Fight, Too: Just 10 points, one position, separates the No. 93 MMG Honda Civic FL5 TCR of Karl Wittmer and LP Montour from the No. 98 Bryan Herta Autosport w/Curb-Agajanian Hyundai Elantra N TCR of Harry Gottsacker. A second BHA Hyundai, the No. 76 of Denis Dupont and Preston Brown, sits 70 back of the lead in third and also with a good shot. 
  • Manufacturer Title Battle: Hyundai has already clinched its sixth consecutive TCR manufacturer championship before Friday’s race. Porsche leads BMW by just 20 and Ford 50 in GS, so one of those three will take home that title.


 

Who’s Hot? 

  • No. 27 Auto Technic and 39 CarBahn BMW M4 GT4 EVOs: It may be too little too late for both in the GS title fight, but combined, these two GS entries have both finished in the top eight every race but one starting at Sebring. 
  • No. 93 MMG Honda Civic FL5 TCR: The TCR title leaders have finished in the top four in six straight races. They’ll need one more strong result to get their title pursuit over the finish line. 


 

Who’s Good Here?

  • Filippi and Wilkins: Among the Herta Hyundai success at this track, Mason Filippi and Mark Wilkins have had the most driving success with three wins apiece. Filippi’s aim this race is to secure the 2025 TCR title for teammate Harry Gottsacker and the rest of the No. 98 crew. 
  • Turner Motorsport: One of two other teams in the field with multiple wins here (Motorsports In Action), Turner also claimed its most recent Michelin Pilot Challenge GS title here in 2023 on a day the team didn’t win the race. 


 

Previous Fox Factory 120 Winners in 2025 Field (12)

·       Mason Filippi (3): TCR – 2020 (second race), 2023, 2024

·       Mark Wilkins (3): TCR – 2019, 2023, 2024

·       Billy Johnson (2): GS – 2014, 2016 

·       Frank DePew (1): GS – 2020 (first race)

·       Ryan Eversley (1): ST – 2014 

·       Robby Foley (1): GS – 2020 (second race)

·       Jan Heylen (1): GS – 2021 

·       Paul Holton (1): ST – 2015 

·       Tim Lewis (1): TCR – 2021 

·       Robin Liddell (1): GS – 2020 (first race) 

·       Dillon Machavern (1): GS – 2022 

·       Karl Wittmer (1): TCR - 2022 

 

Previous Fox Factory 120 Pole Winners in 2025 Field (5)

·       Paul Holton (3): GS – 2017, 2018, 2024

·       Harry Gottsacker (1): TCR – 2020 (first race) 

·       Dillon Machavern (1): GS – 2022 

·       Chris Miller (1): TCR – 2023 

·       Bryson Morris (1): TCR – 2024 

 

Previous Fox Factory 120 Winning Teams in 2025 Field (6)

·       Bryan Herta Autosport (5): TCR – 2019, 2020 (first race), 2020 (second race), 2023, 2024 

·       Turner Motorsport (2): GS – 2020 (first race), 2022

·       KMW Motorsports with TMR Engineering (1): TCR – 2021 

·       Rebel Rock Racing (1): GS – 2020 (first race)

·       RS1 (1): ST – 2016 

·       Victor Gonzalez Racing Team (1): TCR – 2022 


 

Previous Fox Factory 120 Winning Manufacturers in 2025 Field (7)

·       BMW – 5

·       Hyundai – 5

·       Ford – 3

·       Porsche – 3

·       Audi – 2

·       Honda – 2

·       McLaren – 2

 


Tune In Sunday, Oct. 5, for Special NBC and Peacock 2025 IMSA Championship Preview

Hour-Long Show Dedicated to WeatherTech Championship Season Finale Airs at 3 p.m. ET


 

October 2, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – NBC Sports will preview the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season finale, Motul Petit Le Mans, with a special one-hour show on Sunday, Oct. 5 at 3 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock.


 

The second of two hour-long IMSA specials by NBC Sports in 2025 will preview the championship contenders and key storylines to watch for at the always exciting 10-hour season finale at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.


 

NBC sports car experts and commentators Brian Till and Calvin Fish will host the special, with additional content from NBC's Leigh Diffey and interviews conducted by NBC’s Matt Yocum – also the host of the IMSA Endurance Hour podcast, and a fan feature from Chris Wilner. The show is developed in coordination with NASCAR Productions.  


 

The network show will air the Sunday before Motul Petit Le Mans, which kicks off live on network NBC at noon ET on Saturday, Oct. 11. Peacock will stream the full race flag-to-flag (in the U.S.) with additional streaming via IMSA.TV and IMSA’s Official YouTube channel (internationally). 


 

This will cap NBC Sports’ seventh season of IMSA coverage, with details to come on the new season coverage plans prior to the 2026 Rolex 24 At Daytona, Jan. 21-25. Tickets for Motul Petit Le Mans are available at michelinracewayroadatlanta.com.

 


 

Entry List Notebook – Motul Petit Le Mans

Field of 53 Set for 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship Season Finale


 

October 1, 2025

By Tony DiZinno

IMSA Wire Service

Entry List (Click Here)

 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The stage is set for the end of the 2025 IMSA season with the always exciting Motul Petit Le Mans from Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. Both the full-season IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and five-round IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup wrap up their campaigns.


 

The Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) class championship battle is the tightest among the four WeatherTech Championship classes with just 18 points – one or two positions on track – separating the top two contenders. But both Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) and Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) could easily flip first and second. The Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) gap between first and second is the largest.


 

As in Indianapolis, a field of 50-plus cars – 53 in total split among 12 GTP, 12 LMP2, 10 GTD PRO and 19 GTD entries – will be looking for clean track space and working to avoid pitfalls at the historic but condensed 2.54-mile, 12-turn Michelin Raceway layout.


 

Here’s what you need to know ahead of the season finale:


 

Fast Facts

Motul Petit Le Mans

Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta – Braselton, Georgia

October 8-11, 2025


 

Race Day/Time: Saturday, October 11 – 12:10 p.m. ET

NBC Network Coverage: LIVE – Noon-3 p.m.

Peacock Streaming Coverage: LIVE – Flag-to-flag beginning at noon in the U.S.; International feed coverage available on IMSA.tv and IMSA Official YouTube channel (outside the U.S.)

Live Qualifying Stream: Friday, October 10 – 3:15-4:35 p.m. ET on Peacock (in the U.S.) and IMSA.tv and IMSA Official YouTube channel (globally)

IMSA Radio: Select sessions live on IMSA.com and RadioLeMans.com; SiriusXM live race coverage begins at Noon Saturday, October 11 (XM 206, Web/App 996)

Circuit Type: 2.54-mile, 12-turn road course

Classes Competing: Grand Touring Prototype (GTP), Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO), Grand Touring Daytona (GTD)

Race Length: Ten hours


 

Track Social Media: 

Event Hashtags: #IMSA, #MotulPetitLeMans


 

WeatherTech Championship Track Records

  • GTP: Jack Aitken, Cadillac V-Series.R, 1:09.639 / 131.505 mph, October 2024 (DPi track record: Dane Cameron, Acura ARX-05, 1:08.412 / 133.660 mph, October 2020)
  • LMP2: Colin Braun, ORECA LMP2 07, 1:10.634 / 129.455 mph, October 2020
  • GTD PRO: Laurin Heinrich, Porsche 911 GT3 R (992), 1:17.881 / 117.409 mph, October 2024
  • GTD: Scott Andrews, Mercedes-AMG GT3, 1:18.281 / 116.809 mph, October 2024

 

2024 Motul Petit Le Mans Winners:

  • GTP: Sebastien Bourdais/Renger van der Zande/Scott Dixon, No. 01 Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-Series.R
  • LMP2: Steven Thomas/Mikkel Jensen/Hunter McElrea, No. 11 TDS Racing ORECA LMP2 07
  • GTD PRO: Mirko Bortolotti/Jordan Pepper/Franck Perera, No. 19 Iron Lynx Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo2
  • GTD: Albert Costa/Manny Franco/Cedric Sbirrazzuoli, No. 34 Conquest Racing Ferrari 296 GT3


 

2024 Motul Petit Le Mans Motul Pole Award Winners:

  • GTP: Jack Aitken, No. 31 Cadillac Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R
  • LMP2: Ben Keating, No. 2 United Autosports USA ORECA LMP2 07
  • GTD PRO: Laurin Heinrich, No. 77 AO Racing Porsche 911 GT3 R (992)
  • GTD: Scott Andrews, No. 80 Lone Star Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3

 

Storylines 

  • GTD PRO Battle Headlines Championship Fights: Among the four WeatherTech Championship classes, the GTD PRO points battle stands out as the closest. The No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R leads the No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3 by 18 points; whichever car finishes ahead, most likely, wins the title. In LMP2, the No. 99 AO Racing ORECA LMP2 07 tops the No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA by 85 points; a podium assures PJ Hyett and Dane Cameron this crown. In GTP, the No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963 leads its teammate car, the No. 7 Porsche, by 131 points in the GTP class. A seventh-place or better result is what the No. 6 car needs to clinch outright. In GTD, all the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 needs to do is avoid a back-of-the-class finish for a repeat. 
  • IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup Up for Grabs: Points for the championship earned at the four-, eight-and 10-hour marks of the race will define the Michelin Endurance Cup winners. Current leaders are the No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963 in GTP, No. 43 Inter Europol Competition ORECA in LMP2, the No. 1 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 EVO in GTD PRO, and the No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 in GTD. PMR will wrap GTD PRO with either of its two cars, while the other three classes could flip. 
  • Trueman-Akin Honors Down to Two Main Contenders Apiece: The Jim Trueman Bronze Cup in LMP2 and Bob Akin Bronze Cup in GTD are both still on the line, with the top Bronze-rated driver in each category earning a prized invitation to race next year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans. PJ Hyett (No. 99 AO Racing ORECA) leads the Trueman standings in LMP2 over Daniel Goldburg (No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA), with Orey Fidani (No. 13 AWA Chevrolet Corvette Z06 GT3.R) and Brendan Iribe (No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3) tied in the Akin standings for GTD.
  • Manufacturer Title Battles: Porsche leads Acura by just seven points in the battle for top manufacturer in GTP. Chevrolet holds a 46-point lead over Ferrari, 62 over Ford and 80 over BMW in GTD PRO. Mercedes-AMG tops Ferrari by 114 in GTD. 


 

Who’s Hot? 

  • No. 10 Cadillac Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac V-Series.R: With the spread of the last four GTP races over five months, it’s now worth noting the No. 10 Cadillac is the only car with three podiums in those four races. The team looks for its first 2025 win with either this car or the sister No. 40 this weekend.
  • No. 81 DragonSpeed Ferrari 296 GT3: Five straight podium finishes have positioned this car just 18 points behind the No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.R for the GTD PRO championship.
  • Ferrari in GTD with Multiple Cars: Ferrari has claimed five of the last nine podium finishes over the last three GTD races, including two wins. The No. 021 Triarsi Competizione Ferrari 296 GT3 won at Road America and was second at VIR, the No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari won at Indianapolis, and the No. 34 Conquest Racing Ferrari has two third-place finishes in the last three races. Conquest also enters Motul Petit Le Mans as defending GTD race winners. 

 

Who’s Good Here?

  • Renger van der Zande: A bullish pass for the win past Nick Tandy in 2024 propelled van der Zande to victory in his Cadillac sign-off, for his fourth Motul Petit Le Mans win. The Dutchman is always in contention here and paired with three-time Petit winners Acura Meyer Shank Racing, may be able to add another victory. 
  • Nick Tandy: The driver who van der Zande passed last year is tied with him on four Petit wins. With Tandy and co-driver Felipe Nasr down 131 points heading into the race, Tandy will need a fifth win and some help to overtake his Porsche Penske Motorsport teammates and claim his elusive first IMSA full-season championship. Tandy and Nasr are leading the Michelin Endurance Cup, though, in GTP. 

 

Previous Motul Petit Le Mans Winners in 2025 Field (48)

Nick Tandy (4): GT – 2013; GTLM – 2015, 2018, 2020

Renger van der Zande (4): PC – 2014, P – 2018; DPi – 2020; GTP – 2024 

John Farano (3): LMP2 – 2020, 2021, 2022 

Tom Blomqvist (2): DPi – 2022; GTP – 2023 

Sebastien Bourdais (2): P – 2015; GTP – 2024 

James Calado (2): GTLM – 2016, 2019 

Matt Campbell (2): GTLM – 2020, 2021

Scott Dixon (2): DPi – 2020; GTP – 2024 

Mario Farnbacher (2): GTC – 2012; GTD – 2022 

Neel Jani (2): P1 – 2012, 2013 

Oliver Jarvis (2): DPi – 2021, 2022

Mikkel Jensen (2): LMP2 – 2020, 2024

Spencer Pumpelly (2): GTC – 2013; GTD – 2015

Daniel Serra (2): GTD – 2018; GTLM – 2019 

Madison Snow (2): GTC – 2013; GTD – 2015

Jordan Taylor (2): P – 2014, 2018

Scott Andrews (1): LMP3 – 2021 

Ben Barnicoat (1): GTD PRO – 2022 

Till Bechtolsheimer (1): GTD – 2022 

Matthew Bell (1): GTD – 2014

Colin Braun (1): GTP – 2023 

Josh Burdon (1): LMP3 – 2022 

Albert Costa (1): GTD – 2024 

Chris Cumming (1): PC – 2013 

Roman De Angelis (1): GTD – 2021 

Connor De Phillippi (1): GTD – 2017

Louis Deletraz (1): LMP2 – 2022 

Robby Foley (1): GTD – 2019

Felipe Fraga (1): LMP3 – 2021 

Manny Franco (1): GTD – 2024 

Bijoy Garg (1): LMP3 – 2023 

Misha Goikhberg (1): GTD – 2023 

Ross Gunn (1): GTD – 2021 

Ben Hanley (1): LMP2 – 2023 

Jack Hawksworth (1): GTD PRO – 2022

Mathieu Jaminet (1): GTLM – 2021 

Daniel Juncadella (1): GTD PRO – 2023 

Kyle Kirkwood (1): GTD PRO – 2022 

George Kurtz (1): LMP2 – 2023 

Hunter McElrea (1): LMP2 – 2024 

Christopher Mies (1): GTD – 2017 

Felipe Nasr (1): DPi – 2019 

Alessandro Pier Guidi (1): GTLM – 2019 

Gar Robinson (1): LMP3 – 2021 

Alexander Sims (1): GTLM – 2017 

Ricky Taylor (1): P – 2014

Steven Thomas (1): LMP2 – 2024

Sheldon van der Linde (1): GTD – 2017 


 

Previous Motul Petit Le Mans Pole Winners in 2025 Field (17)

Dane Cameron (3): PC – 2011, 2013; DPi – 2020 

Jack Hawksworth (3): PC – 2014; GTD PRO – 2022, 2023

Neel Jani (2): P1 – 2012, 2013 

Felipe Nasr (2): DPi – 2019, 2021 

Madison Snow (2): GTD – 2021, 2022 

Jack Aitken (1): GTP – 2024 

Scott Andrews (1): GTD – 2024

Earl Bamber (1): GTLM – 2015

Tom Blomqvist (1): DPi – 2022 

James Calado (1): GTLM – 2019 

Louis Deletraz (1): GTP – 2023 

Antonio Garcia (1): GTLM – 2020

Laurin Heinrich (1) GTD PRO – 2024 

Spencer Pumpelly (1): GTC – 2013 

Daniel Serra (1): GTD – 2018 

Nick Tandy (1): GTLM – 2014 

Steven Thomas (1): LMP2 – 2022 


 

Previous Motul Petit Le Mans Winning Teams in 2025 Field (19)

Corvette Racing (8): GTS – 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004; GT1 – 2005, 2007, 2008; GT2 – 2010

PR1 Mathiasen Motorsports (4): PC – 2011, 2015, 2016; LMP2 – 2019

Meyer Shank Racing (3): P – 2016; DPi – 2022; GTP – 2023 

Team Penske (3): P2 – 2006, 2007, 2008 

Tower Motorsports (3): LMP2 – 2020, 2021, 2022

Wayne Taylor Racing (3): P – 2014, 2018; DPi – 2020 

Action Express Racing (2): P – 2015; DPi – 2019

Riley (2): GTD – 2016, LMP3 – 2021 

Af Corse (1): GT – 2011 

BMW M Team RLL (1): GTLM – 2017

Conquest Racing (1): GTD – 2024 

CrowdStrike Racing by APR (1): LMP2 – 2023 

Forte Racing (1): GTD – 2023 

Gradient Racing (1): GTD – 2022 

Heart of Racing Team (1): GTD – 2021 

Paul Miller Racing (1): GTD – 2014

TDS Racing (1): LMP2 – 2024 

Turner Motorsport (1): GTD – 2019

Vasser Sullivan (1): GTD PRO – 2022 


 

Previous Motul Petit Le Mans Winning Manufacturers in 2025 Field (11)

Porsche – 22

Ferrari – 12

Chevrolet – 10

Cadillac – 4

Acura – 3

BMW – 3

Aston Martin – 2

Lamborghini – 2

Ford – 1 

Lexus – 1 

Mercedes-AMG – 1 

 


 

Garcia is a Champion by Any Name

Through Series, Class and Car Evolution, Garcia in Contention Yet Again


 

September 30, 2025

By John Oreovicz

IMSA Wire Service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. The top-level, factory-supported production car-based class in American sports car racing has evolved through several names and technical specifications over the last 15 years. But there’s been one constant:


 

Antonio Garcia.


 

Since the 45-year-old Spaniard joined Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports in 2009, he has excelled in every iteration of the premier GT category, through half a dozen technical regulation changes and three generations of Corvettes. 


 

Garcia won his first championship in the GT class of the American Le Mans Series in 2013 with co-driver Jan Magnussen, the final year before ALMS and IMSA’s TUDOR United SportsCar Championship merged to create the modern-day IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. Teamed with Magnussen from 2014-’19, Garcia won a pair of IMSA Grand Touring Le Mans (GTLM) titles for Corvette Racing in 2017 and ’18 and added two more teamed with Jordan Taylor in 2020 and ’21.


 

Garcia has collected a total of 31 IMSA race wins along with his quintet of championships, including five wins since the most recent GT category realignment that created the Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) class in 2022. But whether with Taylor in ’22 and ’23 or his current co-driver Alexander Sims, Garcia has never achieved a GTD PRO championship.

That could change October 11 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. Sims and Garcia and the No. 3 Corvette Z06 GT3.R will carry a slim 18-point advantage into the season-concluding Motul Petit Le Mans over Albert Costa, who has shared DragonSpeed’s No. 81 Ferrari 296 GT3 for the majority of the year with Giacomo Altoè and endurance driver Davide Rigon. Mike Rockenfeller and Sebastian Priaulx sit third, 169 points back in the No. 64 Ford Multimatic Motorsports Ford Mustang GT3, with an outside shot.


 

Given his record, it’s surprising that Garcia has not won a championship to date during the GTD PRO era. What’s even more remarkable is that while Corvette Racing owns eight victories at Motul Petit Le Mans, Garcia has never tasted the champagne in Georgia – a measure of how challenging and unpredictable the 10-hour day-into-night endurance classic can be.


 

Sims and Garcia achieved their only win of the ’25 season at VIRginia International Raceway with an aggressive undercut pit stop strategy from the Corvette by Pratt Miller team that vaulted them to the front of the field. At that point, they led Costa by 53 points, but the fellow-Spaniard cut the margin to 18 by finishing second ahead of the No. 3 Corvette in fourth at the most recent WeatherTech Championship race at Indianapolis.


 

“The last few races we've been always trying to cover different strategies coming from especially the No. 77 (the defending GTD PRO class champion AO Racing Porsche that lies fourth in this year’s standings) or the No. 81 (Costa),” Garcia said. “When people are probably not feeling very competitive or are not in contention at some point, that’s when they roll the dice and they kind of put everybody under the pressure. 


 

“So, I think we really need to be very prepared on that before the races - knowing what to do and how to react to people,” he continued. “Maybe there’s something we can do, like we did at VIR, be the first one to really make the move. You play it out from there and still go for the win.”

Garcia noted that fighting for a championship has become more difficult since IMSA aligned its GT classes to the worldwide FIA GT3 specification in 2022, mostly eliminating the performance disparity that existed between GTD class cars and slightly faster GTLM entries. GTD and GTD PRO now also use a standardized Michelin tire, whereas in the GTLM era, manufacturers worked with Michelin to develop tires for their specific car.


 

Corvette Racing had been a pure factory program since the early 2000s. However, the shift in regulations required Chevrolet and Pratt Miller Motorsports to create the first-ever Corvette GT3.R for customer sales. Ford Racing quickly followed suit with a GT3 version of the Mustang.


 

“GT1, GT2, GT Le Mans…they were really cool cars to drive, and we had a lot of fun with those cars during those years,” recalled Garcia. “The transition to GT3 was a little bit difficult, or different, because we had a transition year with a bit of a mix until the Z06 GT3.R was able to race. But I don’t see many, many differences, because there is always a really good level of drivers and good teams you’re fighting against.


 

“This is my 16th year with the team, and the approach has always been the same,” he added. “The Corvette Racing mentality has been always the same and the approach to every single race or championship has been the same regardless of the actual class of car we were running. This is just another year we are very happy and proud that we are in contention.”


 

Driving for IMSA’s most established and successful GT-class team, the No. 3 Corvette pairing has the championship-tested mettle going into Motul Petit Le Mans over Costa and the DragonSpeed Ferrari, which are in their first full season of GTD PRO competition. Chevrolet leads Ferrari by 46 points in the GTD PRO Manufacturer’s championship.  


 

“The last two years, we came up short, but we are looking forward to show and use all the knowledge we have to be in this position,” Garcia said. “Let’s see if we have enough of everything - pace, race strategy, and I would say a little bit of luck.


 

“Let's hope everything falls in the right direction and we can come up with another championship.”

 

Cadillac Makes Happy Comeback to Indy Victory Lane

Whelen and Wayne Taylor Racing Deliver an Important 1-2 Result


 

September 30, 2025

By David Phillips

IMSA Wire Service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Heading to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway a fortnight ago, the three Cadillac V-Series.R Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) cars were still looking for their first win of the 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season, putting together a smattering of podium appearances from the 50 hours and 40 minutes of racing so far this season. The No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac finished second at the Chevrolet Sports Car Classic in Detroit and third in the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen, with the sister No. 40 WTR Cadillac finishing second at The Glen.  


 

As for the Action Express Racing team, the No. 31 Cadillac Whelen’s most recent top-three finish came at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca in May of 2024. The team’s last victory was at the 2023 Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring, en route to the team and driver championships while contributing mightily to Cadillac’s manufacturers crown in the inaugural season of the revived GTP category. 


 

That’s not to say that Cadillac hasn’t run up front this year. The Whelen Cadillac led in the latter stages at Sebring and WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, only to drop back in the runs to the checkered flag. Similarly, the No. 10 WTR Cadillac led in Detroit before being muscled aside by the No. 93 Acura Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb-Agajanian Acura ARX-06 with less than five minutes to go. And a win slipped from their grasp when Whelen’s Earl Bamber hit the pits for a splash of energy while leading on the white-flag lap at Watkins Glen.


 

It's an understatement to say that Cadillac was itching for a win in 2025; Action Express all the more so.


 

Suffice to say they all delivered the goods in this month’s TireRack.com Battle On The Bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway as Bamber, Jack Aitken and Frederik Vesti piloted the No. 31 Whelen Cadillac to the brand’s 32nd victory since entering prototype competition in 2017. What’s more, the win marked Action Express' 100th podium in IMSA competition. And for good measure, Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque steered the No. 10 WTR entry to a fighting second place on a day the Cadillacs combined to lead 236 of 243 laps on the IMS road course.


 

Further underlining Cadillac’s Brickyard dominance is the fact that the three V-Series.Rs started the race 1-2-3 after the No. 60 Meyer Shank Acura was moved to the rear of the GTP field when a post-qualifying inspection revealed the provisional pole winner failed to comply with the bodywork tolerance rules.

“I’m super proud of everybody at Cadillac and Whelen,” said Vesti, who scored his first IMSA win. “It’s been a hard year for us so far but to step on the top spot of the podium is massive for us. It’s been a strong, amazing weekend from the Whelen Cadillac. The team worked together, and this result proves that it was a team effort. I led every single lap I was out there and pulled gaps multiple times. I’m proud and happy of the whole team. We’re ready for more.”


 

Despite leading a whopping 210 laps, the No. 31 Whelen Cadillac was not assured of victory until the checkered flag waved, thanks to a valiant drive by WTR’s Ricky Taylor. After an up-and-down race that included an unscheduled pit stop for a punctured tire, the No. 10 Cadillac squad threw a Hail Mary in the closing stages of the race, eschewing a late splash ’n go that would have insured it had plenty of go-juice for the run to the finish. 


 

Far from dooming Taylor to a tedious energy-management stint, the gamble unleashed him to charge from the back of the GTP field secure in the knowledge his efforts might well go for naught if the race went green to the finish. Fortuitously, a full course caution in the final 10 minutes insured the No. 10 Cadillac had the energy to complete the race. And though Aitken and the No. 31 Whelen Cadillac proved uncatchable when the green flag waved for the final time, Taylor’s earlier pass of the No. 60 Acura had all but ensured a Cadillac one-two.

Thus, it was a fully “energized” Taylor who took his place alongside Albuquerque on the podium.


 

“Some days, things don’t fall your way and some days they do,” he said. “It has been a really rough year for us. Today the team did everything right. Filipe drove an amazing stint. Unlucky with the puncture, but I think we took the risks we needed to take with fuel saving and overtaking to get a Cadillac win.” 


 

Although things didn’t work out quite as well for the No. 40 WTR Cadillac. Despite mid-race contact with another competitor, Jordan Taylor and Louis Deletraz were in the hunt for a top-three finish after the final round of pit stops. 


 

In contrast to their WTR compatriots, the No. 40 Cadillac opted to conserve energy in the race’s final stint, knowing it was their best chance at a podium or perhaps even a victory. But the late caution put paid to their plan, and relegated Taylor and Deletraz to eighth place at the checkered flag.   


 

“Very unlucky day on the No. 40,” opined Deletraz. “I think we had a strong race, but we gambled on the race staying green. We were one of the only cars that could have made it to the end. We gambled and it didn’t work. We had the best (plan) to make it on the podium but it just didn’t go our way.


 

“Very happy for the 31 and 10 and the double podium for Cadillac,” he continued. “Today we split strategies and in either situation we would have had a car up front. I think that is the point of this program: working together.”


 

“With just over an hour to go and being a lap and a half down, we knew with fuel Louis might win the race,” Wayne Taylor said. “However, if we got a caution Ricky could end up second. Ricky went to it and helped the Whelen guys with (the lead Acura).”


 

Indeed, having two teams and three cars working together - or at least in complementary fashion - was the key to victory at Indianapolis and may well prove to be a road map for future success. 


 

“Between the Cadillacs we had three different strategies and I think that is what we need to do as a brand going forward,” said Ricky Taylor. “Couldn’t be happier. It was fun to be in the car at the end. Thanks to the team, Cadillac and DEX. Hopefully we can get our first win at Petit Le Mans.”

 


 

Manufacturer Championship Battles Highlight Motul Petit Le Mans

Just Seven Points Cover GTP While Four Brands Vie for GTD PRO Crown


 

September 29, 2025

By John Oreovicz

IMSA Wire Service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Rolling out of the TireRack.com Monterey SportsCar Championship weekend at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca in mid-May, Porsche Penske Motorsport had taken Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) class and overall wins in the first four IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship races of the 2025 season. Porsche held a comfortable 164-point lead over BMW in the GTP Manufacturer’s Championship fight, with Acura trailing in third with a 202-point deficit. 


 

Yet just four races later, heading to the season-ending Motul Petit Le Mans at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, Porsche’s lead among manufacturers has been cut to just seven points. Additionally, Acura has leapfrogged past BMW to be the hybrid-powered object looming larger in the Stuttgart marque’s rear-view mirrors.


 

With only the 10-hour finale at Michelin Raceway to conclude the WeatherTech Championship campaign, Porsche is still the overwhelming favorite to claim the Driver and Team championships in GTP; Mathieu Jaminet and Matt Campbell in the No. 6 Porsche 963 lead their No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport teammates Nick Tandy and Felipe Nasr by 131 points. It would take a collapse on the part of the No. 6 team and a perfect 385-point weekend for the No. 7, or for Philipp Eng and Dries Vanthoor (147 points back) in the No. 24 BMW M Team RLL BMW M Hybrid V8, to steal the crown. Fourth-placed Nick Yelloly and Renger van der Zande (No. 93 Acura Meyer Shank Racing with Curb Agajanian Acura ARX-06) are all but mathematically eliminated at -195 points.


 

For the carmakers bankrolling these multi-million-dollar Prototype programs, the Manufacturer’s Championship is arguably just as important as the championship for drivers – maybe even more. These are the true bragging rights for the brands behind the badges. And even though the circumstances that could lead the pursuing teams to a Driver’s championship are unlikely, the Manufacturer’s title will be the goal at Michelin Raceway for the No. 93 drivers and their Acura Meyer Shank teammates Colin Braun and Tom Blomqvist in the No. 60 Acura.


 

Blomqvist was the fastest qualifier for the most recent WeatherTech Championship race (the TireRack.com Battle on the Bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway) but the No. 60 started at the back of the field due to a technical infraction. He and Braun recovered to a third-place finish.


 

“Obviously a solid result for the guys, especially after starting last,” Blomqvist said. “I’m very happy; it’s still a great result and good for the Manufacturer’s championship.”


 

“We closed the gap in the Manufacturer’s championship, which was super important for everyone on the team,” Braun noted. “Really happy with the P3 result and we'll take this to Petit Le Mans and close out the season on a high note.”

Team Penske President (and Porsche Penske Motorsport Managing Director) Jonathan Diuguid is pleased overall with his team’s season to date and position in the various IMSA championships. He’s also not surprised that the PPM Porsches have a target on their back.


 

“When you’re at the top, everybody’s focused on beating you,” Diuguid remarked. “Our performance has been there. We obviously need to improve on some areas, like top speed and some other things. But there’s an aggressiveness on track, and, to be honest, sometimes I feel like it’s our team racing against eight or nine other cars fully focused on beating us only. That’s what happens when you’re in the championship position that our team is in. 


 

“Mathieu and Matt have done amazing jobs and had good strong finishes to put them in the position where they are now,” he added. “Some of the other competitors, inclusive of the No. 7 car, have had some struggles, whether it’s crashes or those kind of things. But I guess that’s why it’s a championship and it’s supposed to reward your performances over the duration of the season.”


 

As intense as the manufacturer competition is in GTP, there’s a whole other level of pride for the manufacturers that compete in IMSA’s production-based Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) and Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) classes, because these are the ultimate manifestation of premium sports cars that you can buy off a dealer’s lot. 


 

With 18 participating manufacturers across its various racing platforms – 17 of whom have won in at least one IMSA-sanctioned series in 2025 – no racing organization in America exemplifies the longtime automotive mantra of “Win on Sunday, Sell on Monday” more than IMSA.


 

Heading to Michelin Raceway, the scenario in GTD PRO is particularly intriguing, with four manufacturers clustered within 80 points. The margins are thin, especially with the larger fields that come as part of IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup rounds of the WeatherTech Championship.

No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports drivers Antonio Garcia and Alexander Sims lead the GTD PRO Driver’s standings, heavily contributing to Chevrolet’s 46-point lead over Ferrari in the Manufacturer’s chase. Ford (-62 points) and BMW (-80) are the other GTD PRO contestants still holding title-winning hopes.


 

In GTD, the outstanding season-long performance of Russell Ward and Philip Ellis in the No. 57 Winward Racing entry has propelled Mercedes-AMG to a 114-point cushion, with Ferrari again holding second. Aston Martin is a distant third, 219 points in arrears.


 

Drivers will almost always remain the focal point in auto racing. But for the women and men who create the machines that make stars out of the folks behind the wheel, recognition as the year’s champion manufacturer is justifiably a more meaningful prize.


 

The 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship concludes with the 28th annual Motul Petit Le Mans, set for October 8-11 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.

 

International Motor Sports Association    Lamborghini Super Trofeo series  

2025 Lamborghini Super Trofeo Europe calendar

11-13 April – Paul Ricard
30 May -1 June – Monza
27-29 June – Spa-Francorchamps
29-31 August – Nürburgring 
10-12 October – Barcelona 
6-7 November – Misano

2025 Lamborghini Super Trofeo Asia calendar

4-6 April – Sydney (Australia)
16-18 May – Shanghai (China) 
27-29 June – Fuji (Japan) 
18-20 July – Inje (South Korea)
5-7 September – Sepang (Malaysia) 
6-7 November – Misano

2025 Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America calendar

12-14 March – Sebring (Florida)
9-11 May – Laguna Seca (California)
19-21 June – Watkins Glen (New York)
1-3 August – Road America (Wisconsin)
18-20 September – Indianapolis Motor Speedway (Indiana)
6-7 November – Misano

2025 Lamborghini Super Trofeo World Finals

8-9 November - Misano


2025 international Motor Sports Association  schedule

Event Date  
Jan 17
11:00
Jan 25
13:40
* Mar 15
 
* Apr 12
 
* May 11
 
* May 31
 
* Jun 22
 
* Jul 13
 
* Aug 03
 
* Aug 24
 
* Sep 21
 
* Oct 11
 

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