Day 10
Race day two
The great thing about a 24-hour endurance race, is that it’s still going in morning and on through the afternoon. Today, it’s up to the north of the circuit, parking in the Panorama car park.
Continued…..
Parking in the Panorama car park, gives easy access to the track after the iconic Dunlop bridge, as the cars sweep down towards Terre Rouge and tge start of the Mulsanne Straight:
We then walked on a bit further, to take the tunnel under the track to watch them come towards us on the sweep down:
To show how hard it is to win Le Mans, the third placed car in LMP2 suffered a suspension collapse and the loss of a rear wheel as it headed towards us. This was after about 21 hours of racing. That was it the driver’s and the team’s entrance and the chance of a podium finish were over:



Likewise, the number eight Toyota suffered a double jeopardy. The rear right wheel nut was not affixed properly in the pit and came off, followed immediately with a sudden and complete deflation of the tyre, close on the pit lane exit. The car limped past as, with almost a full lap to drive, the rear wheel wobbling alarmingly. The rear wheel then came away completely somewhere around Mulsanne, the driver somehow scraping the car back to the pits on three wheels, taking about 20 minutes. The car was then patched up in the pits and re-entered the race.Toyota suffered a double punishment: One, for enduring a 20 minute lap, during which the car was lapped repeatedly. Two, an additional ime penalty sanction from the stewards, for not attaching the wheel nut properly in the first place.
Ferrari by now had three cars in the lead in the Hypercar class, headed by the satellite team’s yellow car, followed by the two official red Ferrari works entry cars and a Porsche. The yellow car was driven by Robert Kubica, the very popular (and very fast) Polish driver. Some will remember that Kubica suffered terrible injuries in a crash, which finished his F1 career:
There was lots of chat over the very good Radio Le Mans commentary, as to whether Ferrari would pull rank and order the satellite team’s car to slow, allowing the two works cars to finish one, two with the satellite car third. Thankfully, that never happened.