Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

How Evans is becoming a Rally Sweden master

Feature
WRC
WRC
Rally Sweden
How Evans is becoming a Rally Sweden master

Barcelona joins F1 rotation with new three-race deal

Formula 1
Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Barcelona joins F1 rotation with new three-race deal

How McLaren has tweaked its steering wheel to maximise F1’s 2026 hybrid

Formula 1
Formula 1
Bahrain Pre-Season Testing
How McLaren has tweaked its steering wheel to maximise F1’s 2026 hybrid

The safety warnings that trump driver complaints on F1 2026 cars

Feature
Formula 1
Formula 1
Bahrain Pre-Season Testing
The safety warnings that trump driver complaints on F1 2026 cars

Ezpeleta: Dorna in hurry to lay foundations for growth, not monetise MotoGP

MotoGP
MotoGP
Ezpeleta: Dorna in hurry to lay foundations for growth, not monetise MotoGP

Why Jaguar's Formula E resurgence ensures Porsche won't have it all its own way

Feature
Formula E
Formula E
Jeddah ePrix II
Why Jaguar's Formula E resurgence ensures Porsche won't have it all its own way

Alonso: Newey hasn't forgotten how to design an F1 car

Formula 1
Formula 1
Bahrain Pre-Season Testing
Alonso: Newey hasn't forgotten how to design an F1 car

What happened in Formula E’s crash-heavy Evo Sessions at Jeddah

Formula E
Formula E
Jeddah ePrix II
What happened in Formula E’s crash-heavy Evo Sessions at Jeddah

Rolex 24, Hour 18: Porsche leads as race resumes after prolonged FCY

Following the longest fog-related FCY in the Rolex 24 history, the race resumes with Porsche at front

#7 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Felipe Nasr, Julien Andlauer, Laurin Heinrich

Porsche leads the Rolex 24 at Daytona with a quarter of the race remaining, as daybreak allowed action to resume following a prolonged caution period.

The Full Course Yellow was deployed shortly after midnight, with race control forced to neutralize the race as conditions rapidly deteriorated in the thick of the night.

Over the following six-and-a-half-hours, the visibility fluctuated, leading to the longest fog-related disruption in the race’s history.

The prolonged safety car period shook up the order across all four classes, as teams juggled strategy and worked to meet minimum drive-time requirements under yellows.

One of the most significant developments involved the two factory Porsche Penske Motorsport 963 LMDh entries, both of which spent extended periods in the pitlane for repairs.

The No. 6 Porsche made four separate pit visits during the 13th hour as Penske mechanics addressed damage sustained earlier in the race.

The No. 7 Porsche, which led the race at the halfway point, also made two unscheduled pitstops in the 14th hour, with mechanics having to remove the nose to carry out work on the front end of the car.

Those issues dropped both cars down the order and put them on offset strategies compared to the rest of the GTP field, although the SC allowed them to recover enough to lead for certain stages of the race.

Late restart

When the pitlane reopened before the restart, the entire GTP field with the exception of the No. 7 Porsche and the No. 25 BMW headed into the pitlane, putting those two cars at the front as the race went back to green.

Laurin Heinrich nailed the restart to stay in front in the No. 7 Porsche, while Matt Campbell jumped the No. 24 BMW M Hybrid V8 of Kevin Magnussen to establish a 1-2 for the Weissach-based marque.

Louis Deletraz held fourth for the No. 40 WTR Cadillac, while Colin Braun was fifth in the best of the Meyer Shank Acuras.

Just after the restart, the race control announced a number of penalties, dropping several crews well down the order.

The No. 85 JDC-Miller Porsche, which had led at the start of the 18th hour, and the No. 24 BMW were awarded a drive-through penalty, while the No. 31 AXR Cadillac was slipped with a 30s stop/go. In each of the three cases, the reason for the penalty was not revealed.

LMP2

In the LMP2 class, Sebastien Bourdais defended his position to keep the No. 8 Tower Motorsport Oreca 07 at the front, although Formula E star Nick Cassidy put together a stunning performance to climb to second place in the No. 343 InterEuropol Oreca.

Tom Dillmann sits third in the other Inter Europol entry, while the No. 99 AO Racing car that had led at the halfway mark was down in sixth.

Meanwhile, the No. 4 Corvette returned to the top spot in GTD Pro, as Tommy Milner passed the No. 64 Ford of Ben Barker at the restart. Jules Gounon stands third, with Antonio Garcia fourth in the second of Pratt Miller Corvettes.

The GTD class is led by the No. 96 Turner Motorsport BMW of Robby Foley, who overtook the No. 21 AF Corse Ferrari of Lilou Wadoux at the end of the 18th hour.

Previous article Daytona 24, Hour 12: Fog halts green-flag running as Porsche remains in control
Next article Daytona 24 Hours: Porsche holds on for third consecutive win

Top Comments