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WEC 24 Hours of Le Mans

2022 Le Mans 24 Hours Live Commentary and Updates

Live updates for the 2022 Le Mans 24 Hours at the Circuit de la Sarthe

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A drive-through penalty for abusing track limits has been dished out to Alessandro Pier Guidi in the #51 Ferrari. Somehow, it doesn't look like that crew is going to be defending its race victory from 2021.
In LMP2, Da Costa continues to lead in the #38 Jota car with Bortolotti second and Aberdein third - that trio all starting drivers remaining aboard for a treble stint. Kubica has handed over the #9 Prema car to Lorenzo Colombo and the ex-Formula 3 racer is hassling Aberdein hard. Dane Cameron has replaced Nasr and runs fifth in the Penske entry, with Lorenzo's former contemporary Bent Viscaal sixth in the leading pro/am entry for ARC Bratislava.
Erstwhile GTE am leader Picariello has just come into the pits and handed over to the #99 Hardpoint crew's bronze driver Andrew Haryanto. He rejoins sixth and is the highest-placed of the Ams currently circulating, with Andlauer, Cairoli, Tincknell, Thiim and Nick Cassidy ahead all Pros who started their respective machines.
Strategising when to use your Bronze is always a fascinating element of the GTE Am class. Some elect to run longer with their Pros early in case of a safety car - remember, there are three different trains around the long Circuit de la Sarthe lap, and being split off from the pack can be costly. But saving the Bronze time until the night when they're likely to be less confident in reduced visibility is a brave move indeed.
Gary Watkins
Sebastien Ogier is now out on track in the Richard Mille ORECA. He joins a long list of rally starts to take the challenge of Le Mans: Rohrl, Ragnotti, Darniche, McRae, Loeb. I could go on. I won't name check the late, great Vic Elford here, too much of a regular on the circuits and the stages, and a grand prix driver after all.
We've had the leader in GTE Pro come in - Garcia, who unseen by us passed Tandy, has swapped over to Jordan Taylor. He's one of two Corvette drivers, the other being Alexander Sims, to be sporting 'Topgun' tribute moustaches this weekend.
Huge moment for Pierre Ehret in the #75 Iron Lynx Ferrari, who spins off at the Porsche Curves when he doesn't see Francois Perrodo come flying down his inside in the AF Corse LMP2 ORECA. Ehret does well to slow it down and avoid a hefty prang with the tyres.
Rast is still aboard the polesitting #31 WRT ORECA and is trying to recover after being hit with a one-minute penalty for that early contact with Will Owen's United car. But he's being thwarted by Mathias Beche's rear-guard action in the #13 TDS machine, the Swiss unwilling to let go of his 16th position.
Colombo has now moved into third in LMP2, passing Aberdein. Fresh rubber undoubtedly doing the trick for the Italian, with Aberdein now scampering after Bortolotti ahead. It's been a quietly effective opening so far for the DTM racer, who we'll surely be seeing more of at Le Mans in the future with Lamborghini committed to LMDh from 2024.
Following the most recent GTE Am stops, Andlauer has continued aboard the #79 WeatherTech Porsche and continues to lead. We've now got Seb Priaulx in second, having taken over the #77 Dempsey-Proton car, and Nicolas Leutwiler in the #46 Project 1 car in third after Tincknell and Cairoli stepped out for a well-earned rest. Behind fourth-placed Andrew Haryanto, who like Leutwiler is a bronze and has taken over the #99 Hardpoint Porsche started by Picariello, is David Pittard in the #98 Aston. Expect the Nordschleife expert to take fourth before too long.
Tandy jumped out of the #64 Corvette at the most recent round of stops, and handed over to Tommy Milner. The American has dropped to third behind Bruni in the #91 Porsche, the Italian now on his second stint with those tyres.
Gary Watkins
Only 10 laps there for the Alpine. The old girl - a car that started out as the Rebellion R-13 - has proved that it can do 12 laps.  Guessing the early stop is down to those four Michelin tyres being more than ready for a change.
Out at the front in Hypercar, Buemi has dropped 19.4s behind Conway, but no problems to report for the Toyotas. Pla is 50s down in third, while Westbrook has taken over the #709 car which made a brief visit to the garage due to a problematic sensor, dropping him behind Vaxiviere in the Alpine.
In comes Mike Conway for his third pit visit of the race. The reigning WEC champion vacates the #7 Toyota, with Jose Maria Lopez jumping aboard.
Former IndyCar racer Ed Jones has now replaced Aberdein aboard the #28 Jota ORECA in LMP2. That has been stopping a little before the rest of its class rivals at each pit cycle.
There's pit callers everywhere you look at the moment. In comes Buemi and Pla, who had run one lap longer than Conway, while the LMP2 leaders also come in, with Da Costa swapping out for Will Stevens.
Gary Watkins
Eleven laps there for both Toyotas and the #708 Glickenhaus as they come in to the end of their triple stints on a set of Michelin tyres. Remember these are heavy old cars. The days when Audi went straight into quadruples from the beginning of the race seem a distant memory.
Brendon Hartley, who took pole on Thursday, and Romain Dumas have jumped aboard the #8 Toyota and #708 Glickenhaus. Both are two-time Le Mans winners, both with two different manufacturers - Hartley with Porsche (2017) and Toyota (2020), while Dumas's wins came with Audi (2010) and Porsche (2016).
We suggested that Pittard was a man to watch, and sure enough the Briton has passed Haryanto for fourth in GTE Am. Next in his sights is Leutwiler, the bronze in the #46 Porsche, just 4s between them last time around.
There were some good battles on track in the GTE Pro ranks, which resolved themselves as we were typing. Tommy Milner closed in and passed Gianmaria Bruni's #91 Porsche, with fresher tyres aboard his #64 Corvette, for second and Michael Christensen's #92 Porsche took fourth from Antonio Fuoco in the #52 Ferrari.
Yifei Ye has made a superb move on Nico Jamin for fifth in LMP2 at Arnage. The order was shaken up a bit by the last round of pitstops, but it's still the #38 Jota ORECA that leads with Will Stevens behind the wheel. Dane Cameron is second for Team Penske, with Lorenzo Colombo still third in the #9 Prema entry that led early on with Robert Kubica. Ed Jones is fourth, chased by a gaggle of cars comprising Ye, Jamin and Dries Vanthoor - who took over from Bortolotti aboard the #32 car in the last round of stops.
Gary Watkins
A couple of 3m29s laps there for Westbrook as he strives to make up for that time loss in the pits with a sensor change. I was going to say that's at least on a par with the leading Toyota, but Lopez has just banged in a 3m28s.
Taylor has a lead around the half-minute mark on Milner in GTE Pro. It's early days yet, but Corvette will be delighted with how the race has gone so far.
A 3m28.809s last time around from Lopez is the fastest lap of the race so far. He's currently 23s to the good ahead of Hartley, with Dumas now 1m21s behind in third. Westbrook is now just 16s behind of the Alpine of Vaxiviere in fourth.
From the back of the grid, Vector Sport is continuing its comeback and now has Sebastien Bourdais at the wheel. The in-form Frenchman, who has four poles from six IMSA starts so far this year, is running P12 but right on the tail of David Heinemeier-Hansson and Reshad de Gerus ahead.
Meanwhile, Dries Vanthoor has moved up into fifth in LMP2, following Ye past Jamin. The 2021 GTE Pro polewinner is having a much better time of it than last year when his HubAuto Porsche was turned around on lap one and never recovered.
In GTE Pro, Bruni has been passed for third by Porsche team-mate Christensen. That's explainable by a one stint offset in tyre life between them, with Bruni now on his second stint after only a single stint for Fred Makowiecki due to a troubling vibration for the #91 car's starting driver.
After almost three hours at the wheel, Julien Andlauer has now vacated the WeatherTech Porsche from the lead in GTE Am. Thomas Merrill jumps aboard, and second-generation racer Seb Priaulx cycles to the lead in the Proton-Dempsey car.
In comes Lopez from the lead for his fourth scheduled stop. Expect Hartley in on the next tour and for the #7 car to re-assert itself at the head of the field once more.
Priaulx has now come into the pits, but stays aboard for a second stint in the #77 car. That cycles the WeatherTech team's bronze Merrill back to the GTE Am class lead, while Pittard remains third - ensuring the top three are all Le Mans newcomers.
Another GTE Am rookie is Frederik Schandorff, and the 2021 International GT Open champion is fortunate not to slap the wall after a wild moment through the Esses. He slides along the grass and just gathers it up, but the #57 Kessel Racing-run Car Guy Ferrari loses fifth spot to the TF Sport Aston of Henrique Chaves.
The gap has closed up in the battle for second in LMP2, with Dane Cameron now seeing Lorenzo Colombo looming large in his mirrors. Penske vs Prema is a battle of the heavyweight motorsport teams beginning with P. It's just missing Porsche (who will partner with Penske on the LMDh project next year).
With three hours complete, Toyota head the order with Jose Maria Lopez in car #7 leading Brendon Hartley by 23s. Romain Dumas is third for Glickenhaus, but 94s off the lead.
In LMP2, Will Stevens continues to lead in the #38 Jota car. Penske's Dane Cameron is second, but has Lorenzo Colombo hard on his tail in the Prema car, with Yifei Ye fourth for Cool Racing and Nico Jamin fifth for Panis - the team owned by 1996 Monaco GP winner Olivier.
In GTE Pro, Corvette leads the way with Jordan Taylor in #63 30s clear of team-mate Tommy Milner in #64. Five seconds behind Milner, Michael Christensen's #92 Porsche has a 10s advantage over the sister #91 car of Richard Lietz, with the two Ferraris of Davide Rigon (#52) and Daniel Serra (#51) over a minute down.
And in GTE Am, Thomas Merrill's #79 WeatherTech Racing Porsche has a 50s lead over Seb Priaulx in the #77 Proton-Dempsey Racing Porsche. Then it's David Pittard third in the #98 NorthWest AMR Aston Martin in third, with the TF Sport Aston of Henrique Chaves fourth and Frederik Schandorff fifth in the Kessel/Car Guy Ferrari.

By: autosport.com

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