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Button targets Le Mans return with own team in future

Formula 1 world champion Jenson Button has targeted returning to race at the Le Mans 24 Hours with his own team in the future

The 2009 champion retired from F1 after the 2016 campaign and has since focused on endurance racing, winning the 2018 Super GT title in the same year he made his only Le Mans appearance to-date in an SMP Racing BR Engineering BR1-AER LMP1.

Due to the pandemic, Button's 2020 racing exploits have been limited to a one-off appearance in the British GT championship at Silverstone, driving a McLaren 720S GT3 for the Jenson Team Rocket RJN squad he co-owns with Bob Neville and Chris Buncombe.

Button, 40, said he is eyeing an opportunity to return to the 24-hour classic "in a competitive car to go for the outright win" but said his "dream" would be to contest the race with his own squad if it could attract support from a manufacturer.

Next year, the World Endurance Championship will replace the moribund LMP1 class with Le Mans Hypercars (LMH) for road-based and prototype machines, while LMP2-based LMDh machines that will also be eligible to compete in the IMSA SportsCar Championship will race at Le Mans from 2023.

"If I could race there next year, and it was the right situation, I would," Button told Autosport.

"The dream obviously would be for this team to race at Le Mans and the dream would be to be in the car when that happens.

"I might be too old by then, I'll have to wait and see.

"I feel like I'm 20 years old still, so the reactions are still there, there's just a few more wrinkles but that doesn't matter when you're driving a racing car."

PLUS: Why Button's motorsport journey is far from over

Button's team was set to contest the GT World Challenge Europe series this year, before the pandemic prompted it to revert to the British championship, and his short-term aim for the team is a return to GTWCE next year.

"For me the exciting future of the team is racing in GT World Challenge because it's so competitive these days, with manufacturers but also with teams and the calibre of drivers," he said.

"It's phenomenal watching Spa [24 Hours] and seeing some of the best drivers from WEC, from F1, from many different backgrounds and they're all racing together in cars that are very similar and all very competitive.

"I think the WEC championship isn't as competitive as you'd like it to be, but Le Mans is and that has to be the aim for the future. If you're in endurance racing, you want to go to Le Mans.

"I obviously raced there in 2018 and the whole idea was to get the experience to race in the future with manufacturers when they came back into the sport.

"COVID hasn't helped that, but I think we'll see over the next couple of years a lot of good manufacturers that are interested, or a lot of good teams anyway that will come in and fight for overall glory at Le Mans. That's the aim."

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