Calado "nearly crashed three times" before WEC Spa GTE Pro win

Ferrari's James Calado has revealed he almost crashed three times in the final stages of the World Endurance Championship's Spa 6 Hours as he strived to hang onto the GTE Pro lead.

#51 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo LMGTE Pro of Alessandro Pier Guidi, James Calado

Calado explained that he “gave it everything” as he resisted the advances of Michael Christensen’s Porsche 911 RSR on the way to completing class victory in the AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo he shared with Alessandro Pier Guidi.

“I nearly crashed the car three times on the last two laps,” said Calado after taking the chequered flag half a second ahead of the Porsche, Christensen shared with Kevin Estre, at the end of round two of the 2022 World Endurance Championship.

“I gave it more than 100%, too much actually, but I didn’t want to give up.”

Calado explained that the big moments came at Eau Rouge, the Bruxelles hairpin and the following left hander over the course of the final two laps.

The Ferrari appeared to be second favourite when the race went green after a final full course yellow with 10 minutes left, because the Porsche was the faster car on slick tyres on a track with a clear dry line.

“I knew the Porsche would be there; in sectors one and two they were very strong,” said Calado.

“They’ve got a good car here at Spa in the dry, as we’ve seen over the past couple of years.”

#51 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo LMGTE Pro of Alessandro Pier Guidi, James Calado

#51 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo LMGTE Pro of Alessandro Pier Guidi, James Calado

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

Calado explained that he was struggling on the soft-compound Michelin slick to which the class-winning Ferrari had swapped when Calado took over from Pier Guidi with just under 90 minutes remaining.

“They were amazing for the first few laps, but then I started to get massive movement from the tyres,” he said. “I even started going onto the wet parts of the track to cool them down.”

The winning Ferrari moved into the lead on the 82nd of the 102 laps completed by the GTE Pro frontrunners when the sister car shared by Miguel Molina and Antonio Fuoco made a short stop for fuel under FCY conditions.

The Christensen/Estre Porsche, which was running third, also pitted at this time with an hour left, but AF Corse and Ferrari gambled on leaving Calado out on track.

A further two FCYs allowed Calado to complete the race without another fuel stop.

“I never saw the fuel light come on,” said Calado when asked if he had been short on fuel. “But if there hadn’t been that last FCY, we would have needed to splash — we took a gamble.”

Pier Guidi conceded that the rain and the multiple interruptions to the race, which included three red-flag stoppages, played a key role in Ferrari’s win after the car again proved off the pace of the Porsche in practice and qualifying.

“We didn’t have the performance in the dry, but in the wet anything can happen,” he said. “We needed a race like this to have a possibility to win.

“James did an amazing job in the last hour and a half, because we knew the Porsche was quicker in the dry.”

shares
comments

Related video

Lopez: WEC Spa race conditions “like a horror movie”

Penske in talks to bring WEC to Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Can Peugeot turn its style into substance at Le Mans?

Can Peugeot turn its style into substance at Le Mans?

Plus
Plus
WEC
Gary Watkins

Can Peugeot turn its style into substance at Le Mans? Can Peugeot turn its style into substance at Le Mans?

How Ferrari’s threat is growing against Toyota approaching Le Mans

How Ferrari’s threat is growing against Toyota approaching Le Mans

Plus
Plus
WEC
Spa-Francorchamps
Gary Watkins

How Ferrari’s threat is growing against Toyota approaching Le Mans How Ferrari’s threat is growing against Toyota approaching Le Mans

Why Cadillac can make amends for its previous Le Mans failures

Why Cadillac can make amends for its previous Le Mans failures

Plus
Plus
Le Mans
Garage 56 Sebring testing
Gary Watkins

Why Cadillac can make amends for its previous Le Mans failures Why Cadillac can make amends for its previous Le Mans failures

The chasm Toyota’s rivals must bridge before Le Mans

The chasm Toyota’s rivals must bridge before Le Mans

Plus
Plus
WEC
Portimao
Gary Watkins

The chasm Toyota’s rivals must bridge before Le Mans The chasm Toyota’s rivals must bridge before Le Mans

How Toyota rendered its Le Mans agony a distant memory

How Toyota rendered its Le Mans agony a distant memory

Plus
Plus
WEC
Gary Watkins

How Toyota rendered its Le Mans agony a distant memory How Toyota rendered its Le Mans agony a distant memory

Why the WEC should make space for modern garagistes in 2023

Why the WEC should make space for modern garagistes in 2023

Plus
Plus
WEC
Gary Watkins

Why the WEC should make space for modern garagistes in 2023 Why the WEC should make space for modern garagistes in 2023

Autosport writers' most memorable moments of 2022

Autosport writers' most memorable moments of 2022

Plus
Plus
Formula 1
Autosport Staff

Autosport writers' most memorable moments of 2022 Autosport writers' most memorable moments of 2022

Is Qatar the price motorsport fans have to pay?

Is Qatar the price motorsport fans have to pay?

Plus
Plus
WEC
Gary Watkins

Is Qatar the price motorsport fans have to pay? Is Qatar the price motorsport fans have to pay?

Subscribe