Toyota
Gazoo Racing took pole position for the 86th Le Mans 24 Hours and locked out
the front row as qualifying for the second round of the FIA World Endurance
Championship (WEC) concluded at the Circuit de la Sarthe on Thursday night.
Kazuki
Nakajima earned his second career pole position at Le Mans, and Toyota's
fourth, with a lap of 3mins 15.377secs right at the start of third qualifying
in the #8 TS050 HYBRID he shares with Sébastien Buemi and Fernando Alonso.
Both
Toyota’s will start Saturday's race from the front, with the #7 TS050 HYBRID of
Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and José María López earning second place thanks
to a best lap set by Kamui in first qualifying.
A
perfect qualifying result brings an extra World Championship point but the
team's focus throughout preparations has been on consistent, reliable
performance in the race, which Toyota is attempting to win for the first time
at its 20th attempt.
Grid
positions are decided by the fastest lap from any of the three two-hour
qualifying sessions, but there was no opportunity to improve on Wednesday's
times during second qualifying. Two red flags made for relatively little action
and ultimately saw the session halted 24 minutes early as a result of an LMP2
accident.
But
third qualifying was different, with both TS050 HYBRIDs immediately hitting the
track to fight for pole position. A clean lap from Kazuki significantly
improved the pole position time and set a new track record for the updated
13.626km circuit lay-out, in use for the first time this year.
With
up to 60 cars on track, traffic is always a factor in qualifying and it did not
fall kindly for Kamui, who was unable to improve on his Wednesday lap time. For
the remainder of the session both cars focused on race preparations and
experienced a wet track when light rain began to fall around 10.30pm.
That
provided important data ahead of the race but meant the fight for grid
positions was effectively over for the entire grid well before midnight.
There
is no track action on Friday but that does not mean anyone in the team has a
day off. While mechanics will work hard to prepare both cars for the race, the
drivers will meet some of the 250,000 fans during the unique drivers' parade in
the city centre.
-Mike Conway (TS050 HYBRID #7)
“Well
done to Kazuki and the #8 guys on getting pole position. I'm pleased for
everyone in the team but the real job is still to come in the race. We have
concentrated on having a strong car in the race and I'm happy with the work we
have done so far. We know from experience that Le Mans is a tough race but I'm
ready for it.”
-Kamui Kobayashi (TS050 HYBRID
#7)
“It's
great for Toyota to be on the front row at Le Mans. Congratulations to Kazuki;
he did a really good lap. I think everyone in the team, the engineers,
mechanics and drivers, did a good job to prepare a strong car which has run
without trouble. We have done a lot of laps so far this week and I think we are
in a good position for the race.”
-José María López (TS050
HYBRID #7)
“Congratulations
to the team for this qualifying result, and to Kazuki for pole position.
Everyone has worked so hard to be ready for Le Mans and this is a small step,
but the big push comes in the race and I think we have a good car in race
conditions. I'm looking forward to it; as always it will be a challenging race
here and many things can happen.”
-Sébastien Buemi (TS050 HYBRID
#8)
“It's
great to be on pole; I'm really pleased for the team. Kazuki did a great lap so
well done to him and everyone for this one-two in qualifying. We still have
plenty of work to do to achieve our target in the race; we will enjoy this
moment but our focus is on the important business of the race. We've prepared
all year for this and we know what we need to do now.”
-Kazuki Nakajima (TS050 HYBRID
#8)
“I
was pushing hard and it was a clean lap; it was a good lap time so I'm happy.
The track conditions were good, much better than yesterday when I didn't feel
as comfortable as today. I think we have a really good balance for the race so
I am pleased with what we have done so far. Qualifying is only maybe 1% of the
whole weekend but this pole position is nice for the team but we all know that
the race is very long and it's going to be tough.”
-Fernando Alonso (TS050 HYBRID
#8)
“I'm
definitely happy. We know that qualifying is not really important for a 24-hour
race but I'm happy for Toyota to be one-two ahead of the long race in front of
us. Kazuki did a very good lap. I'm happy for him to put the car on pole. It's
what we wanted to achieve. But we have earned nothing yet, this is just a
preparation for the race. We have a long 24 hours in front of us but so far it
has been a smooth preparation without any issues on the car. We are ready.”Toyota
Gazoo Racing took pole position for the 86th Le Mans 24 Hours and locked out
the front row as qualifying for the second round of the FIA World Endurance
Championship (WEC) concluded at the Circuit de la Sarthe on Thursday night.
Kazuki
Nakajima earned his second career pole position at Le Mans, and Toyota's
fourth, with a lap of 3mins 15.377secs right at the start of third qualifying
in the #8 TS050 HYBRID he shares with Sébastien Buemi and Fernando Alonso.
Both
Toyota’s will start Saturday's race from the front, with the #7 TS050 HYBRID of
Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and José María López earning second place thanks
to a best lap set by Kamui in first qualifying.
A
perfect qualifying result brings an extra World Championship point but the
team's focus throughout preparations has been on consistent, reliable
performance in the race, which Toyota is attempting to win for the first time
at its 20th attempt.
Grid
positions are decided by the fastest lap from any of the three two-hour
qualifying sessions, but there was no opportunity to improve on Wednesday's
times during second qualifying. Two red flags made for relatively little action
and ultimately saw the session halted 24 minutes early as a result of an LMP2
accident.
But
third qualifying was different, with both TS050 HYBRIDs immediately hitting the
track to fight for pole position. A clean lap from Kazuki significantly
improved the pole position time and set a new track record for the updated
13.626km circuit lay-out, in use for the first time this year.
With
up to 60 cars on track, traffic is always a factor in qualifying and it did not
fall kindly for Kamui, who was unable to improve on his Wednesday lap time. For
the remainder of the session both cars focused on race preparations and
experienced a wet track when light rain began to fall around 10.30pm.
That
provided important data ahead of the race but meant the fight for grid
positions was effectively over for the entire grid well before midnight.
There
is no track action on Friday but that does not mean anyone in the team has a
day off. While mechanics will work hard to prepare both cars for the race, the
drivers will meet some of the 250,000 fans during the unique drivers' parade in
the city centre.
-Mike Conway (TS050 HYBRID #7)
“Well
done to Kazuki and the #8 guys on getting pole position. I'm pleased for
everyone in the team but the real job is still to come in the race. We have
concentrated on having a strong car in the race and I'm happy with the work we
have done so far. We know from experience that Le Mans is a tough race but I'm
ready for it.”
-Kamui Kobayashi (TS050 HYBRID
#7)
“It's
great for Toyota to be on the front row at Le Mans. Congratulations to Kazuki;
he did a really good lap. I think everyone in the team, the engineers,
mechanics and drivers, did a good job to prepare a strong car which has run
without trouble. We have done a lot of laps so far this week and I think we are
in a good position for the race.”
-José María López (TS050
HYBRID #7)
“Congratulations
to the team for this qualifying result, and to Kazuki for pole position.
Everyone has worked so hard to be ready for Le Mans and this is a small step,
but the big push comes in the race and I think we have a good car in race
conditions. I'm looking forward to it; as always it will be a challenging race
here and many things can happen.”
-Sébastien Buemi (TS050 HYBRID
#8)
“It's
great to be on pole; I'm really pleased for the team. Kazuki did a great lap so
well done to him and everyone for this one-two in qualifying. We still have
plenty of work to do to achieve our target in the race; we will enjoy this
moment but our focus is on the important business of the race. We've prepared
all year for this and we know what we need to do now.”
-Kazuki Nakajima (TS050 HYBRID
#8)
“I
was pushing hard and it was a clean lap; it was a good lap time so I'm happy.
The track conditions were good, much better than yesterday when I didn't feel
as comfortable as today. I think we have a really good balance for the race so
I am pleased with what we have done so far. Qualifying is only maybe 1% of the
whole weekend but this pole position is nice for the team but we all know that
the race is very long and it's going to be tough.”
-Fernando Alonso (TS050 HYBRID
#8)
“I'm
definitely happy. We know that qualifying is not really important for a 24-hour
race but I'm happy for Toyota to be one-two ahead of the long race in front of
us. Kazuki did a very good lap. I'm happy for him to put the car on pole. It's
what we wanted to achieve. But we have earned nothing yet, this is just a
preparation for the race. We have a long 24 hours in front of us but so far it
has been a smooth preparation without any issues on the car. We are ready.”
COMBINED QUALIFYING RESULTS:
1st
#8 Toyota GAZOO Racing 3min 15.377secs
2nd
#7 Toyota GAZOO Racing +2.000secs
3rd
#1 Rebellion (Jani/Lotterer/Senna) +4.072secs
4th
#17 SMP (Sarrazin/Orudzhev/Isaakyan) +4.106secs
5th
#3 Rebellion (Beche/Laurent/Menezes) +4.568secs
6th
#10 Dragonspeed (Hedman/Hanley/Van der Zande) +5.733secs
COMBINED QUALIFYING RESULTS:
1st
#8 Toyota GAZOO Racing 3min 15.377secs
2nd
#7 Toyota GAZOO Racing +2.000secs
3rd
#1 Rebellion (Jani/Lotterer/Senna) +4.072secs
4th
#17 SMP (Sarrazin/Orudzhev/Isaakyan) +4.106secs
5th
#3 Rebellion (Beche/Laurent/Menezes) +4.568secsv
6th
#10 Dragonspeed (Hedman/Hanley/Van der Zande) +5.733secs
