The 2026 GT2 European Series powered by Pirelli opens this weekend (May 30-31) at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, a.k.a. ‘The Temple of Speed,’ and the timing could not be more deliberate. Just days after Maserati marked a significant presence at the annual Motor Valley Fest in Modena, where the brand unveiled the MCPURA in a striking Ai Aqua Rainbow Fuoriserie finish and hosted senior executives and historians for its "Trident Talks" series, the focus shifts to the track for the season opener.
Three teams: LP Racing, DINAMIC Motorsport, and the new i4Race outfit will field five Maserati GT2s across the Pro-Am, Silver, and Master classes. Defending two-time Am-class champion Philippe Prette returns in the number 1 car, now competing in the new Master class.
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The real story, though, is on the bodywork, as Maserati debuts exclusive livery, created through its Fuoriserie personalization program, drawing directly from the 250F, the red overyellow single-seater that dominated Formula 1 in the 1950s. Juan Manuel Fangio drove it to world championships in 1954 and 1957, with victories in Argentina, Belgium, Monaco, and France. Stirling Moss won at Monaco and Italy in 1956. Maria Teresa de Filippis, the first woman to qualify for a Formula 1 Grand Prix, also raced the 250F in 1958.
The single seater is one of motorsport's most evocative objects, and Maserati is leaning into that heritage. The liveries will be available on both a one-off Maserati GT2 race car and the street-legal GT2 Stradale.
The anniversary extends beyond the logo. In 1926, the Maserati Tipo 26 wore the Trident for the first time and won its class at the Targa Florio with Alfieri Maserati behind the wheel. That double centennial, 100 years of the Trident logo and 100 years of competition, gives the 2026 season a weight that most racing calendars simply do not carry. After Monza, the series heads to Spa-Francorchamps, Misano, Zandvoort, and Portimao.
Images: Maserati