Following a thrilling four-car battle for victory between three manufacturers, Toyota came won the 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance racing classic from BMW and Cadillac. The #7 TR010 HYBRID of Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Nyck de Vries prevailed, scoring Toyota’s sixth win at Le Mans since 2018 – and its first of the Le Mans Hypercar era that’s been dominated by Ferrari.

Few automotive events carry the mythology, history, and prestige of Le Mans. Since its inaugural running in 1923, the legendary French race has served as the ultimate proving ground for the world’s greatest manufacturers, drivers, and machines – a place where engineering innovation, human endurance, and outright speed converge over 24 unforgiving hours.

For collectors and enthusiasts, Le Mans represents more than a race. It is a cornerstone of automotive heritage, a place where icons are born and legends are written. From Ferrari and Porsche battling for supremacy to the technological breakthroughs that have shaped generations of road cars, the Circuit de la Sarthe has always been where performance meets purpose.

Winning Le Mans is among the most coveted achievements in motorsport, joining an elite legacy that includes some of the most celebrated names in automotive history. For the brands, drivers, and collectors who understand the significance of provenance, few victories carry the same weight as a triumph at Le Mans. It is not simply a test of speed – it is the ultimate measure of endurance, innovation, and automotive excellence. And Toyota achieved this year’s victory the hard way.
After starting from down in 14th on the grid on Saturday afternoon for the 94th edition of the twice-around-the-clock event, the #7 Toyota gained positions on the track and, via fast laps on a clear track, thanks to an early fuel stop. However, it lost time due to a puncture after around three hours, dropping it out of the top 10 again.
But relentless pace from all drivers through the night brought it back into the top four as dawn broke at La Sarthe, and its sister car, the #8 – piloted by Sebastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley, and Ryo Hirakawa – endured a long pitstop to remedy a brake issue.

The race was decided in the closing hours after a safety car for the Porsche 911 GT3 of reigning DTM champion Ayhancan Guven, who slammed into the barriers at the exit of the first Mulsanne chicane. It was only the second major incident of the race, that required a full-course caution.
The Toyotas pulled some power moves to hit the front, and even ran 1-2 going into the final hour, until the BMW of Robin Frijns (which led for a long time in the hands of Rene Rast and team-mate Sheldon van der Linde) grabbed second from Buemi’s #8 Toyota with a brave move just before the final round of pitstops.

But he didn’t have time to catch Kobayashi, who outran him until the finish – and the Japanese F1 racer was glad that Buemi had held the BMW up, so he had a buffer. The margin of victory after 24 hours of racing was just 10.913s. "I need a beer now," joked Kobayashi on his victory lap.
Ferrari was unable to score a fourth consecutive outright victory, as its 499 prototypes did not have quite enough speed to challenge for honors, and its #51 car finished fifth.

Cadillac had two cars in the fight for the win, but lost its frontrunning #38 car due to a power steering failure shortly after 4am on Sunday. However, its #12 V.Series-R of Louis Deletraz, Will Stevens and Norman Nato finished fourth.
There was some joy for General Motors in the LMGT3 class, however. The #33 TF Sport Corvette Z06 GT3.R – driven by Ben Keating, Johnny Edgar and Nicky Catsburg – took control of the category on Sunday morning, and fended off a strong challenge from Lexus and Aston Martin.
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Images: Toyota