Kamui Kobayashi has shared his disappointment with coming so close
to winning the 24 Hours of Le Mans, ultimately finishing second for
Toyota Gazoo Racing . The driver of the #7 car reflected on the
race, admitting that the team was "missing something" as it fell
short of beating the #50 Ferrari of Antonio Fuoco, Miguel Molina
and Nicklas Nielsen. It was two wins in two years for the Italian
marque, with the #51 car winning last year, on what was the 100th
anniversary of the first running of the Le Mans 24 Hours. Down on
energy, it was critical as to whether a final pit stop would be
required for the #51 Ferrari, which would have handed the victory
to Kobayashi and team-mates Nyck de Vries and Jose Maria Lopez -
who was drafted in last minute to cover for the injured Mike
Conway. Having qualified at the back of the hypercar class, the #7
worked its way through the field to claim the podium finish, with
the sister #8 car also coming close to glory, which Kobayashi
touched upon when looking back over a weather and safety
car-affected 24 hours. "We did everything what we can do," the
37-year-old told Eurosport upon conclusion of the 24 hour race. "Of
course, I think we started last [in class], obviously we're missing
something - it's not enough. We had some problems as well. But
yeah, the last piece [of the race] was not enough. "All the team
did everything what we could do, and of course, it's a shame for
car #8. I think they had the opportunity to win as well, still
fighting with car #50 [the winning Ferrari], but contact with car
#51 [the third-place Ferrari] just dropped them back to
fifth-position. It's quite tough for us, but this is racing."
Toyota Gazoo Racing philosophy The former F1 driver, who raced for
Toyota, Sauber and Caterham between 2009 and 2014, became the first
Japanese driver to secure a podium finish in Japan for 22 years at
the 2012 Japanese Grand Prix. He moved into endurance racing in
2016, taking the world title in 2019-20 and 2021, winning the 24
Hours of Le Mans in the latter year - becoming just the fourth
Japanese driver to do so. Looking back on the 2024 edition of the
race, he shared how he relished the challenge whilst highlighting
the philosophy that underpins his team. "We did everything, I think
we take all the risk, and obviously we knew it was gonna be a
challenge, but without the challenge, we never win," he said. "So,
we always do our best - and this is a Toyota Gazoo Racing
philosophy, so that's why we never give up on it - we try until the
end."
(Excluding for the Headline, this article ("story") has not been edited by MiBiz News and is published from a web feed or sourced from the Internet.)